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traceyk65

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Posts posted by traceyk65

  1. *No birthdays today, so here?s a nod to Will Rogers, whose films are being featured tonight:*

     

     

     

    *More words of wit and wisdom, this time from Mark Twain:*

     

     

    *In honor of the animal films today:*

     

    100 years of dog heroes:

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YNH5NRulnm4&playnext=1&list=PL774CD70381E93B63&index=6

     

    The adventures of Rex and Rinty!

     

     

    Horse movies:

     

     

    The Black Stallion (I loved these books as a kid):

     

     

    National Velvet (1944)

     

     

    The Lion King ?Born Free?:

     

  2. > {quote:title=Kinokima wrote:}{quote}

    > I love the relationship between Cary and Katharine in this. I also enjoy Lew Ayres' character. I also enjoy how symbolic the play room is to the theme of the movie.

    >

    > But the one thing that brings the film slightly down for me is how one dimensional the sister and her father are. Heck how did Cary fall in love with such a girl in the first place?

    >

    > Edited by: Kinokima on Dec 28, 2010 8:22 PM

     

     

    I always wondered that too--they met on vacation, so maybe she was a different person when out from under her father's thumb? The character isn;t any better developed in the original either--I wonder if the play does a better job?

     

    My favorite characters from this movie are the Potters. (I always love the comic relief moments.)

  3. Today, surprisingly (as I don;t like westerns) it was Fort Apache with John Wayne, Henry Fonda and Shirley Temple. Wayne was perfect as the laid-back, grizzled vet--he'd gotten his persona down pat by that time and wore the role like a comfortable old pair of blue jeans--and Fonda's stiff-necked, by-the-book commanding officer reminded me of a similar role he played in Jezebel as Bette Davis prim and proper fiance. Even Shirley Temple was appealing (I am not a Shirely Temple fan either) as Fonda's spirited, independent daughter. The ending was a bit predictable (from the moment Fonda dressed down his officers for their lack of spit and polish, you knew it was all going to end in tears) but getting there was entertaining. There were plently of comic moments (usually featuring Victor McLaglan as the incorrigible enlisted man) and moments depicting the lives of the men and women of the Fort.

  4. > {quote:title=ValentineXavier wrote:}{quote}

    > > {quote:title=traceyk65 wrote:}{quote}

    > > From The Big Sleep:

    > > Vivian: Speaking of horses, I like to play them myself. But I like to see them workout a little first, see if they're front runners or come from behind, find out what their *whole* card is, what makes them run.

    >

    > Lots of good ones! I just want to point out that it's "hole card," not "whole card."

     

    Thanks. I know next to nothing about horse racing and nothing at all about betting.

  5. From The Big Sleep:

     

    Vivian: You go too far, Marlowe.

    Marlowe: Those are harsh words to throw at a man, especially when he's walking out of your bedroom.

     

    Vivian: Speaking of horses, I like to play them myself. But I like to see them workout a little first, see if they're front runners or comefrom behind, find out what their whole card is, what makes them run.

    Marlowe: Find out mine?

    Vivian: I think so.

    Marlowe: Go ahead.

    Vivian: I'd say you don't like to be rated. You like to get out in front, open up a little lead, take a little breather in the backstretch, and then come home free.

    Marlowe: You don't like to be rated yourself.

    Vivian: I haven't met anyone yet that can do it. Any suggestions?

    Marlowe: Well, I can't tell till I've seen you over a distance of ground. You've got a touch of class, but I don't know how, how far you can go.

    Vivian: A lot depends on who's in the saddle.

     

    General Sternwood: How do you like your brandy, sir?

    Philip Marlowe: In a glass.

     

    Carmen Sternwood: Is he as cute as you are?

    Philip Marlowe: Nobody is.

     

    From Murder, My Sweet:

    Philip Marlowe: "'Okay Marlowe,' I said to myself. 'You're a tough guy. You've been sapped twice, choked, beaten silly with a gun, shot in the arm until you're crazy as a couple of waltzing mice. Now let's see you do something really tough - like putting your pants on.'"

