Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
People often show art by grouping similar works together, but the author says that approach doesn't work well for early short films, especially nonfiction. In the early 1900s, audiences saw mixed shows with dramas, comedies, news, and travel films all together, not long runs of similar short films, so showing many similar early shorts in a row is usually boring and historically inaccurate. Film restorations that focus only on the movies themselves and then screen them alone lose the original context that made the films work, so we should try to recreate mixed programs when presenting early films today.
Logic Breakdown
Find the author's central claim: the passage critiques the "collecting the similar" approach for early nonfiction films and emphasizes original exhibition context (mixed programs) as essential to their proper presentation.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage1.Which one of the following most accurately expresses the main point of the passage?
Correct Answer
A
The passage's main claim is that showing blocks of similar early nonfiction films is inappropriate because it ignores how those films were originally exhibited and makes them dull. Support: "But I would argue that the philosophy of \"collecting the similar\" is often inappropriate for screening early film, especially nonfiction," "Gathering together several short films...by the same maker or studio...is often profoundly dull for the viewer," and "Early cinemagoers never saw a collection of similar films screened together; they almost always saw a program that was a mix of everything from dramas and comedies to travelogues and news." These statements directly match choice A's assertion that screenings made up entirely of early nonfiction films are poorly conceived because they ignore original context.
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