Cable network AMC is looking to keep mining the genre for ratings gold, and they've come up with "99 Stories" to do so with. Check out the first details on this new show right here!
According to THR AMC has agreed to develop sci-fi horror series "99 Stories".
Feature writer David Seltzer developed and will write the series with James Middleton ("The Sarah Connor Chronicles") and Steven Banks ("Women in Law") executive producing.
The show features a pretty cool premise as it is "set in a new 99-story high-rise building in which a group of strangers gets trapped."
AMC vice president of original series Christina Wayne said: "We want to do original programming that is cinematic and flows seemingly into the films. This seemed like the perfect fit."
"99 Stories" will be part of AMC's Monsterfest season, featuring 240 hours of non-stop horror films as well as online video.
Seltzer said of his series:...
According to THR AMC has agreed to develop sci-fi horror series "99 Stories".
Feature writer David Seltzer developed and will write the series with James Middleton ("The Sarah Connor Chronicles") and Steven Banks ("Women in Law") executive producing.
The show features a pretty cool premise as it is "set in a new 99-story high-rise building in which a group of strangers gets trapped."
AMC vice president of original series Christina Wayne said: "We want to do original programming that is cinematic and flows seemingly into the films. This seemed like the perfect fit."
"99 Stories" will be part of AMC's Monsterfest season, featuring 240 hours of non-stop horror films as well as online video.
Seltzer said of his series:...
- 2/29/2012
- by Uncle Creepy
- DreadCentral.com
AMC has agreed to develop sci-fi horror series "99 Stories," says THR. Feature writer David Seltzer developed and will write the series with James Middleton ("The Sarah Connor Chronicles") and Steven Banks ("Women in Law") executive producing. The show features a pretty cool premise as it is "set in a new 99-story high-rise building in which a group of strangers gets trapped." AMC vice president of original series Christina Wayne said: "We want to do original programming that is cinematic and flows seemingly into the films. This seemed like the perfect fit." "99 Stories" will be part of AMC's Monsterfest season, featuring 240 hours of non-stop horror films as well as online video. Seltzer said of his series: "Each story presents a different kind of challenge for the group. The elevators are in control of destiny, whittling them out by deciding who they deem deserve to go up."...
- 2/29/2012
- bloody-disgusting.com
This review was written for the theatrical release of "Are We Done Yet?"
Mr. Cube builds his dream house in "Are We Done Yet?" which essentially takes the "Are We There Yet?" characters and grafts them into the basic plot line for the classic RKO comedy "Mr. Blandings Builds His Dream House," in which Cary Grant played Mr. Blandings, a man who predated "Green Acres' " Oliver Douglas by a couple of decades.
While the refurbished version would never be taken as an improvement over the original, it makes for a generally inoffensive hour-and-a-half, and with a certifiably gonzo John C. McGinley providing the bulk of the laughs, it is definitely less obnoxious than those "Cheaper by the Dozen" remakes.
It also is better than the 2005 Ice Cube comedy that still managed to gross a highly respectable $82 million. Given the new film's pre-Easter weekend release strategy, it should play well with kids and home improvement fanatics, though others could find themselves relating to the title on more than one occasion.
The last time we saw Ice Cube's Nick Persons, he was trapped in an SUV with two kids traveling from Portland to Vancouver. Now fully domesticated, Nick, his bride, Suzanne (Nia Long), and her two growing children (Aleisha Allen, Philip Daniel Bolden) are finding his former bachelor pad a little cramped, and with twins on the way, bigger quarters are required sooner rather than later.
They find the sprawling house of their dreams in the rural Pacific Northwest (courtesy of British Columbia), which affords lots of fresh air and lakeside views. It also proves to be a major money pit, but Persons is so taken in by a local real estate agent's ("Scrubs" regular McGinley) slick sales pitch, he fails to notice all the telltale signs.
As it turns out, McGinley's ingratiating Chuck Mitchell Jr. wears a number of hats, including building inspector and contractor, and before Nick knows what has hit him, Chuck has moved his Airstream trailer into the Persons' yard to oversee the neverending renovations.
Directed by Steve Carr, who helmed Ice Cube's "Next Friday", and adapted by Hank Nelken ("Saving Silverman"), the picture delivers the requisite number of pratfalls, and the genial Ice Cube makes for a credibly hapless everyman, but the comedy still feels a little too safely soft around the edges. A little more inspiration could have made it something enjoyable instead of simply innocuous.
