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REVERSE CHRONOLOGY

'Reverse chronology' is a method of story-telling whereby the plot is revealed in reverse order.
In a story employing this technique, the first scene shown is actually the conclusion to the plot. Once that scene ends, the penultimate scene is shown, and so on, so that the final scene the viewer sees is the first chronologically.
Many stories employ flashback, showing prior events, but whereas the scene order of most conventional films is A-B-C-etc, a film in reverse chronology goes Z-Y-X-etc.
As a hypothetical example, if the fairy tale ''Jack and the Beanstalk'' were told using reverse chronology, the opening scene would depict Jack chopping the beanstalk down and killing the giant. The next scene would feature Jack being discovered by the giant and climbing down the beanstalk in fear of his life. Later, we would see Jack running into the man with the infamous magic beans, then, at the end of the film, being sent off by his mother to sell the cow.

Contents
Examples of use
Theater
Cinema
Television
Literature
Music
Purpose
See also

Examples of use


Theater

A number of plays have employed this technique. George S. Kaufman and Moss Hart's 1934 play, ''Merrily We Roll Along'', is told in reverse order, as is the Harold Pinter play ''Betrayal'' (1978).
Cinema

Pinter's play Betrayal was made into a film in 1983; this was perhaps the first filmed example of reverse chronology. It was later employed in two movies in 2000, ''Memento'' (which uses a combination of reverse and forward chronology) and ''Peppermint Candy'' (''Bakha Satang''), and in ''Irréversible'' (2002), to such an extent that the end credits are not only shown at the beginning of the movie, but they crawl ''down'' the screen, rather than upwards as is familiar. The 2004 film ''5x2'', directed by François Ozon, tells the story of a relationship between two people in five episodes using reverse chronology.[1]
''Pulp Fiction'' (1994) does not use reverse chronology, but the three separate storylines overlap significantly, so that the third segment features a character who was killed during the second segment. Similarly, in ''Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind'' (2004), a main substory is told in reverse.
''Coup de Sang'', a French film, uses limited reverse chronology. The film begins with the revelation that the main character will commit a murder one week from the next scene, although it is not revealed who will be killed or why.
Television

A 1997 ''Seinfeld'' episode, "The Betrayal", employs the technique, as does the 2002 ''ER'' episode, "Hindsight".
Literature

Martin Amis's novel "Time's Arrow" (1991) tells the story of a Nazi war criminal in reverse chronology, starting with his death and ending with his birth. Amis has suggested that he adapted the idea from Kurt Vonnegut's ''Slaughterhouse Five'' (1969), where the main character recounts events from his life in a seemingly random order.
Iain Banks's novel ''Use of Weapons'' interweaves two parallel stories, one told in standard chronology and one in reverse.
Music

The lyrics to "All Along the Watchtower", written by Bob Dylan, are, he says, "in a rather reverse order"; indeed, the final verse begins with the words "All along the watchtower", and if reversed, the verses would tell the story in the correct order.
The song "One Thing Leads to Another" by the Pet Shop Boys (on a limited release of their 1993 album ''Very'') describes the events leading up to a man's death in reverse order.

Purpose


The unusual nature of this method means it is only used in stories of a specific nature. For example, ''Memento'' features a man with anterograde amnesia, meaning he is unable to form new memories. However, this is paralled by the audience's ignorance of previous events - the reverse chronology is intended to give the viewer the same claustrophobic perspective as the protagonist.
In ''Irréversible'', an act of homicidal violence takes place at the start of the movie (i.e. it is the final event to take place). During the remainder of the film we learn not only that the violence is an act of vengeance, but what exactly is being avenged. The film was highly controversial for its graphic nature; had the scenes been shown in chronological order, this violent content would make it a simple, and pointlessly brutal, revenge movie. However, as it is, told in reverse, the audience is made to consider the exact consequences of each action, and there is often 'more than meets the eye'.

See also



In medias res

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