The Extras - Warner Archive December Release Announcement
Episode Date: October 26, 2023George Feltenstein announces the Warner Archive's upcoming Nov/December Blu-ray releases. PLUS an update on Looney Tunes Collector’s Choice Vol. 2 release date and a tease about 2024.Purchase o...n Amazon:Looney Tunes Collector's Choice Vol. 2 Blu-rayThe Sitcom StudyWelcome to the Sitcom Study, where we contemplate the TV shows we grew up with and...Listen on: Apple Podcasts Spotify The Extras Facebook pageThe Extras Twitter Warner Archive & Warner Bros Catalog GroupOtaku Media produces podcasts, behind-the-scenes extras, and media that connect creatives with their fans and businesses with their consumers. Contact us today to see how we can work together to achieve your goals. www.otakumedia.tv
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hi, I'm film historian and author John Fricke.
I've written books about Judy Garland and the Wizard of Oz movie, and you're listening
to The Extras.
Hello and welcome to The Extras, where we take you behind the scenes of your favorite
TV shows, movies, and animation, and their release on digital, DVD, Blu-ray, and 4K,
or your favorite streaming site.
I'm Tim Lard, your host,
and joining me is George Feldstein to announce the December Blu-ray releases from the Warner
Archive. Hi, George. Hey, Tim, how are you today? I'm great, and I'm very excited to talk to you
about the releases here. We've got quite a few of them, but before we dive into them,
I wanted to give you an opportunity to
talk about how the schedule has changed a little bit and some of the October titles
moved in November and then that impacted the December ones.
Well, it actually goes back even further than that. Some September titles moved into October
and October titles moved into November. And it's basically reflective of the fact that
there's really only one manufacturing plant in the whole United States for the entire industry.
And contrary to what some people may believe, there is a great demand for physical media.
And this plant needs to basically keep up with all the demand, and demand is very high from all over the industry.
So we've had some delays that have been very frustrating, and we want to make sure that the next group of titles is available on the street date, and everybody has it in supply,
and there aren't going to be these little snafus.
So there would have been a real rush to try to make these November releases, and we scheduled
December 12th as the day for all of them so that we would be able to deliver in comfortable amount of time the
discs to the various places they need to go to to get to the consumers so they're on their
doorstep.
If they want them on release date, they'll be able to have them.
And that's the goal.
So we set December 12th as the street date.
goals. So we set December 12th as the street date. And we've always, as I've tried to indicate,
we're always working on anywhere from 12 to 15 titles in some form of production at any given time. So if something has a snafu and needs to go back to the manufacturing or needs to go back to the mastering facility for our correction,
we need to have the time to do that. So I'm very confident we'll be able to make
December 12th for all seven of these titles, which we're very excited about.
Yeah. And having worked there at Warner Brothers, I just remember how hard everybody was working
to get all of the content that comes out for the holidays
in this Q4, the last quarter of the year, when that's a lot of time that people are gifting and
buying physical media. So it's not just the titles from Warner Archive and Warner Brothers,
but Universal, Sony, all of the, you know, the whole industry, as you said,
trying to rush to get things there. So whether it moves a week
or two, the beautiful thing here is that you have a lot of titles coming out in early December so
that people can get them for the holidays. So we have a lot of them. So shall we dive right in with
the first one for December? Let's go for it. And let's go with the oldest ones first, and then we'll come up all the way up to 2000 with the last release.
So what do we have first off there, George?
Well, the earliest release chronologically at a mere 93 years young is Anna Christie from 1930.
from 1930. And this is a very monumental film in the history of Hollywood lore, because this was the first sound film that Greta Garbo starred in. And there was great concern that could Garbo
make the transition from silent to sound? As everything was getting very much into sound during 1929, Garbo continued to be in silent films only, the last film being The Kiss with Lou Ayers in 1929.
airs in 1929. And Irving Thalberg, as head of production at MGM, was very careful about what they would select to be Garbo's talkie debut. And they selected Eugene O'Neill's play, Anna Christie,
to be Garbo's starring vehicle. And the headline of the era was Garbo Talks!
And that phrase became so familiar that it ended up being the title of a 1984 United
Artists movie about, you know, a woman who is a big Garbo fan that really had nothing
to do, you know, the plot was different.
