- Wed Jun 12, 2024 12:18 pm
#106929
Hi fork4k,
First, if you haven't done so already, I'd recommend reading the entire forum thread for this question as there are several excellent explanations in the discussion that you may find helpful.
As to your question, the "gap" in the argument is from the key premises:
1. The film is funny.
2. Being funny is the most important thing for a comedy.
to the conclusion:
The criticism of the film for being unrealistic is misguided.
(In other words, the criticism is not judging the film correctly, or by the correct criteria.)
Answer D basically states: if films succeed in their genre, then they succeed overall. It's important to note that success here means overall or artistically, not merely financially successful. Many films that are financially successful may still fail artistically.
While "success" is not specifically mentioned in the argument, it gets at the idea of why the criticism is misguided. Since the film succeeds at being funny, which is the most important thing for a comedy, then a lack of realism isn't very relevant and such criticism is misguided.
The problem with Answer C is that it doesn't address the gap in the argument. The key to succeeding as a comedy according to the argument is that it be funny. The argument has already established that this film is funny. How a film should be funny is not the issue.
What we need to do, as mentioned above, is to connect being funny as a comedy (i.e. succeeding based on the important criterion specific to that genre) to showing how the criticism is misguided in this case.