One of Miramax’s last big flops was Kirk Jones’ Everybody’s Fine. The film’s initial release stirred up premature Oscar buzz for star Robert De Niro, but eventually that fizzled out when the film failed to find an audience, despite having a holiday/family get-together center that usually caters to the masses anytime from November through December. De Niro’s heartfelt performance is ultimately wasted on a drama that ends on the melodramatic side, when it could have easily gone in many other directions. Everybody’s Fine isn’t nearly as dry or dull as most claim it to be, but it does drop the ball more than it rightfully should.
Frank Goode (Robert De Niro) is a retired widower that’s experiencing the last down-swing of getting old. He’s lonely and spends most of his day gardening or thinking back on memories he had with his four children.
Frank Goode (Robert De Niro) is a retired widower that’s experiencing the last down-swing of getting old. He’s lonely and spends most of his day gardening or thinking back on memories he had with his four children.
- 10/24/2012
- by Jeremy Lebens
- We Got This Covered
Robert De Niro has gone from tough guy to big ol’ softie the past decade. From a deranged cabbie, a boxer and take-no-guff wise-guys, De Niro has played some of film’s most iconic characters. As time marches on, De Niro has taken on roles that have shown his softer side. Oh sure, he still plays “tough guys” but the parts he’s landed have simply been De Niro playing De Niro playing a cop, like in the disastrous Righteous Kill with Al Pacino — another actor who has similar paths as the New York-born actor.
Since Meet the Parents, De Niro, along with fans, has had some fun playing a family patriarch. And it stuck. We can call it the domestication of Robert De Niro or we can simply call it “Robert De Niro” keeps playing a dad. Well, in Miramax’s Everybody’s Fine, get set for more of...
Since Meet the Parents, De Niro, along with fans, has had some fun playing a family patriarch. And it stuck. We can call it the domestication of Robert De Niro or we can simply call it “Robert De Niro” keeps playing a dad. Well, in Miramax’s Everybody’s Fine, get set for more of...
- 3/8/2010
- by Erik Buckman
- ReelLoop.com
Once pegged as arguably the finest actor of his generation, Robert DeNiro's meteoric descent into mediocrity, characterized by one appalling project choice after another, have finally brought us to the once unthinkable point where "starring Robert DeNiro" is these days less an assurance as to a certain level of quality and more a thinly veiled threat. With that in mind we approach journeyman director Kirk Jones star-studded remake of the 1990 Italian original, centered on ol' Bob as a pushy Father attempting to bridge distancing relationships with his four grown children, with a certain apprehension. First then, the good news. DeNiro is just fine, without a hint of the self-parody we've all grown so tired of, and refreshingly buttoned down. The bad news is that the entire affair is simply so tepid and uninspired, a pallid amble down a well-worn brush towards an appropriately middling vista.
With his quartet of...
With his quartet of...
- 2/26/2010
- by Neil Pedley
- JustPressPlay.net
Once pegged as arguably the finest actor of his generation, Robert DeNiro's meteoric descent into mediocrity, characterized by one appalling project choice after another, have finally brought us to the once unthinkable point where "starring Robert DeNiro" is these days less an assurance as to a certain level of quality and more a thinly veiled threat. With that in mind we approach journeyman director Kirk Jones star-studded remake of the 1990 Italian original, centered on ol' Bob as a pushy Father attempting to bridge distancing relationships with his four grown children, with a certain apprehension. First then, the good news. DeNiro is just fine, without a hint of the self-parody we've all grown so tired of, and refreshingly buttoned down. The bad news is that the entire affair is simply so tepid and uninspired, a pallid amble down a well-worn brush towards an appropriately middling vista.
With his quartet of...
With his quartet of...
- 2/26/2010
- by Neil Pedley
- JustPressPlay.net
Robert De Niro's recent film Everybody's Fine was released on DVD this week, giving audiences a chance to see one of the star's quieter performances. Not only is the film's mood mellow but the publicity surrounding its December 2009 theatrical release was also subdued. Hence, it is one of De Niro's lesser known movie credits.
That is not surprising given that Everybody's Fine is hardly blockbuster material. It belongs in that love-it-or-hate-it subgenre of films about family ties that includes the likes of Terms of Endearment, The Ice Storm and Ordinary People. In Everybody's Fine De Niro plays Frank Goode, a retired widower who discovers that all is not well with his three children when he travels across the country to meet each of them.