But the point is that that phrase, Garbo talks, became so much of a vernacular that it had
to be in the parlance of many people.
So the film itself is really terrific.
And you've got Garbo proving that indeed she could talk.
She gives a fantastic performance.
It's directed by Clarence Brown,
who is one of her favorite directors,
certainly one of the great directors in history at MGM.
And it is also a fine film version of O'Neill's Great Play.
Not the first film version.
It was made as a silent film in 1923 with Blanche Sweet.
But it was perfect for remade.
And the results were enormously successful around the world at the box office.
Interestingly enough, at this period of time, the industry hadn't quite gotten the hook
on dubbing yet. So it was not inordinate for the studios with a big picture to film multiple
language versions. And I believe Garbo starred in five, if I'm correct, five different versions of Anna Christie in different languages.
And the only one of these foreign language versions that survive is the German version of Anna Christie.
And when we released these films, the two films, the American and The German, on DVD many, many years ago, people really appreciated being able to see the German version because up until that time, it had remained out of sight for decades.
We do have these alternate versions. We have a release on DVD of The Big House from 1930, where there was a French version that survived and a Spanish version that survived. Blu-ray. And accordingly, you not only have this stunning restoration of the main American
English language feature, but you also have the German version in high definition. And
this is very important because in the past, we have had multiple versions of a film on a Blu-ray,
and there wasn't the ability to provide the high-definition presentation of the secondary
version on the same disc. And here, we felt it was essential to be able to do that. And it is often mentioned that Garbo preferred her German
language performance versus her English language performance. And Jacques Federer,
if I'm pronouncing his name correctly, was the director of the German language version. So
people will now have an opportunity to look at them both. And there are
also other extras on this disc, since this is the extras, we need to talk about that. A few months
ago, we released one of Garbo's films with an episode about the latter part of her career from
the television series MGM Parade. And we are using the other episode of MGM Parade, the 1955-56
television series that MGM used to test their toe in the water of television. The first episode
about Garbo's earlier career is on this disc, as well as a 1930 classic Warner Brothers cartoon, The Booze Hangs High
in High Definition. So I think people are going to be very happy with this disc.
The main feature is a testament to everyone that was involved in creating something that set the
pathway for Garbo's stardom to continue in the sound era.
Yeah, and it's just fantastic that you're getting basically a second movie on here because you put it in HD, this German language version of the film.
And it's very stylistically subtle, but different.
And that's a good thing.
I guess if we're moving chronologically, the next thing would
be a film with a guy that has a very strange yell. That's Tarzan the Ape Man from 1932,
starring the most famous of all Tarzans, Johnny Weissmuller. I'm hoping that if this release succeeds in terms of being profitable,
which is essential for everything that we do, that not unlike what happened with the Thin Man
movies, the Thin Man 1934 first film performed so well that it enabled us to get the green light
from the various powers that be to do the entire
series. Now, that was six films. With Tarzan, we have well close to 30 features that go from
basically 1932 all the way to the late 60s. And we've released some of those later films on Blu-ray,
but none of the Weissmullers. And I'm delighted that we're starting
with this. It's a really seminal film for a franchise that was powerful enough to last
several decades. And this is in the era when there weren't film franchises. Johnny Weissmuller
was an Olympic champion swimmer. They thought he'd be perfect for the part.
And no, he does not say, me, Tarzan, you, Jane.
It's one of those apocryphal film quotes that doesn't exist.
Just like Jimmy Catney never said, you dirty rat.
And Cary Grant never said, Judy, Judy, Judy.
So in any event, I'm very excited about this.
There is going to be a documentary we put together a while ago
for when Tarzan made his DVD debut.
It's a feature-length documentary called Tarzan Silver Screen King of the Jungle.
So that'll be on here, which I think
people will enjoy if they haven't seen
it. And we have two
1932 Looney Tunes that are
in high def. I Wish I Had Wings
and Moonlight for Two.
And then the theatrical
trailer.
So that will be a lot of fun.
I should mention that there's no trailer
on Anna Christie because it doesn't exist, or at least it doesn't exist anywhere within our library.
It might be in a private collector's hand someplace.
We don't know about that.
We don't have any idea.
But we couldn't put a trailer on because we don't have one.