     

    Philip Marlowe: She was a charming middle-aged lady with a face like a bucket of mud. I gave her a drink. She was a gal who'd take a drink, if she had to knock you down to get the bottle.

     

    Philip Marlowe: That's just part of my clothes. I hardly ever shoot anybody with it.

     

     

    From The Maltese Falcon:

    Spade: We didn't exactly believe your story, Miss O'Shaughnessy. We believed your 200 dollars. I mean, you paid us more than if you had been telling us the truth, and enough more to make it all right.

     

    Joel Cairo: You always have a very smooth explanation...

    Sam Spade: What do you want me to do, learn to stutter?

     

    Joel Cairo: I certainly wish you would have invented a more reasonable story. I felt distinctly like an idiot repeating it.

    Sam Spade: Don't worry about the story's goofiness. A sensible one would have had us all in the cooler.

     

     

    From Casablanca (not officially a noir, but should be):

     

    Woman: What makes saloonkeepers so snobbish?

    Banker: Perhaps if you told him I ran the second largest banking house in Amsterdam.

    Carl: Second largest? That wouldn't impress Rick. The leading banker in Amsterdam is now the pastry chef in our kitchen.

    Banker: We have something to look forward to.

     

    Ugarte: You know, Rick, I have many a friend in Casablanca, but somehow, just because you despise me, you are the only one I trust.

     

    Captain Renault: Rick, there are many exit visas sold in this caf?, but we know that *you've* never sold one. That is the reason we permit you to remain open.

    Rick: Oh? I thought it was because I let you win at roulette.

    Captain Renault: That is *another* reason

     

    Rick: Tell me, who was it you left me for? Was it Laszlo, or were there others in between? Or - aren't you the kind that tells?

     

    Ugarte: Rick, think of all the poor devils who can't meet Renault's price. I get it for them for half. Is that so... parasitic?

    Rick: I don't mind a parasite. I object to a cut-rate one.

     

    Yvonne: Where were you last night?

    Rick: That's so long ago, I don't remember.

    Yvonne: Will I see you tonight?

    Rick: I never make plans that far ahead.

     

    Rick: How can you close me up? On what grounds?

    Captain Renault: I'm shocked, shocked to find that gambling is going on in here!

    Croupier: Your winnings, sir.

    Captain Renault: Oh, thank you very much.

     

    Captain Renault: I've often speculated why you don't return to America. Did you abscond with the church funds? Run off with a senator's wife? I like to think you killed a man. It's the Romantic in me.

    Rick: It was a combination of all three.

     

    From Mildred Pierce:

    Ida: Personally, Veda's convinced me that alligators have the right idea. They eat their young.

     

    Ida: When men get around me, they get allergic to wedding rings.

     

    Mildred: Wally, you should be kept on a leash! Now why can't you be friendly?

    Wally: But I *am* being friendly!

    Mildred: No, I mean it. Friendship's much more lasting than love.

    Wally: Yeah, but it isn't as entertaining.

     

    Mildred: Cut it out, Wally. You make me feel like Little Red Riding Hood.

    Wally: And I'm the Big Bad Wolf, huh? Now, Milly, you've got me all wrong. I'm a romantic guy, but I'm no wolf.

    Mildred: Then quit howling!

  6. I had a Beatles sort of Christmas this year (the strangest gift being a surprisingly funny book entitled _Paul is Undead_ which imagines the Fab Four as zombies (except Ringo-he's a Ninja.) ) So in honor of that, here are a few of my favorite Beatles tunes.

     

    "Revolution"

     

     

    "Hey Jude"

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BD3ovfZXO5Q&feature=related'>http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BD3ovfZXO5Q&feature=related'>http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BD3ovfZXO5Q&feature=related'>http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BD3ovfZXO5Q&feature=related

     

    "For the Benefit of Mr Kite:"

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BD3ovfZXO5Q&feature=related

     

    "When I'm 64"

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AQtCldVsjOg

     

    And finally a jaunty little tune about a serial killer:

     

     

    I could keep listing forever, but I'll stop now...

  7. > {quote:title=gagman66 wrote:}{quote}

    > Prince,

    >

    > How about *Mary Pickford and Douglas Fairbanks?* 14 Pickford films. 14 Fairbanks ones. What say you to that? Including premiers of the newly restored *SPARROWS* and *THE BLACK PIRATE!*

     

    I would love to see the Black Pirate!

