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PostPosted: Sun Apr 29, 2007 12:39 pm 
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This has to be one of the worst movies I have seen this year(and I admit I have not seen NAMASTEY LONDON)!!!! I had forgotten the kind of crap Bollywood is capable of churning out till I saw this one. In a time and age when we are seeing the likes of KHOSLA KA GHOSLA, PYAAR KE SIDE EFFECTS, MIXED DOUBLES even, this kind of turd is unacceptable! The law of averages was bound to catch up with Yashraj Films IMO. THey have had too many successes these past two years, time for a dud !!!

Siddharth Anand loses the plot completely in the movie. The only actor with some sanity left is in parts Victor Bannerjee and Javed Jaafri. Saif and Rani ham away (all blame lies with the director). And the script is full of factual improbabilities and absolutely idiotic references. When directors begin to treat their audiences like morons, you get a low IQ product such as this.

Watch at your own peril would be my verdict!!!


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PostPosted: Sun Apr 29, 2007 6:09 pm 
Its a rip-off of Tom Cruises' film 'Days of Thunder'


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PostPosted: Sun Apr 29, 2007 6:32 pm 
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Producer: Aditya Chopra/Yash Raj Films
Director: Siddharth Raj Anand
Starring: Saif Ali Khan, Rani Mukherjee, Jaaved Jaffrey, Angelina Idnani, Ali Haji, Victor Banerjee, and Shruti Seth
Music: Vishal-Shekhar
Lyrics: Javed Akhtar
Genre: Romantic
Recommended Audience: Parental Guidance
Film Released on: 27 April 2007

Reviewed by: Lidia Ostepeev
Reviewer's Rating: 5.0 / 10
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Public Rating Average: 5.42 / 10 (rated by 79 viewers) Give your Rating: 1 / 10 2 / 10 3 / 10 4 / 10 5 / 10 6 / 10 7 / 10 8 / 10 9 / 10 10 / 10

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Call me hardhearted but I just don’t care for cute kids who try too hard to ingratiate themselves to an audience. Cars – for any purpose other than the utilitarian, also leave me cold. So the combination of kids and car racing in Siddharth Anand’s Ta Ra Rum Pum did not hold much promise. It doesn’t seem right to judge a film on the basis of a few promos so I took in a session and can now report that it is an ambling family drama which invariably winds up on the race circuit. Here the measure of a man’s success and a test of good parenting seem to be his capacity to bump his opponent off the track. Forget the protocols of NASCAR racing where I understand it’s possible to win on points even if you don’t come first. When Rajveer – (Saif Ali Khan) swaggers into the brightness of the stadium with helmet in his hand and hears the crowd roar – “V. J!” he becomes a veritable gladiator.
Like Anand’s first film Salaam Namaste (2005), this is an NRI story, with some premarital sex (nothing steamy), a modern look and its fair share of slow motion “trampoline induced” jumps to indicate euphoria. The screenplay however, is so loose that the result becomes almost ambivalent. On leaving the cinema I wasn’t too sure whether I’d seen a tribute to materialism and ego or a story about family love. Whatever the case, it’s a film that tries to cover too many bases with only a modicum of originality.

One of the problems is that the idea of protecting one’s children from the harsh realities of life – used to good effect by Begnini in Life is Beautiful, seems unsuited to the predicament faced by the family in Ta Ra Rum Pum. V. J. experiences a bad turn on the track and loses his confidence so the family have to shift from Manhattan to Brooklyn. An attempted portrayal of their economic hardship is none-too-convincing. Neighbours are supportive, V. J. and Radhika (Rani Mukerjee) get jobs, their home is basic but prettily decorated, there’s a lot of love, a family pet so where, oh where are the harsh realities? The Singhs decide to continue sending their children to an expensive school and pretending that their life-style hasn’t really changed; that the changes are due to their involvement in a TV reality show. Pretence is motivated by ego rather than necessity which makes the premise hard to accept – especially since Radhika’s father is loaded and there is always a financial safety net. Silly decisions, motivated by some misguided attempts at self determination make for confused viewing.

The only moving features of the film were a few depictions of suffering where the children were involved but these were the results of lousy parenting rather than unfortunate circumstances and made me rail against Rhadika and V. J.(which was probably not the film’s intention.) Where it really matters – in the arena of life, V.J. is no hero, even though the film seems to bellow that that the race track is the ultimate test. No, a man who adapts to circumstances; who puts aside his ego and provides to the best of his ability is a hero so all the Ra! Ra! in Ta RA Rum Pum fell on deaf ears where this viewer was concerned.