But thankfully, we do for Tarzan the Ape Man 1932. And I always have to mention the year
when talking about that title, because there was a remake of that story with that title in 1959,
and Tarzan was played by Denny Miller. And then, of course, no one can forget the cinematic cinematic masterpiece of 1981 starring Bo Derek as Jane
and Miles O'Keefe as Tarzan
is one of the
great moments in cinema history
but the
original is what everybody wants to see
and we're delighted to be bringing Tarzan
with Johnny Weissmuller
to Blu-ray in a
spectacularly restored
presentation Well I know there's been a lot of excitement about Johnny Weissmuller to Blu-ray in a spectacularly restored presentation.
Well, I know there's been a lot of excitement about Tarzan the Ape Man.
So, and many people have already mentioned they're hoping that this will be the first of many.
So let's hope that we can get the support for this release.
I hope so.
I'm feeling very confident that people are going to support this release because they saw the benefits of what happened with the Thin Man.
And when we see that kind of support, the results are always pleasurable.
And of course, the next film in the series is actually my favorite, which is Tarzan and His Mate from 1934. So I'm really hoping we get to
sink our teeth into that one. So fans, please support our releases.
Well, I think there's been a lot of excitement about this next one you're going to tell us about,
The Great Ziegfeld from 1936.
The Great Ziegfeld from 1936?
Obviously, we have more Best Picture Oscar winners in our library than any other studio.
And we've been trying to get to a lot of them. And with the release of The Great Ziegfeld, we check another box.
And The Great Ziegfeld is a fascinating film, very unique, because Florence Ziegfeld was the great showman of the early 20th century.
And the film is epic in its scope because Ziegfeld himself was a masterful showman.
He was really focused on bringing great talents into the forefront of the theater.
And William Powell plays Ziegfeld with his usual aplomb.
And you have Myrna Loy cast alongside him, really in the second part of the movie, playing Ziegfeld's second wife,
Billy Burke. Everybody knows Billy Burke as the Glinda, the Good Witch of the North in
Wizard of Oz, or from her many wonderful supporting performances. And we just released
a few months ago, Christopher Strong, in which he had a very important role. But Billy Burke blessed the
great Ziegfeld being made, signed off on it because Ziegfeld himself had died a few years earlier.
And it was really a testament and a tribute to Ziegfeld that they made this movie. And it was
originally going to be a Universal film. And Universal was in terrible financial straits, and it ended up
going to MGM instead. And that was to everyone's benefit. And that's how it won the Oscar. It's
really a spectacular film with very impressive, different musical numbers. This is the period of time where the MGM musical, as we came to know it, had really not come into formation.
And musicals were not a kind of cornerstone of MGM at that time.
So you have some very interesting production numbers.
Some really wonderful songs were written for the film.
production numbers. Some really wonderful songs were written for the film. And you have at least one, if not more, Ziegfeld stars that made their name on the stage in Ziegfeld productions,
and then reprised their activities in this movie, The Great Ziegfeld.
And specifically, I'm speaking of the one and only Fanny Bryce.
People are more familiar with Fanny Bryce today,
thanks to Barbara Streisand's amazing portrayal of her life in Funny Girl,
both on the stage and screen.
And that's how a lot of people in future generations knew Fanny Bryce. Fanny Bryce
died in 1950. And she was really popular in the 20s and in the 30s and then on radio in the 40s.
But people know of her and she got her start with Ziegfeld in terms of becoming a huge star. So having her in this film
is very, very impressive. All the performances are great. And I need to mention Louise Reiner,
who played Ziegfeld's first wife, Anna Held. She has a telephone scene in this movie that is
She has a telephone scene in this movie that is incredibly memorable and everyone is pretty much in line with thinking that's the scene that won her the Oscar for Best Actress.
And she won the Oscar for Best Actress the following year for her role in The Good Earth.
Very rare that you have an actor or actress who wins an Oscar in consecutive years.
It has happened subsequently. It happened with Katharine Hepburn.
It happened with Spencer Tracy about this time.
It happened with Tom Hanks in the 90s.
But it's rare that it happens.
And the performances really need to be remarkable to make that happen and i
think people will love this presentation of the film because i don't think this film has ever
particularly looked good in any of its prior iterations and i've been involved with a lot of
them this 4k scan from our preservation elements really sparkles.
And the audio is wonderful.
