- Sat May 03, 2025 10:25 pm
#112785
Hi,
I'm uncertain about two things here, and I'd love someone's guidance.
First, does this question show the LSAT trending toward more acceptance of small inferences in correct answers to "according to" questions? I'm used to verbs like "according" and "indicates" meaning that I should look for an answer that is more or less explicitly mentioned in the stimulus. That's not the case here, of course—we need to infer from the fact that nonfiction films functioned as supporting films that they were usually intended to function as supporting films. (But what if the nonfiction film industry actually aspired to rule Hollywood, even though their hopes were miserably dashed?? The stimulus doesn't make this impossible ...)
Second, is one reason that A is wrong because it is implicitly making a statement about all—not just some—early nonfiction films? I'm struggling to find another compelling reason to choose A over D here. Because there's no explicit "all" in A, I first read it as saying something like "Some were produced by studios that focused exclusively on nonfiction films." Such a statement is an inference from the passage, of course. But it doesn't seem like a more speculative inference than that of A. After all, we know that (1) retrospectives involve "collecting together and screening several examples of the work of a particular director, star, studio, etc." and (2) these retrospectives result in "showing several films of the same type one after the other in the same sitting" and (3) sometimes this film type is nonfiction (the author spends paragraph 2 talking about nonfiction retrospectives). We know, therefore, that retrospectives that screen examples of a studio's work result in showing films of the same genre (the author uses "type" as genre, unless I'm missing something here?). It doesn't seem that far out to then conclude that at least some studios (the ones which have had retrospectives!) focused exclusively on nonfiction films. How else would their retrospectives result in showing only nonfiction films?
If A is making a statement about all early nonfiction films, however, it's easier to eliminate—there could be nonfiction films made by multi-genre studios that just haven't had retrospectives (perhaps a few low-quality studios, for example, that just haven't retained any scholarly focus).
As you can tell, I'm muddled—thank you, very much, for any clarity you are able to offer me!!