SELECT THE LEGITIMATE SYNOPSIS FROM THE LIST BELOW

Elevator Movie (2004): Short artsy promotional video made by the Otis company for industry conferences, intended to romanticize the "elevator experience".

Elevator Movie (2004): Jim is a shy, withdrawn loner, pervert, and virgin. Lana is a friendly and outgoing born again Christian who has renounced her promiscuous drug filled past. They have never met until they step into an elevator together one day. The elevator gets stuck between floors, and they start to get to know each other. A building maintenance man assures them over the elevator's emergency intercom that an elevator repairman is on the way to let them back into their lives. Hours, days, weeks, and months pass, and no repairmen ever show up. Jim and Lana spend their days screaming into the intercom trying to get the maintenance guy to answer again. He doesn't. Starvation is not a problem for them, as Lana entered the elevator with a bag full of groceries which is mysteriously found to be filled with fresh food every morning. After enough time passes, Jim gives up hope of escape and resigns himself to building a new life in the elevator with who he sees as his first girlfriend. Lana on the other hand desperately wants to escape, and clings to her faith in God to provide them with an opening of the elevator doors. Eventually, a reluctant and desperate romance begins between the two, but it is promptly cut short by an inexplicable transformation of parts of Lana's body into metal.

Elevator Movie (2004): "Look, they show movies on planes, right? Why shouldn't they show movies on elevators? Okay, so they have to be short. So we'll make them short." This 20-second Tom Hanks comedy was the first and probably last in the genre, and the executive who masterminded it (quoted above) is now active in another line of work.

Elevator Movie (2004): A series of brief encounters in a high-rise apartment building's elevator slowly reveals the details of the residents' lives and how they are interwoven. Jim Jarmusch directs.

Elevator Movie (2004): Sequel to 1992 farce Blame It On The Bellboy, the action follows the still-unnamed bellboy (Bronson Pinchot again) as he moves from Venice to Miami and takes a job as an elevator operator in a swanky hotel. As with the first film he inadvertently instigates an assortment of madcap hijinks with the guests who include a frisky retired couple, a Cuban drug lord (complete with henchmen), a movie producer and her harried assistant, and a pair of handsome young con artists looking for a big score (of any kind!).

None of the synopses above could possibly be legitimate!

I give up! What is the answer?
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