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mise en scene

[mee zahn sen] / mi zɑ̃ ˈsɛn /


mise-en-scene


mise en scène
NOUN
placement of actors, props, etc. in film or play
Synonyms




Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Once there, I barely recognized the mise en scene I’d detailed in the novel.

From Washington Post

Featuring Jeunet’s signature irreverence and colorful mise en scène, “Bigbug” follows an ensemble cast of offbeat characters and their domestic robots, confined to a technologically advanced home by the malevolent androids that now rule the world.

From New York Times

That said, if your January is dedicated to repenting for gastronomic excesses over the holidays, director-writer Éric Besnard’s sumptuously photographed mise en scène of so much culinary mise en place may be a tad masochistic, from the first close-up of a delicate pastry to the last shot of a spit-roasted fowl glistening in firelight.

From Los Angeles Times

“With her sense of immediacy and mise en scène, she’s created a mode of participation in which you are required to be present, to participate.”

From New York Times

I was looking for something complex — a woman's story, a thriller, a genre movie — something powerful, with space to direct and work on the mise en scène.

From Salon