before the mise-en-scène overwhelms the narra -
tive with overripe colors, swirling movements (of
characters and camera), manic editing, and non -
naturalistic acting. The movies can create the most
imaginative spectacles, but when those spectacular
effects do not help to tell the story, viewers are left
with cinematic fireworks and little else.
The creation of a movie’s mise-en-scène is nearly
always the product of very detailed planning of each
shot in the movie. Planning a shot involves making
advance decisions about the placement of people,
objects, and elements of decor on the set; determin-
ing their movements (if any); setting up the lighting;
figuring out the camera angles from which they will
be photographed; determining the initial framing of
the shot; choreographing the movement of the cam-
178 CHAPTER 5MISE-EN-SCÈNE
1 2
Stanley Kubrick tightly controls mise-en-scène in
Eyes Wide ShutTwo types of finely controlled mise-en-
scène in Stanley Kubrick’s Eyes Wide Shut(1999): [1] In this
indirect-point-of-view shot, we see through the eyes of Dr.
William Harford (Tom Cruise, not pictured) as he is brought
before a ritualistic tribunal. Painterly framing concentrates
our attention and thus accentuates the scene’s harrowing,
hallucinatory effects. Every particular in this image——the
elaborate architecture, the beautiful masks and cloaks, the
color scheme, the staging——makes clear that Harford is
headed into the center of power within this cinematic
underworld. [2] In contrast, a scene in which Harford
searches for a costume in New York City’s Greenwich Village
seems natural, chaotic, even haphazard——but this illusion has
been constructed as carefully as every other one in the
movie. Here, the darkly clad Harford is the focal point amid
more visual information than we can absorb. We note the
urgency of his quest, not the details of the surroundings. (In
fact, Kubrick filmed the Greenwich Village scenes not in his
native New York but on sets in his adopted home, London.
That the street names and shop names do not correspond to
real ones in New York alerts sharp-eyed viewers to the sets’
artificiality.)
era during the shot (if any); and creating the sounds
that emanate from the shot. Mise-en-scène is the
result of all that planning.
To be sure, impressive aspects of a movie’s mise-
en-scène can occur by chance, without planning,
whether through an act of nature (a sudden rain-
storm, for example), an actor’s deviating from
the script, or some other accident. Although some
directors display strict control of mise-en-scène and
some don’t, they generally collaborate with their
teams to control every aspect of it. Consciously and
deliberately put there by someone, staged for the
camera, mise-en-scène happens because directors
and their creative colleagues have envisioned it.
You should find the term mise-en-scèneuseful for
explaining how all the formal elements of cinema