  8. Courtesy of lzcutter (aka the list lady)

     

    STAR OF THE MONTH:

     

    May 1994: Greta Garbo

    June 1994: Glenn Ford

    July 1994: Greer Garson

    Aug.1994: Edward G. Robinson

    Sept.1994: Barbara Stanwyck

    Oct.1994: Angela Lansbury

    Nov.1994 John Garfield

    Dec.1994:

     

    Jan.1995: Esther Williams

    Feb.1995: Ronald Reagan

    Mar.1995:

    Apr.1995: Doris Day

    May 1995: Myrna Loy

    June 1995: Errol Flynn

    July 1995: G. Kelly (Gene or Grace?)

    Aug.1995: Paul Muni

    Sept.1995: Jane Powell

    Oct.1995: Clark Gable

    Nov.1995: Barrymores

    Dec.1995: Bing Crosby

     

    Jan.1996: Deborah Kerr

    Feb.1996: Robert Young

    Mar.1996

    April 1996: Irene Dunne

    May 1996: James Stewart

    June 1996: Rosalind Russell

    July 1996: Fred Astaire

    Aug.1996: Ann Sheridan

    Sept.1996: Van Johnson

    Oct.1996: Kathryn Grayson

    Nov.1996: Robert Mitchum

    Dec.1996: Gary Cooper

     

    Jan.97: Jean Arthur

    Feb.97: Eleanor Parker

    Mar.97: 31 Days of Oscar

    Apr.97: Ava Gardner

    May 97: George Brent

    June 97: June Allyson

    July 97: John and Walter Huston (also Director of the Month)

    Aug.97: Cary Grant

    Sept.97: Ida Lupino

    Oct.97: Walter Pidgeon

    Nov.97: Katharine Hepburn

    Dec.97: Best of ?97

     

    Jan.1998: Lana Turner

    Feb.1998: Charlton Heston

    Mar.1998:31 Days of Oscar

    April 1998: Red Skelton

    May 1998: Olivia de Havilland

    June 1998: James Cagney

    July 1998: Lucille Ball

    August 1998: Joan Crawford

    Sept.1998: John Wayne

    Oct.1998: Cyd Charisse

    Nov.1998: Claude Rains

    Dec.1998: Best of ?98

     

    Jan.1999: Elizabeth Taylor

    Feb.1999: William Powell

    March 1999: 31 Days of Oscar (probably)

    April 1999: Dennis Morgan

    May 1999: Bette Davis

    June 1999: Mickey Rooney

    July1999: Natalie Wood

    August 1999: Peter Sellers

    Sept.1999: Norma Shearer

    Oct. 1999: Gregory Peck

    Nov. 1999: Ginger Rogers

    Dec. 1999: Burt Lancaster

     

    Jan. 2000: Debbie Reynolds

    Feb. 2000: Robert Ryan

    March 2000: 31 Days of Oscars (probably)

    April 2000: Spencer Tracy

    May 2000: Alexis Smith

    June 2000:Wallace Beery

    July 2000: Judy Garland

    August 2000: film debuts

    Sept 2000: Jane Wyman

    October 2000: Dick Powell

    Nov 2000: Frank Sinatra

    Dec. 2000: Lauren Bacall

     

    Jan. 2001: Elvis Presley

    Feb.2001: Jean Hagen

    March 2001: 31 Days of Oscar (probably)

    Apr.2001: Knighted Actors

    May 2001: Jean Harlow

    June 2001: W.C. Fields

    July 2001: Ann Sothern

    Aug.2001: James Garner

    Sept. 2001: Robert Taylor

    Oct. 2001: Lana Turner

    Nov.2001: Glenn Ford

    Dec.2001: The Marx Brothers

     

    Jan. 2002: Marlene Dietrich

    Feb. 2002: Kirk Douglas

    March 2002: 31 Days of Oscar

    April 2002: Barbara Stanwyck

    May 2002: Edward G. Robinson

    June 2002: Greta Garbo

    July 2002: Sidney Poitier

    Aug. 2002: Joan Crawford

    Sept. 2002: Van Heflin

    Oct. 2002: Final films

    Nov. 2002: Shelly Winters

    Dec. 2002: Montgomery Clift

     