Visually, cinematographer Jack Green, a frequent Clint Eastwood collaborator, effectively captures all those unobstructed, picture-perfect vistas. Production designer Nina Ruscio rightfully lends the house a distinctive character of its own.
Should the Persons family return for another sequel, here's hoping they at least don't take another dip into the RKO vault and turn "Citizen Kane" into "Are We Rich Yet?"
ARE WE DONE YET?
Columbia Pictures
Revolution Studios presents an RKO Pictures/Cube Vision production
Credits:
Director: Steve Carr
Screenwriter: Hank Nelken
Based on characters created by: Steven Gary Banks, Claudio Grazioso
Based on the motion picture "Mr. Blandings Builds His Dream House," screenplay by Norman Panama and Melvin Frank
Producers: Ted Hartley, Ice Cube, Matt Alvarez, Todd Garner
Executive producers: Heidi Santelli, Aaron Ray, Steve Carr, Derek Dauchy, Neil Machlis
Director of photography: Jack Green
Production designer: Nina Ruscio
Editor: Craig P. Herring
Music: Teddy Castellucci
Cast:
Nick Persons: Ice Cube
Suzanne Persons: Nia Long
Chuck Mitchell Jr.: John C. McGinley
Lindsey Persons: Aleisha Allen
Kevin Persons: Philip Daniel Bolden
Running time -- 92 minutes
MPAA rating: PG...
Mr. Cube builds his dream house in "Are We Done Yet?" which essentially takes the "Are We There Yet?" characters and grafts them into the basic plot line for the classic RKO comedy "Mr. Blandings Builds His Dream House," in which Cary Grant played Mr. Blandings, a man who predated "Green Acres' " Oliver Douglas by a couple of decades.
While the refurbished version would never be taken as an improvement over the original, it makes for a generally inoffensive hour-and-a-half, and with a certifiably gonzo John C. McGinley providing the bulk of the laughs, it is definitely less obnoxious than those "Cheaper by the Dozen" remakes.
It also is better than the 2005 Ice Cube comedy that still managed to gross a highly respectable $82 million. Given the new film's pre-Easter weekend release strategy, it should play well with kids and home improvement fanatics, though others could find themselves relating to the title on more than one occasion.
The last time we saw Ice Cube's Nick Persons, he was trapped in an SUV with two kids traveling from Portland to Vancouver. Now fully domesticated, Nick, his bride, Suzanne (Nia Long), and her two growing children (Aleisha Allen, Philip Daniel Bolden) are finding his former bachelor pad a little cramped, and with twins on the way, bigger quarters are required sooner rather than later.
They find the sprawling house of their dreams in the rural Pacific Northwest (courtesy of British Columbia), which affords lots of fresh air and lakeside views. It also proves to be a major money pit, but Persons is so taken in by a local real estate agent's ("Scrubs" regular McGinley) slick sales pitch, he fails to notice all the telltale signs.
As it turns out, McGinley's ingratiating Chuck Mitchell Jr. wears a number of hats, including building inspector and contractor, and before Nick knows what has hit him, Chuck has moved his Airstream trailer into the Persons' yard to oversee the neverending renovations.
Directed by Steve Carr, who helmed Ice Cube's "Next Friday", and adapted by Hank Nelken ("Saving Silverman"), the picture delivers the requisite number of pratfalls, and the genial Ice Cube makes for a credibly hapless everyman, but the comedy still feels a little too safely soft around the edges. A little more inspiration could have made it something enjoyable instead of simply innocuous.
Visually, cinematographer Jack Green, a frequent Clint Eastwood collaborator, effectively captures all those unobstructed, picture-perfect vistas. Production designer Nina Ruscio rightfully lends the house a distinctive character of its own.
Should the Persons family return for another sequel, here's hoping they at least don't take another dip into the RKO vault and turn "Citizen Kane" into "Are We Rich Yet?"
ARE WE DONE YET?