The acting abilities of Saif Ali Khan and Rani Mukherjee were underutilized because any director would have had difficulty making sense of the character’s motives given the sprawling, ill-conceived material at hand. Jaaved Jaffrey as V. J’s friend and ex-manager pops up at regular intervals to go through a repetitious sequence which invariably ends in a stand-off between the buddies and a tired reaffirmation from V. J. that he will rise from the ashes. That said, Jaffrey’s role in this film is more fully developed than the odious cowboy cameo in Salaam Namaste.

Angelina Idnani and Ali Haji – the children are naturals but their responses are generally confined to the cute kiddie domain as presented in the animated theme song. Admittedly there are a few scenes where Priya (Angelina) is switched on to her family’s predicament and gives vent to her feelings. These instances are probably the most moving in the film. Pity that the modern lifestyle projected in the film doesn’t extend to modern views on child rearing which have parents giving kids honest answers to questions. It’s strange that a cool young couple wouldn’t operate this way.

Radhika and V. J’s love story in the first half exudes very little charm, an abundance of mechanical contrived meetings and the expected barrier of parental disapproval. There are some points of dramatic interest in the second half and the rendition of Saaiyaan is soulful but this is generally a predictable film which relies on clichés and the quick-fix rather than delving into the complexities of family relationships. There is plenty of colour and movement but like the cars on the circuit, it’s all just seems to go round in circles.


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PostPosted: Mon Apr 30, 2007 1:30 pm 
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I have to say that I did indeed enjoy the film. I wouldn't call it mind blowing or anything like that, but it was quite entertaining in my book. Some fun performances and great music (especially the "chica girl" number). This is what Yash Raj does consistently in terms of upping the production value. I'm surprised at what they were able to pull off on only a fraction of the budget of a typical Hollywood blockbuster. Excellent cinematography and great usage of NYC locations (closing down Park Ave. and Times Square was especially impressive, as well as renting out a real MTA bus). It does get a bit cloying at times but for the most part, pretty hilarious. Loved how they tried to confuse the audience too by having the characters start the "animated bear" number from the Disney store. I'm sure Disney will have a field day with that one! All in all, pretty fun.

By the way, surround usage was pretty good. The hi-hats of the "chica girl" number as well as the synths from the main score really pop up on the surround channels.


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PostPosted: Tue May 01, 2007 12:58 am 
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My comments:

1) There should be more films like this. Critics may or may not like it, but it hits the target audience perfectly. Kids like car-racing scenes, and there are plenty of exciting races. Once you get the kids hooked on the film, then wait for the educational message sink in. Specially applicable to the audiences in the west, where parents may or may not be 'well to do' but kids are never made aware of the financial hardships. Excellent example to kids to realize how it is to live with limited resources.

(I wish there are more such films on other hot topics like conservation, global warming, pollution etc .)

2) All songs are good and you can't say for any one song to be not as good as other in the film. And, there are plenty of them. Well picturised of course.

3) I did notice surround activity but not that often (And it was not as aggressive as in the trailer that they showed us a few weeks back). Mostly it was front channel. (Can't fault projection as it did produce surround at times and perhaps thats all there was).

4) End credits showed DD and DTS logos.

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Film Length: 4344 m ; 155 min.

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They showed a trailer of Jhoonm Barabar Jhoom and looks like Bobby Deol will get a Hit, after all, with this film. Abhishek, Bobby Deol, Lara Dutta, Preity Zinta. Plus Amitabh, but it looks like similar role as Kyun Ho Gya Na, that was waste of big AB's talents. Or may be it's just a guest appearance ??


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PostPosted: Tue May 01, 2007 5:42 am 
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http://desipundit.com/baradwajrangan/20 ... a-rum-pum/

Review: Tara Rum Pum
FORMULA (NO.) 1
A race car driver faces life’s ups and downs in a predictable drama that could’ve used less gloss, more grit.

