"There is mise en scène as the global history - still to be fully, comprehensible written - of how film-makers made their films, what structures and effects of style they created in their work; this could be called a history of forms in cinema. Then there is mise en scène as the history (again, global) of what critics, theorists and commentators have said, written and thought in their quest to define and use tools to understand the films they see, study, analyse and transmit to others." (Martin 2014: xviii)
The term comes from the theatre and it is not obvious that
it should be something to argue about since it would seem to refer to whatever
is within the frame (including the angle of the frame), and nothing else. So
the actors, lighting, set, décor, depth of field and so on. But since it is a
theatre term there is friction when applied to the cinema. Two obvious things
is that 1) you have editing in films but not in the theatre and 2) in the
theatre the stage is fixed and space is restricted whereas in film space is
limitless, and the camera can move. When what is in the frame is constantly
changing, the camera moving from one location to another, what becomes of mise
en scène? When a film is shot outdoors is it still relevant to use the
term? Is it Manhattan which is the mise en scène in the
opening sequence of Woody Allen's Manhattan (1979)? Some argue
that it is. In The Film Experience: An Introduction, Patricia White
and Timothy Corrigan talks about the desert in Lawrence of Arabia (David
Lean 1962) as mise en scène. They also argue that
"architecture of a town might be described as a public mise-en-scène"
(2012: 64), but now we are getting to the point where everything is mise en scène...
In Film Art: An Introduction, Kristin Thompson and David Bordwell provide four elements of mise en scène, setting, costumes and make-up, lighting and staging, and among their many examples they use a scene from Ford's She Wore a Yellow Ribbon (1949) as an example, a lightning storm over the prairie. Likewise, in "Afterword: the Auteur Theory Revisited" (to be found in later editions of The American Cinema: Directors and Directions 1929-1968), Andrew Sarris defines mise en scène as "all the means available to a director to express his attitude towards his subject. This takes in cutting, camera movement, pacing, the direction of players and their placement in the decor, the angle and distance of the camera, an even the content of a shot". But I find all this unsatisfying, and too broad. If mise en scène is simply what is seen in a film, what distinguish it from cinematography? Jacques Rivette had another answer. “Here's a good definition of mise en scène - it's what's lacking in the films of Joseph L. Mankiewicz.” (Incidentally, I think Laura Mulvey claimed that melodrama was “the genre of mise en scène”.)
In Film Art: An Introduction, Kristin Thompson and David Bordwell provide four elements of mise en scène, setting, costumes and make-up, lighting and staging, and among their many examples they use a scene from Ford's She Wore a Yellow Ribbon (1949) as an example, a lightning storm over the prairie. Likewise, in "Afterword: the Auteur Theory Revisited" (to be found in later editions of The American Cinema: Directors and Directions 1929-1968), Andrew Sarris defines mise en scène as "all the means available to a director to express his attitude towards his subject. This takes in cutting, camera movement, pacing, the direction of players and their placement in the decor, the angle and distance of the camera, an even the content of a shot". But I find all this unsatisfying, and too broad. If mise en scène is simply what is seen in a film, what distinguish it from cinematography? Jacques Rivette had another answer. “Here's a good definition of mise en scène - it's what's lacking in the films of Joseph L. Mankiewicz.” (Incidentally, I think Laura Mulvey claimed that melodrama was “the genre of mise en scène”.)
If mise en scène is to be used I feel it
should be used to refer to something more specific; something deliberately,
artificially created, staged, for the purpose of the shooting of a scene, to
return the term to its theatrical roots. But I would also include sound and colour
grading as being part of it. What is required is unity, coherence and spatial
awareness (space being integrated in the scene, with the actors and their
movements). Some seem to connect it especially with "classical
cinema", and some conflate it with long takes and elaborate camera
movements, but I see no reason to do that. Editing can be a part of it when it
is done within the context of the specific scene, such as from a medium shot to
a close-up, or from a high angle shot to a low angle shot. But a tracking shot
through a real city street would not count as mise en scène whereas
this shot from Henry Hathaway's Niagara (1953) would.
But outdoor tracking shots are not excluded wholesale of course. In Weekend (1967), Jean-Luc Godard does a very long tracking shot alongside a country road which is filled with cars, people, animals and various activities and set-pieces, staged by Godard for the film, and that might very well be regarded as a striking example of mise en scène. Instead of forcing the term into the straitjacket of a definition, I will leave it somewhat open, but I still want it to refer to something specific, the coherent, spatially aware scene I mentioned above. Its occurrences are all around us, in films, in video games, in art installations, in paintings. Diego Velázquez's Las Meninas, from 1656, is an excellent example.
In films the term is for me especially connected to F.W. Murnau,
Henry King and Douglas Sirk, because their mise en scène is frequently
so striking, meticulous, sometimes overwhelming, and complete (or integrated),
it is where they put the most emphasise and tenderly cared for. But this is
more of a personal hang-up; there is no objective reason for emphasising those
three and not, say, David Lean, Rainer Werner Fassbinder, Akira Kurosawa, Wong
Kar-Wai, or Carol Reed, among many others. Unlike Rivette in his comment quoted
above, for me mise en scène is not related to quality, it is a
neutral element of a film, and it might be good or bad. Whereas somebody like
V.F. Perkins prefers unity and coherence and compare it unfavourably to
fragmentation and disparity, I do not favour one over the other. It is not a
contest but different ways of filmmaking, and to each his own.
Chinese Roulette (Fassbinder 1976)
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For those who want to read more about Adrian Martin's thoughts on mise en scène but have neither the time nor the money to invest in his book, try this piece. In his book he also suggests that should we want "a decent English translation for mise en scène, staging is not bad". (2014: 15) Yet he seems to think that there is a lot more to it than that.
Jeanne Dielman 23, Quai du Commerce, 1080 Bruxelles (Chantal Akerman 1975)