Columbia Pictures
Revolution Studios presents an RKO Pictures/Cube Vision production
Credits:
Director: Steve Carr
Screenwriter: Hank Nelken
Based on characters created by: Steven Gary Banks, Claudio Grazioso
Based on the motion picture "Mr. Blandings Builds His Dream House," screenplay by Norman Panama and Melvin Frank
Producers: Ted Hartley, Ice Cube, Matt Alvarez, Todd Garner
Executive producers: Heidi Santelli, Aaron Ray, Steve Carr, Derek Dauchy, Neil Machlis
Director of photography: Jack Green
Production designer: Nina Ruscio
Editor: Craig P. Herring
Music: Teddy Castellucci
Cast:
Nick Persons: Ice Cube
Suzanne Persons: Nia Long
Chuck Mitchell Jr.: John C. McGinley
Lindsey Persons: Aleisha Allen
Kevin Persons: Philip Daniel Bolden
Running time -- 92 minutes
MPAA rating: PG...
Mr. Cube builds his dream house in Are We Done Yet? which essentially takes the Are We There Yet? characters and grafts them into the basic plot line for the classic RKO comedy Mr. Blandings Builds His Dream House, in which Cary Grant played Mr. Blandings, a man who predated "Green Acres' " Oliver Douglas by a couple of decades.
While the refurbished version would never be taken as an improvement over the original, it makes for a generally inoffensive hour-and-a-half, and with a certifiably gonzo John C. McGinley providing the bulk of the laughs, it is definitely less obnoxious than those Cheaper by the Dozen remakes.
It also is better than the 2005 Ice Cube comedy that still managed to gross a highly respectable $82 million. Given the new film's pre-Easter weekend release strategy, it should play well with kids and home improvement fanatics, though others could find themselves relating to the title on more than one occasion.
The last time we saw Ice Cube's Nick Persons, he was trapped in an SUV with two kids traveling from Portland to Vancouver. Now fully domesticated, Nick, his bride, Suzanne (Nia Long), and her two growing children (Aleisha Allen, Philip Daniel Bolden) are finding his former bachelor pad a little cramped, and with twins on the way, bigger quarters are required sooner rather than later.
They find the sprawling house of their dreams in the rural Pacific Northwest (courtesy of British Columbia), which affords lots of fresh air and lakeside views. It also proves to be a major money pit, but Persons is so taken in by a local real estate agent's (Scrubs regular McGinley) slick sales pitch, he fails to notice all the telltale signs.
As it turns out, McGinley's ingratiating Chuck Mitchell Jr. wears a number of hats, including building inspector and contractor, and before Nick knows what has hit him, Chuck has moved his Airstream trailer into the Persons' yard to oversee the neverending renovations.
Directed by Steve Carr, who helmed Ice Cube's Next Friday, and adapted by Hank Nelken (Saving Silverman), the picture delivers the requisite number of pratfalls, and the genial Ice Cube makes for a credibly hapless everyman, but the comedy still feels a little too safely soft around the edges. A little more inspiration could have made it something enjoyable instead of simply innocuous.
Visually, cinematographer Jack Green, a frequent Clint Eastwood collaborator, effectively captures all those unobstructed, picture-perfect vistas. Production designer Nina Ruscio rightfully lends the house a distinctive character of its own.
Should the Persons family return for another sequel, here's hoping they at least don't take another dip into the RKO vault and turn Citizen Kane into "Are We Rich Yet?"
ARE WE DONE YET?
Columbia Pictures
Revolution Studios presents an RKO Pictures/Cube Vision production
Credits:
Director: Steve Carr
Screenwriter: Hank Nelken
Based on characters created by: Steven Gary Banks, Claudio Grazioso
Based on the motion picture "Mr. Blandings Builds His Dream House," screenplay by Norman Panama and Melvin Frank
Producers: Ted Hartley, Ice Cube, Matt Alvarez, Todd Garner
Executive producers: Heidi Santelli, Aaron Ray, Steve Carr, Derek Dauchy, Neil Machlis
Director of photography: Jack Green
Production designer: Nina Ruscio
Editor: Craig P. Herring
Music: Teddy Castellucci
Cast:
Nick Persons: Ice Cube
Suzanne Persons: Nia Long
Chuck Mitchell Jr.: John C. McGinley
Lindsey Persons: Aleisha Allen
Kevin Persons: Philip Daniel Bolden
Running time -- 92 minutes
MPAA rating: PG...
