Non-diegetic insert
In film, diegesis refers to the story world, and the events that occur within it. Thus, non-diegesis are things which occur outside the story-world.
A non-diegetic insert is a film technique that combines a shot or a series of shots cut into a sequence, showing objects represented as being outside the space of the narrative. Put more simply, a non-diegetic insert is a scene that is outside the story world which is "inserted" into the story world. Diegetic could also refer to sound in media or film studies.
Examples
- Three images shown during the disastrous opening night of the play in The Band Wagon, as a metaphor to highlight how much of a flop the show is.
- Sky sequences shown in Gus Van Sant's Elephant.
- Most famously in The Great Train Robbery a bandit, either following the character's death or before the narrative began, shot his gun directly at the audience.
- Starting scene of Charlie Chaplin's film Modern Times.
gollark: I just noticed that the xenowyrm thuwed thingy *also* has `PHI` in its code - it's a Greek letter.
gollark: Kindofcoded 4G silver tinsel arrow:https://dragcave.net/teleport/dc3e993835536614b89a562c3ebcc96d
gollark: 7G/6G (broken generation count) xenowyrm thuwed:https://dragcave.net/teleport/4633e8fc15090a2ac91f662256bb83b0
gollark: Oh, I actually got it, thanks!
gollark: ↑
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