by ohthatpatrick Mon Jun 17, 2019 6:04 pm
The contextual setup for B's first two sentences was this question:
Since musical films tend to have sharp deviations from the stories, during which they do arsty, self-justifying music videos .... can they really be included in B's definition of classical style (which was "straightforward narrative ... the technical elements are all employed to tell a realistic story")
He said, "Yeah, musicals are still classical, even though the narrative takes a detour and the technical elements are used for fun, not narrative. Since, the viewer expects that sort of thing in a musical, based on their experience of live theater musicals, they treat that sort of interlude as "realistic" in the world of the musical."
We need an answer that goes against that.
(A) this doesn't go against anything. If anything, it seems to support the idea that people seeing/reviewing musical film are fine with the unrealism, although that really has nothing to do anyway with the question of whether it should qualify under the classical definition.
(B) this doesn't go against anything. Whether the audiences enjoyed/didn't enjoy is as irrelevant as whether critics praised / didn't praise. Whether or not you find something realistic / normal is not logically connected to whether or not you find it praiseworthy/enjoyable.
(C) YES, this goes against what he said. B's whole case is that these musical detours are "realistic" because the viewer expects that sort of fanciful detour in a musical world, based on having seen musicals in live theater. But if people have the same experience whether they've seen musicals or not, it undermines B's tale that the previous experience of seeing a musical affects how the viewer interprets the movie.
(D) attention spans? That doesn't relate to anything in the first two sentences
(E) This strengthens. We would have weakened with the opposite. If musical films were very different in style from the musical theater that B thinks has calibrated the audiences expectations, then it would weaken the idea that audiences seeing the musical film would think, "this seems normal .. this seems like what I've seen before in musicals".