While the refurbished version would never be taken as an improvement over the original, it makes for a generally inoffensive hour-and-a-half, and with a certifiably gonzo John C. McGinley providing the bulk of the laughs, it is definitely less obnoxious than those Cheaper by the Dozen remakes.
It also is better than the 2005 Ice Cube comedy that still managed to gross a highly respectable $82 million. Given the new film's pre-Easter weekend release strategy, it should play well with kids and home improvement fanatics, though others could find themselves relating to the title on more than one occasion.
The last time we saw Ice Cube's Nick Persons, he was trapped in an SUV with two kids traveling from Portland to Vancouver. Now fully domesticated, Nick, his bride, Suzanne (Nia Long), and her two growing children (Aleisha Allen, Philip Daniel Bolden) are finding his former bachelor pad a little cramped, and with twins on the way, bigger quarters are required sooner rather than later.
They find the sprawling house of their dreams in the rural Pacific Northwest (courtesy of British Columbia), which affords lots of fresh air and lakeside views. It also proves to be a major money pit, but Persons is so taken in by a local real estate agent's (Scrubs regular McGinley) slick sales pitch, he fails to notice all the telltale signs.
As it turns out, McGinley's ingratiating Chuck Mitchell Jr. wears a number of hats, including building inspector and contractor, and before Nick knows what has hit him, Chuck has moved his Airstream trailer into the Persons' yard to oversee the neverending renovations.
Directed by Steve Carr, who helmed Ice Cube's Next Friday, and adapted by Hank Nelken (Saving Silverman), the picture delivers the requisite number of pratfalls, and the genial Ice Cube makes for a credibly hapless everyman, but the comedy still feels a little too safely soft around the edges. A little more inspiration could have made it something enjoyable instead of simply innocuous.
Visually, cinematographer Jack Green, a frequent Clint Eastwood collaborator, effectively captures all those unobstructed, picture-perfect vistas. Production designer Nina Ruscio rightfully lends the house a distinctive character of its own.
Should the Persons family return for another sequel, here's hoping they at least don't take another dip into the RKO vault and turn Citizen Kane into "Are We Rich Yet?"
ARE WE DONE YET?
Columbia Pictures
Revolution Studios presents an RKO Pictures/Cube Vision production
Credits:
Director: Steve Carr
Screenwriter: Hank Nelken
Based on characters created by: Steven Gary Banks, Claudio Grazioso
Based on the motion picture "Mr. Blandings Builds His Dream House," screenplay by Norman Panama and Melvin Frank
Producers: Ted Hartley, Ice Cube, Matt Alvarez, Todd Garner
Executive producers: Heidi Santelli, Aaron Ray, Steve Carr, Derek Dauchy, Neil Machlis
Director of photography: Jack Green
Production designer: Nina Ruscio
Editor: Craig P. Herring
Music: Teddy Castellucci
Cast:
Nick Persons: Ice Cube
Suzanne Persons: Nia Long
Chuck Mitchell Jr.: John C. McGinley
Lindsey Persons: Aleisha Allen
Kevin Persons: Philip Daniel Bolden
Running time -- 92 minutes
MPAA rating: PG...
Are We There Yet? runs 96 minutes but feels like so much more. There is only one gag: Two thoroughly spoiled and obnoxious youngsters make life miserable for a poor guy doing them a favor by driving 300 miles to deliver them to their mom. Some of the cruel tricks played on the hapless man are simply infantile. Others -- such as pretending he is a kidnapper -- flirt with dangerous pranks unlikely to produce laughs from anyone other than those who will laugh at anything. Is this what passes for family entertainment these days?
The always welcome presence of Ice Cube should bring out his core following on opening weekend. A few tykes might chuckle at the urination joke and the attack deer, but the grindingly awful, predictable gags will wear down even Ice Cube's most loyal fans.
Nick (Ice Cube), a former pro baseball player who runs a sports memorabilia store in Portland, Ore., splurges to purchase a brand-new Lincoln Navigator, mostly to impress the ladies. The lady he most wants to impress is Nia Long's frisky divorcee Suzanne. The downside here is her two bratty kids, precocious Kevin (Philip Daniel Bolden), age 7, and stuck-up Lindsey (Aleisha Allen), age 11.
