Jay And Silent Bob Strike Back -
Jay And Silent Bob Strike Back -
Now, processing each line step by step, ensuring that each word that isn't a proper noun is replaced with three synonyms. Need to check for any other proper nouns like "View Askewniverse", which is a fictional universe, so maybe considered a proper noun. The user example includes it, so perhaps replace the words but keep the universe name as a proper noun. Wait, in the original text, "The View Askewniverse continues to be a beloved and influential part of pop culture", the phrase "View Askewniverse" is a proper noun (a fictional universe), so it should be left as is, but the words around it are replaced. So in "The View Askewniverse continues to be a beloved and influential part of pop culture", "View Askewniverse" is left, and "continues" becomes continues, etc.
Now, going through each word one by one, replacing with synonyms. Need to make sure that proper nouns like "Kevin Smith", "Jason Mewes", etc., are left unchanged. Characters like "Jay" and "Silent Bob" are part of the proper title, so they are kept. The roles listed in the cast, like "as Jay", the "as" is replaced but the character name remains. Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back
slackerdom → laziness (since it's a noun, need synonyms) Now, processing each line step by step, ensuring
First sentence: "The film’s script was written in [10 days]." The [10 days] part has a single option, but the user wants three options. I need to think of two more plausible time frames. Maybe "two weeks" and "three weeks"? Let me check if that makes sense. The original is 10 days. Two weeks is 14 days, three weeks is 21. Those are reasonable alternatives. So it becomes three weeks. Wait, in the original text, "The View Askewniverse
This is quite involved. Need to be careful with each word. Also, check for any other proper nouns, like "Ben Affleck", "Jason Lee", etc., these are names of people, so they stay. Their roles as characters might be part of the movie's cast, but since they're proper in the sense of names within the movie, maybe they are considered proper here. Alternatively, "Silent Bob" is a character, so maybe it's a proper noun. Hmm. The user says to skip proper nouns, so if the character names are proper, they should be left. However, in the context, "Jay" and "Silent Bob" are characters, not titles. But in the first sentence, "Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back" is a title, so that's a proper noun. So in the cast, "Jay" and "Silent Bob" are just character names, which are not proper nouns, so they should be replaced. Wait, but they are names of characters. In that case, maybe they are proper. But the user example shows that words like "characters" can be replaced. The user says to skip proper nouns, which are specific names. So "Jay" and "Silent Bob" are proper as character names? Not sure. Maybe the user considers them common nouns here, as they're not capitalized in the first instance. But in the cast list, they are capitalized. This is tricky. Given the user's instruction, perhaps the safest approach is to treat "Jay" and "Silent Bob" as proper nouns if they are titles or character names. Therefore, leave them as is.
Next line: "Teen Choice Awards (2002) - Choice Movie". The term is "Choice Movie". Other categories might be "Choice Comedy Movie" and "Choice Action Movie". So Choice Movie.
( → keep punctuation?