By Matt Zoller Seitz
Other people direct movies. Terrence Malick builds cathedrals. "The New World" is my new religion, easily the most pictorially innovative and moving American studio release I've seen in the 15 years I've been a professional movie critic. To appreciate it requires viewers to abandon narrative filmmaking conventions they're comfortable with (perhaps even spoiled by) and learn a new language, a primordial language of pictures that largely bypasses narrative cinema's persistent theatrical influence and plugs into the rhythms of thought.
Where even the greatest of Malick's American contemporaries (Steven Spielberg, Oliver Stone, Robert Altman, Martin Scorsese) are content to wring minute variations on established strutures and techniques -- mainstream filmmaking techniques -- Malick has devoted himself since 1973 to creating a new language, one that fuses nonlinear, overtly omniscent filmmaking techniques favored by silent masters (D.W. Griffith, Abel Gance), "Hiroshima Mon Amour," the French New Wave and 1960s Italian art cinema and experimental filmmakers like Stan Brakhage.
With rare exceptions -- notably Spielberg's "War of the Worlds," easily the most abstract film he's ever made, a work that is to his filmography as "The Birds" is to Alfred Hitchcock's -- even the directors we think of as unique and innovative tend to stick with established genres and play by (or with) established rules. Malick, in contrast, has dedicated himself to discovering and perfecting a new genre, practically a one-man genre, the epic naturalist fable. In the service of that new genre, he's created his own syntax, indeed his own language, one that must be engaged with, decoded and learned. It truly does represent an attempt to see the past through contemporary eyes, to identify and even honor timeless, universal drives, without pretending that people from other decades and centuries were just like us.
"Badlands," "Days of Heaven," "The Thin Red Line" and "The New World" are not strictly narrative. They are musical and mathematical. They are symphonies in pictures. One can no more judge them by the standards of mainstream commercial narrative -- basically, Syd Field's three act structure -- than one can judge Cubism by standards of perspective laid out during the Renaissance.
"Hiroshima Mon Amour" director Alain Resnais' defense of French New Wave techniques also describes Malick's modernist version of history and personal remembrance. "A classic film," Resnais said, "...cannot translate the real rhythm of modern life. Modern life is fragmented, everyone feels that. Painting, as well as literature, bears witness to it, so why should the cinema not do so as well, instead of clinging to the traditional linear narrative?"
Which is not to say Malick's films exist mainly to subvert commercial storytelling norms. They're too (deliberately) cosmic and willfully naive for that. Besides, I don't think Malick gives a damn about what anybody else is doing. His films don't so much break rules as fail to recognize their supposed importance. But that's not to say that Malick is just fooling around, that there's no rhyme or reason to what he does. Even a cursory examination of Malick's four films puts the lie to the notion that they're messy, that Malick is just glomming a succession of pretty pictures together and papering the seams with narration. The interplay of word and image is more complex, more deliberate, more tense than any in the history of English language cinema; Malick's startling, at times confounding vocabulary represents the full flowering of a cinema grammar experiment that has been going on since "Hiroshima" gave movies permission to jump from past to present, from an event to its recollection, as fast as the mind itself.
Released 32 years apart, and separated by long period of rumination that caused successive generations of critics to mock Malick as a hippie-dippy recluse, a dilettante, a potsmoking slacker, all four films are tightly packed and intricately assembled. And they are astonishingly consistent in rhythm, tone and color. They flow into each other as one dream flows into another. All four deliberately, provocatively and playfully blur the line between present-tense narrative and retrospective remembrance. They remind us of the difference between life and a story, between personal experience and history, between our presumption of centrality and the cold hard truth that the earth doesn't give a damn about us, that it would, to paraphrase George Carlin, have no compunction about sloughing us off like fleas. If there is, in fact, a God, He probably views us as Malick does, with a mix of empathy and distance.
Here is my review of "The New World," originally published in NYPress Dec. 22, 2005. In a future post, I will attempt to defend this masterpiece against its growing legion of detractors, many of whom try to pass off their own obstinance and aesthetic timidity as common sense, and demand prose in place of poetry.
A GENIUS VIEW OF JAMESTOWN
Malick’s triumphant new film.