The subject matter of fractured families is hardly original territory. That's perhaps because these days family bonds seem to be more frail than they once were.
That is not surprising given that Everybody's Fine is hardly blockbuster material. It belongs in that love-it-or-hate-it subgenre of films about family ties that includes the likes of Terms of Endearment, The Ice Storm and Ordinary People. In Everybody's Fine De Niro plays Frank Goode, a retired widower who discovers that all is not well with his three children when he travels across the country to meet each of them.
The subject matter of fractured families is hardly original territory. That's perhaps because these days family bonds seem to be more frail than they once were.
- 2/26/2010
- CinemaSpy
Robert De Niro stars in a gentle family drama as a widower rounding up his four offspring
Robert De Niro eases into a Spencer Tracy career phase for this gentle, lump-in-the-throat family drama, remade from a 1990 Italian movie by Giuseppe Tornatore, Stanno Tutti Bene, starring Marcello Mastroianni. Lonely widower Frank Goode travels around the country in a fraught attempt to round up his busy grownup children for the first family get-together since their mother's funeral eight months previously.
This is a sweet-natured film on the saccharine borderline, but with interesting moments; it does not deserve the cold critical response it has so far been given in the Us, and the 66-year-old De Niro gives what, for my money, is his first decent, watchable performance in quite a while. British writer-director Kirk Jones has persuaded him to turn the heat down under his trademark mannerisms and tics. It is good for...
Robert De Niro eases into a Spencer Tracy career phase for this gentle, lump-in-the-throat family drama, remade from a 1990 Italian movie by Giuseppe Tornatore, Stanno Tutti Bene, starring Marcello Mastroianni. Lonely widower Frank Goode travels around the country in a fraught attempt to round up his busy grownup children for the first family get-together since their mother's funeral eight months previously.
This is a sweet-natured film on the saccharine borderline, but with interesting moments; it does not deserve the cold critical response it has so far been given in the Us, and the 66-year-old De Niro gives what, for my money, is his first decent, watchable performance in quite a while. British writer-director Kirk Jones has persuaded him to turn the heat down under his trademark mannerisms and tics. It is good for...
- 2/25/2010
- by Peter Bradshaw
- The Guardian - Film News
Every year some modest but fine films with big name actors slip under the radar of most moviegoers while bigger, brasher blockbusters grab the headlines. Everybody's Fine is such a film. Released in early December 2009, it was submerged by the tidal wave of expectation and publicity that helped make Avatar the highest grossing film of all time (although not the most popular, as some people think).
Here on CinemaSpy.com we published an exclusive interview with star Robert De Niro and director Kirk Jones around the time of the film's theatrical release. The film makes its DVD debut today (February 23) and thanks to our friends at Buena Vista Home Entertainment and Miramax, we have another treat for De Niro fans: the chance for you to win one of five copies we are giving away.
To have a chance of winning Everybody's Fine you need to answer one simple question: which...
Here on CinemaSpy.com we published an exclusive interview with star Robert De Niro and director Kirk Jones around the time of the film's theatrical release. The film makes its DVD debut today (February 23) and thanks to our friends at Buena Vista Home Entertainment and Miramax, we have another treat for De Niro fans: the chance for you to win one of five copies we are giving away.
To have a chance of winning Everybody's Fine you need to answer one simple question: which...
- 2/23/2010
- CinemaSpy
Dir: Kirk Jones Cast: Robert DeNiro, Sam Rockwell, Drew Barrymore, Kate Beckinsale Frank Goode has spent his whole life making rubber coating for the telephone wires that run alongside America's railways. This has had two major consequences: firstly, he has developed an illness from decades of breathing in noxious fumes; secondly, he barely knows his own four middle-aged children. Both of these things come to light in the weeks following his wife's death; and so it is fair to say that Frank has been granted a rare and precious window to peer inside his own past and find out where he lost his way. As his four children make their excuses to avoid visiting him for a reunion dinner, Frank decides to head out on an ill-advised (in fact downright forbidden as far as his doctor is concerned) road trip to surprise his unwitting cubs in their natural surroundings. In...
