Sceneception
English
Pronunciation
- scene-SEP-shun
- IPA: /siːnˈsɛpʃən/
Part of speech
Noun
Related forms
- sceneceptive — adjective
- scenecepted — adjective or past-tense verb
- scenecepting — present participle
Definition variants
- Formal-styled definition
- A nested or recursive scene structure in which one scene contains, rehearses, auditions, simulates, pitches, or imagines another scene.
- Plain-language definition
- A scene inside a scene.
- Media-specific definition
- In film or television, Sceneception refers to a self-referential scene-within-a-scene, especially one where characters are acting, auditioning, rehearsing, or pretending to act inside the larger scene.
- Theatrical comparison
- A play-within-a-play is the classic theatrical cousin of Sceneception: one staged performance nested inside another. Sceneception, however, usually has a stronger film-and-video flavor and implies extra absurdity, self-reference, or layered performance.
- Slang definition
- A slang noun for the moment when a scene becomes so recursive, audition-like, or self-referential that it feels as if the scene is trying to perform its way into another scene.
Usage
The term is used when a movie, play, show, sketch, roleplay, dream sequence, rehearsal, or pitch collapses into scene-within-scene nonsense.
Examples of Sceneception
From the 1980 French comedy film The Umbrella Coup (French: Le Coup du parapluie) Grégoire Lecomte is an unsuccessful actor going to a casting because he wants to play a hitman in a comedy film. Through a wrong-room mix-up, he walks into a real mafia meeting instead of the audition. He thinks Don Barberini is a film producer and treats the meeting like part of the casting process; the mobsters, meanwhile, think Grégoire is an actual assassin.
Etymology
A blend of scene and the meme-like suffix -ception, inspired by the nested-dream logic associated with Inception.
The word suggests not merely recursion, but theatrical recursion: performance folded inside performance until the audience begins to suspect that the entire room may be part of the bit.
MorDictionary note
Not every scene-within-a-scene is Sceneception.
A normal play-within-a-play is only dramatic nesting. Sceneception requires a stronger sense of layered performance: a scene rehearsing, auditioning for, pitching, simulating, or accidentally spawning another scene.
Mini taxonomy
- Low Sceneception
- A rehearsal scene inside a movie.
- Moderate Sceneception
- A rehearsal scene where the characters act out a future scene.
- Severe Sceneception
- A scene inside a scene auditioning for a fictional production of a scene that mirrors the original scene.
- Terminal Sceneception
- The audience realizes they, too, may somehow be part of the scene.
Related terms
- metascene
- scenematryoshka
- dramatic recursion
- theater gremlin behavior
- narrative nesting-doll syndrome