The title of Terrence Malick’s "The New World" discloses the secret of its greatness. From start to finish, in dialogue and music, in every shot and cut, Malick’s masterpiece dedicates itself to discovering, exploring and cherishing all that is new: new lands, new loves, new battles; new feelings, new thoughts, new rhythms; new ways of thinking about history and culture, experience and memory; new ways of seeing and feeling. Refining and perfecting techniques Malick first explored in 1973’s “Badlands,” “The New World” fuses classical Hollywood production values (including CinemaScope photography and an eclectic symphonic score) with a documentary approach to narrative, characterization and editing. The result is a powerfully modern style that could be called epic naturalism, a style that appreciates the physicality of existence—the moment-to-moment visceral intensity cherished by Walt Whitman—while acknowledging human life’s impermanence, then further acknowledging that the life of a person, a nation or even a species is insignificant compared to the life of the earth.
In service of this unfashionably transcendental vision of life, Malick merges images and music with a silent filmmaker’s muscular grace. The immediacy of Malick’s shooting and editing style (he improvises entire scenes and subplots on the fly, and sends second unit cameramen to pop off shots of anything they deem beautiful, and finds the movie in the editing much as a reporter finds a story in his notes) pushes against the film’s lofty, contemplative elements: the swelling classical score (Wagner, Mozart, James Horner), the ruminative multiple voice-overs. The resultant aesthetic tension jostles us into new ways of seeing. Watching "The New World," we are at once dislocated and free, experiencing the shock of the new while recollecting it in tranquility (or speculating on how we will remember it). Malick’s characters pore over their lives as if words will fix their feelings; sometimes a random, lonely word will puncture a reverie or a moment of intense violence (a word like “mother,” for instance, or “wonder”). But words, Malick realizes, fix nothing because nothing is fixed; there is no past or present, no differences or similarities, except those we choose to mark. In Malick’s films, memory becomes history (or anecdote); thoughts and feelings become images, and images become music, and everything becomes new.
"The New World" rediscovers cinema’s kinship to music by creating a symphony of images, an ambition made plain in the film's astonishing opening section, which depicts the English explorers’ arrival at what would later become Jamestown. Malick, cinematographer Emmanuel Lubezki and Malick’s squad of editors build up to the meeting by picking off individual documentary-like moments: the ship coming out of the distance and sighting land, the Native Americans spotting the ship and swarming toward the forested bluffs and the rocky shore to get a better look, the English wading onto the land and into the grassy meadows, the whites and the natives meeting each other for the first time, each speaking a foreign tongue to the other, touching garments and staring in fearful amazement.
Each culture has its audience surrogate. For the English, it’s disreputable soldier/explorer John Smith (sad-eyed Colin Farrell, finally delivering on his leading man promise), who arrives at the New World locked in a shipboard holding cell, and for the Powhatan tribe, it’s 15-year old princess Pocahontas (newcomer Q’Orianka Kilcher, whose ray-of-sunshine naturalism is just right). There are other significant characters: the princess’ tough but decent father, Powhatan (August Schellenberg), and his brother Opechancanough (Wes Studi); the English have their visionary businessman leader, Capt. Christopher Newport (Christopher Plummer) and the irascible Edward Wingfield (David Thewlis). But in this ecstatic opening section – a set piece as staggeringly detailed yet intimate as the mass gatherings in "The Leopard," "The Godfather" and "The Deer Hunter"—no man or woman’s mere existence is privileged over anyone else’s. In fact, the sequence—indeed the entire film—is not about individuals, nor exclusively cultures. It’s about disconnected fragments of the same species fusing like lovers to create something new.
In "The New World," form mirrors function mirrors feeling: we watch the awful push-pull of the English and Powhatan cultures, the establishment of a fort and the planting of corn, the mingling and friendship that becomes violence, then war; we see John Smith and Pocahontas cling to each other, lying in the meadow, brushing each other’s skin, playing like kids, fleeing their cultures and hiding in a secret world. The Native Americans are more attuned to nature, but Malick doesn’t deem the English morally inferior because of it, he just finds their angry sense of entitlement mildly funny. This isn’t just a war between cultures; it’s a mating dance followed by an inevitable (arguably forced) wedding. Late in the film, when a now-assimilated Pocahontas visits England with her husband (Christian Bale, whose decency and expressiveness equal Farrell’s) and her uncle Opechancanough, the cultural positions are reversed, and the Native Americans wander an alien (but not necessarily more advanced) landscape. Here, too, Malick expresses cultural truths in understated shots: for instance, Opechancanough touching the skirts of huge shrubs trimmed into a bell shapes, while exploring a sculpted garden whose very existence testifies to the West’s need to conquer (rather than coexist with) nature.
