[ noun ] a paste-up made by sticking together pieces of paper or photographs to form an artistic image <noun.artifact> he used his computer to make a collage of pictures superimposed on a map
Zaillian knows when to hasten his story with montage sequences, pasting-and-scissoring whole weeks or months in speedy scrapbooks of images.
Writer-director Rod Hewitt took some chances with his abrupt montage, but it works: Months pass between some scenes, minutes and seconds between others.
He changed the way teen-agers thought about America." The cortege was followed by a montage of Presley and other rock 'n' roll stars for whom he paved the way.
The documentary is more a montage of beguiling images than of explanatory narration.
It depicts the horrified face of a soldier, surrounded by a dark, swirling montage of images that Nisbet termed a "collage of horrible memories." Many of the artists' works invoke feelings of helplessness and anxiety.
Tyler intended the flag to be spread on the floor beneath a framed, black-and-white montage featuring flag-draped coffins and Third World anti-American protest, and the shelf containing the ledgers.
It also includes a montage of previous July 4th reports he has done in his "On the Road" work for the "CBS Evening News." I'M COMING, NELL!
The work features a montage of photographs depicting flag-draped coffins and South Koreans burning the American flag, plus a book that invites viewer comments.
Meanwhile, HBO has already put out "Mike Tyson's Greatest Hits," an hour-long montage of the heavyweight boxer's best fights, including his World Boxing Congress, World Boxing Association and International Boxing Federation championship triumphs.
But there is another image of the cities: a montage of homeless people sleeping on heating grates, of crime victims bleeding in ambulances, of poverty and drugs and fear and hopelessness.
The opening credits show a montage of home video shots of the family.