APR 29, 2007 - IS THERE some sort of medical condition that afflicts only the very beautiful, making them see style where everyone else senses silliness? I’m talking about hairstyles like Rani Mukerji’s in the early portions of Ta Ra Rum Pum. (What a curious title, as if a musician were humming the outline of a tune that hadn’t yet crystallised in his head; it turns out just right for this film, which hits high notes every now and then but never quite coheres into a resonant whole.) Looking like a cross between the Sadhana fringe and a few dozen strands of limp fettuccine, this is easily the worst tonsorial decision by a major actress since Aishwarya Rai stuck burnt sausages onto her head in Kyon… Ho Gaya Na. It is so awful and so distracting, I just couldn’t look past it – and looking past surfaces is something you’ve got to be able to do in this Yash Raj production (or, probably for that matter, in any Yash Raj production). You’ve got to look past the fact, for instance, that the story is one half sporting drama (specifically, Days of Thunder), one half survival saga (specifically, In America) – and that it takes the unlikeliest of plot conveniences to make these genres mesh. It’s not that these premises cannot come together – there’s a good instance of that in the irresistibly old-fashioned Cinderella Man – but the reason for the cross-breeding in Ta Ra Rum Pum seems less to make a movie than to appeal to a market. The hot-blooded racing is for the young, the warm-fuzzy emotions are for the older crowd – add to this an animated sequence with teddy bears for the kiddies, and there’s all the evidence you need that covering every possible audience base is the first and foremost motto of the Yash Raj house.

It’s quite startling, really, how Ta Ra Rum Pum goes about this objective. Even Karan Johar sets his films in America, but his Americanness is mostly veneer. Scrape it off and you’ll find that his heroines still wear the occasional sari, they still observe the occasional Indian tradition, his heroes still love their parents – there’s at least a bit of a nod to the Indian roots of his characters. But there’s very little of that in this Siddharth Anand film. I was most intrigued by the scene in which Radhika (Rani Mukerji) marries Rajveer (Saif Ali Khan, who, like his costar, coasts along on comfortable autopilot, though his jokey shtick is getting a little wearying). She’s wearing a bridal dress in white, clutching the kind of bouquet that is tossed after the ceremony and caught by the next bride-to-be. And he’s in a white suit, repeating man-and-wife vows after the minister solemnising the wedding. And when they slip rings on each other’s fingers, all I could think was: with all the temples in the US, they couldn’t have gone through a little Hindu ceremony? This isn’t about religious allegiance so much as cultural appropriation – and my jaw dropped further when I learnt that they called their kids Champ and Princess. (Whatever happened to Bittu and Pinky?) I’m not sure, but this may be a historically important moment in our movies – these depictions of the utter assimilation into a Western lifestyle (something that we saw in Anand’s earlier film Salaam Namaste as well, with its no-fuss treatment of a live-in relationship).

There’s a lot of Salaam Namaste in Ta Ra Rum Pum. The hero is one of those chronically irresponsible, never-on-time characters. (There may be a bit of irony lurking there somewhere, for his profession as a race car driver demands that he bring in his vehicle under time.) There’s Jaaved Jafferi spouting English with shades of a vernacular accent. Vishal-Shekhar’s Ab to forever – the first song in a ho-hum soundtrack – brings together the hero and heroine amidst a dance-ready group of strangers-yet-friends (just as Vishal-Shekhar’s first song in Salaam Namaste did), and the next one, Hey Shona, reminds you of My dil goes mmm. It’s quite something, really – not only do these songs sound like their earlier counterparts, they are even sequenced in the same order in the screenplay. Talk about formula filmmaking… Also fantasy filmmaking. Rajveer is a lowly pit stop tyre changer who becomes, almost instantaneously, the Number One race car driver in America – in other words, from zero to hero in sixty seconds. And it is nice, even in a far-out fantasy such as this, to see an Indian being cheered by a stadium full of whites. I guess that’s what they call a willing suspension of disbelief – and as long as the film courses around in these privileged lanes, it’s mostly fine in an impersonal manner (for nothing actually reaches out and touches you).

That’s the thing about these Yash Raj films. As long as they confine themselves to the lives of the privileged in some moneyed la-la land, they work to an extent as undemanding fantasies. If we don’t question Preity Zinta being eight months pregnant and yet dancing wildly to What’s going on in Salaam Namaste, it’s because we don’t take the movie very seriously. Sure, it tries to make points about commitment and all, but the tone is lighthearted and that helps us keep our distance. But if there’s one thing that is at odds with glitzy packaging, it’s poverty. I don’t think there can be such a thing as suspension of disbelief when you’re trying to sell hard times, for poverty is all around us – there’s nothing not to believe about it. At one point, Rajveer loses his job and all his money – this is preceded by a great visual during a race; he takes his foot off the accelerator and slows down until every other contestant has passed him by, literally and figuratively – so he moves his wife and kids from tony Manhattan to a Harlem-ish neighbourhood. (His daughter looks at their cramped quarters and exclaims, “Five people in one room!” The fifth is their dog Bruno, and it’s a lovely touch that she refers to him as part of “people.” That’s really how indistinguishable from siblings pets can be to a child that age.) So after this move, we think things will get serious on us, but every dramatic episode is followed by a mandatory bit of clowning around. (The memo passed around before the project was greenlit must have read: Don’t let things get too serious.) Despite being about a penniless immigrant father who desperately tries to provide for his kids, In America managed to be light on its feet because it coated its drama with fairy-tale whimsy. But Ta Ra Rum Pum coats its drama with big, ritzy, Bollywood production numbers, as if wanting to cancel out the low spirits with high energy – and it doesn’t work. (The only film I can recall offhand that attempted this was the highly-stylised Pennies From Heaven, which contrasted Depression-era life with musical-comedy lushness – and that didn’t entirely work either.)