Tellingly, both the opening and the equally powerful and even more moving, mirror-image finale are scored to the opening section of Wagner’s Das Rheingold, “Thus, We Begin in the Greenish Twilight of the Rhine,” a tide of brass and strings that rises and rises, then falls, then rises again. This declares Malick’s intent to tell a mythic or operatic story about John Smith and Pocahontas (who were never lovers in real life), and use that story as springboard for a poetic and musical exploration of how love does and does not transcend individual experience. Malick makes John Smith and Pocahontas—and their nations, and their lands, and their historical epoch—seem truly small, as exposed to the elements as the battered characters in Theo Angelopoulos’ brilliant, temperamentally similar "The Weeping Meadow." Malick’s symphonic filmmaking bears them aloft and sweeps them along. Seattle Symphony conductor Gerard Schwarz’s description of Wagner’s Ring cycle could double as a description of Malick’s four masterpieces, "The New World" in particular: “…a huge symphonic poem to which singing and stage action had been added. The orchestra provides a stream of music that carries the words being sung and reflects the psychological states of the various characters.” Paradoxically and wonderfully, Malick’s approach bonds us to the characters even more deeply by stressing their fundamental kinship to every other person, and this underlines their fragility, their mortality, all the more. Smith’s aching tenderness and Pocahontas’ guileless affection are as pure as flowers and as easily crushed.
By presenting every character’s experience through the same cosmic, free-associative prism, Malick ascribes equal emotional significance to each individual’s life, a masterstroke that’s not just exciting but inspiring. Tributaries of individual experience merge to create a river of collective feeling that sweeps you along as Malick’s heroes are swept along, in rapture. It is as if Malick is dreaming for all of us—a presumption as recklessly innocent and beautiful as Stephen Daedalus’ promise in "Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man": “Welcome, O life! I go to encounter for the millionth time the reality of experience and to forge in the smithy of my soul the uncreated conscience of my race.” Daedalus, like the rest of us, was never quite capable of realizing this ambition. Malick is on his way.
Monday, January 02, 2006
"There is only this...All else is unreal."
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Terrence Malick,
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22 comments:
Your blogs make interesting reading. Pleasant to read. ... TL
Thank you, thinklife. i see by your poetry that you're trying to engage some of the same primal issues as Malick. I hope you get a chance to see the film.
Of course, the crucial thing you know as a critic is that there are no rights and wrong in criticism. Your feelings about Malick are just as valid as mine against him because the whole process is subjective.
To me, the test that Malick fails for me is the purest one I know -- he bores me to tears. It's not because he's abstract or pretentious or indifferent to characters and story, it's just because to me he's dull in the same way a conventional film like Warren Beatty's "Reds" bored me to tears. I couldn't tell you what the hell "Last Days at Marienbad" was about, but it held my interest. That was not the case with "Days of Heaven" or "The Thin Red Line." "Badlands" held my interest well enough, I just didn't think it was very good.
My favorite critic of all time is probably Pauline Kael -- and I'm sure I disagreed with her more often than I agreed with her. People shouldn't be defensive when people disagree with their assessment on something as subjective as film. If you love it that's all that matters for you. If I've not liked him, that's all the matters for me. No one should ever be defensive about their opinions about movie -- stand your ground. If one's will is strong enough, no one is going to be able to change your mind.
You're right, and you'll never change my mind about Malick. I first discovered him at SMU over 20 years ago, when my fiction teacher, the novelist C.W. Smith, said during a casual conversation about movies that he considered "Days of Heaven" the greatest film made by an American during his lifetime. I rented it from Premiere Video on Mockingbird Lane and fell in love with it, but I was stunned that C.W. liked it because his fiction was generally quite "realistic," i.e. first or third person limited, and structured in a pretty linear, easy to follow way. This was more like James Joyce or William Faulkner or Toni Morrison (whom I was only beginning to read at that point, the late 80s). It was, as I've said, more musical and poetic than strictly prosaic. Resnais and Antonioni had been mucking about with similar techniques (do those directors bore you as well?) but I had no idea that Americans made movies like that, and that they could be released by major studios.