Seems their deadbeat dad dumped everyone a while back, but the kids still believe he will return any day. So they must keep mom single. This they do by declaring war on any eligible man who comes near her. That she hasn't caught on to their strategy yet speaks poorly of her parenting skills but nevermind.
Nick and Suzanne are still in the "friend zone" when work requires her to leave for Vancouver after Christmas. Nick offers to bring her kids to Vancouver for New Year's Eve. When the youngsters sabotage his plans to fly and then to take a train, he is forced to drive them in his new SUV. You can pretty much guess that the car will not survive the trip. No amount of guess work, though, can deduce why Nick -- after his car, body and reputation are destroyed by these relentless brats -- would say "I love you guys" at trip's end.
This is a comedy of exasperation where teams of writers go to the same well scene after scene to see how far they can go in testing the patience of their characters -- and audience. Gags are designed around stunts rather than logic. And the actors have little to play other than annoyance, panic or rage.
To break the monotony, someone dreamed up the idea of sticking a bobble-head doll of baseball legend Satchel Paige on Nick's dashboard. This becomes animated so Satchel can discuss the deteriorating situation with the car's owner during the ride. (Tracy Morgan does Paige's voice.) The comedy here is as flat as everywhere else.
Director Brian Levant, who helmed the similarly misanthropic Jingle All the Way, gives the slapstick little rhythm and even less reason. And since the four credited writers never allow Nick to retaliate or outwit the kids, the movie squanders Ice Cube's comic talents. (Don't feel too sorry for him, though, as his company produced the film.) Long virtually disappears once the road trip begins. And the young actors are, not too surprisingly, unable to play malevolence and cuteness at the same time.
Tech credits are routine.
ARE WE THERE YET?
Columbia Pictures
Revolution Studios presentsa Cube Vision production
Credits:
Director: Brian Levant
Screnwriters: Steven Gary Banks, Claudia Grazioso
Story by: Steven Gary Banks, Claudia Grazioso, J. David Stem, David N. Weiss
Producers: Dan Kolsrud, Matt Alvarez, Ice Cube
Executive producers: Todd Garner, Derek Dauchy
Director of photography: Thomas Ackerman
Production designer: Stephen Lineweaver
Music: David Newman
Costumes: Gersha Phillips
Editor: Lawrence Jordan
Cast:
Nick: Ice Cube
Suzanne: Nia Long
Lindsey: Aleisha Allen
Kevin: Philip Daniel Bolden
Marty: Jay Mohr
Al: M.C. Gainey
Voice of Satchel Paige: Tracy Morgan
Miss Marble: Nichelle Nichols
MPAA rating: PG
Running time -- 96 minutes...
The always welcome presence of Ice Cube should bring out his core following on opening weekend. A few tykes might chuckle at the urination joke and the attack deer, but the grindingly awful, predictable gags will wear down even Ice Cube's most loyal fans.
Nick (Ice Cube), a former pro baseball player who runs a sports memorabilia store in Portland, Ore., splurges to purchase a brand-new Lincoln Navigator, mostly to impress the ladies. The lady he most wants to impress is Nia Long's frisky divorcee Suzanne. The downside here is her two bratty kids, precocious Kevin (Philip Daniel Bolden), age 7, and stuck-up Lindsey (Aleisha Allen), age 11.
Seems their deadbeat dad dumped everyone a while back, but the kids still believe he will return any day. So they must keep mom single. This they do by declaring war on any eligible man who comes near her. That she hasn't caught on to their strategy yet speaks poorly of her parenting skills but nevermind.
Nick and Suzanne are still in the "friend zone" when work requires her to leave for Vancouver after Christmas. Nick offers to bring her kids to Vancouver for New Year's Eve. When the youngsters sabotage his plans to fly and then to take a train, he is forced to drive them in his new SUV. You can pretty much guess that the car will not survive the trip. No amount of guess work, though, can deduce why Nick -- after his car, body and reputation are destroyed by these relentless brats -- would say "I love you guys" at trip's end.
This is a comedy of exasperation where teams of writers go to the same well scene after scene to see how far they can go in testing the patience of their characters -- and audience. Gags are designed around stunts rather than logic. And the actors have little to play other than annoyance, panic or rage.
