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| Bedroom
Radio |
Northwest
Premier |
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42 minutes, 2004
DVCAM, Scotland
By Doug Aubrey & Marie Olesen |
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Bedroom
Radio is a story of Pirate radio broadcasting, Love,
Life, and Death on a different Scottish frequency. Gary
(DJ Allusion) and Yvonne (DJ Miss-Chief) are a young
couple who live on a tough Paisley housing estate. Most
nights they broadcast from their one bedroom flat on
Gary’s pirate radio station: Allusion FM. In a
world where the drug dealer and money lender rule, and
where alcoholism and violence are an everyday reality,
it is ironic that the only positive thing that this
young couple can do for themselves is illegal. Pirate
radio broadcasting is a criminal offence in the UK and
although being a radio pirate carries with it the risk
of either a hefty fine or prison sentence, the buzz
of being a pirate has attracted a whole new generation
of what Gary calls `Bedroom DJs’ to the airwaves.
Giving voice to the disenfranchised, these pirates are
perhaps the real sound of Scotland’s housing schemes.
Bedroom Radio is an intimate and compassionate insight
into life on the wrong side of the M8’s hard shoulder.
It captures the highs, lows, dreams and tragedy of scheme
life, yet remains a positive film about aspirations,
hopes and dreams in a notoriously deprived area of Scotland.
Bryony McIntyre
Scottish Screen
249 West George St
Glasgow G2, Scotland
bryony.mcintyre@scottishscreen.com
www.scottishscreen.com |
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| Beyond
Mountains of Darkness
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North
American Premier |
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50 minutes, 2004
Beta SP, Israel
By Tszach Nissenboim
& Sylvain Beigeleisen
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For
two years a film crew documented the daily routine of
the Alons, a family of settlers from a settlement near
Ramallah. Against the mundane backdrop of familial quarrels
and pleasures, the family’s sense of dread from
an ever-imminent danger mounted like a ring, which slowly
was closing in tighter and tighter.
On June 19, 2002 the coverage of the Alon family took
a terrible turn. Noa Alon and her granddaughter, Gal,
were killed by a suicide bomber in Jerusalem.
Ruth Diskin
Marketing & Distribution
13, Diskin St.
Jerusalem, 96440 Israel
Tel. 972-2-5610094
ruthdis@netvision.net.il
/www.ruthfilms.com/html/fs_beyond_mountains_of_darkness.html
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30 minutes, 2005
DVCAM, USA
By Sarah Prior & Monica Bigler
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Buried
in the Backyard is a documentary about Americans who
are actively
engaged in preparations for nuclear attack. Meet Andre,
living alone in the mountains of New England, tending
his campground, his public and private bomb shelters,
and the ashes of his wife. Meet Steve, whose Michigan
basement contains a plywood shelter shored up with several
years‚ worth of food and water, as well as other
bomb shelter builders from around the country. In Utah,
the dirt mound that shields the Jay and Kim’s
shelter is visible from the living room doors. Don and
Barbara, whose suburban cement safe room is attached
to a basement full of exercise equipment, a pool table,
and a year’s worth of stored food and water.
Sarah Prior
307 6th Avenue, #1R
Brooklyn, NY 11215
h: (718) 788 - 1087
c: (917) 683 - 4111
sarahprior@verizon.net
www.bombsheltermovie.com |
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| Dominance
& Terror: A Discussion with Noam Chomsky |
| Northwest
Premier |
15 minutes, 2004
miniDV, USA
By Roberto Oregel
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A
visual and audio landscape into Noam Chomsky's ideas
on terrorism, world dominance, and survival.
“In the final montage, Oregel's Chomsky rolls
on like Eisenstein's Potemkin leaving you panting for
more and hoping for a holiday weekend."
- Radio Free Maine
Roberto Oregel
725 Spring St. #18
Los Angeles, California 90014
213 629-8150
oregelfilms@aol.com
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| Hardwood |
Montana
Premier |
29 minutes, 2004
DVCAM, Canada
By Hubert Davis
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Hardwood
is a personal journey by director Hubert Davis, the
son of former Harlem Globetrotter Mel Davis, who explores
how his father’s decisions affected his life.
