SELECT THE LEGITIMATE SYNOPSIS FROM THE LIST BELOW

Crossplot (1969): The catch of the day is "red herring" in this convoluted erotic thriller concerning deep sea fishermen, their wives, and their torrid affairs both on and off shore. Film critic Adam Lowenstein called it “a shocking collision of film, spectator, and history where registers of bodily space and historical time are disrupted, confronted, and intertwined.”

Crossplot (1969): So anyway, there was this guy, you know? And he really hated this other guy, only the other guy didn't realize it. Oh wait, and the first guy was in love with the second guy's wife or girlfriend or something. Or was it his sister? No, it was his girlfriend. Yeah. And anyway, the first guy decides to kill the second guy so he can go out with the girlfriend, except that the girlfriend finds out about the first guy's plan but instead of telling the police or the second guy - who's her boyfriend -- she decides to turn the tables on the first guy by killing this other guy who she doesn't like and framing the first guy for it. Well, after that the first guy has to go on the run and try and prove that he was innocent even though he was going to kill the second guy in the first place, and the girlfriend has gone all "evil bitch" and is trying to keep her boyfriend from realizing that she had killed the other guy and not the first guy like everyone thinks. And eventually we learn that the second guy actually tricked his girlfriend into killing the other guy and framing the first guy for it because he's like this evil genius and he knew about everything all along, right? And there's this really cool chase at the end across the city rooftops and fire escapes, and both guys and the girlfriend are there, and there's this big dramatic climax that takes place on the building ledge with all the police and firetrucks and everything going on below, and it's just this really cool film and you just gotta see it. I wonder why they don't make films like that anymore?

Crossplot (1969): A husband and wife plot to kill each other but hire the same hitman. When they both inadvertently discover this, neither can trust the other to cancel the hit. But does the assassin have an agenda of his own? A Hitchcock-wannabe thriller.

Crossplot (1969): A successful London ad-exec hires a beautiful Hungarian girl to pose for some modeling shots, little realising that she has overheard an assassination plot and is now being hunted by some dangerous killers.

Crossplot (1969): American release of the British film Cro's Splot. The movie had already been distributed and heavily advertised before the error in the title was discovered. The film tells the story of Cronin Pfnidge, inventor of the splot.

Crossplot (1969): Jack Pogue portrays Mr. Alain Turnstall, a wealthy newspaper tycoon turned assasin who accidently kills the daughter of a Russian diplomat. Hilarity ensues when Turnstall tries to cover his tracks while one of his newspaper staff reporters is hot on his trail.

None of the synopses above could possibly be legitimate!

I give up! What is the answer?
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