The Deus ex machina reference article from the English Wikipedia on 24-Apr-2004
(provided by Fixed Reference: snapshots of Wikipedia from wikipedia.org)

Deus ex machina

Deus ex machina is Latin for "god from the machine" and is a calque from the Greek "από μηχανής θεός", "apo mekhanes theos". It originated with Greek and Roman theater, when a mechane would lower a god or gods onstage to resolve a hopeless situation: thus god comes from the machine. The phrase deus ex machina has been extended to refer to any resolution to a story which does not pay due regard to the story's internal logic and is so unlikely it challenges suspension of disbelief, and presumably allows the author to end it in the way he or she wanted.

The Greek tragedian Euripides was notorious for using this plot device.

Warning: Plot details follow.

A few more recent examples, where it isn't literally a god-like being, but is a similar sudden resolution of plot, are in the films The Joyless Street and Pandora's Box by G.W. Pabst. In Pandora's Box, the movie is ended when for no apparent reason the main character is murdered by Jack the Ripper. Similarly, in Medium Cool, the final scene ends with the lead characters being killed in a car accident. Stephen King's novel The Stand would arguably be another example: a minor character who has gone insane in the desert returns with an atomic bomb, which is set off by an electric charge taking the shape of a hand, destroying Las Vegas; characters in Boulder believe the charge to have been the "Hand of God." Monty Python and the Holy Grail is another example; however, the ending — in which the movie comes to a sudden halt when the entire cast is arrested — is intentionally preposterous in this case. In the Peter Straub/Stephen King novel The Talisman, one of the characters is said to be driving a Deus ex machina.

The pronunciation is a problem in English. Traditional ways of saying Latin would have it something like DAY-us ex MAK-in-a, more modern ways of saying Latin would give perhaps DAY-oos ex MAH-kin-ah, but many people naturally bring in the modern English m'SHEEN, resulting in a mixed pronunciation.

See also: plot


In Isaac Asimov's I, Robot it is used as a part of the description of the relationship between humans and robots.

In Bored of the Rings, Frito and Spam are rescued by Deus Ex Machina Airlines (parodying Frodo and Sam being rescued by eagles at Mount Doom).

Deus Ex Machina is also the name of the ship Joel Hodgson uses to escape from the Satellite of Love on the television show Mystery Science Theater 3000.

Further, in its abbreviated form it is the name of a Warren Spector computer game Deus Ex.

In "The Matrix Revolutions", the third chapter in "The Matrix Trilogy", the Deus Ex Machina is the ultimate power in the machine world.