Now a coach for young basketball players in Vancouver,
Mel recalls falling in love at first sight with Hubert's
mother, a white woman, at a time when racism made their
union impossible, and then his subsequent marriage to
a black woman and the birth of their son. Both women
in Mel's life, the mothers of his two sons, speak movingly
about love and betrayal, and both sons speak of the
pain of their absent father and its effect on their
mothers. Elegantly structured, Davis uses personal interviews,
archival footage and home movies to delve into his father’s
past in the hope of finding a new direction for his
own.
National Film Board of Canada
1123 Broadway, Suite 307
New York, NY 10010
212-629-8890
j.sirabella@nfb.ca
www.nfb.ca/hardwood/ |
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| Herder's
Calling |
Montana
Premier |
24 minutes, 2004
miniDV, Canada/Kyrgyz Republic
By Najeeb Mirza |
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“This is where I was born and also where my parents
were born - my ancestors have been coming here for 200
years”, says Akim Aliev Datka, a pensioner who
has returned to tend horses and sheep on his ancestral
pasture lands 200 km from Bishkek, the capital of the
Kyrgyz Republic. But he is one of the very few to return;
others are leaving for the cities. Life on the high
pastures can be difficult, but herding has been a mainstay
of Central Asian life for millennia. Herders' Calling
focuses on Akim Datka’s pastures, following the
lives of families living there. From requisite duties
such as tending the herds, to entertaining neighbors
and engaging in traditions of song and sport, Herders'
Calling offers a glimpse into the life of the Kyrgyz
herders. And at times, it simply captures the quiet
existence of life in this expansive and distant land.
Najeeb Mirza
3651-109 street
Edmonton, Alberta
Canada T6J 1C2
(780) 434-3929
najeeb@newyoke.com
www.newyoke.com |
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| Managing
the Herd |
World
Premier |
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11 minutes, 2005
Hi8, USA
By Joel Webster
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In
Montana, the deer are as plentiful as the people. In
many places, the deer have moved into town and everyone
seems to have an opinion about what to do about it.
Filmed in Missoula, Managing the Herd wanders through
the life of five people who all share a different understanding
of what it means have deer in town. While some enjoy
having these animals around, others want the deer removed
from city limits by any means necessary.
Joel Webster
2321 Gerald Ave
Missoula, Montana 59801
406-829-3850
websterjoel@hotmail.com
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| Mighty
Times: The Children's March
|
Northwest
Premier |
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40 minutes, 2004
16mm, USA
By Robert Hudson
& Bobby Houston
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Mighty
Times: The Children’s March is the never before
told account of the most amazing act of civil disobedience
in American history. In 1963, heavy intimidation by
Birmingham authorities left Martin Luther King’s
Civil Rights Movement floundering without supporters
until thousands of children and young students rose
up and became the unsung heroes.
Robert Hudson
4308 Hendrickson Road
Ojai, CA 93023
(805) 646-7655
Emily@tttpictures.com |
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| My
Father Lives In Venezuela |
Northwest
Premier |
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25 minutes, 2003
16mm, Netherlands
By René Roelofs
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My
father Lives in Venezuela is one episode of a nine part
series for children between eight and twelve years old
and is meant to deepen and broaden the knowledge of
children of their own rights. This episode is based
on article 9 of the 1989 “Convention for the Children's
Rights,” which states that, “A child cannot
be separated from its parents. The state must ensure
that both parents can take responsibility a child.”
“I didn’t know for how long, but I knew
he was in prison. At school I told he was there for
business because I was afraid to get a bad reputation.
I was afraid they would call me a little criminal.”
This is 13-year old Roxana. In René Roelofs film
she is talking about her father who has been in prison
in Venezuela for two years. She tells us how she kept
contact with him and that she missed him very much.
She also visits a prison complex in Amsterdam to see
what a Dutch prison looks like inside.