I don't begrudge you for saying Malick bores you; at least you take the trouble to understand what he's trying to do before deciding you don't like it. What bugs the shit out of me are the critics -- some of whom I normally respect -- refusing to engage with Malick's style, refusing to think about it and meet it on its own terms, and lazily writing him off as a guy who just cuts a bunch of pretty pictures together and then papers the cracks with voice-over. What he's doing is a lot deeper than that, like documentary filmmaking plus opera. Some of these critics remind me of little kids who will refuse to eat any food that doesn't remind them of something they know they like. Just because it doesn't move according to the rules of traditional commercial narrative doesn't mean it's meaningless.
Also, Pocahantas is pretty.
Uh-oh -- isn't Pocahontas jailbait?
By the end of the picture, I am pretty sure she's legal.
Thanks for sharing your thoughts on this one, Matt. A comparison to cathedrals or Walt Whitman feels so accurate -- yet I haven't found the right adjectives, nouns or verbs to highlight the film's texture. It's like trying to describe evolution -- a theme Malick draws out visually, through images and editing.
I was filled with awe upon seeing it recently with my friend Keith, who in fact used images to describe my strong reaction. He said it was as being "as if you'd been carried along by a gigantic wave"...and no kidding! I was ready to surf this masterpiece again as soon as the end credits rolled.
---and demand prose in place of poetry---
One final thought, though, Matt -- something compelling in "The New World" that its detractors may eventually latch onto is that it does drift into "prose" and a somewhat more traditional narrative when Pocahantas marries John Rolfe. One could argue the story takes on more structure parallel to Pocahantas's life, as opposed to the free floating poetry of her life before. I bring it up only because it feels like a major shift in Malick's film, and critics who embrace the poetic, ethereal quality in the earlier sections of the film may have their feathers ruffled by the increasingly orderly arrangement of scenes and sequences once Rolfe becomes a narrator and Pocahantas takes on some of the attributes of the Europeans. (I could start rambling on now about the great scene where Native American Wes Studi explores the European garden, but I've already said a mouthful, haven't I?)
I am heartened whenever I find anyone who loves this movie as intensely, even hopelessly, as I do. Most people seem vaguely respectful of it, but not excited, or else surly, hostile and dismissive. When I first saw it at a press screening in December, I heard a fairly influential critic complaining to another fairly influential critic, "That was like a botanical garden with stars in it." It was the first time in about ten years that I've seriously had to restrain myself from hitting someone.
Adding to your other comment, I don't see that structural shift as evidence of a prosaic or linear tendency. The third act it seemed as musical as everything else -- Malick assembling motifs he'd dropped during the preceding couple of hours, and moving them into a reflective formation. (Pocahantas' arrival in England being almost a mirror reversal, culturally, of John Smith's arrival in the New World.) I've been listening to a lot of Wagner recently, inspired by Malick, and I really do think music is the key here. He's really thinking symphonically, practically treating individual lives and cultural concerns as motifs.
Matt, you've done something unbelievable. You have gotten me to break my vow never to respond to a blog! Your place in Hell is now confirmed.
Malick is two for four with me as a filmmaker. I doubt there is an American director working today who can compete with his sense of visual poetry. One gets a sense, if one can find the cadences, that Malick is not so much telling his story but pressing it into the senses. At his best, it feels the French coined the term mise en scene for Malick.
At his worst, it feels that Malick does not trust his visual power, and lazily relies on sometimes godawful attempts at poetic narration to underscore his images. There were times during The New World where I thought I was listening to a bad cross between a Harlequin romance novel and the Bible, or Jar-Jar Binks gone native.
I know what to expect from Malick's movies, and I watch them with the knowledge of his style. This is why I can't say his movies are boring. I am always visually captivated. In his last two films, however, Malick appears to be far too impressed with his writing, and not impressed enough with his direction.
A good example is The Thin Red Line. Line is a movie that inspired the bloodiest internal fight between the critic and movie-lover who schizophrenically cohabit this body. The critic in me felt almost obligated to write a favorable review of the film, because there is greatness in it. The movie-lover in me took issue with that blasted narration. For once, the movie-lover won and I wrote a slightly negative review of The Thin Red Line.
