Library/PT 152/Sec 3/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

Bordwell calls 1917–1960 Hollywood "classical" because films then usually tell clear, realistic stories and use camera work, lighting, editing, and sound to support the plot rather than call attention to filmmaking. But 1930s movie musicals often stop the story for showy, self-contained song-and-dance sequences (like Busby Berkeley's) that don’t move the plot and instead highlight filmmaking techniques. Bordwell says audiences accept this because musicals come from theater and people expect alternating story and performance, but the author argues Bordwell is stretching "realism" and ignores how actual viewers perceive and react to these breaks.

Logic Breakdown

Locate Bordwell's explicit definition in paragraph 1 and compare each choice to the features he lists; the correct "EXCEPT" choice will be the one described as anomalous (nonnarrative interludes) rather than as part of his definition.

Passage Stimulus

Passage Redacted

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8.

The passage identifies each of the following as a component of Bordwell's definition of the classical style of filmmaking EXCEPT:

Correct Answer
D
Choice D is correct because Bordwell's core definition emphasizes narrative continuity and avoidance of techniques that call attention to the medium; the passage treats musical "nonnarrative interludes" as anomalous rather than characteristic. Supporting quotations: "Bordwell defines the era's style as being governed by straightforward narrative considerations, i.e., the need to follow well-defined characters through a chronological sequence of events, or plot." "...the technical elements of filmmaking—camera movement, lighting, editing, and sound—are all employed to tell a realistic story, one in which the world of the story is self-sufficient and recognizably related to our own." "Devices that draw attention to the film as film rather than to the story are avoided." And: "Within this definition, the musical films of the 1930s are anomalous in that they interrupt narrative to present musical performances only tangentially related to the plot." These passages show that "use of nonnarrative interludes between episodes of plot" is not listed as a component of Bordwell's definition.
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