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Inception- Mise-En-Scene

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“Mise-en-scene” The scene that is going to be analyzing in this part is the scene in the second dimension of the dream. In the other word, the scene in the hotel or Arther’s dream. Mise-en-scene will covered many details in the shot for example, setting, lighting, character casts with their performance style, costume and make up, and the props that is using in the shot. This analysis will involve only the part where all of characters are in the same room, before they are going down into the deeper dream. Cobb is disguising as Mr. Charlse, the man as told as “Specialize in Subconscious Security” (Nolan), projected from Fischer’s imagination in order to protect Fischer from the dream terrorist. Cobb makes…show more content…

Mr. Charlse (Cobb) and his team should look really formal, credible and professional so they are wearing the suits adjusting with each characteristic. Cobb, Saito, and Arther are in the suit with the necktie and Eames styled in a little less formal one. Ariadne is also in the middle length skirt, woman suit top with her hair tide up and the formal, natural make up. This scene is the only scene that Ariadne has her hair up do because, according to Nolan, later on the scene, there will be the zero-gravity sequence and they wouldn’t have to think of how her hair will flow. (Nolan). All the costume and make up are designed to be as close to the reality as possible to sustain the feeling of reality even they’re in the imagination.Lastly, another important part of mise-en-scene, is the props. It this scene we can see a bed, that Fischer lays down after he sleep, chairs where Browning and Ariadne sits on, the flowing curtain and the sleeping machine. Bed and chairs are the normal elements to have in the scene placed in a room. The flowing curtain as we see is not actually the real curtain of that hotel room. This room probably has a curtain but according to the other scenes, that flowing, white curtain is the same one as the curtain in another hotel where Cobb’s wife, Mal, suicides. It is the motion of the curtain Cobb sees in the past, appears again in this scene, showing that how he loses

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