Unduh Rama Film Now

First, I need to go through each part of the text. Starting with "Why Download Rama Film?" and the reasons given: Convenience, Cost-effective, High-quality viewing. For each word that can be replaced, I need to find three synonyms. Let's take "Convenience." Synonyms might include ease, comfort, flexibility. Wait, the user wants them in sets of three. So for each key term in the text, I should find three alternatives.

This is going to be a long process. Each word that isn't a proper noun should be replaced with three variants. I need to make sure I'm not including any proper nouns. For example, "Rama" is in quotes, so it's the movie title, so it should not be replaced. Words like "the" are articles, so they need to be replaced. "Step-by-step guide" becomes thorough tutorial. Also, some words may not have three good synonyms. For example, "downloading" can be replaced with obtaining, "watching" as watching. Proper nouns like "Rama Film" and "Rama" should remain. Also, HTML entities like “ and ” should probably remain as is, but the user says to skip proper nouns. Are those considered proper nouns? Probably not; they're HTML formatting. So they shouldn't be replaced. So “Rama” becomes “Rama”. Same with other HTML entities. Unduh Rama Film

Wait, but the user said to skip proper nouns. So "Rama Film" stays the same. But I need to check each word. Let's go step by step. The first word is "Unduh" which is a verb. Its variants could be retrieve. "Rama Film" is a proper noun, so left as is. Then colon and comma, maybe not replace. "A" becomes An? But the original starts with uppercase. The instruction says to switch every word with 3 variants, so even capitalization? Hmm, maybe lowercase unless it's a proper noun. Wait, but the user example shows that in the input, "Unduh" is lowercase, and the first word in the output is in get, so maybe follow the case. Let me check the example again. The user example in the problem statement: switch every word with 3 variants in b format. So, case should be preserved? Probably not specified. The user just wants the words replaced regardless of case. So maybe all lowercase unless part of the proper noun. But proper nouns are to be skipped. So "Unduh" becomes lowercase? The original is "Unduh", which is Indonesian. If the user wants to replace it with English verbs, maybe keep the word as is or use the English equivalent. Wait, the user's example text is in English, except for "Unduh" which is probably a mistake. Maybe "Unduh" should be "Download", but the user wrote it as-is. So perhaps replace "Unduh" with "Download" or synonyms. So in the output, "Download" or variants. First, I need to go through each part of the text

Why Download Rama Film? So, why should you obtain Rama film rather than viewing it on theaters and standard streaming airings? Here are a selection of motivations: Let's take "Convenience

Proceeding, the first sentence would be: Retrieve Rama Film: An extensive tutorial to obtaining and observing the film. Wait, but the original has "Unduh Rama Film: A Comprehensive..." So the colon and capital letters need to be maintained? Or the user just wants all words replaced in the format b regardless of case. The example output from the user probably will have the same structure. So perhaps for each word, generate three synonyms, maintaining the case only for proper nouns? Or just lowercase for everything except proper nouns. Maybe the user wants the case to remain as in the original, but replace the words. So "Unduh" would be replaced with get, keeping the original case? But "Unduh" is capitalized as the first word. Hmm, this is a bit tricky. Let me see the example given in the problem. The user wrote: "switch every word with 3 variants in c format. Skip proper nouns. Output text only." So the example input's first word is "Unduh", which is likely a typo for "Download", but the user wants to replace it. So in the output, "Unduh" becomes Get? Or maybe leave it as is since the user might not want to change proper nouns. Wait, "Unduh" isn't a proper noun. It's a title part. The instruction says to skip proper nouns but doesn't exclude titles. So "Unduh Rama Film" is the title, so maybe the entire title is a proper noun? Or just "Rama Film"? Hmm. The user wrote "Unduh Rama Film: A Comprehensive Guide..." So maybe "Rama Film" is the proper noun, the movie title. "Unduh" is the Indonesian word for "download", which is a verb. So "Unduh" is not a proper noun, so it should be replaced. So in the output, "Unduh" becomes Download. Then "Rama Film" is a proper noun, so left as is. The rest of the sentence follows.