Why, you ask? Shit is blowing up all over, and somebody (butterfly crazy Mariah Carey, perhaps?) is on the soundtrack talking about butterflies. In my review I wrote, "if I'm running like crazy while red-hot shrapnel is piercing my ass, the last thing on my mind is butterflies." It threw me right out of the movie, as if my ears were fighting with my eyes.
The New World does exactly the same thing, despite the fact that the otherworldly narration would seem more at home here. This film is, in my opinion, about the corruption of nature and the loss of innocence. Innocence finds its symbolic counterpart not only in the land but in that hot piece of R. Kelly worthy jailbait, Pocahantas. Malick portrays this corruption visually and subtly (like the scene where Pocahantas is corseted). Malick's greatness is in this type of visual cue/depiction, yet his last two films seem to depend too much on lousy narration, as if we the audience need to be spoon-fed what to feel.
Ki-duk Kim's Spring, Summer, Fall, Winter...and Spring tells its story as visually as Malick does (though with different rhythms), and I found its silences allowed me to succumb to its imagery better than The New World did. There was no "Hey look, I'm Philip Glass!" score by James Horner, and no 10th-grade poetry readings.
I understand your appreciation for Malick, and even agree with you on some points. Even when flawed, his movies support my argument that cinema is passive entertainment. We sit back and allow the movie to happen to us. I just wished my vision were better and my hearing were worse while visiting The New World.
Odie, your own description of Malick's narration misrepresents its intent. In a very real sense, it is SUPPOSED to take you out of the movie, or make you fight to stay in the movie. It's all about the tension between the larger world (the environment in which Malick's characters struggle to survive; the sweep of history, the clash and marriage of civilizations) and the private world of John Smith/Pocahontas and Pocahantas/John Rolfe (and more minutely, the internal world of each individual character). All of Malick's films are, to some extent, about the lie of centrality, the sweet fiction that we're the center of the universe, just as movies tell us we are. The schism between that magnificent river of imagery and the pathetically inadequate stabs at verbal description are Malick's way of externalizing that schism, building it right into the syntax of the film.
To me, Malick's narration is an exampl of what I consider to be the only defensible kind of narration, which is narration that deepens, contradicts or recontextualizes what's happening onscreen. This is narration in the mode of "Hiroshima Mon Amour," "A Clockwork Orange," "Casino" and "Croupier." (Also, Wim Wenders' poetry-choked "Wings of Desire," which Malick's last two films often resemble.) It is deliberately distancing, deliberately disruptive. it creates new aesthetic tensions that would not exist if Malick had simply shown the characters and the land. At no point does Malick "spoon feed" the audience anything. If anything, he's making is pick our utensils, then decide how to cut into the feast he's laid before us.
Sorry, but Malick should be directing documentaries for the Discovery channel. You can defend the narration any way you want but it's still people talking in my ear while I'm trying to watch a movie.
Thanks Matt....we need more people on our side. Future film critics will be rolling in the aisles when they read accounts of the utter embrace of trendy trash like Crash, Walk the Line, et. al, and the complete discounting of Malick's masterwork. (see also the fate of A.I. in the face of A Beautiful Mind; Eyes Wide Shut vs. American Beauty, etc.) It becomes increasingly futile to fight the forces that be on issues of what makes art art, but odds are if the response is this divisive, history will come out swinging in favor of the contested work. (Hey dummies, see also: Vertigo, which in your lifetime has already been sanctioned as ok art, so no nagging issues of what makes it art...). And what better way to finally appreciate The New World than for HISTORY to acknowledge it, a film so steeped in conflicting definitons of the word HISTORY. Like its subject matter, and its current editing travails, NEW WORLD promises to be an endlessly revised and rewritten text, at least conceptually and critically. Don't deny it now, you'll only change your tune later.
Dear Robbie: You're mostly right about divisive movies being the ones that are eventually assessed as being great, or at least worth watching. History's verdict isn't unanimous, and there will always be caveats. For instance, I admire the technique of Peckinpah's "Straw Dogs" while finding its view of manhood and womanhood to be essentially juvenile and false -- an endorsement intermittently masquerading as critique; but my own personal reservations don't detract from its greatness, or the necessity of seeing or having an opinion on it. ("The Wild Bunch" and "Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid" are a whole different story, though; I could rave all day about the greatness of those films, and I find very little in them that needs to be justified or rationalized away.)
