We've changed 15 movie titles by replacing units of measure (not always used in a measurement context) with equivalent quantities of a different unit.   For example, One Hundred Twelve Ounces represents the movie title Seven Pounds.   Can you convert the units to restore the original titles?
1. One Week in May
2. Sixty Thousand Miles Under the Sea
3. Seventy-Two Hours of the Condor
4. The Longest Three Feet
5. A Most Violent Twelve Months
6. Three-Quarters of a Year
7. Rush Sixty Minutes
8. My Left Twelve Inches
9. Four Million Eight Hundred Forty Thousand Square Feet (THIS IS A BAD CLUE)
10. Hot One-Fortieth of a Furlong
11. A Little Eighth of a Byte of Heaven
12. The Three-Thousand-Forty-Eight-Centimeter Journey
13. Tin Half Pint
14. The Hundred-Thousand-Dynes Boys
15. Almost Three-Quarters of an Ounce

Solution to the Problem:

Credit was given if you could answer ten of the movies correctly.   The number of correct answers that each person submitted is in parentheses below.

1. Seven Days in May
2. Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea
3. Three Days of the Condor
4. The Longest Yard
5. A Most Violent Year
6. nine Months
7. Rush Hour
8. My Left Foot
9. A Thousand Acres (ACTUALLY, IT IS JUST 111.111 ACRES)
10. Hot Rod
11. A Little Bit of Heaven
12. The Hundred-Foot Journey
13. Tin Cup
14. The Newton Boys
15. 21 Grams



Thanks to James Alarie for finding the error in #9.
4,840,000 square feet divided by 43,560 sq ft in an acre = 111.111 acres, not 1,000.


Correctly solved by:

1. Eliza Sheffield, Alex Seminov
      and Anna Vice (10 correct)
Boston, Massachusetts
Reston, Virginia
2. Bob Currie (15 correct) R E Campbell Company,
Houston, Texas
3. Brijesh Dave (15 correct) Mumbai City, Maharashtra, India
4. James Alarie (15 correct) Flint, Michigan
5. Jonathan Punke (15 correct) Joliet Central High School,
Joliet, Illinois
6. Mairany Jaracuaro (15 correct) Delta High School,
Delta, Colorado