Monthly Archives: January 2020

  • Jojo Rabbit

    Taika Waititi (2019)

    In Jojo Rabbit, set in Germany in the last days of the Third Reich, a ten-year-old boy called Johannes ‘Jojo’ Betzler is a passionate admirer of Adolf Hitler, who is also the boy’s exuberantly comical imaginary friend.   Things get complicated when Jojo discovers that his mother Rosie is hiding Elsa Korr, a Jewish teenager, in the Betzlers’ house.  While Elsa remains undiscovered, Rosie’s other work for the Resistance comes to light and she’s murdered by the Gestapo.  Her death brings Jojo and Elsa warily closer together.  The climax is a battle between German and Allied forces in the streets of the (unnamed) town where Jojo lives.  At this point, having learned that the real Hitler is dead, Jojo kicks the imaginary one out of an upstairs window.  Fearful of being alone, he then tells Elsa that Germany has won the war.  She discovers the truth when she ventures out onto the street and sees American flags flying.  Elsa slaps Jojo for lying to her before the two of them break into a zany dance together, to David Bowie’s ‘Heroes’ (sung in German).

    Black comedy takes nerve and integrity to get right – that is, be funny and intellectually persuasive.  Sentimental black comedy is, almost by definition, proof of failure and Jojo Rabbit, which doesn’t make you smile inside or out, is an aberration.  Although it takes a while for the tone of Taika Waititi’s film to shift into but-seriously schmaltz, the set-up doesn’t make sense from the start.  A prologue sees Jojo (Roman Griffin Davis) excitedly preparing for his first Hitler Youth training camp.   The opening titles then appear against archive news film of real German children beaming and cheering as they behold Hitler (with the Beatles’ ‘I Wanna Hold Your Hand’, in German, on the soundtrack).  The man himself doesn’t appear on the screen but his comedy avatar, in the form of Waititi, soon does – romping around with Jojo in his bedroom, asking him to ‘give me a Heil’, and so on.  They’re on first name terms.  But why would a child who idolises the Führer imagine him as a loopy playmate?  Especially when Jojo has an actual friend, fellow Hitler fan Yorki (Archie Yates).  He too is meant to be a laugh, chiefly because he’s a fat specky four eyes.

    The portrayal of Hitler as a big, daft kid is meant to reinforce Jojo Rabbit‘s satire of Nazism – a strain of satire more easily said than done.  This is the first film I’ve seen by the New Zealander Taika Waititi, who won praise for his horror mockumentary What We Do in the Shadows (2014) and Marvel Studios‘ Thor: Ragnarok (2017).   According to Wikipedia, Waititi, who has a Maori father and mixed Irish and Russian Jewish heritage on his mother’s side, describes himself as a ‘Polynesian Jew‘.  Perhaps he thinks he’s ethnically well qualified to take on this project – following in the footsteps of Mel Brooks, who said, in relation to The Producers, that ‘by using the medium of comedy, we can try to rob Hitler of his posthumous power and myths’.  There’s a gulf, though, between Jojo Rabbit and The Producers.  The latter is set not in Nazi Germany but in a Jewish metropolitan enclave, post-war New York theatreland, where all the characters – Jews and Gentiles, including an unreconstructed Nazi playwright and a stage representation of Hitler – are the butt of jokes.

    Thomasin McKenzie, so good last year in Debra Granik’s Leave No Trace, plays Elsa with humour as well as sensitivity.  Even so, from the moment she appears, Waititi seems to intend this Jewish girl to stand heroically outside the comic framework of his story:  you can – indeed, should – make Hitler an object of ridicule but you shouldn’t make light of his victims’ ordeals.  This approach can’t fail to throw Jojo Rabbit out of whack.   Once the bold decision has been taken to turn the prime mover behind the Holocaust into a laughing stock, it’s counterproductive to exempt other characters from the comedy.  The main effect of treating Elsa’s plight seriously is to make Waititi’s cartoon lampoon of Hitler intolerable.

