Dictionary Definition
misdirection
Noun
1 an incorrect charge to a jury given by a
judge
2 incorrect directions or instructions
3 management that is careless or inefficient; "he
accomplished little due to the mismanagement of his energies" [syn:
mismanagement]
4 the act of distracting; drawing someone's
attention away from something; "conjurers are experts at
misdirection" [syn: distraction]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
- An act of misleading, of convincing
someone to concentrate in an incorrect direction.
- The magician used misdirection to get us to watch his left hand while he did something with his right hand.
Extensive Definition
Misdirection is a form of deception in which the
attention of an audience is focused on one thing in order to
distract its attention from another.
Misdirection in magic
The study of close-up magic is a wonderful introduction to misdirection. However, without giving away any magic secrets, the limits of the human mind can be used to give the wrong picture and memory. The mind can concentrate on only one thing at a time. The magician uses this, and the "victim's" idea of how the world is supposed to be, against him. Some of the results are startling. A coin seemingly dissolves in the air, and yet it was never there. The face of a card that was not seen is seen. Things can be torn that are not torn.An example of misdirection in magic might be as
simple as a magician rolling up his sleeves and saying "nothing up
my sleeve" and then "magically" producing an object that in no
conceivable way could have been "up his sleeve". The audience
instinctively
scrutinizes the magician's arms but ignores the location where the
object-to-be-magically-produced is hidden.
Attention can be controlled in various ways as
well. For example, a magician will first grab attention with a
coin, or other small, shiny object-shine makes the affect more
stunning, as a shiny object captures more attention and seems more
unlikely to disappear or be manipulated- and then briefly, often
imperceptibly, direct attention away from the object (hence,
"misdirection") through a combination often including comedy,
sleight of hand, or an unimportant object of focus to provide just
enough time for the magician to do whatever he wishes with the
original object, whether it vanishes, transforms, or
teleports.
One of the most important things to remember when
thinking about misdirection and magic is this; A larger movement
conceals a smaller movement.
Misdirection is often combined with illusion or
disguise to produce another affect, and misdirection is not just
used by magicians. In such a way, a group of Jeeps with plywood
coverings painted to resemble tanks may misdirect an enemy
general into ignoring a fleet of trucks (which are actually tank
transports disguised as grocery trucks, etc.) and closely
scrutinizing the movement and activity of the fake tanks. The real
tanks, suddenly disembarked on his flank, may be remembered by the
general as appearing "out of thin air" as if by magic. Among the
very few magicians who have researched and evolved misdirection
techniques are: John
Ramsay, Tommy
Wonder, Juan
Tamariz, Tom
Stone, Tony Slydini
and Dai
Vernon.
Misdirection in literature
Misdirection is also a literary
device most commonly employed in detective
fiction, where the attention of the reader is deliberately
focused on a
red herring in order to conceal the identity of the murderer.
The means for this form of misdirection may include false clues,
false motives or more purely literary methods such as exposition, dialogue, and interior
monologue. In a whodunit, misdirection can take
place on two separate levels: within the narrative the criminal may
attempt to implicate a third party in order to elude the detective;
or the author may implicate an innocent party in order to distract
the reader. If the watch on a victim's wrist has apparently stopped
at 3:00 p.m., this may be because the killer has broken the watch
and reset it in order to create a false time of death, but it may
equally be the writer's intention to plant that false suspicion in
the reader's mind.
For example, in their novel Dance
of Death, Douglas
Preston and Lincoln
Child use misdirection to suggest several possible causes for
the falling of lumber and the occurrence of loud snapping sounds
that Margo Green hears as she walks through museum exhibits in the
wee hours of the morning. First she thinks that the sounds are made
by boards that have chanced to fall over after construction crew
workers have left them precariously balanced upon quitting the work
of the day. Next, she supposes that the sounds are made by a night
guard tripping over a loose board. Then, she wonders whether the
sounds are made by someone playing a practical joke on her. None of
these possibilities turns out to be the actual cause of the
sounds.
Misdirection in TV and film
Many of the techniques for misdirection are
directly adopted from magic and literature. Joss Whedon
and the writers of the television show
Buffy the Vampire Slayer use misdirection by making viewers
think that the season's villain is one character (the "little bad")
when, in fact, the antagonist turns out to be another, more
dangerous, character, the "big bad". Movies also employ
misdirection, as when, for example, in The
Exorcist, the welts that rise upon the possessed girl's
stomach, like other physical reactions, are blamed on physiological
conditions; in reality, it turns out that they are the effects of
the girl's demonic
possession.
Nevertheless, visual media have their own means
of drawing a viewer's attention away from the real meaning of the
events that are being seen. In both
The Silence of the Lambs and Speed an
exterior scene (the arrival of police at a building supposed to
contain the murderer) is edited in sequence with an interior scene
(the murderer going about his business); due to the conventions of
film editing the viewer assumes that these two environments are
contiguous, but in fact they are not. Other medium-specific
examples of misdirection would include the shock effects customarly
used during suspense
sequences. For example, there is a cliché in horror films
that if the potential victim of the monster is fearfully exploring
the environment, apprehensive of attack, something noisy and sudden
will occur such as a cat jumping out at them hissing or screaming.
This misdirected shock dissipates the immediate feeling of suspense
and prepares the audience for the actual shock of the attack.
Another form of misdirection in the visual media
is used for comic effect, when something accepted by the audience
as a convention of the medium is in reality the basis for a joke.
During the first scene of
The League of Gentlemen's Apocalypse a character urgently hunts
through his house to a building musical soundtrack; this proves to
be a diegetic noise,
the ringtone of the mobile phone for which he is looking. A common
visual equivalent would be the sudden revelation that the blank
band letterboxing used for showing films on 4:3 ratio television
screens is actually physically present in the environment of the
set.
Some movies like Swordfish
and The
Firm are about misdirection. In Swordfish, Gabriel, the main
movie character in a scene explains misdirection as What the eyes
see and the ears hear, the mind believes. The super-spy Ethan Hunt in
Mission:
Impossible favors misdirection over confrontation. The same
applies to some popular comic book characters, such as Batman. In a scene
from the movie Batman
Begins, Bruce Wayne
(Batman) says that theatricality and deception are powerful
weapons he can use to defeat his enemies.
External links
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
bad policy, bum steer, college of Laputa,
corruption, false
coloring, impolicy,
inexpedience,
inexpediency,
maladministration,
malfeasance,
malpractice,
misadministration,
misconduct, misconstruction,
misfeasance,
misgovernment,
misguidance,
mishandling,
misinformation,
misinstruction,
misinterpretation,
misknowledge,
misleading, mismanagement, misrepresentation,
misrule, misteaching, misuse, mystification, neglect, negligence, nonfeasance, obfuscation, obscurantism, obscuration, omission, perversion, slanting, sophistry, straining, torturing, wrongdoing