HarishKumar wrote:
There is no point in combing through the director’s work for hints of ideological significance. It is unnecessary: his ideology—Marxist, anti-imperialist, aligned with the perceived interests of the powerless and the marginal—is the (i) ________ of his films. The clarity and force of that ideology are considerable, but its (ii) ________ sometimes bothers critics, who often scold the director for lacking (iii) ________.
First Blank
Since it is not necessary to comb through the director's work to find his ideology, and since we are also told that the clarity and the force of his ideology are considerable, we can say that his ideology is the chief impetus of his films. The clarity and force of his ideology also insists that it is not the hidden focus of his films. There is nothing to justify it as a murky lesson of his films.
Second Blank
The "but" in the second sentence after the comma implies that we need something that counters the clarity and force of his ideology. It cannot be feebleness, because it is the exact opposite of force, and it makes no sense to say the ideology has both force and feebleness. We are not looking for exact opposite, but something similar to counterparts. Since it is unnecessary to search for the ideology, obscurity can be rejected. Bluntness is a good choice for the same reason. And also because the ideology has clarity and force. And we already know that it is the chief impetus of his films.
Third Blank
And if the director was blunt, then the critics will scold him for lacking subtlety.
Hence the correct choices are chief impetus, bluntness and subtlety.
HarishKumarWhy its not Obscurity and Lucidity ??
opposite of clarity is obscurity
and opposite of obscurity is lucidity.