    I knew beforehand that Waititi’s screenplay was an adaptation.  As I watched Jojo Rabbit, I wondered if the source material was a graphic novel – a medium that compels stylisation and thereby a degree of consistency.  The source is a ‘blackly comic’ novel, Caging Skies, by Christine Leunens, published in 2008, but there’s nothing to suggest it’s a graphic one.  The novel does, however, have a potential unifying mechanism:  Johannes is the first-person (and an unreliable) narrator of his story.  It’s bound to be more difficult to keep control of this kind of material once you place it in more or less realistic locations rather than inside a particular individual’s head.  It doesn’t help either that the film’s visual style is oddly bland.  There are Gothic script touches to the lettering of the titles but that’s about as far as Waititi gets to stylising, and the deliberately anachronistic dialogue makes you feel you’re watching a put-on.  Adolf, who asks for his ‘Heil’ in give-me-five style, tells Jojo to ‘get your shit together’ and ignore detractors:  ‘People used to say a lot of nasty things about me.  “Oh, this guy’s a lunatic – oh, look at that psycho!  He’s gonna get us all killed!”‘  The Deutsches Jungvolk training weekend promises, says Jojo, to ‘be intense’.

    It turns out a disaster.  Instructed to break a captive rabbit’s neck to prove his ‘courage’, Jojo can’t do it and is ridiculed by the other kids as ‘Jojo Rabbit’.  He tries to make amends by throwing a hand grenade, which bounces off a tree and explodes at his feet, leaving Jojo with facial scars and a limp.  Adolf tells him he’s ‘still the bestest, most loyal little Nazi I’ve ever met’ but Jojo, when he gets out of hospital, is reduced to propaganda leafleting duties.  This doesn’t stop him being rabidly anti-semitic but Elsa, on the receiving end, calmly perceives he’s not really a Nazi – ‘You’re a ten-year-old kid who likes dressing up in a funny uniform and wants to be part of a club’.  Jojo is isolated, for sure (though he’d be less isolated if he wasn’t so dismissive of Yorki).  His absent father, who Jojo thinks is fighting for the Fatherland in Italy, is actually working for the Resistance.  Jojo’s elder sister, Inge, recently died of influenza.  Elsa, a former classmate of hers, is holed up in what was Inge’s bedroom.

    I’ve not read (and won’t be reading) Caging Skies so this is only speculation but Christine Leunens, by describing a world entirely from Johannes’s point of view, may have been able to ascribe the boy’s Nazi ambitions and fantasy to his particular, needful circumstances more plausibly than Waititi’s film does.  On screen, the focus on a cutely eccentric child (well but rather knowingly played by Roman Griffin Davis) and an infantilised version of Hitler combine to present Nazism as a function of immaturity.   As American and Soviet troops descend on the town, Yorki tells Jojo, ‘I’m going home to my mother – I need a cuddle’.  With the hapless Jojo and Yorki as its representatives, there’s no real malice in the Hitler Youth – as if it were just a foolish phase that German kids went through, then grew out of.

    The training camp is run by one-eyed Captain Klenzendorf (Sam Rockwell) – a louche, sinister joker at the start of proceedings.  As a result of the grenade incident, Klenzendorf is demoted to administrative duties in the town and becomes another figure of fun.  Jojo’s mother Rosie (Scarlett Johansson) arrives to see him.  Blaming Klenzendorf for her son’s injuries, she knees him in the balls before demanding that he find jobs that Jojo can do.  (It’s a struggle to understand why a woman prepared to risk her life by hiding a Jewish girl in her home would continue to indulge her son’s Nazism to the extent that Rosie does.  The idea is presumably that it’s a blind for her own Resistance activities but the real explanation is that she has to do it for the sake of the plot.)   In the closing stages, Klenzendorf undergoes a major character change.   First, he covers for Elsa when, on a visit to the house from a Gestapo official (Stephen Merchant) and his henchmen, she pretends to be Inge but makes a mistake about her date of birth.  Once the Russian soldiers descend, they round up German captives, including Jojo and Klenzendorf.  After telling the boy that Rosie was a good woman, Klenzendorf sacrifices his own life to save Jojo’s.