And it is the roadshow version where we had done this initially for the DVD,
where we restored the overture intermission and end track and exit music. So it's really a superb presentation that is in line with what you would have experienced back in 1936. So we're
very excited about this one. Yeah, and I think there's a lot of excitement for that roadshow
version element of this, and that makes this a very unique, unique release.
And we've carried over some of the special features that were on the DVD featurette we put together,
Ziegfeld on Film, an excerpt from a newsreel about the New York premiere of the film.
We've added an HD classic Warner Brothers cartoon, Toy Town Hall.
Toy Town Hall, I have to say that three times twice.
And then we have the air trailer of Leo is on the air promoting the movie.
And of course, the original theatrical trailer. So it's a loaded disc and I think people will
really enjoy it. Stay with us. We'll be right back.
Hi, this is Tim Millard, host of The Extras Podcast. And I wanted to let you know that
we have a new private Facebook group for fans of the Warner Archive and Warner Brothers catalog physical media releases. So if that interests
you, you can find the link on our Facebook page or look for the link in the podcast show notes.
That takes us to the next release, Gentleman Jim from 1942. What can you tell us about that release, George?
Well, this is one of my favorite Errol Flynn movies. And that's saying something because
I have so many favorite Errol Flynn movies. But what sets this apart is it's not a swashbuckler.
This is a wonderful, loving, admirable portrayal of the gentleman who really legitimized prize fighting,
James J. Corbett. And this is based on his life story. It was authorized by his widow
for Warner Brothers to make this film. Errol Flynn is just stupendous. He's charming. He's believable. The film is meticulously directed by Raoul Walsh. And this is a 4K scan off the camera negative. So people will notice a huge uptick in quality from our DVD, which was not bad looking for its time. But it's really, really terrific.
But it's really, really terrific. There's a great supporting cast here, particularly to me, Ward Bond as John L. Sullivan gives a fantastic performance. It represents a real golden era in the history of Warner Brothers, because this is the same year that you had Now Voyager and Casablanca and so many wonderful other films.
And 21-year-old Alexis Smith really is enchanting and beautiful.
And I also have to call out Alan Hale.
He's terrific in this.
And he made a lot of films with Flynn.
I've been wanting this to come out for a long time.
And I know the fans have been asking for it for a long time. We added three high-definition Warner Brothers cartoons,
The Dover Boys at Pimento University,
Phony Fables and Hobby Horse Laughs.
And then we have a radio show from the Screen Guild Players
from February of 1944 with Flynn and Alexis Smith
recreating their roles in the original trailer, which will be in HD. So it's going to be a superb
disc. I can't wait to see it. But I've seen everything in preparation and everything looks
fantastic. So I think fans will be very happy.
Yeah, there's a lot of excitement for this one as well. I mean, obviously,
getting another Errol Flynn film in. I mean, the ones we've gone through so far,
it's just a terrific cast of stars. But I know this one has created a lot of excitement as well.
So, so far, this December is just a home run, every single one.
These are just terrific. And I'm sure the fans are going to be over the moon with these,
but we have three more. So let's jump into the next one. And that's the 1949 film,
Madame Bovary, directed by one of your favorite directors, George Vincent Minnelli.
One of the reasons why Minnelli is so fascinating to me is his ability to conquer
virtually all genres. He's best known for his musicals, but he brought his talents to great
dramas as well as comedies. And in this case, a fascinating romantic drama that's almost like a fever dream of a movie it is he brings his visual
sense to it and it is just a stunning unique telling based on the famous gustave flaubert novel
which was uh quite what do i say like a a dirty book of the 19th century. This is handled with such taste.
MGM borrowed Jennifer Jones from her husband, David O. Selznick, to appear in this movie.
Van Heflin is terrific. A very young Louis Jourdan is in this film. And I think this is one of James Mason's first American films.
He's terrific in it. The whole way the film was put together is astounding. Jennifer Jones really
gives an exceptional performance as Emma Bovary. And the tale of Madame Bovary has been filmed many
times, but I don't think anyone has ever done it as well as what Minnelli did here.
And it was with the support of producer Pandro Berman, who later on would work with Minnelli on films like Father the Pride in the Long, Long Trailer, and who I think of as being a genius behind so many great RKO movies in the 30s.
