Mise en scène: /ˌmēz ˌän ˈsen/
Noun: mise en scène.
Plural noun: mises en scène.
The arrangement of scenery and stage properties in a play. The setting or surroundings of an event or action.
1a : the arrangement of actors and scenery on a stage for a theatrical production. b : stage setting. 2a : the physical setting of an action (as of a narrative or a motion picture) : context this ordinary house that became the mise-en-scène of an extraordinary drama— E. M. Lustgarten.
Mise-en-scène (French: [mi.z‿ɑ̃.sɛn]; English: "placing on stage") is the stage design and arrangement of actors in scenes for a theatre or film production,[1] both in visual arts through storyboarding, visual theme, and cinematography, and in narrative storytelling through direction. The term is also commonly used to refer to single scenes that are representative of a film. Mise-en-scène has been called film criticism's "grand undefined term".
Noun: mise en scène.
Plural noun: mises en scène.
The arrangement of scenery and stage properties in a play. The setting or surroundings of an event or action.
1a : the arrangement of actors and scenery on a stage for a theatrical production. b : stage setting. 2a : the physical setting of an action (as of a narrative or a motion picture) : context this ordinary house that became the mise-en-scène of an extraordinary drama— E. M. Lustgarten.
Mise-en-scène (French: [mi.z‿ɑ̃.sɛn]; English: "placing on stage") is the stage design and arrangement of actors in scenes for a theatre or film production,[1] both in visual arts through storyboarding, visual theme, and cinematography, and in narrative storytelling through direction. The term is also commonly used to refer to single scenes that are representative of a film. Mise-en-scène has been called film criticism's "grand undefined term".