    Jan. 2003: Doris Day

    Feb. 2003: John Garfield

    Mar. 2003: 31 Days of Oscar

    Apr. 2003: Harold Lloyd

    May 2003: Olivia de Havilland

    June 2003: TV Actors in Films

    July 2003: Lee Marvin

    Aug. 2003: 1st Summer Under the Stars (see below)

    Sept. 2003: James Mason

    Oct. 2003: Boris Karloff

    Nov. 2003: Shirley MacLaine

    Dec. 2003: David Niven

     

    Jan. 2004: Katherine Hepburn

    Feb.2004: 31 Days of Oscar

    Mar.2004: Charles Chaplin

    Apr. 2004: Judy Garland

    May 2004: Greer Garson

    June 2004: Cary Grant

    July 2004: Stars That Died Before Their Time

    Aug.2004: 2nd Summer Under the Stars (see below)

    Sept.2004: Myrna Loy

    Oct. 2004: Peter Lorre

    Nov.2004: Clark Gable

    Dec. 2004: James Stewart

     

    Jan.2005: Canadian Actors

    Feb. 2005: 31 Days of Oscar

    Mar. 2005: Claudette Colbert

    Apr. 2005: Errol Flynn

    May 2005: Orson Welles

    June 2005: Ingrid Bergman

    July 2005: Audrey Hepburn

    Aug. 2005: 3rd Summer Under the Stars (see below)

    Sept.2005: Greta Garbo

    Oct.2005: Robert Mitchum

    Nov.2005: Joan Fontaine

    Dec. 2005: Bing Crosby

     

    Jan. 2006: Robert Montgomery

    Feb.2006: 31 Days of Oscar

    Mar.2006: Nelson Eddy & Jeanette MacDonald

    Apr.2006: Deborah Kerr

    May 2006: Bette Davis

    June 2006: Anthony Quinn

    July 2006: Elizabeth Taylor

    Aug.2006: 4th Summer Under the Stars (see below)

    Sept.2006: William Holden

    Oct.2006: Child Stars

    Nov.2006: Lucille Ball

    Dec. 2006: Gary Cooper

     

    Jan.2007: Jean Arthur

    Feb.2007: 31 Days of Oscar

    Mar.2007: Gene Kelly

    Apr.2007: Rita Hayworth

    May 2007: John Wayne and Katherine Hepburn

    June 2007: Ida Lupino

    July 2007: Randolph Scott

    Aug.2007: 5th Summer Under the Stars (see below)

    Sept.2007: A Star is Born (starmaking/breakthrough performances)

    Oct.2007: Henry Fonda

    Nov.2007: Guest Programmer Month

    Dec.2007: Irene Dunne

    Jan.2008: James Cagney

    Feb.2008: 31 Days of Oscar

    Mar.2008: Acting Dynasties

    Apr.2008: Hedy Lamarr

    May 2008: Frank Sinatra

    June 2008: Sophia Loren

    July 2008: Rosalind Russell

    Aug.2008: 6th annual Summer Under the Stars (see below)

    Sept.2008: Kay Francis

    Oct.2008: Carole Lombard

    Nov.2008: Charles Laughton

    Dec. 2008: Joseph Cotton

     

    Jan. 2009: Jack Lemmon

    Feb. 2009: 31 Days of Oscar

    Mar. 2009: Ronald Reagan

    April 2009: Funny Ladies and 15th Anniversary

    May 2009: Sean Connery

    June 2009: Great Directors

    July 2009: Stewart Granger

    August 2009: Summer Under the Stars

    Sept. 2009: Claude Rains

    Oct. 2009: Leslie Caron

    Nov. 2009: Grace Kelly

    Dec. 2009: Humphrey Bogart

     

    Jan. 2010: ?The Method?

