Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Woody Allen often shows artists as self-centered and obsessed with their own feelings, and Deconstructing Harry pushes that idea to an extreme. The passage argues this is a steady theme in his movies: some characters say artists just turn private pain into “art,” many artist characters end up lonely or unhappy (e.g., Crimes and Misdemeanors; Husbands and Wives; Celebrity), while plain, nonartistic characters (e.g., Zelig; Broadway Danny Rose) tend to have happier endings.
Logic Breakdown
Scan for the author's generalization about how Allen's films portray characters; the final paragraph links characters' fates to the filmmaker's judgment—use those examples to pick the underlying principle.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage8.It can most reasonably be inferred that which one of the following principles underlies the author's argument regarding Allen's films?
Correct Answer
C
The author treats characters' outcomes as evidence of Allen's approval or disapproval. Support: "It is also significant that in Allen's films, the less artistic the characters, the more likely their narrative is to result in a happy ending." The author then contrasts artists who "wind up desolate and solitary" (the filmmaker in Crimes and Misdemeanors; the novelist in Husbands and Wives; the screenwriter in Celebrity) with inartistic figures who "dies an untroubled, even happy, death" (Zelig) or "is the beneficiary of the most gratifying resolution" (Broadway Danny Rose). These examples show the author inferring Allen's views from the fates of his characters, which matches option C.
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