The Dark Knight Trilogy (Christopher Nolan, 2005-2012)

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Cde.
Joined: Sun Dec 02, 2007 10:56 am
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#551 Post by Cde. »

Antoine Doinel wrote:
Cde wrote:Have you seen the film? Had you when you wrote this post? As someone who has, a lot of what Edelstein says rings true, so I find the assumption that by posting a lukewarm reaction he must be trying to get attention and bring hits (Edelstein and the New Yorker? Does anyone seriously believe that?!) stupid and even offensive. The film must be perfect and everyone must love it, and if they claim they don't it's just a ploy for attention. Right. In suggesting this, before watching the film no less, you come off as the fanboy figure Edelstein mentions who is bound to love the film no matter what because he's emotionally invested in loving it already. So why did Edelstein post the reply? I'd say that the explanation he provided in the article, coupled with all the death-threats he's no doubt received by now, are sufficient explanation without anyone having to turn to a narrow point-of-view focused around silencing critical discourse.
No, I haven't seen the film (will be seeing it in IMAX on Monday) nor do I particularly care that he gave it a negative review. I take his negative review with just as much salt as the fanboy gushing. Frankly, I've been avoiding any reviews until I see the film myself.

As for Edelstein, I'm sure this isn't the first time he's received fanboy death threats and it won't be the last. I just think it would've been classier to stick by his negative review and let the next few weeks play out to see what critical and fanboy reaction truly ends up being. Edelstein is not an idiot, and responding to a select group of fanboy nerds, as he well knows, will only drive more traffic to his review that he weakly insists he doesn't want undue attention for.
Fair enough. I was harsh before because I thought that you were suggesting that 'if you claim you don't like The Dark Knight you are just looking for attention!'

I do agree that it would have been classier if he had just stuck with his original review regardless of the response. The title in the link (possibly not Edelstein's doing) says it all: "Why you're still wrong about The Dark Knight").
swo17 wrote:I know they start high and eventually drop down, but starting at #4? That must be some sort of record. Maybe this one is actually good in addition to being fanboydroolworthy?
It is. Of course, it's not '#4' good. I don't think it's worthy of sitting on any greatest films of all time list anywhere, ever. It's not a great film, it's not a masterpiece, and it's not the best American film in 35 years. It's a solid, tense city crime/gadgets film about the nature of chaos within society. I don't think trying to approach these kinds of themes in a genre many have come to dismiss automatically makes it worthy of this gushing.
Mr Finch wrote:Chaw did himself, the film he was reviewing and his readers who are looking forward to TDK a disservice with the Godfather II comparison, and that's coming from someone who has admiration but no love at all for Godfather II (the only Coppola film I truly love is The Conversation). As good as the remainder of his review of TDK was, he got carried away there and his suggestion that it might be the best US film since Godfather II is indeed so nonsensical that one wonders if he already regrets having made it in the first place. That hyperbole aside though, I still think it's one of the better-written raves about the film.

For what it's worth, I don't take his or any critic's word for gospel and I actually agree that there is no such thing as a perfect film and that art arises from imperfection; in fact, I stated in The Furies thread that in spite of its flaws I loved the film more than some of the canon titles in the CC (and to go one bit further: of all Hitchcock masterpieces, I personally love Rear Window the least because it is almost too smooth, too perfectly fine-tuned while Vertigo's flaws make the film more endearing to me).

One final note about Chaw's reviews: his name calling doesn't gall me personally as much because it strikes me as usually directed at deserving targets like Michael Bay and his likes, and the audiences who defend this crap (Bad Boys II essentially tells you it's alright to treat women as sex objects, to be racist and homophobic, to laugh at obese people and to have no regard for human dignity) under the same old pretense that "it's just a film". I do agree though that he sometimes goes overboard with his barbed language and attacks, and that he can be offputtingly intolerant and ignorant of opinions contrary to his own: I remember his controversial talkback where he proclaimed that he didn't like and understand anyone who didn't think that No Country for Old Men was a masterpiece. In that though, he is not unlike Pauline Kael who infamously received a journalist for an interview allegedly with the words "Did you like Godfather II? Because if you didn't, fuck you".
Chaw's pointing out of the foulness of the attitudes beneath mainstream entertainment is his best contribution, but I often don't see the rest of what he has to say as being of much significance. And yes, I was offended by the No Country incident. I liked the film but thought it was no masterpiece, Unfortunately, that was emblematic of a wider trend in Chaw's writing to dismiss anyone who doesn't agree with what he has to say. My opinions were just as true to me as Chaw's were to himself, but it seems he's yet to wrap his mind around that, and if he has he doesn't care.

