Inverted Portrait: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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[[File:shikabanehime-invertedportrait_1058.jpg|link=Shikabane Hime|right|Do you think she's getting a headache?]]
[[File:shikabanehime-invertedportrait_1058.jpg|link=Shikabane Hime|frame|Do you think she's getting a headache?]]


This is when a character's full-body portrait is shown, as commonly seen in [[Title Sequence|Title Sequences]], only they're upside-down. May also appear in other parts of a work as well.
This is when a character's full-body portrait is shown, as commonly seen in [[Title Sequence|Title Sequences]], only they're upside-down. May also appear in other parts of a work as well.

Revision as of 16:54, 16 December 2013

Do you think she's getting a headache?

This is when a character's full-body portrait is shown, as commonly seen in Title Sequences, only they're upside-down. May also appear in other parts of a work as well.

Used for artistic effect or perhaps to symbolize something about the character, such as being in pain in strange ways, or in deep thought. Whether the character is really upside-down, or is lying on his or her back (or floating) and is merely seen from a perspective that puts their head down, is not necessarily clear.

Note that this only applies when the character is seen in a stylized portrait. Although it could appear anywhere within a work, if the character is literally floating upside-down within the story, it is not an example of this.

Examples


Anime

Other media

  • The cover art for the musical Funny Girl.
  • Battler in the Umineko Motion Graphic 6 has a couple of seconds where he's shown upside down, flashing through a sea of memories.