To break the monotony, someone dreamed up the idea of sticking a bobble-head doll of baseball legend Satchel Paige on Nick's dashboard. This becomes animated so Satchel can discuss the deteriorating situation with the car's owner during the ride. (Tracy Morgan does Paige's voice.) The comedy here is as flat as everywhere else.
Director Brian Levant, who helmed the similarly misanthropic Jingle All the Way, gives the slapstick little rhythm and even less reason. And since the four credited writers never allow Nick to retaliate or outwit the kids, the movie squanders Ice Cube's comic talents. (Don't feel too sorry for him, though, as his company produced the film.) Long virtually disappears once the road trip begins. And the young actors are, not too surprisingly, unable to play malevolence and cuteness at the same time.
Tech credits are routine.
ARE WE THERE YET?
Columbia Pictures
Revolution Studios presentsa Cube Vision production
Credits:
Director: Brian Levant
Screnwriters: Steven Gary Banks, Claudia Grazioso
Story by: Steven Gary Banks, Claudia Grazioso, J. David Stem, David N. Weiss
Producers: Dan Kolsrud, Matt Alvarez, Ice Cube
Executive producers: Todd Garner, Derek Dauchy
Director of photography: Thomas Ackerman
Production designer: Stephen Lineweaver
Music: David Newman
Costumes: Gersha Phillips
Editor: Lawrence Jordan
Cast:
Nick: Ice Cube
Suzanne: Nia Long
Lindsey: Aleisha Allen
Kevin: Philip Daniel Bolden
Marty: Jay Mohr
Al: M.C. Gainey
Voice of Satchel Paige: Tracy Morgan
Miss Marble: Nichelle Nichols
MPAA rating: PG
Running time -- 96 minutes...
- 2/23/2005
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Nia Long has found her way to the female lead role in Revolution Studios' Are We There Yet? opposite Ice Cube for director Brian Levant. Shooting is scheduled to start Nov. 17 in Vancouver. Are We There stars Ice Cube as Nick, a playboy bachelor and sports memorabilia collector who is trying to land a date with Suzanne (Long), a divorced mother of 8-year-old Kevin and 11-year-old Lindsey, who never like the men their mom dates. When Suzanne is stuck in Vancouver for work on New Year's Eve, Nick offers to get her kids -- whom he has never met -- from Oregon to Vancouver on one of the busiest travel days of the year. Ice Cube and his CubeVision producing partner, Matt Alvarez, are producing the project for Revolution along with Dan Kolsrud. The project was originally picked up as a pitch from writing team Steven Gary Banks and Claudia Grazioso, with a rewrite by Ice Cube. The project is being overseen at Revolution by production executive Derek Dauchy. Long is repped by Paradigm Talent & Literary Agency and attorney Jason Sloane.
- 11/4/2003
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Bow Wow will make a run for the presidency courtesy of Columbia Pictures and Overbrook Entertainment. The rapper-actor is attached to star in Mr. Prez for directing duo Fat Cats -- aka Randy Marshall and Eric Williams -- and comedy writing team Claudia Grazioso and Steven Gary Banks, who have just been tapped to write the script. Overbrook and Teresa Caldwell Prods. will produce Prez, which centers on a teenager (Bow Wow) from Philadelphia whose normal life is turned upside down when he becomes president for the day after winning an essay contest. The project was brought to Columbia and Overbrook as a pitch developed by the directing duo along with Bow Wow. Overbrook's James Lassiter and Teddy Zee will produce, with Caldwell taking executive producer credit. At the studio, the project is being overseen by co-president of production Doug Belgrad and creative executive Jonathan Kadin.
- 9/12/2003
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
The Walt Disney Co. has picked up the comedy pitch How to Become Famous in 12 Days or Less from the writing team of Steven Gary Banks and Claudia Grazioso. Based on a Marie Claire article, the pitch is described as a female Trading Places and marks the sixth sale for the duo in the past 18 months. It will be produced by Evolution Entertainment, with Disney's Kristin Burr and Casey Wolfe overseeing for the studio. Among the duo's recent sales are Daddy's Girls to Paramount Pictures, 35 to Life at New Line Cinema, Are We There Yet? to Revolution Studios and Coeds at Warner Bros. Pictures. Both writers are repped by ICM, while Grazioso is additionally repped by Palomar and Banks is additionally repped by Evolution.
- 4/15/2003
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
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