    Feb. 2010: 31 Days of Oscar

    March 2010: Ginger Rogers

    April 2010: Robert Taylor

    May 2010: Donna Reed

    June 2010: Natalie Wood

     

    Summer Under the Stars:

     

    SUMMER UNDER THE STARS:

    Aug. 2003: James Stewart, Clint Eastwood, Peter O'Toole, Joan Crawford, Fred Astaire, Robert Mitchum, James Cagney, Elizabeth Taylor, Cary Grant, Jack Lemmon, Frank Sinatra, Greta Garbo, Gary Cooper, Charlton Heston, Katherine Hepburn, Steve McQueen, Gene Kelly, Marlene Dietrich, Gregory Peck, Humphrey Bogart, Judy Garland, Clark Gable, John Wayne, Myrna Loy, Kirk Douglas, Lana Turner, Bette Davis, Spencer Tracy, Paul Newman, Doris Day, William Holden.

     

    August 2004: John Wayne, Barbara Stanwyck, Bob Hope, Debbie Reynolds, Sidney Poitier, Lucille Ball, Katherine Hepburn, Clint Eastwood, Ava Gardner, Henry Fonda, Jean Harlow,

  9. *Birthdays Today*

     

    Humphrey Bogart:

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hq4octPpydA&feature=fvsr

     

    His leading ladies:

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dnW1Xp0Daug&feature=fvsr

     

    With Bacall, his real-life leading lady:

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0b1MrlU3gXM&feature=related

     

    Tribute to film noir:

     

     

     

    Cab Calloway:

     

    Jib-jab jumpin? and jivin? with the Nicholas Brothers:

     

     

    Singing the delights of illegal botanicals:

     

     

     

    ?and the Story of Minnie the Moocher:

     

     

    ..Can you tell him how to get to?Sesame Street?

     

     

     

    *MERRY CHRISTMAS TO ALL!*

     

    (From Me and Judy Garland. Well, ok-mostly from her)

     

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5g4lY8Y3eoo&feature=related

  10. To go back to the original question, I found an interview with the woman who played the little girl Debbie in the Bishop's Wife (and also the little girl in It's A Wonderful Life) and she says Grant did do his own skating. Of course she was 7 then and is now 70, so who knows? Her memory may be off a bit.

  11. > {quote:title=FredCDobbs wrote:}{quote}

    > Latest names and numbers:

    >

    >

    >

    > #1 Riso Amaro (Bitter Rice) Italian, 1949

    > #2 His Girl Friday

    > #3 The Outlaw

    > #4

    > #5

    > #6 Riso Amaro (Bitter Rice) Italian, 1949

    > #7 Gerard Depardieu (?)

    > #8 The Gold Rush, Chaplin

    > #9 The Adventures of Robin Hood, Flynn and deHaviland

    > #10 Riso Amaro (Bitter Rice) Italian, 1949

    > #11 (?) Room At The Top, Simone Signoret

    > #12 The Sheik, Valentino

    > #13 It's a Wonderful Life, Donna Reed and James Stewart

    > #14

    > #15

    > #16

    > #17 La Terra Trema (1948, Italian) (aka The Earth Trembles)

    > #18 Le Notti Bianche (1957, Italian) (aka White Nights)

    > #19 The Sea Hawk Flynn and Brenda Marshall

    > #20 La Cena Delle Beffe (1942, Italian) (aka The Jester's Banquet)

    > #21 Les Bas-fonds, Jean Gabin, 1936, French

    > #22

    > #23

    > #24

    > #25

    > #26

    > #27 Farewell to Arms, Gary Cooper and Helen Hayes

    > #28 It's a Wonderful Life (again)

    > #29 Senso, 1954, Alida Valli & Farley Granger

    > #30 Les Bas-fonds, Jean Gabin

    > #31

    > #32 Il Cavaliere Misterioso, 1948, Vittorio Gassman

    > #33

    > #34

    > #35 Possessed, Clark Gable & Joan Crawford

    > #36 Senso, 1954, Alida Valli & Farley Granger

    > #37 (Garbo?)

    > #38 The Son of the Sheik

    > #39

    > #40

    > #41 (?) Bellissima, 1951, Anna Magnani

    > #42 (?) It Happened One Night, Claudette Colbert & Clark Gable

    > #43 The Adventures of Robin Hood (again)

    > #44 Grand Hotel Greta Garbo and John Barrymore

    > #45 Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, Spencer Tracy and Ingrid Bergman

    > #46 ?