    This personality transplant is the most blatant instance of Jojo Rabbit’s shift into genuinely heartwarming (or that’s the idea) territory but Klenzendorf exposes a weakness of the film well before this happens.  There’s a challenge in setting the story at a point in World War II when eventual defeat for Germany was becoming inevitable.  (In one of his exchanges with Jojo, Hitler mentions the von Stauffenberg plot ‘last year’.)  Taika Waititi is either unwilling or unable to show Jojo’s infatuation with the Führer as pathetically late in the day – but he does show Jojo taking a shine to Klenzendorf and wanting to be in his good books.  The boy agrees not to tell the authorities about Elsa on condition that she tells him her ‘Jew secrets’ so that he can put together a kind of dossier to please Klenzendorf.  In his early scenes, Sam Rockwell seems to be channelling Nazi crazies of the screen including Peter Sellers’s Dr Strangelove and Kenneth Mars’s Franz Liebkind, the demented author of ‘Springtime for Hitler’ in The Producers.  Rockwell adds something of his own too, though, and he’s resourceful enough to keep adjusting to the changes the script demands of him.  He’s more credible as a weirdly charismatic father figure for Jojo than Taika Waititi’s Adolf is an imagined best mate.  Once Klenzendorf is in the picture, Hitler seems surplus to Jojo’s requirements.

    Others in the cast aren’t required to go through the character contortions that Sam Rockwell does.  The performances – of Scarlett Johansson, Stephen Merchant, Alfie Allen (as Klenzendorf’s sidekick) and Rebel Wilson (as the brutally demented Fräulein Rahm, another Nazi youth instructor) – are coherent in themselves but illustrations of an incoherent scheme:  these characters belong in different films.   The most memorable image in Jojo Rabbit is of people hanged by the regime and whose corpses remain on public view in the town square.  Waititi shows just the dangling legs – a pair of trousers, a pair of stockings.  The first time Jojo sees the display, he’s with his mother and asks her what these people did.  Rosie replies, ‘They did their best’.  (Needless to say, she doesn’t expand on this and her son doesn’t ask further questions.)  The second time Jojo sees corpses on the gallows, one of them is his mother’s.  He hugs her legs, weeping.   The moment is mawkish rather than moving but the intention to move is evidence enough of how tonally erratic the film has become.

    The Rilke quote that Taika Waititi puts up on the screen at the end is, in a way, an admission of this:  ‘Let everything happen to you. Beauty and terror. Just keep going. No feeling is final’.  In another way, it’s confirmation of this picture’s high opinion of itself.  There’s a double meaning to Jojo’s telling Elsa, as Germany is defeated, that it’s not safe for her to come out of hiding.  The boy lies about the outcome of the 1939-45 war because he needs Elsa to stay put but it’s hard to resist the suspicion that Waititi also thinks he’s telling a truth here:  that, as the 2010s end, lethal racial and cultural hatred is once again rampant – as if Nazism did prevail.  It’s remarkable how morally self-important commercial film-makers can be.  No denying there’s plenty of hate around these days but how many mainstream movies are actively promoting it?  Yet Jojo Rabbit is being sold as an ‘anti-hate satire’, as if the concept were radical and daring.

    29 December 2019

  • Little Women

    Greta Gerwig (2019)

    The appearance of the BBFC caption – announcing a U certificate with a caveat of scenes of ‘very mild threat’ – got a laugh from the audience at Curzon Richmond.  As if this wasn’t enough assurance of easy viewing in store, Greta Gerwig’s film is prefaced by a quote from Louisa M Alcott:  ‘I had lots of troubles so I write jolly tales’.  In fact, plenty of what follows is far from jolly.  Some of the threats are hardly mild:  they include vengeance, loneliness and death, and they’re all realised.  Yet Little Women does raise the spirits.  You leave the cinema elated by what the heroine, Jo March, and the adapter-director have achieved.

    The film begins and ends with interviews between Jo (Saoirse Ronan) and Mr Dashwood (Tracy Letts), a New York publisher.  Dashwood is a character in Alcott’s novel (publisher and editor of the ‘Weekly Volcano’) but a more significant one here.  At the start, when Jo offers him a short story, pretending it’s the work of a friend, Dashwood puts a blue pencil through half the manuscript before agreeing to buy what’s left of it (at a reduced price).  Jo asks if he’d be willing to look at further work from the author.  He says yes but advises, to her silent chagrin, that ‘If the main character is a girl, make sure she’s married by the end – or dead, either way’.  At the other end of the film, they discuss the autobiographical novel Jo has now written.  With barely concealed exasperation, she explains that and why her heroine doesn’t marry.  Dashwood insists that ‘The right ending is the one that sells’.  Jo finally concedes but, in doing so, strikes a harder financial bargain with Dashwood than she would otherwise have done.  ‘If I’m going to sell my heroine into marriage for money,’ she says, ‘I might as well get some of it’.

