C. Bruised Petals because they want for that will pop not look dead
In shaping a movie’s mise-en-scene, filmmakers determine two aspects of (a) composition(b) Framing (what we (c) see on the screen) and (d) Kinesis (what (e) Moves on the screen).
The phrase "mise en scène" (literally, "the activity of putting onto the stage") is French. The phrase was first used in stage play, where it described the placement of performers and set pieces; when its use spread to other storytelling arts, however, its meaning changed.
Design and composition are the two main visual elements of mise-en-scène: Design is the technique used to choose how the locations, accessories, lighting, and performers will appear. The overall design is influenced by the stage design, décor, prop choice, lighting setup, costume, make-up, and haircut choices.
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I believe it would be a xylophone.
Hope I helped!
Answer:
Dim the lights, not too much, just noticeably dimmed. Have sheets waving slowly to imitate wind and the have stage-hands run their hands left to right (audience perspective) across the screen behind the stage, but out of the view of the audience and actors. Depending on the scene, use dark gray or silver ribbons being blown the same direction as the stage hands behind the screen. Slow showers of light glitter from a catwalk with work as well, but it could effect the actors.