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Sort of related to Criterion movies, I just noticed Fellini's 8 1/2 is free on Amazon's unbox video rental service. I keep meaning to watch this flick and this is the perfect opportunity.
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# ? Nov 17, 2007 05:37 |
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# ? May 11, 2024 13:39 |
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SubG posted:I mean, if Criterion is going to start poaching material from Anchor Bay, I'd way rather they pick up the Django films than the Evil Dead films. If that's the case then I would definitely want some Herzog on Criterion. Maybe a reissue of Aguirre will not have the " *** - Video Movie Guide" quote on the case. SubG posted:Or how about a blacksploitation set from Criterion (I'd pay a lot for a Criterion Coonskin (1975) or Boss friend of the family (1975))?
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# ? Nov 17, 2007 10:15 |
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I assume most people who read this thread also read Take 5, but just in case, there was just an interesting post there: http://www.criterion.com/blog/2007_12_01_archive.html#8783218335688029824 Long story short: Criterion hosed up their recent releases of Mala Noche and the Ingmar Bergman: Four Masterworks boxed set. If you bought either of those recently, you can return the bad discs as described in the blog post and get a new copy, although it looks like new versions of Mala Noche won't be available for a while.
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# ? Dec 8, 2007 02:13 |
Looks like The Last Emperor will be cropped from 2.35:1 to 2:1 per Storaro's preference for 2:1 http://www.criterion.com/asp/release.asp?id=422
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# ? Dec 8, 2007 05:35 |
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God, Storaro is such a douchebag.
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# ? Dec 8, 2007 05:40 |
Criminal Minded posted:God, Storaro is such a douchebag. I understand his reasoning, as it adds a little more resolution, but it's not much. Sorry for the irrelevant image, but it has the varied levels of detail for a comparison: Does the 2:1 image really look sharper enough to justify the cropping? Looking at Apocalypse Now, he cropped to 2:1 for sharpness, yet still applied a lot of edge enhancement to fake sharpness.
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# ? Dec 8, 2007 07:36 |
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Og Oggilby posted:I understand his reasoning, as it adds a little more resolution, but it's not much. This is really loving annoying. I was thinking about dropping the veritable wad of cash on this one, but this just seems like a screw up. Isn't Criterion supposed to use the best version of the film out there? What say does the cinematographer really have in it at this point?
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# ? Dec 8, 2007 07:52 |
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I dunno, when a man has shot arguably the most gorgeous movie ever made (The Conformist), I'm willing to cut him some slack. And Bertolucci approved it. Still, it is disappointing.
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# ? Dec 8, 2007 08:53 |
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The Artisan release is pretty severely cropped to begin with. It'd probably be about equivalent to ~2.10:1 widthwise, plus more cropped off top+bottom. http://www.dvdbeaver.com/film/dvdcompare/lastemperor.htm
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# ? Dec 9, 2007 04:02 |
March Criterions: Mafioso (1962, Alberto Lattuada) Antonio Gaudí (1984, Hiroshi Teshigahara) The Ice Storm (1997, Ang Lee) - 1.85:1 anamorphic widescreen - Dolby Digital 1.0 mono - New, restored high-definition digital transfer - A 1996 interview with director Alberto Lattuada by filmmaker Daniele Luchetti - New video interviews with the director's son, Alessandro Lattuada, and wife, actress Carla Del Poggio (Variety Lights) - Italian and U.S. theatrical trailers - Stills gallery of promotional caricatures by artist Keiko Kimura - New and improved English subtitle translation - $29.95 MSRP - 1.33:1 standard - Dolby Digital 1.0 mono - New, restored high-definition digital transfer - New video interview with architect Arata Isozaki - Gaudí, Catalunya 1959, a short film by Hiroshi Teshigahara featuring footage from his first trip to Spain - Monitor: Antonio Gaudí (1961), a short film essay by director Ken Russell - VITA, a short film by Teshigahara on the sculpture work of his father, Sofu Teshigahara - Original theatrical trailer - New and improved English subtitle translation - PLUS: A booklet featuring a new essay by art historian Dore Ashton, and reprinted writings by Hiroshi and Sofu - $39.95 MSRP - 1.85:1 anamorphic widescreen - Dolby Digital 2.0 stereo - New, restored high-definition digital transfer, supervised and approved by director Ang Lee and director of photography Frederick Elmes - Audio commentary featuring Lee and producer-screenwriter James Schamus - New documentary featuring interviews with actors Joan Allen, Kevin Kline, Christina Ricci, and Elijah Wood - New video interview with novelist Rick Moody - Deleted scenes - Footage from an event honoring Lee and Schamus at New York's Museum of the Moving Image - Production designs and sketches, with commentary by the designers - Theatrical trailer - PLUS: A new essay by film critic Bill Krohn $39.95 MSRP and Eclipse Series 9.... The Delirious Fictions of William Klein - Who Are You, Polly Magoo? (1966) - Mr. Freedom (1969) - The Model Couple (1977)
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# ? Dec 15, 2007 01:59 |
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A very odd month. Mafioso - First I've heard of it. The other Italian comedies from Criterion have been pretty good, so chances are I'll like (but not love) this one. Antonio Gaudí - Eh. I love the features in the Teshigahara box, but the documentary shorts didn't do much for me. I'll rent it, but expectations are low. The Ice Storm - A decent movie, but why? I guess it'll generate some revenue. I'm not liking that cover at all. IIRC, there's some special features from the previous disc that are missing here. The Delirious Fictions of William Klein - Sounds like it could be interesting. It's nice to see Criterion dip into more obscure waters, they've been hitting the canon pretty hard lately. Still, none of it really excites me.