    Gerwig cuts to and fro between these later sequences in the publisher’s office and the closing stages of Louisa M Alcott’s plot, which sees Jo marry Professor Bhaer (Louis Garrel).  Although Jo’s exchanges with Dashwood are largely the film’s invention, they’re true enough to Alcott’s own feelings about the book she was writing.  In her journal for 1868, following the appearance of the first of Little Women’s two volumes (the second would be published the following year[1]), she recorded that: ‘Girls write to ask who the little women marry, as if that was the only aim and end of a woman’s life … I won’t marry Jo to Laurie to please anyone’.  Gerwig’s Dashwood dialogues foreground the enduring conflict between artistic and commercial imperatives, and the hardly less short-lived struggle of female creativity against patriarchal authority.  It’s also worth noting, in this meta-textual context, that Alcott herself never married.

    This is the seventh cinema adaptation of her classic (including last year’s version of the story, set in the twenty-first century)[2].   English-language television adaptations include four by the BBC alone, the latest, which also aired on PBS, as recent as 2017.  Yet another Little Women must offer something new; I’m guessing Gerwig was impelled to rework the material through a combination of personal inclination and assumed audience expectations of something more conspicuously ‘relevant’ to present-day concerns.  In other words, she herself has had to negotiate a position between self-expression and satisfying popular demand.  This doesn’t place a serious strain on Gerwig’s film-making, though:  there’s a strong convergence between what the director wants to say and what the audience wants to see.  Gerwig collapses the linear structure of the novel on similar dual grounds.  On the one hand, she’s acknowledging how familiar Alcott’s narrative is and the risk of boring the viewer with a straightforward journey through it.  On the other hand, she wants to enrich the meaning and increase the impact of episodes in the book by closely juxtaposing them.  The most startling example of this is a pair of sequences centred on the sick bed of Beth (Eliza Scanlen), the third of the four March sisters.

    When Beth is dangerously ill with scarlet fever, contracted through a visit to an impoverished family in the Marches’ neighbourhood (in Concord, Massachusetts), Jo keeps watch at her sister’s bedside.  She falls asleep on the job, wakes to find Beth’s bed empty and fears the worst.  She hurries downstairs to find a reviving Beth sitting at the parlour table with their mother Marmee (Laura Dern) and the family’s housekeeper Hannah (Jayne Houdyshell).   It feels like a miracle but it’s a short-lived one.  Beth’s health deteriorates.  Several years later, Jo returns from New York to find her sister dying, and reconciled to death.  There’s another vigil; Jo again wakes up and Beth isn’t in her bed.  Jo goes downstairs; this time, Marmee is alone and weeping at the parlour table.  The scarlatina crisis occurs well before the end of the first volume of Little Women; Beth dies around halfway through the second.  In Gerwig’s film, the two events are just about consecutive.  As a result, Beth’s survival of scarlet fever is quickly shadowed by the realisation that she doesn’t permanently recover and the fragility of her first victory over serious illness makes it more precious.  When Jo comes down from the bedroom the second time, we realise the memory of doing so the first time is vivid in her mind, as the earlier scene is in ours.

    Gerwig’s strategy takes a while to pay dividends.  In the early stages, her movement between episodes occurring at an interval of around seven years, while it isn’t difficult to follow, gives the narrative an unsettled, anticipatory quality:  you wait for things to settle down, for the film to get properly underway.  It’s only when you realise this isn’t going to happen, and start seeing unexpected facets of the story you might not have seen in a linear telling of it, that you engage fully with this Little Women.  Gerwig’s treatment is coherent.  Yorick Le Saux’s lovely cinematography takes every opportunity to intensify images of the New England landscape, and of figures in that landscape – Jo and Laurie (Timothée Chalamet) skating on a frozen pond, for example – as if to idealise the past.  This quasi-nostalgising throws into sharper relief the director’s de nos jours perspective on her characters and their situation.  Alexandre Desplat’s pleasant, conventional score seems designed for a similar effect but works less well.  The music is so much in evidence – and so often tangential to what’s on screen — that it sometimes sounds less like a counterpoint to the film’s modernity than like an elderly relative talking to themselves.