- 2/19/2010
- by For Your Consideration
- t5m.com
On the heels of this week's broadcast of his Kennedy Center Honors (along with Bruce Springsteen, Dave Brubeck, Mel Brooks, and Grace Bumbry), legendary actor Robert De Niro is on the silver screen again. While he's being lauded for past laurels, he's also garnering kudos for his latest film, Everybody's Fine, a comparatively modest work that has recently been released after making a festival circuit tour -- most recently it had a special feature screening at the 2009 Denver Film Festival. Based on Oscar-winning director Guiseppe Tornatore's 1990 hit Italian film, Stanno tutti bene (which starred Marcello Mastroianni as an Italian bureaucrat on a veritable travelogue across Italy in search of his adult children), English director Kirk Jones transfers the story to the States and De Niro. The 67-year-old actor plays retired widower Frank Goode who used to string telephone wire...
- 12/30/2009
- by Brad Balfour
- Huffington Post
Bad times call for upbeat slogans, producers seem to think, no matter what the film is really about
These are feel-bad times in western economies, and two high-profile movies just released in the United States (due in Britain early next year) can be commended for reflecting this. In Up in the Air, George Clooney plays a chilly figure whose job is to fly around the Us as an industrial executioner, sacking employees at firms who are downsizing or, as the cute euphemism has it, "right-sizing". Equally tuned to the current mood is Everybody's Fine, starring Robert De Niro as a seriously ill widower who, when his children renege on their promises to visit him for Christmas, summons his dwindling energies for a bus tour to their doorsteps.
Although both films have good jokes in them, they are fundamentally bleak case studies of alienation. Clooney's character, Ryan Bingham, is emotionally cut...
These are feel-bad times in western economies, and two high-profile movies just released in the United States (due in Britain early next year) can be commended for reflecting this. In Up in the Air, George Clooney plays a chilly figure whose job is to fly around the Us as an industrial executioner, sacking employees at firms who are downsizing or, as the cute euphemism has it, "right-sizing". Equally tuned to the current mood is Everybody's Fine, starring Robert De Niro as a seriously ill widower who, when his children renege on their promises to visit him for Christmas, summons his dwindling energies for a bus tour to their doorsteps.
Although both films have good jokes in them, they are fundamentally bleak case studies of alienation. Clooney's character, Ryan Bingham, is emotionally cut...
- 12/11/2009
- by Mark Lawson
- The Guardian - Film News
Rating: 7.5/10
Writer/director: Kirk Jones
Cast: Robert DeNiro, Drew Barrymore, Kate Beckinsale, Sam Rockwell
Studio: Miramax
A remake of Italian director Giuseppe Tornatore’s (Cinema Paradiso) 1990 film of the same name, Everybody’S Fine tells the story of Frank Goode (Robert DeNiro), a recent widower out of touch with his four children (Drew Barrymore, Kate Beckinsale, Sam Rockwell, and Austin Lysy). And so he decides to do what any elderly parent with a heart condition would…set out on a trek by way of plane, train, and automobile across America to drop in and surprise his kids one by one. After all, if they aren’t going to come see him, why not take the initiative and go see them, right? Wrong.
Read more on Theatrical Review: Everybody’S Fine…...
Writer/director: Kirk Jones
Cast: Robert DeNiro, Drew Barrymore, Kate Beckinsale, Sam Rockwell
Studio: Miramax
A remake of Italian director Giuseppe Tornatore’s (Cinema Paradiso) 1990 film of the same name, Everybody’S Fine tells the story of Frank Goode (Robert DeNiro), a recent widower out of touch with his four children (Drew Barrymore, Kate Beckinsale, Sam Rockwell, and Austin Lysy). And so he decides to do what any elderly parent with a heart condition would…set out on a trek by way of plane, train, and automobile across America to drop in and surprise his kids one by one. After all, if they aren’t going to come see him, why not take the initiative and go see them, right? Wrong.
Read more on Theatrical Review: Everybody’S Fine…...
- 12/7/2009
- by James Wallace
- GordonandtheWhale
Robert DeNiro's Everybody's Fine is not exactly as the adverts portend. I'd expected a movie about a doddering, lonely old widower whose family stood him up for a holiday trip, so he decided to travel the country and surprise his children, learn they weren't the people he was led to believe, and come to terms with their lives while realizing something important about himself. Then, everybody would wind up together over Christmas dinner and the movie would be wrapped up in a nice basket of mirth and fuzzies and old folks would leave the theater exclaiming, "What a cute little movie! I've got to tell Sylvia about that one. And isn't DeNiro so charming?"