I’m not the kind of viewer who’s going to get all real and demand that Rajveer’s kids be reduced to images of snot running down a nostril or matted hair teeming with lice. This isn’t that kind of poverty, and this isn’t that kind of movie either. But when you’re trying to milk tears by showing a child pick food out of a dustbin – and when you’re trying to milk more tears by showing said child stand in front of a bakery’s window display (I guess this is for those who didn’t get the point the first time around) – and when you follow this with a song sequence with happy, dancing teddy bears in a Willy Wonka land of chocolate rivers and candy-cane walking sticks, we end up remembering more of the fantasy, less of the reality. This makes the film feel strangely incomplete. The dark themes (and the resulting dark emotions) are never allowed to fully develop and it’s only when the characters refer to themselves as being poor that we are reminded that they are. Until Rajveer launched into this bit of dialogue about the depths to which he’s sunk, I never quite realised that he’d sunk any depths at all. The scams he indulges in to make money for his family, they are presented almost like little capers. You smile at them the way you would at a roguish hero in a heist movie. You never get a hint of the depths of desperation behind this act. And that desperation is why you root for the underdog. It’s why you got up and cheered at the end of Jo Jeeta Wohi Sikandar and at the end of Lagaan. (These references come about because Ta Ra Rum Pum invites us to cheer for Rajveer as he attempts an against-all-odds comeback to the racing circuit.)

Throw this accusation at the director and he’d probably point to a sequence midway through his film, where Rajveer goes job hunting and no one will hire him – and the song in the background isn’t a sad number but an oddly optimistic one, with lyrics that go Aayenge phir se din khushiyon ke / badlega yeh mausam. He’d also point to the racing sequences and say that the way he stages them is an indication that this is like Salaam Namaste, that nothing here is meant to be taken seriously. (As Rajveer passes a driver, he smiles and waves and mouths a bye-bye. As Rajveer makes a pit stop, he uses the time to wolf-whistle to his girl in the stands. And as Rajveer finishes, he drives circles on the grass, his wheels carving out an I Heart You. I think it’s safe to assume these events weren’t taken from the life of Schumacher.) And one thing you have to give the people at Yash Raj – they know how to keep a movie moving with well-oiled professionalism, which is not altogether a bad thing. There’s a moment when Rajveer carries his new bride Radhika over the threshold of the house he’s just bought for her. He’s barely gone through the door when the camera floats lazily to the window of a first-floor bedroom, through which we see Rajveer and Radhika and their two children engaged in a pillow fight. A few years get compressed into a few seconds, and it’s clear that there’s some kind of brain behind the scenes – that it’s not amateur hour. And after enduring, in quick succession, the likes of Red, Delhii Heights, Shakalaka Boom Boom and Kya Love Story Hai, it is a relief that someone at least knows what they’re doing – even if we know that, with their clout and with the resources at their disposal, they should be doing a whole lot better.

Copyright ©2007 The New Sunday Express


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PostPosted: Tue May 01, 2007 12:37 pm 
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Ta Ra opened with $425,102 on 85 screens. Per screen is $5,001.

http://www.boxofficemojo.com


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PostPosted: Sun May 06, 2007 11:43 pm 
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i liked this film, thought it was fun, althought some parts were slow. Its not like the greatest movie of all time- and do think it could have been alot better- but i enjoyed it. Its a Typical Yash Raj film production. It seemed highly copied from Talledaga Nights and somewhat inspired by Life is Beautiful.