    Greta Gerwig is keen to give each character due attention.  That’s admirable but there was a point midway through Little Women when I’d started to worry her democratic approach was getting in the way of Jo’s centrality.  False alarm:  by the end of the film’s 135 minutes, Jo is confirmed as one of the most distinctive screen heroines of recent English-language cinema.  Two others in that category were the protagonists of John Crowley’s Brooklyn and Gerwig’s debut feature Lady Bird.  They also were played by Saoirse Ronan, whose portrait effortlessly blends Jo’s ornery, driven side with her leavening wit.  Ronan does some breathtaking things.  Jo and Laurie are outdoors when she rejects him and explains why.  She knows she was right to do this; she’s nonetheless dismayed that she’s done it.  After Laurie has walked off, Jo sits down on the ground, incredibly quickly.  Actors are often fond of sliding down the wall against which they’re standing and slumping to the floor, in order to signal great distress.  Much more often than not, the movement looks artificial.  Ronan’s unsupported, rapid drop rehabilitates what’s become a cliché.   She brings off a key feminist speech – ‘I’m so sick of people saying love is all a woman is fit for’ – naturally and thrillingly.  The tirade culminates, unexpectedly, in ‘but I’m so lonely!’  Saoirse Ronan’s delivery of this punchline, which she injects with a passion as strong as but quite different from what’s gone before, is inspired and moving.

    On this occasion, she shares the screen and the acting honours with another outstanding young performer:  Florence Pugh is the youngest March sister, Amy.   With her lack of height and round, potentially childish face, Pugh can pass for much less than the twenty-three she really is – allowing her and Gerwig to exploit the age difference between the younger and older versions of her character to maximum effect.  When Amy, annoyed that she can’t accompany her sisters on a theatre outing, vows revenge for this and burns the manuscript of Jo’s novel, Pugh makes the outrageous act both petulant and very seriously meant.   Yet there’s an almost shocking continuity in Amy’s selfish determination at the start and end of her teenage years.  The difference is that, in her ‘older’ scenes, Pugh captures Amy’s increased awareness of her nature.  She also makes you believe in, and sympathise with, Amy’s real desire to be an artist and is frequently funny – when Amy’s at her most exuberant and in sotto voce asides.  Pugh is an extraordinarily strong screen presence – there are a few moments when Gerwig might have done well to get her to tone things down a bit.  But most of the time you just feel grateful for this effulgent talent.  Eliza Scanlen is actually the youngest of the foursome playing the sisters.  She can hardly compete with Ronan or Pugh and she doesn’t.  Her playing of Beth is understated and touching.

    Jo writes, Amy paints, Beth plays the piano – a gift from the Marches’ rich, lonely neighbour, Mr Laurence (Chris Cooper), Laurie’s grandfather.  Meg, in Jo’s opinion, could be a great actress – something that Emma Watson, who plays Meg, is not.  She’s competent but, even allowing that Meg lacks the drive of Jo and Amy, bland and emotionally shallow.  The scene in which Meg, dressed in a borrowed pink ball dress, is accused by Laurie of social-climbing falsity doesn’t work.  This is meant to be uncharacteristic behaviour on Meg’s part but Emma Watson is more believable at this point than she ever is as the young woman who marries Laurie’s tutor John Brooke (James Norton), for love rather than money.  Emma Stone was due to play Meg but dropped out because of a scheduling conflict (with the press tour for The Favourite).  That turns out to have been a pity:  Stone’s substance would have created a more satisfying balance of emotive power across the March sisterhood.

    The male roles are relatively subsidiary but interestingly cast and played.  John Brooke is a limited character but James Norton does creditably with him.  (It’s testament to his versatility that, the evening after Sally and I saw Little Women, we were watching Norton as Stephen Ward in the BBC’s The Trial of Christine Keeler.)  Timothée Chalamet is unexpectedly humorous, not least in Laurie’s moments of exaggerated movement and even clowning.  As she does with Florence Pugh, Gerwig exploits Chalamet’s physique very well.  His slenderness makes him a credible teenager; his boyishness means that Laurie still seems callow as an adult.  The sometimes unappealing whiff of vanity that Chalamet has about him works well here – helps convince you that, in spite of his charm, Jo’s apparent soulmate Laurie isn’t worthy of her.