Pedro Berman is not somebody who rolls off the tip of the tongue. Unfortunately,
he needs to be remembered for his contribution as a great producer, just as Minnelli was a great
director. So here you've got greatness all over, and it's all underscored, this can't be emphasized enough, by the amazing music of the great Miklos Roja.
And it's Roja's Madame Bovary Waltz sequence in this movie that's probably the most famous part of the movie.
And I'm a little bit of a Miklos Roja obsessive, so I get very excited anytime he scores a movie.
This is really, I would say, probably the earlier part of his MGM tenure, which went on for quite
some time. It's one of his most impressive scores. This film looks amazing in this new presentation. I think fans are going to be very,
very happy. We've also added a very important, I really can't say short film, it's more like a
featurette. It's 40 something minutes long from 1949. It's called Some of the Best, and this was made as a promotional film by MGM to celebrate their 25th anniversary.
It shows a lot of MGM movies of the past as well as MGM movies that were then in production and going to be forthcoming.
first time the public got to see the footage, which is now very famous, of the famed MGM 25th anniversary luncheon, where they got almost all their stars together on one soundstage
to have a luncheon that will never be forgotten. All of that is in Some of the Best, the 1949
version. I bring the year up specifically because they also did a film called Some of the
Best in 1944 for their 20th anniversary that was far less extensive. So this is a very special extra
and it will be in high definition. We also have in high definition in 1949 Tom and Jerry cartoon,
love that up, and of course the Madame Bovary trailer. So another disc
that is filled with a great film. And I hope what people will think is a fine presentation of extras.
Yeah, it's really loaded. And that retrospective featurette, as you call it, sounds amazing. And
I'm looking forward to seeing that. And I'm sure a lot of people, we just want to highlight that. We'll want to get that, uh, uh, as, and see
that extra as well. So, well, two more George, and we're jumping ahead quite a few years to 1995
to a couple more modern films, which has been great fun that, uh, you've been able to bring
so many movies from the nineties and 2000s in the last number of months.
And there will be more.
There will? Okay, terrific.
So this is A Midwinter's Tale from 1995.
What can you tell us about this film, George?
Well, Kenneth Branagh was just becoming known as the wunderkind of Shakespeare in the 90s.
And he extended his talents from the stage to the screen.
And this is a film in which he does not appear,
but he directed it and I believe he co-wrote it.
I believe he co-wrote it.
And it's really a tongue-in-cheek kind of mockumentary.
This is to Shakespeare what Waiting for Guffman is to regional theater.
I mean, it's just hysterical. And the cast that Branagh put together for this, as they really have fun with Hamlet as the subject, includes a lot of actors that aren't that famous in this country, but also people who are very well known in this country, like Joan Collins and Jennifer Saunders from Absolutely Fabulous. But the whole cast is terrific.
I believe the film was released in the UK as In the Bleak Midwinter. That was the title in the UK.
But Castle Rock, which became part of our company as part of the acquisition of Turner Broadcasting.
Castle Rock got behind this film in the U.S. in a big way.
But because it's black and white and because the subject matter is very much,
I would say, to the art film crowd, it isn't as well known as it should be.
It made its debut on DVD as an early Warner Archive DVD title.
So this new master is a revelation in how wonderful the black and white photography is.
And I really hope people will enjoy having this film because it is hysterically funny.
having this film because it is hysterically funny. And then we have one more here that is from 2000,
which, you know, not too long ago here. That's Saving Grace. What can you tell us about that one,
George? Well, I saw this film when it came out and it was very successful in this country. It's a film from the UK with Brenda Blithin. She is the grace in the
title. She's a woman with lots of problems because her husband has died and left her a lot of debt.
She's got a really good friend played by Craig Ferguson, who at the time was only known as Mr. Wick on the Drew Carey show.
This was like a little bit of a breakthrough for him because he was also involved in the
creation of this film.
And he's a pot grower and dealer.
And they come up with a plan to turn Grace's greenhouse into a marijuana factory.
Grace's greenhouse into a marijuana factory.
And this is 2000, so marijuana wasn't approved for legal use in certain parts of the world.
It still isn't in many parts.
And they made it into a very sweet, kind-spirited comedy that's very, very...
It's just a sweet, irresistible film.
Beautifully written, efficiently told.
It was also a very big hit for an art film at the time of its release. It was a great success, and it came from Fine Line Features,
which was the art film division of New Line Cinema at that time.
