London Fields -2018- Dual Audio -hindi-eng- Web... !free!
Let me check the rest of the text. The film is described as a 2018 British-American thriller film. "Thriller" might be a genre term, but the user hasn't specified genres. The cast includes Amber Heard, Billy Crudup, and Ben Foster. Those are brand names (actors' names), so they should stay. The dual audio format is Hindi and English. The user's example in the task shows "Dual Audio - Hindi/English WEBRip" and wants three options for terms with three choices. Wait, the original has two, but perhaps the user wants to add a third possible option. However, unless specified, I can't just add a third one. So maybe the user made a typo and intended to have three options even if the original has two. Alternatively, maybe the "thriller" genre is a term with three options. Let me check the task again: "change all terms with 3 options as word1. Keep brand names. Return text only."
Alternatively, perhaps the user made a mistake and the example is not about adding, but replacing existing terms that have three options. For example, if the text had a term like "Hindi/English/Spanish", that would be three options, and replace with Spanish. But in the given text, the dual audio is Hindi/English. So perhaps that's a two-option term and should remain as is. But the user might be referring to the "dual audio" term as a term that has three possible audio options. Wait, the instruction says "terms with 3 options as word1". The term "Dual Audio" itself might be a term that can have three options. But the original text says "Dual Audio - Hindi/English WEBRip", so perhaps the "dual audio" is a term that can have three options. However, dual audio implies two. But maybe in some contexts, there are three audio tracks. So perhaps the correct approach is to take the existing two and add a third possible option. London Fields -2018- Dual Audio -Hindi-ENG- WEB...
Let me go through the sample again. The example given in the problem is the first sentence converted. The user provided an example where each word is replaced except proper nouns. For instance, "For fans of the film who prefer to watch movies with a Hindi audio track..." becomes "For buffs of the film who choose watching cinema with a Hindi sound track, the dual sound version of London Fields is now offered for download." Let me check the rest of the text