    Louis Garrel gave off more than a whiff of vanity in Redoubtable (2017).  True, he was playing Jean-Luc Godard but it’s still a surprise, in the early scenes between Jo and Bhaer in New York, that Garrel has such appealing modesty and warmth.  He’s deft throughout but also decidedly French, as well as better-looking than you expect Bhaer to be.  In the novel, this German scholar-poet is overweight, losing his hair and many years older than Jo:  Alcott, to compensate for having to tie Jo into marriage, pairs her off with a figure who subverts reader expectations of Mr Right.  Louis Garrel suggests a mild eccentricity of spirit but he’s facially eccentric only in comparison to a young man as pretty as Timothée Chalamet.  Gerwig is aware of this:  when Bhaer turns up at the Marches’ home, they remark, with almost amused surprise, on his handsomeness.

    Chris Cooper has a better part here than in A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood and the reliable Bob Odenkirk makes good use of limited screen time as the March paterfamilias, absent on service as a Union Army chaplain for much of the film.  (The few sequences specifically referring to the Civil War are somewhat perfunctory – perhaps a reflection of Gerwig’s limited interest in this aspect of the novel, as much as of her narrative structure.)  Among the senior men, though, Tracy Letts is the standout. Compared with the others, Dashwood is an obviously satirical conception.  Letts plays him accordingly – and very entertainingly.  The same goes for Meryl Streep’s Aunt March, the girls’ formidably cantankerous (and wealthy) spinster great aunt.   Compared with Ronan and Pugh, both thoroughly inside their character, Streep is doing-a-character but to highly enjoyable effect.  Just how crowd-pleasing a turn this is was clear from how regularly Aunt March’s putdowns raised laughter in Curzon Richmond.  And Streep is splendid in the verbal sparring that matters most, an exchange with Saoirse Ronan in which we see that the elderly lady recognises in Jo a serious adversary.  (The older actress may see something of the same in the younger one.)  Thanks to this dialogue, it makes complete sense, in retrospect, that Aunt March leaves her mansion to Jo in her will.  (It becomes the site of the school Jo sets up with Bhaer.)

    As Marmee, Laura Dern can’t use her smile to dissimulate quite as she does in Marriage Story.  There are times when this threatens to sentimentalise things but Dern always manages to suggest that more is going on in Marmee’s head than appears on her face.   Gerwig orchestrates the conversations of larger groups wonderfully – the four sisters, of course, and the larger family gathering on the occasion of Bhaer’s first visit to Concord.  These interactions are refreshingly natural without sacrificing a plausible period feel.  This is an exceptional cast, directed with remarkable confidence.  It’s beyond belief they haven’t even been nominated for the ensemble award (or for any individual acting prizes either) in this year’s Screen Actors Guild nominations – especially when the ensemble short list includes the cast of the ludicrous Jojo Rabbit.  SAG is evidently full of professional actors who can’t recognise acting quality in others.

    Greta Gerwig achieves her aim of novelty (in the circumstances, that word has almost a double meaning) but she does so without deprecating her source material.  She’s made a costume drama that’s never stiff, either verbally or visually.  Gerwig exults in emphasising the youth of her principals – running, dancing, fighting – yet their liveliness doesn’t feel forced.  She’s also succeeded in making a film that’s politically right-on but never pompous.  The one relatively weak part of Lady Bird was the last ten minutes; Gerwig’s binary perspective prevents that being the case in Little Women too.  On its own, the Alcott novel’s finale, in this film’s rendering of it, would be an over-extended celebration.  It doesn’t come across that way because romantic fulfilment is upstaged by professional success.  The authentic happy ending here is the publication of Jo’s novel – in other words, the publication of Little Women.   This is made clear in two key closing images.  One is Saoirse Ronan’s expressive face, on which Jo’s feelings are clearly read.  The other is the volume itself – in Jo’s hands, then on sale.   The heroine whom Louisa M Alcott hated marrying off is no longer on the shelf.  But her novel is.

    28 December 2019

    [1] The second volume was first published in Britain with the title Good Wives (not Alcott’s), in spite of the fact that, for most of this book, Meg, the eldest of the March sisters, is the only married one.

    [2] The Wikipedia article on Gerwig’s film claims it’s the eighth cinema version.  This contradicts the list of seven adaptations on the Wikipedia entry for the novel.

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