SELECT THE LEGITIMATE SYNOPSIS FROM THE LIST BELOW

Son of Oklahoma (1932): Teenager: "You can't tell me what to do! You're not my father!" Oklahoma: "Yes I am! Now go to your room!" Teenager: "I bet New Jersey's son gets to stay out past midnight..."

Son of Oklahoma (1932): A Tulsa-born ventriloquist tries to cut it in the fast-paced club scene of Cheyenne, Wyoming.

Son of Oklahoma (1932): This attempt to transfer Shakespeare's Coriolanus to a Western ranch setting was considered too violent and disturbing for film audiences and was banned in several states (though, ironically, not Oklahoma).

Son of Oklahoma (1932): Verdugo finds a young boy on the desert and raises him as his son. Now a grown man, Dan is framed for a stagecoach robbery by Brent, the same man that shot his father and tried to take him and his mother away twenty years earlier.

Son of Oklahoma (1932): Luke Brentford leaves the failing family farm to make his fortune in the big city. Can a boy from Oklahoma really take on New York City - and succeed?

Son of Oklahoma (1932): In this comic spoof, three misguided cowboys open a roadside clam joint.

None of the synopses above could possibly be legitimate!

I give up! What is the answer?
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