I think the blue hairs might want to check their expectations a bit, because while the first half of Everybody's Fine is exactly as advertised, the third act delivers a melodramatic, overly wrought, heinously sentimental...
I think the blue hairs might want to check their expectations a bit, because while the first half of Everybody's Fine is exactly as advertised, the third act delivers a melodramatic, overly wrought, heinously sentimental...
- 12/4/2009
- by Dustin Rowles
Robert De Niro shows funny moments in 'Everybody's Fine' movie trailer. Miramax's new Robert De Niro comedy flick, "Everybody's Fine" hit the theaters today. The movie trailer (below) features Robert De Niro in some pretty funny moments. The movie also stars : Drew Barrymore, Kate Beckinsale, and Sam Rockwell "Everybody's Fine" is a remake of the "Stanno Tutti Bene" movie by Giuseppe Tornatore. It focuses on Robert De Niro's character,Frank Goode.
- 12/4/2009
- by Andre@ontheflix
- OnTheFlix
Everybody who has been fretting over Robert De Niro’s career of late can collectively exhale a sigh of relief. After carpet bombing the cinematic landscape with stinkers like The Adventures of Rocky and Bullwinkle, Hide and Seek, Godsend, and Righteous Kill, De Niro finally settles into a nice little film devoid of gimmicks and action. Playing the widowed patriarch of four grown children, De Niro gives a quietly nuanced performance that grounds the film, and makes you remember why you liked him to begin with.
Everybody’s Fine tells the story of a very ordinary family and the events surrounding a holiday gathering. Frank Goode (Robert De Niro) is recently widowed, and has made plans to have all four of his grown children visit him for Christmas. He prepares the house, buys the groceries, purchases a new grill, and awaits their arrival. One by one each child calls and...
Everybody’s Fine tells the story of a very ordinary family and the events surrounding a holiday gathering. Frank Goode (Robert De Niro) is recently widowed, and has made plans to have all four of his grown children visit him for Christmas. He prepares the house, buys the groceries, purchases a new grill, and awaits their arrival. One by one each child calls and...
- 12/4/2009
- by Shannon Hood
- The Flickcast
Courtesy of Miramax Films.
In the movie Everybody's Fine, Robert De Niro calms down a bit and acts his age. Much like Jack Nicholson did in About Schmidt, De Niro gets somber and reflective as he moves through this modern-day tale, depicting the current status of the American family. Although released during the holiday season, prepare for a depressing yet intelligent story.
We meet Frank Goode (Robert De Niro) as a retired man who recently had to deal with the death of his wife. His big ambition is trying to get all four of his grown-up children to come home and sit at the same table. The problem is that Amy (Kate Beckinsale lives in Chicago. Robert (Sam Rockwell) is constantly on tour in an orchestra. Rosie (Drew Barrymore) is apparently a Las Vegas stage performer. David (Austin Lysy) lives in NYC and keeps to himself. Despite all the logistical obstacles,...
In the movie Everybody's Fine, Robert De Niro calms down a bit and acts his age. Much like Jack Nicholson did in About Schmidt, De Niro gets somber and reflective as he moves through this modern-day tale, depicting the current status of the American family. Although released during the holiday season, prepare for a depressing yet intelligent story.
We meet Frank Goode (Robert De Niro) as a retired man who recently had to deal with the death of his wife. His big ambition is trying to get all four of his grown-up children to come home and sit at the same table. The problem is that Amy (Kate Beckinsale lives in Chicago. Robert (Sam Rockwell) is constantly on tour in an orchestra. Rosie (Drew Barrymore) is apparently a Las Vegas stage performer. David (Austin Lysy) lives in NYC and keeps to himself. Despite all the logistical obstacles,...
- 12/4/2009
- Tampa Film Examiner
I'm not a fan of movie trailers. I like a short teaser, but three-minute trailers -- for example, the Edge of Darkness trailer currently playing in theaters -- that appear to reveal the entire plot bother me. Even more so are the misleading trailers. Yes, you need to entice folks in to the theater, but I'm quite baffled at the main trailer for Everybody's Fine, the American adaptation of the 1990 film Stanno Tutti Bene with Marcello Mastroianni. This trailer reminded me of the recut trailer for The Shining, depicting a happy-go-lucky about a boy and his dad. How could such a somber film be portrayed as a joyful coming home movie?
