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Tapping the Fourth Wall

Examples of actors looking right in the lens for dramatic effect but not breaking the fourth wall.


Rules are made to be broken. The first thing you learn in an "acting for film" class is this: Don't Look In The Lens! Why? Because it breaks the fourth wall. Does what? It shatters the illusion that we are safely observing recorded events. By looking directly at the lens, you are looking directly at the audience and this always (ALWAYS!) has a shocking effect.

Most of the time this is done in a winking, post-modern way, to acknowledge the fact that we are just watching a movie. For eerie effect think Funny Games. More common, though, is comedy. Think Ferris Bueller (although Groucho Marx did it way before he did.) My all time favorite double-take to the lens was done by Eddie Murphy in Trading Places. The old men Mortimer and Winthrop are trying to explain commodities trading and they show him examples of the products they work with, such as "bacon - like you might find on a bacon, lettuce and tomato sandwich." Murphy is dumbstruck that these two guys are talking to him as though he is a moron, but there's no one he can turn to. No one but us. Observe:

So that's the most common use of a glance to the camera. The other, even more common, is simply "when you are seeing something from someone's point of view."

In Full Metal Jacket, Sgt. Hartman slugs Pvt. Joker in the stomach, sticks a finger in his face and this is what we see.

But what about more innovative and bizarre uses of actors looking directly in the lens. Not breaking the fourth wall, but perhaps just tapping it? Some of these examples may seem like it is just POV like the Full Metal Jacket image above, but there are other kooky things going on. Let's take a look.

Taxi Driver - Parting Shots
Taxi Driver - Parting Shots

Taxi Driver - Parting Shots

After the bloody mayhem at the end of Taxi Driver, deranged sociopath Travis Bickle is named a vigilante hero. But we know what he really is. And after he drops Betsy off at her apartment, and the jazzy saxophone begins to swell, Bickle catches something out of the corner of his eye. We do too, in the rearview mirror: it is Bickle, looking back at us!

A sharp crescendo of cymbals (or is it rewinding tape?) interrupts the soundtrack. Cut back to Travis in the driver's seat. His hand raises toward the mirror. Cut back to the mirror and this time there is no mistaking it - Travis Bickle is looking (in)directly at the lens. There is another "cut" but one with no editing. Bickle adjusts the mirror. We see the city streets. The audio cue ends and the credits role.

So what's happening here? Travis Bickle is breaking his own fourth wall. By seeing his own eyes in the mirror (angled, perfectly, for our eyes with the camera lens) Bickle is confronted with his own true self. Eegads, can't have that, so he swiftly turns it away. He does it by changing the mirror - but the camera stays in the same place. We're still seeing from Travis' point of view - and that point of view no longer contains anything as disturbing as an actor looking directly in the camera lens.

See More: A Christmas Story | A Clockwork Orange | Blade Runner | Brainstorm | Brazil | Evil Dead | Pee Wee's Big Adventure | Philadelphia | Rear Window | Rushmore | Taxi Driver | The Shining