I was very slow to come around to "AI" -- I still think it's overrated, an example of Spielberg being too self-consciously Spielbergian, making the kind of obvious artfilm his detractors always said he wasn't capable of making. If I had to make a list of his greatest movies, I doubt it would be in my top five (though it's crept its way into my top 10). But again, we're talking about pretty fine gradations here; I don't care for Hitchcock's "Frenzy" or his remake of "The Trouble with Harry," but they're still Hitchcock, full of pleasures and worth seeing and having an opinion on. All critics miss the boat on certain masterpieces. Roger Ebert totally missed the point of "Blue Velvet," and Pauline Kael had almost nothing good to say about anything Kubrick made after "Strangelove"; she even thought "2001" was boring and shallow!
But come on, let's face it, critics' opinions mean as little in the face of great artists as those antlike people posed in the lower margins of the wide shots in "Barry Lyndon." We're backpackers rating the relative beauty of mountains. In the long run, the work makes its own arguments, and if the argument is persuasive, the public will eventually be swayed.
"With rare exceptions -- notably Spielberg's "War of the Worlds," easily the most abstract film he's ever made, a work that is to his filmography as "The Birds" is to Alfred Hitchcock's"
Perhaps I'm not understanding what you mean by this, but I don't see War of the Worlds as being very abstract, i.e. removed from the regular, identifiable world or recognizable objects. That honor would certainly go to A.I. or Close Encounters of the Third Kind.
Sorry about that. My asides could sometimes stand to be more clear.
Spielberg's movies are anchored in the recognizable world, the world of everyday objects. So are all commercial movies, or almost all. I guess what I mean to say is, WAR OF THE WORLDS seems to me like Spielberg's most spare and mysterious narrative, less a traditional Syd Field-approved story structure than a stream of incidents, a succession of things that happen. Notwithstanding that ending in Beacon Hill, Boston, where the family is reunited (unconvincingly, I think, but that's a whole other discussion), WOTW offers the fewest explanations of any Spielberg movie. Its beginning and ending seem marvelously open to me. As in THE BIRDS, it's a succession of setpieces, a succession of things that happen.
Even AI and CLOSE ENCOUNTERS offer a feeling of definitive, even momentus closure, a sense that Spielberg has put a period at the end of his narrative sentence (the abducted people being returned to their loved ones). The aliens just appear, and despite dribs and drabs of rumor and innuendo, we never really learn where they came from, why they're here, what those horrible red veiny plants are (they seem to be foodstuffs nourished by blood, but Spielberg never pulls the trigger and says so). And as in THE BIRDS, the film's events seem to have occurred in order to shatter and test civilization (and this one particular family, an aspect of WOTW that caused a lot of people, fans included, to charge Spielberg with worshipping the nuclear family too much; but the movie is a dream, so why not have it ultimately be about the family?).
Perhaps, rather than "abstract,: a better word would have been "dreamlike." Unlike any other Spielberg film, including CLOSE ENCOUNTERS and AI, when I watch WOTW, I feel as if I have joined a dream already in progress, and when I leave it, the dream will continue without me. It reminds me of a Bunuel or David Lynch movie in that respect, more than Spielberg's usual.
"...I don't care for Hitchcock's "Frenzy" or his remake of "The Trouble with Harry,"..."
Do you mean THE MAN WHO KNEW TOO MUCH?
D'Oh!
Hey Matt, what's the deal with the new edit of The New World that's going to be released on the 20th? I can't wait to see this film, But now anyone not living in LA or New Tork is going to be able to see the versin you saw until it comes out on DVD.
Wonderful review, Matt - probably the best I've seen coming out of US film-crit so far. Much of the rest has been so utterly disappointing, with even the likes of otherwise-Malick-admirer Jonathan Rosenbaum apparently losing his "bearings" watching the film ...
I've only seen The New World once as yet (ridiculous basis to judge any Malick film) and so have only yet traced its formative outlines here: http://subject-barred.blogspot.com/2006/01/let-me-feel-your-lack-new-malick.html
Cheers,
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