- Mon Mar 15, 2021 2:30 pm
#85491
Hi ladybug!
We're rarely looking at an excerpt of a passage without considering its context in the paragraph and in the passage as a whole. In specific reference and concept reference questions, we at least want to read a little above and below the area they've referred us to so that we how the statements relate to what comes before and after. Even when we're focused on a very specific piece of the passage to answer a very specific question, we're never totally ignoring everything else.
To fully understand Borwell's argument, we need to look at more than just the two sentences the question refers us to. In fact, the first sentence starts with "Bordwell's response..." so we need to ask ourselves, "Bordwell's response to what?" For that, we need to look at the question at the end of the preceding paragraph: "Can the musical—in which such differently motivated and constructed sequences abut so closely—fit comfortably within Bordwell’s definition of the classical style?"
Bordwell's argument in response to that question is that musicals do fit within his definition of classical style because, though musicals contain performances which interrupt the narrative, the conventions of the musical genre learned from the theater "cue viewers to expect a different structure—alternating narrative scenes and self-contained performances—from that of other genres, a structure that audiences are prepared for and thus accept as “realistic.”"
His argument isn't that musicals are realistic--clearly people don't spontaneously burst into elaborate song and dance performances several times throughout the day (at least not in my experience). His argument is that viewers perceive musicals to be "realistic" because they are accustomed to the structural conventions of the genre. It's a subtle but important difference. It's this whole explanation we're trying to weaken--we need to show that audiences are not necessarily conditioned to accept musicals as "realistic" just because they have seen the genre play out on stage.
Answer choice (A) states: "evidence that reviewers of musical films in the 1930s generally praised the films’ unrealistic elements." This does not weaken his argument because, again, his argument is not that musicals don't contain unrealistic elements. His argument is also not that viewers do not recognize that musicals contain unrealistic elements. Rather, his argument is that they accept these unrealistic elements as "realistic" within the confines of the musical genre. Many films have a mix of realistic and unrealistic elements. Praising unrealistic elements, such as musical numbers, does not mean that the reviewers do not find the film "realistic" based on it conforming to the musical genre. Another thing to note here, it "praising unrealistic elements" does not necessarily mean that these reviewers noted that these elements were unrealistic or called them out for being unrealistic. Musical numbers are objectively unrealistic as compared to our general experience of the real world. But they are considered realistic when watching a musical film. Reviewers may have praised the musical numbers without necessarily praising them for being unrealistic.
Furthermore, this answer choice is referring specifically to "reviewers" which are a very small subset of moviegoers and, due to the nature of their jobs, may view and interpret films differently than the average audience member that Bordwell is referring to. Even if reviewers did not find the films to be realistic (which, again, is not exactly what answer choice (A) is saying), that would not necessarily mean that audiences in general did not find them to be realistic.
Answer choice (C), on the other hand, directly challenges Bordwell's argument that audiences accept musical performances as realistic because they are accustomed to the musical genre from stage performances. This answer choice tells us that audiences experience musicals in the same way, regardless of whether they have been accustomed to stage performances or not. If prior experience with the theater does not affect how viewers experience musicals, that challenges Bordwell's argument that audiences perceive musicals as "realistic" because they fit with their previous experiences with the genre.
Hope this helps!
Best,
Kelsey