His hasty assessment of this as the best American film in 35 years reminds me of how he compared the inarguable masterpiece status of No Country for Old Men with that of Paradise Lost. The latter has been around for 350 years, the former came out a little over half a year ago and took out the big Oscars. Time has shaped our understanding and appreciation of that Milton's text, and it can justifiably be called a masterpiece. Chaw thinks that a recent movie everyone loves is equivalent to that in standing, and that anybody has the right to disagree is responsible for the death of criticism. To use his own words against him, "y'know...shut the fuck up".

All that said, I often agree with Walter Chaw. He also sometimes has interesting things to say. Often though he comes off as a more educated and eloquent form of fanboy, and his tone and intolerance of other opinions makes him incredibly unpleasant.

I agree about Vertigo. Rear Window is a great film, but it isn't something that I can become obsessed by like Vertigo (how appropriate). I think Hitchcock himself would agree; I recall that he thought Rear Window was his best made film but that Vertigo was his masterpiece.
Cold Bishop wrote:Your point? The movie is definitely commenting on a post-9/11 world. Whether you think it's "brilliant" is another question, but it's definitely is a film about terrorism and the climate of fear that comes with it. To think otherwise is self-delusional.

My main problem with the film is I'm not sure I like what it's saying in that regard.
Exactly.
Spoiler
Fear rules, people have no hope to cling to except in lies like the white-knight figure of Harvey Dent. In this environment, Batman is justified in using his whatever-means-necessary techniques to stop the terrorists. Nolan made the parallels between Batman and the USA clear as day with the not so subtle patriot act reference, but in the end that act was justified in its role in helping take down the terrorist. Batman is making the right decisions for us and we should trust him, but instead he's pursued by the cops and a public who'd rather believe in a lie about the viability of peaceful ways of solving Gotham's problems than the ugly truth. Given the parallels made I don't think it's too much of a stretch to think that it's Bush or America fleeing from the police and hated by the public at the end, the world's 'Dark Knight'. Ugh.
moviscop
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#552 Post by moviscop »

You are looking way too deep into the film. The goal of the project was chaos through the joker.

I feel like the parallels you draw can be drawn in plenty of other films. But, has it occurred to you that a film can contain elements of terrorism and anarchistic themes and not be about the US.

I felt like the Patriot Act thing at the end could have alluded to our current situation. However, the film just seemed so far away from critiquing America. It was critiquing a society that was like ours, it was discussing Gotham.
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AWA
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#553 Post by AWA »

moviscop wrote:I think anything can be related to our current times in films these days. The information age is filled with these struggles and films that portray those struggles are either making a political point, or falling within circumstance. In Batman's case, I feel the latter is correct.
Having seen this tonight, there is no way anyone could write that movie and have it just be "circumstance" - I was trying to give it the benefit of the doubt until the whole tapping into everyone's cell phones to spy on the entire city to find the terrorist / Joker is clearly and deliberatly playing on a major issue before America today. Impossible that is just circumstances, there are million other ways to have written that but to come up with the (quite frankly unbelievably stupid) concept of saving everyone by *temporarily* spying on them is pretty damn blatant any way you want to twist it.

The entire film acted as a defence of the Bush administration's policies for the last eight years:
Spoiler
- over-riding international law to bring someone to justice (Batman going to China to get a bad guy)

- destroying documents to hide the truth from people for their own good (done at several points in the movie)

- spying on people via wiretapping their cell phones to protect them from a terrorist

- Saying the Joker (called a terrorist was mentioned a couple times) is only doing evil things because some men "just want to watch the world burn"

- people's true nature is revealed when faced with a crisis to their society

- use of torture as effective interrogation method

- the ending with Batman taking to being the fall guy with the public and official scorn, necessary evil, etc etc etc.
Obvious. Stomach churningly bad.

Ledger though, as the Joker, was absolutely fantastic - I was amazed at just how good he was. They didn't kill him at the end either, so it's a damn shame he will never get a second chance at it either.
Cde.
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#554 Post by Cde. »

moviscop wrote:I feel like the parallels you draw can be drawn in plenty of other films. But, has it occurred to you that a film can contain elements of terrorism and anarchistic themes and not be about the US.
Sure. When you feature such an obvious metaphor for the patriot act though, you're practically asking to be compared to the current USA-lead fight against 'terrorism'.