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PostPosted: Mon May 07, 2007 4:30 am 
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Location: vancouver, canada
the film was good it does show my generation how we take our parents money for granted and how it can go away in a sec
it did make me think but its too hard for me to stop buying a lot of stuff :oops: :lol:
i wish they used a better name tara rum pum just doesnt go with this movie
and i am impressed that during the tara rum pum bear song, india improved on their graphics a lot
the surround sound was really good esp during the racing and songs
the trailors they showed were jhoom barabar jhoom, cheeni kum, metro, good boy bad boy, and aap ka suroor


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PostPosted: Mon May 07, 2007 3:17 pm 
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kpatl84 wrote:
i liked this film, thought it was fun, althought some parts were slow. Its not like the greatest movie of all time- and do think it could have been alot better- but i enjoyed it. Its a Typical Yash Raj film production. It seemed highly copied from Talledaga Nights and somewhat inspired by Life is Beautiful.


Talledega knights with melo dramatic yrf mush! you got it!


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PostPosted: Mon May 07, 2007 5:33 pm 
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Location: Birmingham
arsh wrote:
kpatl84 wrote:
i liked this film, thought it was fun, althought some parts were slow. Its not like the greatest movie of all time- and do think it could have been alot better- but i enjoyed it. Its a Typical Yash Raj film production. It seemed highly copied from Talledaga Nights and somewhat inspired by Life is Beautiful.


Talledega knights with melo dramatic yrf mush! you got it!


Arsh, have you actually seen the film yet?

I saw the film at the weekend, and enjoyed it in a typical YRF sort of way. It was a relief to see no songs in huge halls with people dressed up like Christmas trees.........if you know what I mean.


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PostPosted: Mon May 07, 2007 6:31 pm 
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bhaskar wrote:
arsh wrote:
kpatl84 wrote:
i liked this film, thought it was fun, althought some parts were slow. Its not like the greatest movie of all time- and do think it could have been alot better- but i enjoyed it. Its a Typical Yash Raj film production. It seemed highly copied from Talledaga Nights and somewhat inspired by Life is Beautiful.


Talledega knights with melo dramatic yrf mush! you got it!


Arsh, have you actually seen the film yet?

I saw the film at the weekend, and enjoyed it in a typical YRF sort of way. It was a relief to see no songs in huge halls with people dressed up like Christmas trees.........if you know what I mean.


I have not seen it! but have seen taledega knight and it was no good!

i am not implying that this yrfinized version is no good, but it is inspired heavily as usual.


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PostPosted: Mon May 14, 2007 12:00 pm 
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Location: USA
Looking at the past collections for Yash Raj Films in the US (see below). It look like Tara Rum Pum has not done well in the US compared to past YRF films.

TOTAL LIFETIME GROSSES
Domestic: $667,140 as of 5-10-07 8.6%
+ Foreign: $7,134,768 91.4%

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= Worldwide: $7,801,908



Top 10 Movies - Boxofficemojo.com

1 Kabhi Alvida Naa Kehna Yash $3,275,444 8/11/06
2 Veer Zaara Yash $2,938,532 11/11/04
3 Kabhi Khushi Kabhie Gham Yash $2,902,000 12/14/01
4 Dhoom 2 Yash $2,643,586 11/23/06
5 Fanaa Yash $2,105,352 5/26/06
6 Kal Ho Naa Ho Yash $1,991,922 11/26/03
7 Salaam Namaste Yash $1,413,283 9/9/05
8 Mohabbatein Yash $1,070,000 10/27/00
9 Mangal Pandey - The Rising Yash $954,108 8/12/05
10 Bunty Aur Babli Yash $942,756 5/27/05


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PostPosted: Mon May 14, 2007 3:15 pm 
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ksingh wrote:
Looking at the past collections for Yash Raj Films in the US (see below). It look like Tara Rum Pum has not done well in the US compared to past YRF films.

TOTAL LIFETIME GROSSES
Domestic: $667,140 as of 5-10-07 8.6%
+ Foreign: $7,134,768 91.4%

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

= Worldwide: $7,801,908



Top 10 Movies - Boxofficemojo.com

1 Kabhi Alvida Naa Kehna Yash $3,275,444 8/11/06
2 Veer Zaara Yash $2,938,532 11/11/04
3 Kabhi Khushi Kabhie Gham Yash $2,902,000 12/14/01
4 Dhoom 2 Yash $2,643,586 11/23/06
5 Fanaa Yash $2,105,352 5/26/06
6 Kal Ho Naa Ho Yash $1,991,922 11/26/03
7 Salaam Namaste Yash $1,413,283 9/9/05
8 Mohabbatein Yash $1,070,000 10/27/00
9 Mangal Pandey - The Rising Yash $954,108 8/12/05
10 Bunty Aur Babli Yash $942,756 5/27/05


Is'nt amazing, all YRF films! :idea:


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