Lemming Film
Kromme Mijdrechtstraat 110-3
1079 LD Amsterdam
31 (0) 20 661 04 24
info@lemmingfilm.com
www.lemmingfilm.com |
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| Naomi
and Her Mother |
Northwest
Premier |
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25 minutes, 2003
16mm, Netherlands
By John Appel
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Naomi
and Her Mother is one episode of a nine part series
for children between eight and twelve years old and
is meant to deepen and broaden the knowledge of children
of their own rights. This episode is based on article
18 of the 1989 'Convention for the Children's Rights,”
which states that, “The state will ensure that
both parents take responsibility for their child. The
parents firstly are responsible for the upbringing of
their child. Their duty is the protection of the their
child’s interests.” Naomi is 12 years old
and has a mother who is manic-depressive. In the film
Naomi and her Mother director John Appel followed her
during a week. During these days she tells her story
on how is it is to live with a mother who, at the end
of the day, can’t be a mother for her. The film
is above all, a film about surviving.
Lemming Film
Kromme Mijdrechtstraat 110-3
1079 LD Amsterdam
31 (0) 20 661 04 24
info@lemmingfilm.com
www.lemmingfilm.com |
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| Old
Man and Hemingway |
Northwest
Premier |
8 minutes, 2004
miniDV, Cuba/USA
By Hugo Perez
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The
first thing one notices about Gregorio Fuentes is his
eyes. "Everything about him was old except his
eyes," was the way Hemingway described Santiago
in The Old Man and the Sea. Out of a 102 year-old face
that is as worn as the side of a mountain, Gregorio's
eyes shine brightly. Gregorio was Hemingway's boat-captain
from 1938 until Hemingway's death in 1961, and provided
the template for several Hemingway characters including
the old fisherman Santiago. The Old Man and Hemingway
is a documentary short that chronicles the long friendship
between Ernest Hemingway and Gregorio, his boat captain,
and the way that at the age of 102, Gregorio remembers
his friend.
Best Short Documentary , 2004 Lake Placid Film Festival
Hugo Perez
305 7th Street, #3R
Brooklyn,NY 11215
917-279-4846
hugo@aya.yale.edu |
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| Other
Peoples' Pictures |
Montana
Premier |
53 minutes, 2004
miniDV, USA
By Lorca Shepperd
& Cabot Philbrick
|
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Other
People’s Pictures is a documentary about collectors
who share an unlikely obsession – snapshots that
have been abandoned or lost by their original owners
and are now for sale. The film is set at New York City’s
Chelsea Flea Market where, every weekend, dozens of
collectors sift doggedly through piles, boxes and bins
of cast-off photos, ready to pay anywhere from a few
cents to hundreds of dollars for a single snapshot.
While some collectors look at the snapshots as found
art, others search for images that reflect events and
themes in their own lives. The un-initiated ask: why
buy someone else’s family photographs? In Other
People’s Pictures, nine collectors try to answer
this question as they hunt for the images that feed
their fantasies and quiet the voices in their heads.
Winner,
Best Documentary, New Orleans Film Festival
Cabot
Philbrick
464 42nd Street #2
Brooklyn, NY 11232
(718) 854-0065 home
(917) 648-9059 cell
cabot@availablelightproductions.net
www.other-peoples-pictures.com |
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| Paul
Soldner: Playing with Fire
|
Northwest
Premier |
|
59 minutes, 2004
DVCAM, USA
By Renee Bergan
|
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Paul
Soldner: Playing with Fire, explores the life and art
of Paul Soldner – a revolutionary ceramic artist
who transformed a three thousand year old craft into
a new way of expressing modern art. While earning an
MFA at the Otis Art Institute in Los Angles during the
mid-1950s, Paul Soldner challenged the established ceramic
aesthetic – much like the New York school painters,
like Jackson Pollack, did by creating the Abstract Expressionist
Movement. It was during this Otis movement that ceramic
art graduated from function to fine art. Paul Soldner
was at the forefront of this revolutionary period, pushing
the boundaries of what the clay and the kiln could do.
Today, at 84 and after decades of teaching his skills
to younger generations, Paul is still on the cutting
edge of modern ceramic sculpture. He pushes no one harder
than himself, understanding that one’s only limitation
is one’s own imagination.
