![]() ![]() Lipstick-and-Load Montage: A montage of a woman dressing and applying makeup.Kuleshov Effect: The actor is making the same expression, but it conveys different emotions based on the context.Interrogation Montage: Characters being interrogated or interviewed, and it cuts to a different character answering the question each time.Indestructibility Montage: A montage of someone trying, and failing, to kill a person or destroy a thing.House-Hunting Montage: A montage of a character looking for somewhere to live.Hard-Work Montage: A montage of a character working home.Happier Home Movie: A sad character watches a home movie of times they were happy.Good-Times Montage: A montage that shows a character or characters having fun.Gluttony Montage: A montage of a character eating.By the next scene, they're doing or have done exactly what they said they wouldn't. Gilligan Cut: A character insists they won't do something.Fully Automatic Clip Show: A montage focusing on a single action or phrase.Flashback-Montage Realization: A montage of previous scenes is shown as a character realises something that puts those things in a new light.Fashion-Shop Fashion Show: A woman buys many new outfits with her friend or boyfriend and poses like a model in each one (not always a montage, but usually is).Fan Edit: An unofficial edit of a work.Falling-in-Love Montage: A montage of two characters developing a romance.Failure Montage: A montage of one or more characters trying to do a specific thing, but failing.Exploding Calendar: Time is shown passing by having calendar pages flip, tear off, or days get crossed out.Drunken Montage: A montage focusing on a single, drunk character.Death Montage: A montage where a character repeatedly dies.Crime Spree Montage: A montage of someone committing crimes.Credits Montage: The credits show a montage of scenes from the show/movie.Creation Sequence: A scene of something being made (not always a montage, but usually is).Costume-Test Montage: A montage of a character trying on and rejecting different outfits.Conversation Cut: When there's a scene cut in the middle of a conversation, but the conversation continues as if no time had passed.Contrast Montage: A montage that contrasts two characters.Clip Show: A television episode consisting mainly of recycled footage from earlier episodes.Boredom Montage: A montage of a character starting off happy about something, but eventually growing bored of the monotony.Blipvert: A very fast montage, often of unrelated scenes.Blade-of-Grass Cut: A screen cut to an object.Binge Montage: A montage that shows a group of characters partying drunkenly.Avengers Assemble: The members of a hero team are signaled to come together and we see a montage of every individual member being summoned by the call and having to stop whatever they were currently doing.Atrocity Montage: A montage of people suffering horribly.A-Team Montage: A montage that shows the characters one by one building something together.Aspect Montage: Rather than show a whole scene to establish a setting, a montage of different parts of it is shown instead.Apocalyptic Montage: A montage of places being destroyed.Anger Montage: A montage that shows a very angry character smashing up a room.Not to be confused with a Motif, although a motif may crop up here if a certain type of image is repeated. If the shots are short, but one flows into the next in real time, it's not a montage, it's just a tense scene. Montage is generally considered to be the opposite of continuity editing, so discontinuity is key. Note that it takes more than a lack of dialogue and some overlaid music to be a montage. ![]() A montage (literally "putting together") is a form consisting of a series of short shots which are edited into a coherent sequence.
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