SELECT THE LEGITIMATE SYNOPSIS FROM THE LIST BELOW

Okay America (1932): As a way of keeping costs down, a major studio decided to make a movie in which the promised entertainment would never actually occur. Instead, a cheap impresario spends 80 minutes in front of a curtain saying "We've got a terrific movie for you, America. Okay, America? It's really going to be great! Are you ready for it, America? We've got singers, dancers, trained dogs, and so much more. Is that all right with you, America? Are you sure, America? Because it's going to be just fantastic, America . . . ."

Okay America (1932): Tender chunks of lamb braised and gently simmered in a white wine, garlic and herb sauce. Choice of salad, vegetable and roll.

Okay America (1932): The Smiths are an ordinary family. Son Timmy makes average grades. The family pet is an unexceptional collie. The house is no great shakes. Dinner is mediocre (dessert is always vanilla), and conversations are unmemorable. But this gritty portrait of middle-of-the-road America is outstanding!

Okay America (1932): A short Government-produced film showcasing scenes of Americans at work, with the message that despite the Great Depression America is still "okay".

Okay America (1932): In this lighthearted comedy, three men get into a variety of slapstick mishaps while working on the construction of New York skyscraper. When they are spotted clowning around on the beams by a circus owner they are hired as acrobats, touring the country and getting into mischief. The three eventually find love with the knife-thrower's assistant, a local schoolmarm and the Bearded Lady respectively.

Okay America (1932): A brash reporter saves a politician's daughter from kidnapping. Okay melodrama remade in 1939 as Risky Business.

None of the synopses above could possibly be legitimate!

I give up! What is the answer?
< Back to index