    >

     

    Wow. Keep it up guys! Youve doubled the ones I knew!

  12. > {quote:title=Bronxgirl48 wrote:}{quote}

    > > {quote:title=wouldbestar wrote:}{quote}

    > > Constance Ford was not always the cold fish. She spent 30 years playing Rachels mother, Adah, on Another World and she was the wise, caring, and honest one we all should have had. She outlived three husbands and these romantic storylines with mature people were very sweet and believable. There was fire under that ice.

    >

    > Gee, I didn't realize she had this background. All I know is that when I look at her, I get scared!

     

     

    That's why I know her! I grew up watching that one with my Mom!

  13. > {quote:title=JackFavell wrote:}{quote}

    > Ha ha! "didn't notice Allison Hayes."

    >

    > Rotary phones are confusing to the newer generation. Imagine growing up and never hearing the diddle diddle diddle sound of the dial..... ah, the good old days.

     

     

    I remember in college the phone company used to give you a lock for the phone so only the people paying for it could use it, but you could get around that by pushing down the disconnect the right number of times. (I'm really not a master criminal or anything--I actually caught someone doing that on the phone in my friend's hallway and questioned it. Really.)

  14. *No Birthdays, so a few tributes to Hollywood couples in honor of tonight?s schedule:*

    Tracy and Hepburn (because it?s a movie, not a lifeboat):

     

     

    Loy and Powell (because he?s too much a gentleman to let Myrna go last):

     

     

    Fred and Ginger:

     

     

    Janette and Nelson in glorious color:

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a-6ToFUId4o&feature=related

     

    Gaynor and Farrell (was she really teeny or he really tall?):

     

     

    *Classic on-screen couples:*

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bTKvyEZSel4&feature=related

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IEBSwFhERXo

     

     

    *Oscar-winning pairings (a surprisingly small category):*

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=41hlQx-XY4g&feature=related

     

    *Real life couples:*

     

     

  15. *Birthdays today:*

     

    Irene Dunne:

     

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eupBFzpMqMc&feature=related

     

    And she sings too!

     

     

    Irene and her Leading Men:

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LfT0xeZaZ0Q

     

    Classic Couples:

     

     

     

    *5 Days to Christmas!*

     

    Merry Christmas! from Irene and Cary:

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F_Yi84HrGTM

     

    Oh, By Gosh By Golly, It's time for Christmas Movies:

     

     

    Christmas with the Crawfords:

     

     

    Joan, Bette and Christina "elf" themselves:

     

  16. > {quote:title=lzcutter wrote:}{quote}

    > Fred,

    >

    > I recognized the two you mentioned and (if I counted correctly, if not someone let me know)

    >

    > #8 *The Gold Rush* Chaplin

    > #9 *The Adventures of Robin Hood* Flynn and deHaviland

    >

    > #12 *The Sheik* Valentino

    > #13 *It's a Wonderful Life* Donna Reed and James Stewart

    > #19 *The Sea Hawk* Flynn and Brenda Marshall

    > #20 *Love on the Rocks* Swanson and Valentino

    > #27 *Farewell to Arms* Gary Cooper and Helen Hayes

    > #28 *It's a Wonderful Life* (again)

    > #38 *The Son of the Sheik*

    > #40 *The Adventures of Robin Hood* (again)

    > #41 *Grand Hotel* Greta Garbo and John Barrymore

    > #42 *Dr. Jekyl and Mr. Hyde* Spencer Tracy and Ingrid Bergman

    >

    > Towards the end is another clip of Garbo but I'm not sure from what film.

    >

    > Also, there is a clip of Ginger Rogers getting her negligee all but torn off and is that Joan Crawford going topless?

    >

    > Lastly, looks like a number of Italian pre and post war films in the mix as well.

    >

    > This montage, to me, is the best valentine to film and those of us who love it. Ever.

     

    Those are more or less the ones I recognized. And to all who suggested it, I will try and find a copy and watch the whole thing. Ive only heard great things about it.

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