Much like Massimo De Rita's original screenplay for Stanno Tutti Bene, everybody's far from fine -- widower Frank Goode (Robert De Niro) realizes that his only connection to his children had been his wife, so he sets out to visit each of them.
Much like Massimo De Rita's original screenplay for Stanno Tutti Bene, everybody's far from fine -- widower Frank Goode (Robert De Niro) realizes that his only connection to his children had been his wife, so he sets out to visit each of them.
- 12/4/2009
- by Debbie Cerda
- Slackerwood
“Everybody’s Fine” is like taking a nice leisurely walk through the park. Your body won’t be stressed by the activity, but you somehow get some enjoyment out of it. This film doesn’t strive to be anything special. It just tells a simple story and moves along. You might though feel unfulfilled at the end of the day. Robert DeNiro plays against type as recent widower Frank Goode. He is a lonely chap looking to reconnect with his four kids. Unfortunately, all of them cancelled a recent outing leaving Frank with plenty of steak and a spanking new grill. Frank was a strict disciplinarian with the kids. He never quite listened to their needs. His wife on the other hand talked to them about their problems and was a great sounding board for them. Many people out there will certainly relate to this family arrangement.
- 12/4/2009
- Upcoming-Movies.com
Around 3/4 of the way through Everybody’s Fine — the new dramatic comedy from Kirk Jones that functions as a remake of the Italian film Stanno tutti bene — Robert De Niro’s character Frank Goode has a conversation with a female truck driver as he hitches a ride to visit one of his grown children who have dispersed themselves across the country. The driver acknowledges that she lost her husband to alcoholism, while Goode mentions that he’s “lost” his wife as well.
Actually, Goode has lost everybody important to him. His wife has passed away, and she was the one who the children (played as adults by Drew Barrymore, Sam Rockwell, Austin Lysy and Kate Beckinsale) felt more comfortable communicating with; in her absence, he learns nothing new about his family and almost all threads have been severed. His journey to reacquaint himself with them is motivated by loss and the impending fear of death,...
Actually, Goode has lost everybody important to him. His wife has passed away, and she was the one who the children (played as adults by Drew Barrymore, Sam Rockwell, Austin Lysy and Kate Beckinsale) felt more comfortable communicating with; in her absence, he learns nothing new about his family and almost all threads have been severed. His journey to reacquaint himself with them is motivated by loss and the impending fear of death,...
- 12/4/2009
- by John Cooper
- ReelLoop.com
Everybody's Fine seems tailor-made for those with big hearts, small brains, and a wad of tissues in their pockets. Despite a solid cast and strong source material, this remake of a 1990 film from Cinema Paradiso director Giuseppe Tornatore quickly devolves into a mess of treacle and tears.
In the comedy-tinged drama, recently widowed Frank Goode (Robert De Niro) has lost touch with his grown children Amy (Kate Beckinsale), Rosie (Drew Barrymore), Robert (Sam Rockwell), and David (Austin Lysy), particularly since the death of his beloved wife. When everyone fails to show up for a family event at his home, Frank decides to head across the country to surprise each of his sons and daughters.
A trip to New York finds artist David absent from his downtown apartment, and Frank's other visits don't go much better. He is quickly shooed away from Amy's Chicago home, and his arrival in Robert's Denver doesn't last much longer.
In the comedy-tinged drama, recently widowed Frank Goode (Robert De Niro) has lost touch with his grown children Amy (Kate Beckinsale), Rosie (Drew Barrymore), Robert (Sam Rockwell), and David (Austin Lysy), particularly since the death of his beloved wife. When everyone fails to show up for a family event at his home, Frank decides to head across the country to surprise each of his sons and daughters.
A trip to New York finds artist David absent from his downtown apartment, and Frank's other visits don't go much better. He is quickly shooed away from Amy's Chicago home, and his arrival in Robert's Denver doesn't last much longer.
- 12/4/2009
- CinemaSpy
By Susan Granger - Robert De Niro plays a retired, recent widower, Frank Goode, trying to reconnect with his grown children in Kirk Jones. remake of Giuseppe Tornatore.s "Stanno Tutti Bene."