Renegade Pictures, Inc.
275 Rosario Park Rd.
Santa Barbara, CA 93105
805.967.4679-ph
805.967.5248-f
www.renegadepix.net
www.playingwithfirethemovie.com |
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| Rod
Crawford: Spiderman
|
Montana
Premier |
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6 minutes, 2004
miniDV, USA
By Sonja Watson
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Rod
Crawford, Washington State's only professional arachnid
researcher, reveals what drives his interest in the
animal kingdom and how he relates to the human world.
Sonja Watson
1111 15th Avenue #5
Seattle WA 98122
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| Seoul
Train |
Northwest
Premier |
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54 minutes, 2004
miniDV, USA
By Jim Butterworth, Aaron Lubarsky & Lisa
Sleeth
|
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With
its riveting footage of a secretive “underground
railroad,” Seoul Train is the gripping documentary
exposé into the life and death of North Koreans
as they try to escape their homeland and China. Seoul
Train also delves into the complex geopolitics behind
this growing and potentially explosive humanitarian
crisis. By combining vérité footage, personal
stories and interviews with experts and government officials,
Seoul Train depicts the flouting of international laws
by major countries, the inaction and bureaucracy of
the United Nations, and the heroics of activists that
put themselves in harm’s way to save the refugees.
Best Documentary, Fort Lauderdale International Film
Festival
Jim Butterworth
Incite Productions
info@seoultrain.com
www.seoultrain.com |
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| Sin
Embargo |
Montana
Premier |
|
49 minutes, 2003
DVCAM, USA/Cuba
By Judith Grey, Katherine Cheng
& Eva Orner
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After
the revolution of 1959 and the U.S. embargo that followed,
the people of Cuba were left to fend for themselves.
Deprived of even the most basic goods, they scavenge
the alleys and scrap heaps, giving new vitality to the
discarded. Their recycled products are often remarkably
ingenious and creative. For Andrs the sculptor, Tomas
the canary breeder, and the other subjects of Sin Embargo,
even the greatest pressure – whether levied by
government or circumstance – cannot crush the
spirit nor quash the desire to forge a better life for
themselves and their families. Shot entirely in Cuba,
Sin Embargo is a look into the hearts and dreams of
struggling peoples and a tribute to their optimistic
and resourceful determination to survive.
Best
Documentary, Festival de Cine de Granada, Spain
Documentary
Educational Resources
101 Morse Street
Watertown, MA 02472
800-569-6621
docued@der.org
www.der.org/films/sin-embargo.html
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| Sing
Until They Slaughter You
|
World
Premier |
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32 minutes, 2004
DVCAM, France/Serbia
By Mathias Barbier
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Jovan
and Valdan are brothers. They are Serbs living in Belgrade.
Fifteen years ago they formed a reggae band called Del
Arno Band. Their artistic destiny crossed the path of
former Yugoslavia’s political destiny. When the
federation began to collapse, the band began to rise.
Ever since and despite the wars and dictatorship, they
carry on singing their battle for a better life. From
Serbia to Slovenia their concerts are the living memory
of their country’s fall. Years of war and misery
anchored in their souls rise to the surface as a musical
breath of wind whose lyrics in Serbian carry the seed
of a new vision of the Balkans.
Des Mondes Productions
515, route de Carpentras
84170 Monteux, France
desmondes.prod@voila.fr |
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| Something
Between Her Hands |
Northwest
Premier |
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18 minutes, 2004
miniDV, US/Cambodia
By Sonya Shah
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Something
Between Her Hands examines the growing problem of sex
slavery and labor for women in Southeast Asia through
the eyes of six young Cambodian girls who were trafficked
into prostitution in Cambodia and Thailand. From the
brothels to a transitional shelter, the girls are faced
with the toughest decision of their lives- to return
to prostitution, to join the garment factory work force
or to return to their villages and face the stigma of
being sold.
