Those who have taken pt-73 as a timed test, how did you score in its LR compared to other 70s tests?
This question was fairly confusing.
We know from the premises that humor is important for comedy. C says that comedies should find their humor in stylistic portrayals.
So stylistic portrayals are very relevant and important for the comedy film Quirks, because that is where comedy is expected to find humor. Thus, criticizing Quirks for being non-realistic is wrong.
D doesn't counter the argument's conclusion that the criticism of film for not being realistic is wrong. D can not be seen as justifying the conclusion because though it says the film is successful, it doesn't mean that criticism of the film for not being realistic is not valid. A film could be successful and still deserving of criticism for not being realistic.
why is C not the best choice?
https://7sage.com/lsat_explanations/lsat-73-section-2-question-06/
Comments
Conclusion: Quirks is misguided for saying it's not realistic
Why?
P1: It is true that the characters are too stylized
P2: The film ended up being funny
P3: Being funny is important for a comedy
There's no evidence to suggest that P1 is the reason why P2 is true: we don't necessarily know if the reason the movie ended up being so funny is because it was too stylized - we just know that the film is funny (success) and because being funny is important for a comedy (the genre), that's why the critics are misguided. This is what makes answer choice (D) correct.
It's in the OP and reproduced here. It flows from choice C the need or relevance of stylistic portrayals for comedies, because C says that in them one finds humor. Why doesnt that make C a better choice?
From the OP also, how is that D that justifies only that the film is successful address the issue that a film being successful and criticism being invalid are two very different things?
However, even if the referential language is saying that stylization is the specific reason for why the film is funny, (C) still doesn't get at how we should judge films. So what if film comedies should find humor in their stylistic portrayals? We've already established that this is true, right? Even if this is true, we still don't know how to judge whether or not the critic is misguided. (D) gets at that by specifically saying that meeting genre is a sufficient requirement for success. Because Quirks meets the genre requirement, we can deem the movie a success (and therefore, declare that the criticism is misguided).