And Fine Line had really established itself for being really at the forefront,
along with other companies, of the art film circuit at the time.
And they brought a lot of really important films, both from this country as well
as imports, to theaters. And Saving Grace was a big hit. And it's long overdue for a Blu-ray release.
And on this Blu-ray, we've carried over commentaries that were recorded for the DVD.
There are two of them. One of them is more of a creative commentary, and it has the DVD, there are two of them. One of them is more of a creative commentary,
and it has the director, Nigel Cole, and Craig Ferguson,
and one of the other creators, I believe the writer,
who is also, I think, the producer.
And then there's a commentary with Craig Ferguson and Brenda Blethen.
So you get two feature commentaries and the trailer, as well as a gorgeous new presentation of the film that is stunning to look at and quite enjoyable.
And I can't believe this movie is 23 years old already, but it is our intention.
And we're not neglecting the 70s or the 80s.
We were very heavy in the 70s and the 80s a couple of years ago,
and everybody was complaining that we weren't doing enough from the 30s and the 40s.
And we're trying to please everyone, which is impossible.
But I'm very grateful.
I want to say thank you to all the fans who have supported Warner Archive this year,
because our release schedule for 2023 got back to normal with over 60 releases for the year,
as opposed to last year, where we were constricted to a much lesser number, much to my chagrin.
And this is just reflective of Warner Brothers Discovery's support of the Warner Archive
collection in terms of management, realizing that our little boutique label within the
Behamoth is a can-do organization that can bring profit to the company by doing carefully managed, well-prepared releases that
are geared to the consumer who is a connoisseur and wants the very best in quality. And if your
particular favorite film has not yet made it out, don't be surprised if it surfaces soon. We're working on films from
every genre, every era. We have all sorts of plans ahead for 2024. So if your particular favorite
film is not available yet, know that if there is a demand and a reason, we'll get behind it and get it out to you
on a beautiful disc, which you will be able to place on your shelf and own forever with
the best possible quality.
And that's our mission statement.
And we are married to it and proud of it.
Well, before we wrap up, George, there was one title that I forgot to ask you about earlier, and that was the Looney Tunes Collector's Choice Volume 2, which is also falling in this timeframe.
What can you tell us about that and any updates?
Well, we moved the street date from November 28th to December 12th to the same production clog line.
But we'll have to talk about that on another podcast because there's 25 cartoons on there.
And that means 25 different things to talk about.
We're very excited about that.
And I did mention earlier, I believe with you that we we let people know that
we're already working on volume three as a matter of fact i will be looking at some uh new uh sources
that have been created for volume three and we plan to expand our animation activities in 2024. And read into that what you may, but we know, we hear you out
there. We love animation in the Warner Archive, and we intend to do a lot more of it, and we
intend to make sure that it's done right. Well, I just wanted to be sure a few people maybe
had not heard about that slight move back a week or two for that release,
but it's always exciting to hear your updates. And as you mentioned, as it gets closer, we'll
get more into that title specifically. But that means that on December 12th, we'll have the seven
you talked about today, plus that Looney Tunes will also be coming out on December 12th. So that's just a packed day and should be very
exciting leading into the holidays. So as always, George, thank you so much for coming on the extras
to talk about these new releases from the Warner Archive. My pleasure, Tim. And once again, thank
you. And thank you to all the consumers out there who have supported our efforts for almost 15 years now.
We're getting ready for a big birthday, so there are big plans in store.
Well, that's exciting to hear that there are big plans in store for 2023,
including more animation ahead for all of you animation fans out there.
And just to recap some of the changes to the schedule, including more animation ahead for all of you animation fans out there.
And just to recap some of the changes to the schedule,
In Love and War and Rapa Nui have moved from October and are now releasing in November on the 14th,
and Looney Tunes Collector's Choice Volume 2 has now moved out to December 12th.
So you have eight titles releasing that day.
We will continue to update more information on these releases on our podcast Facebook page
and in our Facebook group called the Warner Archive and Warner Brothers Catalog Group.
So look for those links in the podcast show notes.
And we will let you know when you can pre-order these titles as soon as those are made available.
So be sure and follow us on social media so you get that information right away.
And as always, if you are a long-term fan of the show, don't forget to follow or subscribe
and leave us a review at your favorite podcast provider.
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