AWA, I agree 100% with everything you said, and I'm surprised more people haven't noticed the incredibly unpalatable messages behind this film.
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Binker
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#556 Post by Binker »

Although I haven't seen the film, when I first heard that "some people just want to watch the world burn" line in the trailer, it immediately brought to mind neocon rhetoric and reinforced my concerns re a Batman films capacity to pose complex moral questions. Yes, in comic books, villains just want to watch the world burn. In the real word, psychopaths don't rise very high in any institution. Not even the terrorist ones.
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John Cope
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#557 Post by John Cope »

Binker wrote:Yes, in comic books, villains just want to watch the world burn. In the real word, psychopaths don't rise very high in any institution. Not even the terrorist ones.
This is pretty funny to me. You do realize don't you that there are many (especially in the privileged, "diverse" halls of academia) who truly believe such a description is an apt fit for our current Commander in Chief. And these attitudes are not expressed as just some hyperbolic rhetoric. This is what much of the left truly believes.
Cde.
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#558 Post by Cde. »

Thanks for that.

Accepting the apparent truth that the enemy just wants to watch the world burn and can't be influenced or reasoned with (and therefore we need to operate outside of the law and challenge conventional ethics to defeat him) is ultimately just a nice way of avoiding the real issue: we need to look at ourselves and the real reason why such antagonism exists and try to counter that. The Joker doesn't arise for no reason in reality. He has a reason he hates us, and if we simply counter aggression with aggression we can never hope to understand this and will simply propagate a cycle of violence. The Dark Knight doesn't seek to examine this, but rather as Kehr says it romanticises Batman's actions. Gosh, if only we would just accept that he has our best interests in mind and trust him!
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Mr Sausage
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#559 Post by Mr Sausage »

So, when in a movie like Seven shows the police illegally obtaining library records and using that to help find a killer waging his own holy war, everyone's cool with that and no one cares to find pernicious allegories in there because it preceeded the patriot act. But when the Dark Knight does something similar--hell, has a vigilante with a long history of moral ambiguity do it--now we're ready to find pernicious allegories? I have to wonder how much of this is honest moral complaint, as opposed to band-wagon hopping, when there's no uniform reaction. Is it only when your own freedoms might be threatened that you're finally ready to be outraged?

I guess I find the current climate makes people oversensitive to things they earlier had no moral reaction to. The media is giving out so much propaganda these days I guess one should expect a degree of overzealous vigilence.
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Binker
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#560 Post by Binker »

John Cope wrote:This is pretty funny to me. You do realize don't you that there are many (especially in the privileged, "diverse" halls of academia) who truly believe such a description is an apt fit for our current Commander in Chief. And these attitudes are not expressed as just some hyperbolic rhetoric. This is what much of the left truly believes.
Hmm.... It's possible that's a widely held belief in academia (and on the Left). Bush is certainly widely hated, but whether or not those same people truly consider him a psychopath, I honestly don't know. I consider myself firmly to the Left (and hypercritical of Bush's policies), and I would never consider advancing the position of Bush as a true psychopath.
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King Prendergast
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#561 Post by King Prendergast »

Bush is certainly a war criminal and a borderline fascist, but he is not a psychopath. Mildly retarded perhaps, but hardly insane.
moviscop
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#562 Post by moviscop »

Mr_sausage wrote:I guess I find the current climate makes people oversensitive to things they earlier had no moral reaction to. The media is giving out so much propaganda these days I guess one should expect a degree of overzealous vigilence.
Amen.
Cde.
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#563 Post by Cde. »

Mr_sausage wrote:So, when in a movie like Seven shows the police illegally obtaining library records and using that to help find a killer waging his own holy war, everyone's cool with that and no one cares to find pernicious allegories in there because it preceeded the patriot act. But when the Dark Knight does something similar--hell, has a vigilante with a long history of moral ambiguity do it--now we're ready to find pernicious allegories? I have to wonder how much of this is honest moral complaint, as opposed to band-wagon hopping, when there's no uniform reaction. Is it only when your own freedoms might be threatened that you're finally ready to be outraged?