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# ? Dec 15, 2007 03:23 |
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The editor for Roger Ebert's site reviewed Mafioso! when he was out recuperating from surgery. Link
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# ? Dec 15, 2007 03:41 |
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I actually squealed upon announcement of that William Klein set. Although i'm sure not too everyone's taste, Polly Maggoo has been a favourite of mine for a while now and i've always wanted to see more of his stuff.
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# ? Dec 15, 2007 03:48 |
December newsletter is out and the hinted film is Anthony Mann's The Furies (1950).
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# ? Dec 18, 2007 20:58 |
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New features added for The Last Emperor: - The Chinese Adventure of Bernardo Bertolucci, a 52-minute documentary that revisits the film's making - A 66-minute BBC documentary exploring Bertolucci's creative process and the making of The Last Emperor - A new interview with Ian Buruma examining the historical period of the film And the booklet now includes interviews with production designer Ferdinando Scarfiotti and actor Ying Ruocheng, and a reminiscence by Bertolucci.
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# ? Dec 20, 2007 17:05 |
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It's about drat time that Mafioso got put out on DVD.
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# ? Dec 21, 2007 01:49 |
http://www.criterion.com/blog/index.html Criterion explains The Last Emperor. It turns out that the shorter 165 min. cut is the real director's cut and the 4-hour cut was part of the contract for allowing a 4-part miniseries to be shown. So, it'll have both the theatrical cut (director's cut) and the extended director's cut (really the television version). Of course, Storaro supervised the 2K transfers. It's also worth mentioning that a bare-bones DVD will be out from Image around the same time.
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# ? Jan 5, 2008 21:33 |
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FitFortDanga posted:The Ice Storm - A decent movie, but why? I guess it'll generate some revenue. I'm not liking that cover at all. IIRC, there's some special features from the previous disc that are missing here. When I first saw it, I thought Criterion was doing the third "Works of Director" boxset. That IS an ugly cover. I can't remember the last Criterion cover art I really liked.
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# ? Jan 6, 2008 03:03 |
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Starscream posted:When I first saw it, I thought Criterion was doing the third "Works of Director" boxset. That IS an ugly cover. I can't remember the last Criterion cover art I really liked. "Drunken Angel"? I really love that cover.
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# ? Jan 6, 2008 03:17 |
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zandert33 posted:"Drunken Angel"? I really love that cover. Personally, I loved the cover to "Robinson Crusoe on Mars". The picture on the website doesn't do it justice as it makes it looks to be more colorful than it really is. When you get the actual disc you can see that it has a much darker tone giving it a bold and striking look. I was looking at the first page of this thread from late 2006 to read that I only had two Criterions back then ("Seven Samurai" three-disc reissue and "Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas"). poo poo's changed a little since then... * Seven Samurai (Three-Disc Reissue) * Brazil (Three-Disc Special Edition) * Yojimbo * Sanjuro * The Third Man * Haxan * Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas * Ran * Equinox * Pandora's Box * Robinson Crusoe on Mars I've got a birthday coming up soon and I've been interested in picking up the "Samurai" trilogy. Can anyone here testify to it's awesomeness?
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# ? Jan 12, 2008 15:02 |
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Macrame_God posted:
The movies are great, you should be aware though that they are not Anamorphic. Criterion has slowly but surely been rereleasing their older non-anamorphic DVDs, so tt may be possible that the movies COULD be released again in a few years, but then again you could be waiting for nothing.
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# ? Jan 12, 2008 16:01 |
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Macrame_God posted:
Are you talking about the Musashi Miyamoto films with Toshiro Mifune, or the Rebel Samurai pack?
