Moulin Rouge (2001) Directed by Baz Luhrmann
Detail how setting is used in creating meaning and understanding in a film.A very important scene in the film is when Christian and Satine (played by Nicole Kidman) first met. Their meeting location is inside a large, highly ornamented elephant located just outside of the Moulin Rouge. The fact that the location is so extraordinary displays the crazed ideas of the people in those situations. The elephant is also a large animal, this could show how the Moulin Rouge are trying to boost their status within the world at the time, however it's later apparent that they're just as deprived as every other person. The elephant also has a big, heart-shaped opening at the front, displaying how their love is very open and public, which is late contrasted by the factor that they have to hide it. As the couple duet together, it switches to a scene above Paris, where they both dance together in the clouds, showing how their love for each other makes them feel on top of the world. It could also say that by them being in the clouds, the plaintive scenes of Paris and behind them, which is only the case when they're together.
As the show 'Spectacular Spectacular' in which Christian is writing and Satine is staring in begins, it's clear that each event within the play, also takes place within the film. In the play, the courtesan. played by Satine, has to convince her lover that she doesn't love him, Which is exactly what Satine does in the reality as she's told repeated by Harold Ziddler that she had to be with the Duke, for the sake of his money, which is a massive contrast to the Bohemian belief of "Freedom, Beauty, Truth and Love" which is repeated throughout the film. After being left, Christian decides to visit the Moulin Rouge one last time. This is when we see a scene of a dark, ruined street, but in the center is the Moulin Rouge, lavished with red and appears as the light at the end of the tunnel - however, that is the main contradiction. The Moulin Rouge advises itself to be the home of the Bohemian revolution and it's belief in love, but was easily persuaded by the Duke's money. This is when the hypocrisy of the building and it's belief becomes the most apparent, and how the entire building is merely a cloak, a lie and a red curtain to the truth; The Moulin Rouge is just as derelict and desperate as every other building in Paris. It's also depicted as if it's the light at the end of the tunnel, however it's also the very thing that causes Christian's emotional pain the viewer witnessed in the opening scenes, and currently seen in the fact that he's stood in the darkness.
