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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
set piece
noun
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ The State of the Union address is one of the great set pieces of American public life.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ Eleven minutes later Andrew McBride saw his set piece effort deflected past the post by a defender's stick.
▪ The Laurel and Hardy set piece was the ordinary situation from which sprang a coiling spiral of disaster.
▪ We might think, in retrospect, that it was a set piece of rather obvious connivance.
Wiktionary
set piece

n. 1 a piece of freestanding stage scenery 2 any carefully planned sequence of operations, especially as part of a military operation 3 an elaborate action scene in a movie or video game 4 (context football English) any planned strategy that a team uses after play is restarted with a free kick, penalty kick, corner kick, goal kick, throw-in or kickoff.

WordNet
set piece

n. a piece of scenery intended to stand alone as part of the stage setting

Wikipedia
Set piece (disambiguation)

Set piece may refer to:

  • Set piece (film production), an elaborate sequence which sees a chase, fight, or other action taking place in an original and memorable way
  • Set piece (football), when a dead ball re-enters open play, such as at a free kick or corner kick
  • Set Piece (Doctor Who), a novel based on the science fiction television series Doctor Who
  • A piece of theatrical scenery
Set piece (filmmaking)

In film production, a set piece is a scene or sequence of scenes whose execution requires serious logistical planning and considerable expenditure of money. The term set piece is often used more broadly to describe any important dramatic or comedic highpoint in a film or story, particularly those that provide some kind of dramatic payoff, resolution, or transition. Thus the term is often used to describe any scenes that are so essential to a film that they cannot be edited out or skipped in the shooting schedule without seriously damaging the integrity of the finished product. Often, screenplays are written around a list of such set pieces, particularly in high-budget " event movies".

Set pieces are very often planned meticulously using storyboards, screentests, and rehearsals, in contrast to smaller scenes where the director and actors may be more improvisational. Each action requires the combined efforts of different departments: set builders, physical effects, and special visual effects. On most films, different groups of people will work on different set pieces individually since they can take a long time to prepare before shooting. For example, the car chase in The Matrix Reloaded took months to prepare and cost $30 million, including $5 million to build the freeway set.

Set piece (football)

The term set piece or set play is used in association football and rugby football to refer to a situation when the ball is returned to open play, for example following a stoppage, particularly in a forward area of the pitch. In the case of association football the term is usually used to refer to free kicks and corners, but sometimes throw-ins. Many goals result from such positions, whether scored directly or indirectly. Thus defending set pieces is an important skill for defenders, and attacking players spend much time practicing them; set pieces are one area where tactics and routines can be worked out in training in advance of matches. Some players specialize in set pieces.

Set Piece (novel)

Set Piece is an original novel written by Kate Orman and based on the long-running British science fiction television series Doctor Who. It features the Seventh Doctor, Ace, Bernice and Kadiatu Lethbridge-Stewart. It is the last New Adventure to feature Ace as a regular character, although she appeared sporadically throughout the rest of the series. A prelude to the novel, also penned by Orman, appeared in Doctor Who Magazine #222.

Usage examples of "set piece".

The boat was a prop, a set piece, like the Bavarian cottage glued to the plaster alp in some amusement park a nice touch, but one that wasn’.

The boat was a prop, a set piece, like the Bavarian cottage glued to the plaster alp in some amusement park a nice touch, but one that wasn't quite necessary.

He could sit here on this porch a thousand years, Rand told himself, and the old man would continue going past and each time the selfsame words would be mouthed - a set piece, a strip of film run over and over again.