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# ? Jan 13, 2008 00:50 |
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Jack Does Jihad posted:Are you talking about the Musashi Miyamoto films with Toshiro Mifune, or the Rebel Samurai pack? The Musashi Miyamoto films.
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# ? Jan 13, 2008 01:54 |
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The new announcements should come tomorrow, I wonder what we'll see. Seems like it's about time for Bottle Rocket and/or Mishima.
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# ? Jan 14, 2008 23:30 |
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Ebert's new review of Mishima has me interested. I need to see some of Schrader's directorial efforts too.
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# ? Jan 14, 2008 23:33 |
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Mishima is incredibly beautiful, and has an equally lovely score to match it, but I remember it leaving me cold. But it's been awhile since I've seen the film, so I should Netflix it and give the movie another shot. As for Schrader in general, his output is pretty erratic, and I think he's a better writer than director, but I think the best movie he's made was his debut, Blue Collar. The DVD is out of print, but if you can find it, I highly recommend watching it. Actually, checking various sites, it looks like a bunch of Schrader's films are OOP. Maybe Criterion can put together a box set?
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# ? Jan 15, 2008 00:49 |
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Green Vulture posted:Mishima is incredibly beautiful, and has an equally lovely score to match it, but I remember it leaving me cold. Come to think of it, I think this is a pretty good summary of my feelings for about three quarters of all anthology films.
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# ? Jan 15, 2008 01:48 |
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First hints of the new announcements... #427: This looks familiar, but maybe it's just one of those shots that always looks familiar. #428: Someone at criterionforum.org says this is Blast of Silence. EDIT: looks like once again they're going to post the new releases while I'm driving home from work. FitFortDanga fucked around with this message at 01:07 on Jan 16, 2008 |
# ? Jan 16, 2008 00:51 |
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Inspired by some of the other lists, I decided to list the Criterions I already own: 400 Blows and its sequels 8 1/2 Alphaville Autumn Sonata The Beauty and the Beast Branded to Kill Chasing Amy Cries and Whispers Dairy of a Chambermaid The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie Double Suicide Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas The Fireman's Ball High and Low Hiroshima mon amour Ikiru Juliet of the Spirits Kwaidan The Last Temptation of Christ Late Spring Loves of a Blonde Mona Lisa My Own Private Idaho Naked Lunch Night and Fog The Night Porter The Passion of Anna Picnic at Hanging Rock The Pornographers Rashomon Red Beard Robocop The Royal Tenenbaums The Ruling Class Through a Glass Darkly The Silence Slacker Solaris Story of a Prostitute That Obscure Object of Desire This is Spinal Tap (actually on laserdisc) Throne of Blood Through a Glass Darkly Tokyo Drifter Tokyo Story The Unbearable Lightness of Being Videodrome Wild Strawberries Winterlight Withnail and I My collection is not so bad, but I've definitely fallen behind. Of course, being here isn't going to help my wallet any.
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# ? Jan 16, 2008 01:14 |
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Apparently #427 is Death of a Cyclist. I admire Criterion's ability to keep whipping out these interesting-looking films that I've never heard of.
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# ? Jan 16, 2008 01:59 |
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BranceMulliganPI posted:Videodrome drat you. I want a copy of this but DVDPlanet won't sell me one because they think it's a porno and I don't have a credit card with which to buy "pornos"
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# ? Jan 16, 2008 06:05 |
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FitFortDanga posted:Apparently #427 is Death of a Cyclist. I admire Criterion's ability to keep whipping out these interesting-looking films that I've never heard of. Death of a Cyclist is fantastic. I loved every moment of it when I saw it in the big Janus Films film series I caught last year. I'm surprised it's not on DVD yet.
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# ? Jan 16, 2008 06:19 |
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Starscream posted:drat you. I want a copy of this but DVDPlanet won't sell me one because they think it's a porno and I don't have a credit card with which to buy "pornos" Why not pay seven dollars more then, and get it from some other site?
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# ? Jan 16, 2008 15:51 |
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I picked up three new Criterions today: "If...", "Man Bites Dog", and "The Hidden Fortress". I've seen "Man Bites Dog" before, but I haven't seen the others. "If..." was very nice and, even though I haven't seen "The Hidden Fortress" yet, I'm certain that it's wonderful. I mean, Kurosawa directed it for crying out loud!
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# ? Jan 16, 2008 21:42 |
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Macrame_God posted:I haven't seen "The Hidden Fortress" yet, I'm certain that it's wonderful. I mean, Kurosawa directed it for crying out loud! That said, The Hidden Fortress is pretty drat good.