I guess I find the current climate makes people oversensitive to things they earlier had no moral reaction to. The media is giving out so much propaganda these days I guess one should expect a degree of overzealous vigilence.
No. This film is obviously a 'post 9/11 allegory', and the Patriot Act reference is blatant, complete with Lucius Fox commenting on how unethical it all is. Batman's actions are justified since it helped him save us. Furthermore,
Spoiler
the public and the police turn on him and he boldly and heroically takes the fall for someone else's evil so the public can go on carrying hope, believing that aggressive force is not the only way that evil can be fought.
This is about much more than simply looking at a character operating outside of the law and seeing connections to current politics that aren't there. The metaphor in this film poses a reductively simplistic answer to serious problems that, frankly, solves nothing. I felt this before there was any bandwagon to jump on.
Binker wrote:
John Cope wrote:This is pretty funny to me. You do realize don't you that there are many (especially in the privileged, "diverse" halls of academia) who truly believe such a description is an apt fit for our current Commander in Chief. And these attitudes are not expressed as just some hyperbolic rhetoric. This is what much of the left truly believes.
Hmm.... It's possible that's a widely held belief in academia (and on the Left). Bush is certainly widely hated, but whether or not those same people truly consider him a psychopath, I honestly don't know. I consider myself firmly to the Left (and hypercritical of Bush's policies), and I would never consider advancing the position of Bush as a true psychopath.
I'm also firmly left, and Bush certainly isn't a psychopath. He just has hidden motives, as do those he fights. This is something I wish this film would address.
Last edited by Cde. on Sat Jul 19, 2008 5:03 am, edited 1 time in total.
moviscop
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#564 Post by moviscop »

Honestly, give it up. The film is a Batman movie and if you are going to start drawing post 9/11 parallels to make a conspiracy theory out of the film, you are wasting your time.

I didn't feel like I was subliminally messaged and neither did you I'm sure.
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Cold Bishop
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#565 Post by Cold Bishop »

moviscop wrote:Honestly, give it up. The film is a Batman movie and if you are going to start drawing post 9/11 parallels to make a conspiracy theory out of the film, you are wasting your time.

I didn't feel like I was subliminally messaged and neither did you I'm sure.
Subliminal? The message of the film is quite blunt.

Conspiracy? Just because the film holds questionable politics hardly makes a conspiracy.

And why is that a Batman movie can't have post-9/11 parallels. Like I said, if you fail to see the parallels, you're not paying attention.
Mr_sausage wrote:So, when in a movie like Seven shows the police illegally obtaining library records and using that to help find a killer waging his own holy war, everyone's cool with that and no one cares to find pernicious allegories in there because it preceded the patriot act.
Like Cde. mentioned, if Seven was a film about police ethics, and the film seemed to fall firmly on the side of the officers, then it would be a problem. I don't for one second believe Fincher is championing illegal procedures. He's just portraying an action of the film's characters- of which cops do all the time- necessary to move the plot along.
Last edited by Cold Bishop on Sat Jul 19, 2008 5:08 am, edited 2 times in total.
Cde.
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#566 Post by Cde. »

moviscop wrote:Honestly, give it up. The film is a Batman movie and if you are going to start drawing post 9/11 parallels to make a conspiracy theory out of the film, you are wasting your time.

I didn't feel like I was subliminally messaged and neither did you I'm sure.
What the hell? The film is a 'Batman movie' on a surface level.

Have you ever heard of subtext? What about thematic parallels? What about the fact that ART DOESN'T EXIST IN A VACUUM?

And aren't lots of people saying this is a post 9/11 allegory, critics included? If we accept that then what's wrong with taking that to its logical conclusion?

Just because you didn't see or feel something doesn't mean nobody else did.
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aox
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#567 Post by aox »

King Prendergast wrote:Bush is certainly a war criminal and a borderline fascist, but he is not a psychopath. Mildly retarded perhaps, but hardly insane.
Yep.
moviscop
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#568 Post by moviscop »

Cde. wrote:
moviscop wrote:Honestly, give it up. The film is a Batman movie and if you are going to start drawing post 9/11 parallels to make a conspiracy theory out of the film, you are wasting your time.

I didn't feel like I was subliminally messaged and neither did you I'm sure.
What the hell? The film is a 'Batman movie' on a surface level.

Have you ever heard of subtext? What about thematic parallels? What about the fact that ART DOESN'T EXIST IN A VACUUM?

And aren't lots of people saying this is a post 9/11 allegory, critics included? If we accept that then what's wrong with taking that to its logical conclusion?

Just because you didn't see or feel something doesn't mean nobody else did.
People like you know how to suck the life out of anything. Your comments belong in junior college film classes where you try to find every piece of non-existent symbolism.

