- Fri Apr 22, 2022 8:36 am
#94907
I was wondering if there was any approach, elimination process, tips, etc, that I can use to deal with this kind of definition question, which always trips me up.
I chose C in this one because of the last two sentences of the first paragraph. So my paraphrase was something like, “the quality that allows technical elements and devices help the audience get into the story without noticing them.” Basically, a realistic film is when technical elements and devices make the story more smooth and captivating, but the technical seams don’t show and audience aren’t conscious of the so-called movie magic.
I think C matches my paraphrase, especially when I replace the author’s other references with C. For example, when author says “the break in the film's reality,” s/he means the musical interlude, which “isn't intended to advance the plot but instead to draw attention to its own artistic expertise.” So interlude isn’t realitic because, as said in the last sentence of the first paragraph, it’s one of the “devices that draw attention to the film as film rather than to the story are avoided.”
I eliminated B because it left out technical part and it reads like a comment on content (kitchen-sink or something, as realism in its commonest sense, which I thought was usually not the correct answer to this kind of question?), but the second paragraph makes it clear that musicals are "anomalous" to classical realism because of its “filmmaking techniques” such as “editing and camera movement.”