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# ? Jan 16, 2008 22:07 |
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Green Vulture posted:For someone with over 30 movies to his name, this is a dangerous attitude to have, especially if you're paying $20 to $40 per film. I mean, I have a major hard-on for Martin Scorsese's work, and am about as biased with him as Darko is with Steven Spielberg, but even I'll admit he's had a few duffers in his career. I hate to be the Kurosawa freak, but please tell us what Kurosawa movies from the 50's/60's (14 movies total) that are not worth owning? The "The Idiot" may be your answer, but that movie is part of the Eclipse boxset.
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# ? Jan 16, 2008 22:29 |
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zandert33 posted:I hate to be the Kurosawa freak, but please tell us what Kurosawa movies from the 50's/60's (14 movies total) that are not worth owning? The "The Idiot" may be your answer, but that movie is part of the Eclipse boxset. "Worth owning" is relative to the viewer. I own The Lower Depths because I like having all of Kurosawa's films, but I don't consider it essential part of his work. Not that it's bad (it's good, I like Renoir's version a little more), but I probably wouldn't ever put it on unless I had planned a marathon of all his movies. I'm not sure why you qualified your question with the "50's/60's" limitation either. That wasn't part of what Green Vulture said. I certainly wouldn't recommend Dodesukaden or Dersu Uzala as blind buys.
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# ? Jan 16, 2008 22:45 |
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FitFortDanga posted:"Worth owning" is relative to the viewer. I own The Lower Depths because I like having all of Kurosawa's films, but I don't consider it essential part of his work. Not that it's bad (it's good, I like Renoir's version a little more), but I probably wouldn't ever put it on unless I had planned a marathon of all his movies. I wouldn't recommend those two movies as "blind buys" either. We've got to remember here, he did say "Hidden Fortress", anybody who's a real movie fan has heard about the movie and knows it's ranked as worthwhile. Also, what I really meant is that if you've purchased any film from those two decades you really can't go too far off. Even though "Lower Depths" isn't his best film, it's still an excellent film that is beautifully shot with some great acting. I do understand it's not always wise to just buy anything "blind" just because the director has done good stuff in the past... but with Kurosawa, I'd say without a doubt that he's only make 3 or 4 films that I would rank as a "bad buy".
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# ? Jan 16, 2008 22:55 |
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#427 - DEATH OF A CYCLIST - New, restored high-definition digital transfer - Calle Bardem (2005), a documentary on the revolutionary life and career of director Juan Antonio Bardem - Theatrical trailer - New and improved English subtitle translation - PLUS: A booklet featuring a new essay by scholar Marsha Kinder and a 1955 essay by Bardem on Spanish cinema #428 - BLAST OF SILENCE - DIRECTOR-APPROVED SPECIAL EDITION FEATURES: - New, restored digital transfer - Requiem for a Killer: The Making of “Blast of Silence” (2007) - Rare on-set Polaroids - Locations revisited in 2008 - Trailer - PLUS: An essay by film critic Terrence Rafferty and a four-page graphic-novel adaptation of the film by award-winning artist Sean Phillips (Criminal, Sleeper, Batman: Jekyll & Hyde) ECLIPSE SERIES 10: SILENT OZU Includes: I Was Born, But... Passing Fancy Tokyo Chorus No other April announcements yet. Seems like another blah month to me, but I haven't seen most of them so I should shut up. I have seen I Was Born, But... which is okay, but I don't have any interest in seeing it again. Also, kinda lame that they're only on the 10th Eclipse release and they're already repeating directors. I know a lot of Criterion fans go apeshit for Ozu, but I'm dying for the rumored Mizoguchi set. FitFortDanga fucked around with this message at 23:31 on Jan 16, 2008 |
# ? Jan 16, 2008 23:26 |
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# ? May 11, 2024 13:39 |
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FitFortDanga posted:I'm not sure why you qualified your question with the "50's/60's" limitation either. That wasn't part of what Green Vulture said. I certainly wouldn't recommend Dodesukaden or Dersu Uzala as blind buys. I'm saying that in this age of Netflix, you shouldn't just blind buy a film because it has a director's name on it...and especially if it's a Criterion, due to their higher prices. For the life of me, I honestly can't think of one director with over a dozen films that hasn't made a bad movie somewhere down the line (and before you throw his name out, let me say I have a major dislike of Kubrick's The Shining, so there. ) As for the new Criterions, the art is again quite beautiful and looking them up on IMDb, the movies sound interesting (especially Blast of Silence), but, going back to Scorsese in my first post, I wish Criterion would stop dicking around and release a compilation of his short films like they said they would, a long time ago.
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# ? Jan 17, 2008 00:12 |