Frank senses something.s amiss when he plans a summer barbeque and his children cancel, one after another, giving a variety of flimsy excuses. So despite dire warnings from his doctor, Frank decides to make a cross-country road trip, paying a surprise visit to each one of them. His first stop is in New York City, where he waits at his artist son David.s apartment, but David never shows up. He then goes to Chicago, where his advertising executive daughter Amy (Kate Beckinsale) seems tense and uncomfortable in his presence. After that, his classical musician son Robert (Sam Rockwell) is just leaving Denver as Frank is arriving. And his dancer daughter Rosie (Drew Barrymore) is saddled with...
Frank senses something.s amiss when he plans a summer barbeque and his children cancel, one after another, giving a variety of flimsy excuses. So despite dire warnings from his doctor, Frank decides to make a cross-country road trip, paying a surprise visit to each one of them. His first stop is in New York City, where he waits at his artist son David.s apartment, but David never shows up. He then goes to Chicago, where his advertising executive daughter Amy (Kate Beckinsale) seems tense and uncomfortable in his presence. After that, his classical musician son Robert (Sam Rockwell) is just leaving Denver as Frank is arriving. And his dancer daughter Rosie (Drew Barrymore) is saddled with...
- 12/4/2009
- Arizona Reporter
For his roles in such '70s and '80s classics as Mean Streets, Taxi Driver, The Deer Hunter, Raging Bull and Goodfellas, Robert De Niro has been revered as the master of Method Acting. But of late he has been more closely associated with animated family fare (The Adventures of Rocky and Bullwinkle and Shark Tale), thrillers that failed to deliver thrills (Hide and Seek and 15 Minutes) and slow plodding dramas (City by the Sea and Men of Honor). Even his recent reunion with Al Pacino in Righteous Kill failed to spark with audiences.
For much of this decade, many De Niro-led films have neither ignited the box office nor drawn critical kudos. But there have been a few notable exceptions. As Frank, the curmudgeonly soon-to-be-father-in-law in Meet the Parents, De Niro struck gold. The sequel, Meet the Fockers, raked in almost $280M in international ticket sales. And What Just Happened?...
For much of this decade, many De Niro-led films have neither ignited the box office nor drawn critical kudos. But there have been a few notable exceptions. As Frank, the curmudgeonly soon-to-be-father-in-law in Meet the Parents, De Niro struck gold. The sequel, Meet the Fockers, raked in almost $280M in international ticket sales. And What Just Happened?...
- 12/2/2009
- CinemaSpy
In Everybody's Fine, the new adaptation of the 1990 Italian classic Stanno tutti bene (which starred Marcello Mastroianni), Frank Goode (Robert De Niro) is a newly-widowed retiree just trying to keep busy: gardening, vacuuming, doctor's appointments, grocery shopping... On a larger scale, he is trying to reconnect with his grown children (Drew Barrymore, Sam Rockwell, and Kate Beckinsale), and when they won't come to visit him, he sets out on a road trip - via Amtrak and Greyhound - traversing the same country across which he strung telephone lines for forty years. Writer/director Kirk Jones (Waking Ned Devine, Nanny McPhee) is a Brit, and though his vision seemed ripe for an American road movie, he knew he had to get the lay of the land before writing the script. Cue the cross-country trip, a la Frank himself: countless buses, trains, and cheap motels later, Jones knew he had found his inspiration.
- 11/30/2009
- TribecaFilm.com
If there's anything to take away from the very relatable new Kirk Jones film, Everybody's Fine, it's this: call your family. The critics' screening of the film, usually a room filled with hard-hearted people taking notes, was sniffling and sobbing after the film. I called my parents and, by Sunday, my mom was visiting me in New York, a rare occurrence. Everybody's Fine - a remake of the 1990 Italian film starring Marcello Mastroianni by Giuseppe Tornatore (Nuovo Cinema Paradiso) - is a road trip of a film starring Robert De Niro as Frank Goode, a retiree living in solitude after the death of his wife, eight months earlier. When his kids all cancel on a planned family weekend, Frank decides to crisscross America via Amtrak, surprising his kids Rosie (Drew Barrymore), Amy (Kate Beckinsale), and Robert (Sam Rockwell), with a visit and getting a glimpse into their successful lives. Marking...
- 11/17/2009
- TribecaFilm.com
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