Blade of Grass Cut



This screenwriting technique is seen a lot in "realist" films of the seventies and eighties, with a kind of rebirth in the nineties. It involves cutting to a still object. It might be a stalk of grass, a branch with dew, or a child's toy. Sometimes the trope involves fading in and out of focus, as was done a lot in the 70s, or holding steady, sharp focus. It might be a close up of a Christmas ornament while the drunken parents are arguing, perhaps showing how the child finds it too painful to look at directly, and instead fixates on something steady and reliable. The whole scene of a dinner might focus on a bowl of soup rather than the person eating it.

This trope more often than not has a melancholy or painful tone to it. It often feels emotionally detached or wistful. Effects are often achieved through shifting Depth of Field.

The technical term for this in cinema is Associational Montage, or Intellectual Montage. The Grammar of Film & Television writes:

"The juxtaposition of short shots to represent action or ideas; Intellectual montage is used to consciously convey subjective messages through the juxtaposition of shots which are related in composition or movement, through repetition of images, through cutting rhythm, detail or metaphor. Montage editing, unlike invisible editing, uses conspicuous techniques which may include: use of close- ups, relatively frequent cuts, dissolves, superimposition, fades and jump cuts. Such editing should suggest a particular meaning."

What it is not: Shots of an object with major significance to the subject (the Ring in The Lord of the Rings, the Coffee and the Cigarettes in Coffee And Cigarettes, Rosebud...)

See also Motif for use of objects as a motif, usually a recurring motif.

This is a specific type of Montage. Related to Aspect Montage, among others.

Comic Books

 * Watchmen combines this with Motif, cutting in between panels to random symbolic objects (including a snowglobe and a rose, see below) flying in stop motion to symbolize the character's thoughts, immutability of time and stuff.

Film

 * The Lion King: as Simba climbs Pride Rock to take his rightful place as king, there is a brief shot of a wildebeest skull being washed away in the rain, as if to indicate that the land is being cleansed of the excesses of Scar's regime.
 * Many of the shots during musical sequences of Easy Rider.
 * A classic, almost definitive example can be found here.
 * Visible in Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid in a fade in/out of a tree branch with dew, set to "Raindrops Keep Falling On My Head".
 * The Thin Red Line. Body blows up—cut to blade of grass. Man slowly dying—cut to birds preening in the trees. Narrator asks "why is nature at war with itself?"—cut to a crocodile swimming.
 * This may include the film La Jetee, which is made up of all still shots with one motion shot.
 * Seen in most Dogme 95 films, such as The Idiots.
 * Used to particularly creepy effect in Eraserhead by David Lynch.
 * Many examples are silent or musical, many have dialogue, often painful dialogue, going over. High Hopes by Mike Leigh has quite a few "overlong" shots of doors, an elderly lady's dentures, a series of shots of gravestones, often used to reflect a malaise of the characters.
 * Many shots in Dancer in the Dark are examples of this.
 * Rosebud does not apply in Citizen Kane, but the snowglobe possibly does. In fact, snowglobes in general.
 * Karina Hill writes about Eisenstein: "His associational montages use dialectic elements to activate audience emotions. Generally, his associational montages are used to sadden or disgust the audience. Intellectual montage is the colliding of two unrelated shots in order to arrive at an understanding of an abstract concept or message. The Soviet system within which he worked emphasized the social utility of film and he believed that film could be used to reeducate the public. Therefore, Eisenstein used montages to incite physiological, emotional, and intellectual responses in spectators, with the ultimate goal of motivating them to take action."
 * To illustrate, here are some examples from Battleship Potemkin: A shot of an officer tapping the hilt of his sword is followed by a shot of a priest tapping his crucifix, to imply the connection between the Church and the oppressive tsarist government; an officer is dumped overboard and a shot of the water churning after he falls is compared to an earlier close-up of the maggot-ridden meat that let to the revolt; and the famous three successive shots of lion statues in progressive stages of standing up, symbolizing the people standing up against oppression.
 * During David's first transformation in An American Werewolf in London, the film cuts to a smiling Mickey Mouse figurine, then cuts right back to David completing the transformation.
 * In Taxi Driver, there is a scene where Travis is at a table with some cabbie colleagues, and while the conversation is going on around him, the camera cuts to a slow push into his glass of water with alka-seltzer in it. It's a great way to illustrate his increasing social and emotional isolation.
 * As Barton Fink slowly loses it in his Hell Hotel, we get a lot of these showing details of his room. One long, slow zoom right before a particularly nasty scene takes us into the bathroom, up to the sink, and down the drain.
 * In the Alfonso Cuaron version of A Little Princess, Sara and the camera briefly focus on a balloon when Miss Minchin tells her what happened to her father.

Literature
"So much depends upon a red wheel barrow glazed with rain water beside the white chickens."
 * In the second Sister Hood of the Traveling Pants book, Tibby is taking a college film course for the summer and makes her project a bitter portrait of her mother, tricking her by only asking to interview her when she's busy, so that all the shots she gets are of her mother looking harried and telling her she can't talk right now. The Jerkass-but-talented kid she's trying to befriend at the college suggests that she add in shots like a patch of dead grass in the yard so that it doesn't "get predictable."
 * William Carlos Williams' poem "Red Wheelbarrow":

Live-Action TV

 * The Biggest Loser often does scenery cutaways as transitions, but in Season 9, episode 17, there was a bizarre close-up of a single wild rose, wet with dew, sandwiched between two of the scenery shots. The rose had nothing to do with anything.