Mise-en-scène is a French word used to express the blueprint features of a theatre or film making, which fundamentally means telling a story, both in visually crafty ways through storyboarding, camera work and stage design, and in poetically subtle ways through direction. Mise-en-scène can refer to everything that comes into sight before the camera and its arrangement when applied to the cinema, and includes work of art, sets, props, actors, costumes, and lighting. The placing and movement of performers on the set is also a part of Mise-en-scène (Kristin, 2003).
Analysis the mise-en-scène
The clip as the mise-en-scène is the “They are flocking this way” from the movie “Jurassic Park” park. This is the scene in which the dinosaurs are trying to avoid the T-Rex and are running in a herd across the place when the main character is standing. The scene is a vast open frame utilizing deep space when significant fundamentals of an image are both near to and distant from the camera. In this case, the actors were closer to the camera, while the dinosaurs were in the back at a distance.
Artists involved in the film
The film is a master piece of work credited to the genius director Steven Spielberg with Kathleen Kennedy, Gerald R. Molen and Steven Spielberg as the producers. The re-known actors in the movie are David Koepp and Michael Crichton who are acclaimed stars, while Sam Neill, Laura Dern, Jeff Goldblum, Richard Attenborough, Bob Peck, Martin Ferrero, B.D. Wong, Samuel L. Jackson, Wayne Knight, Joseph Mazzello, and Ariana Richards did the additional screen play. The person behind the edition of the acclaimed movie was Michael Kahn, while John Williams was responsible for the music and Dean Cundey for Cinematography.