“The talking-head shots of Cambodian survivors
of sexual slavery in Sonya Shah’s Something Between
Her Hands demonstrate that sometimes the best choice
a filmmaker can make is to dispense with artifice entirely.
Haltingly without self-pity, the women recount how they
were duped, sold, drugged, and forced to serve 30 clients
and more a day”.
- The Chicago Reader
Sonya Shah
1355 3rd Avenue, apt. #4
San Francisco, CA 94112
415-566-5033
SonyaShah@hotmail.com |
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| Song
of Roosevelt Ave. |
Northwest
Premier |
13 minutes, 2004
miniDV, USA
By Aaron Schock
|
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Song
of Roosevelt Avenue is a meditation on Queens, New York
-- home to over one million foreign-born immigrants
and arguably the most diverse place in the world. Stretching
over sixty blocks, Roosevelt Avenue is at the center
this global crossroads, a place where new immigrants
get their start as street vendors, day-laborers, can-collectors,
and in the thousands of stores that serve this immigrant
population. The film tells the stories of three immigrants
whose lives intersect with Roosevelt Avenue and examines
the difficulties they face as they begin their American
journey.
Aaron Schock
35-40 87th Street
Jackson Heights, NY 11372
718-446-1234
aaronschock@earthlink.net |
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| Street
Denizens |
World
Premier |
15 minutes, 2005
miniDV, USA
By Margot Higgins
& C. Wolf Drimal
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Street
Denizens is a character driven film that creates a collage
of personal narratives depicting life on the streets.
Here are the often marginalized words of a few homeless
souls. With humor and raw sensitivity, the film weaves
together individual stories ranging from a train hopping
vagabond, to a soft spoken Native American outcast with
compassion for his fellow brethren, to a jocular street
philosopher, among others. Street Denizens was shot
entirely in Missoula, Montana, but serves to illuminate
an issue of national consideration. Filmed by two graduate
students with an assignment to document and search for
the meaning of “community.”
Margot Higgins
(406) 543-0702
margothiggins@hotmail.com
C. Wolf Drimal
(406) 543-3221
dharma_wolf@hotmail.com |
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| The
Mantelpiece |
Northwest
Premier |
27 minutes, 2004
miniDV, Canada/USA
By Samantha Hodder
& Geoffrey Siskind
|
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The
Mantelpiece is an observational film about the people
who make taxidermy their art, the process of creating
taxidermy and a peek inside the world where people hunt
and collect animals for trophies. While the taxidermists
struggle to maintain their personal and creative lives,
their job requires them to cater to wealthy American
hunters who want to immortalize their kill. Their craftsmanship,
combined with their passion for their work begs the
question: Is taxidermy art? From the wild to the wall,
this film spans the length of North America, beginning
in Canada’s Northwest Territories at a hunting
camp, then moving to a taxidermy shop in Saskatchewan,
and finishing with a road trip to Texas for home delivery
of the completed pieces. The Mantelpiece presents a
whole new way of looking at migration.
Tightrope Entertainment
192 Spadina Ave # 106
Toronto, Ontario M5T 2C2 Canada
416 369 9889
shodder@tightrope.ca
www.tightrope.ca/mantelpiece |
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| This
Black Soil |
Montana
Premier |
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58 minutes, 2004
miniDV, USA
By Teresa Konechne
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This
inspiring documentary chronicles the story of Bayview,
Virginia, a community that fights the system, redefines
the needs of poor people and challenges all conventional
ideas of community development. In this tiny rural African-American
village, 85% of the residents live without indoor plumbing
or safe heating in below sub-standard housing. In 1994,
Virginia's Governor announced the building of a maximum
security prison in their front yards. But Bayview said
no. Catalyzed by defeating the state's plans, the powerful
women leadership have acquired the prison site land
and over $10M to build a new community. This extraordinary
vision of a new rural village includes affordable housing,
a sustainable economic base, community and daycare centers,
a laundromat, and a community farm which provides jobs
and income for the organization.
Working Hands Productions
2613 Garfield AVE S
Minneapolis, MN 55408
612-871-2576
tkonechne@workinghandsproductions.net
www.workinghandsproductions.net |
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