When will you realize that not every film is an allegory for America? I'm convinced that you would take a plane flying into a building in a Michael Bay movie as a 9/11 statement. Symbolism isn't hiding in every scene, I know it is hard to accept, but it just isn't. Coincidence exists, especially during this age.
Cde.
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#569 Post by Cde. »

moviscop wrote:Your comments belong in junior college film classes
That's a pretty good description for constantly calling everything 'style over substance', a comment that fundamentally misses the point of the cinematic medium.
moviscop wrote:Please, give it up and stop ruining the atmosphere of the film...
An atmosphere of dread in which we have to trust a guy who is acting unethically and spying on us using sophisticated technology in order to get anything done and save the day. Aren't I allowed to object to that?
I'm convinced that you would take a plane flying into a building in a Michael Bay movie as a 9/11 statement.
Well, uh, yeah. That's a pretty damn blatant reference which will always be inextricably linked with 9/11 and I don't think anyone in the audience of that hypothetical film could avoid thinking of that. If you would dismiss something like that as coincidence then you really are oblivious to symbolism or metaphor.
Symbolism isn't hiding in every scene, I know it is hard to accept, but it just isn't. Coincidence exists, especially during this age.
Yes, but I'd also say that metaphor and symbolism are very prominent in this age where we are struggling to grapple with these kinds of issues.

"It's Batman, it can't be about anything deeper!" is an incredibly weak defence against these kinds of arguments. This film is asking to be seriously engaged with and if these kind of things can be so easily read into it and fit so perfectly into the work Christopher Nolan has created then so be it.

Even if there's no political commentary intended (which I find incredibly unlikely) then the fact that the film presents a man making the ethical decisions Bruce Wayne/Batman does and depicting him as a misunderstood hero whose methods are necessary needs to be taken into account when evaluating the film. This isn't 'symbolism', it's right there in the film, and intentionally or not it acts as a justification of the approach to terrorism of George W. Bush.
Last edited by Cde. on Sat Jul 19, 2008 5:32 am, edited 4 times in total.
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Cold Bishop
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#570 Post by Cold Bishop »

moviscop wrote: When will you realize that not every film is an allegory for America?
You're right, not every film is. This one, however, does happen to be one.

And if it wasn't, making a film of this nature and deciding to make it apolitical would be in itself a political choice, as choosing to be apathetic towards politics always is, and an even more irresponsible one.
Cde.
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#571 Post by Cde. »

Cold Bishop wrote:
moviscop wrote: When will you realize that not every film is an allegory for America?
You're right, not every film is. This one, however, does happen to be one.

And if it wasn't, making a film of this nature and deciding to make it apolitical would be in itself a political choice, as choosing to be apathetic towards politics always is, and an even more irresponsible one.
Very well put.
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#572 Post by moviscop »

I think when you said
"An atmosphere of dread in which we have to trust a guy who is acting unethically and spying on us using sophisticated technology in order to get anything done and save the day. Aren't I allowed to object to that?


you pretty much admitted to being bitter toward Bush and looking for attention with your points. I don't like Bush either but this doesn't mean I have to argue political themes from a Batman movie to express my bitterness.

I don't think we need to discuss this further.
Cde.
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#573 Post by Cde. »

moviscop wrote:I think when you said
"An atmosphere of dread in which we have to trust a guy who is acting unethically and spying on us using sophisticated technology in order to get anything done and save the day. Aren't I allowed to object to that?


you pretty much admitted to being bitter toward Bush and looking for attention with your points. I don't like Bush either but this doesn't mean I have to argue political themes in a Batman movie.

I don't think we need to discuss this further.
Hang on, where did I claim I was looking for attention with my points? You can't just put words in my mouth and then say 'I don't think we need to discuss this further'.

My point was that that sentence can be applied just as well to the Batman in this film as to George W. Bush. Can't you see the parallel between Bush and Batman? Your post suggests you can.

I'm not just looking to any film to find links to the current political climate so I can argue against it, it's just that this one very obviously has this kind of content in it already. All I did was notice that and comment upon what I saw. Obviously that offended you.
Last edited by Cde. on Sat Jul 19, 2008 5:55 am, edited 1 time in total.
moviscop
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#574 Post by moviscop »

"An atmosphere of dread in which we have to trust a guy who is acting unethically and spying on us using sophisticated technology in order to get anything done and save the day. Aren't I allowed to object to that?
I feel like your entire motivation for discussing these themes was expressed in this statement.

Quoting you isn't putting words in your mouth.

I'm done.
Last edited by moviscop on Sat Jul 19, 2008 5:57 am, edited 1 time in total.
planetjake

#575 Post by planetjake »

This thread is getting as redundant as Bush's second term!*











*No political viewpoint, opinion or argument is to be inferred from the above post.
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