French composer, pianist and conductor Philippe Rombi will be the guest of honour at the 24th World Soundtrack Awards in Belgium on October 16, 2024.
Rombi is best known for his collaborations with François Ozon on films including Swimming Pool, Young And Beautiful, In The House, Potiche, Frantz and last year’s The Crime Is Mine.
The composer has been nominated for four Cesar awards and two Lumieres. His other credits include Oscar nominee Joyeux Noël from Christian Carion, Danny Boon’s Welcome To The Sticks and Christophe Barratier’s The Time Of Secrets.
Rombi will attend the awards at Film Fest Ghent in October,...
Rombi is best known for his collaborations with François Ozon on films including Swimming Pool, Young And Beautiful, In The House, Potiche, Frantz and last year’s The Crime Is Mine.
The composer has been nominated for four Cesar awards and two Lumieres. His other credits include Oscar nominee Joyeux Noël from Christian Carion, Danny Boon’s Welcome To The Sticks and Christophe Barratier’s The Time Of Secrets.
Rombi will attend the awards at Film Fest Ghent in October,...
- 3/19/2024
- ScreenDaily
Neon is opening Origin on 130 screens and plans to expand the Ava DuVernay film, which premiered in Venice and had a excellent qualifying run in December.
Neon took global rights on Origin before its Venice premiere where it received an eight-minute standing ovation and DuVernay became the first Black American woman to have a selection there. Deadline reported the film tested well with audiences, landing a 91 total positive in the top two boxes, with an 81 definite recommend, the highest for both Neon and DuVernay. With the theatrical release, the distributor is looking to pull in the arthouse and “smarthouse” (mainstream crossover) audiences and Black audiences with targeted bookings including theaters in regional markets like Atlanta, Chicago and Baltimore. It’s a hard film to comp but it is everywhere that recent films The Color Purple and American Fiction have done well.
Origin is based on New York Times’ Pulitzer Prize-winning...
Neon took global rights on Origin before its Venice premiere where it received an eight-minute standing ovation and DuVernay became the first Black American woman to have a selection there. Deadline reported the film tested well with audiences, landing a 91 total positive in the top two boxes, with an 81 definite recommend, the highest for both Neon and DuVernay. With the theatrical release, the distributor is looking to pull in the arthouse and “smarthouse” (mainstream crossover) audiences and Black audiences with targeted bookings including theaters in regional markets like Atlanta, Chicago and Baltimore. It’s a hard film to comp but it is everywhere that recent films The Color Purple and American Fiction have done well.
Origin is based on New York Times’ Pulitzer Prize-winning...
- 1/19/2024
- by Jill Goldsmith
- Deadline Film + TV
In a lull for specialty openings early in the new year, three foreign-language films are taking a shot. The Settlers, winner of the Cannes Un Certain Regard Fipresci Prize, and Inshallah A Boy are Cannes alumns and Oscar submissions from, respectively, Chile and Jordan (neither short-listed in a competitive field). Driving Madeleine is a crowd pleasing French film.
The Settlers is a western presented by Mubi in limited release at the IFC Center/NY and Laemmle Royal/LA. The debut feature by writer-director Felipe Galvez is a frontier epic set at the turn of the 20th century as three horsemen set out across the Tierra del Fuego archipelago tasked with securing a wealthy landowner’s vast property. Accompanying a reckless British lieutenant and an American mercenary is mestizo marksman Segundo, who comes to realize their true mission is much darker. Stars Mark Stanley, Camillo Arancibia and Benjamin Westfall. Screenplay by Galvez and Antonia Girardi.
The Settlers is a western presented by Mubi in limited release at the IFC Center/NY and Laemmle Royal/LA. The debut feature by writer-director Felipe Galvez is a frontier epic set at the turn of the 20th century as three horsemen set out across the Tierra del Fuego archipelago tasked with securing a wealthy landowner’s vast property. Accompanying a reckless British lieutenant and an American mercenary is mestizo marksman Segundo, who comes to realize their true mission is much darker. Stars Mark Stanley, Camillo Arancibia and Benjamin Westfall. Screenplay by Galvez and Antonia Girardi.
- 1/12/2024
- by Jill Goldsmith
- Deadline Film + TV
Buckle in for more exotic locations with Adam Sandler and company. Netflix has just released a first-look clip from the sequel to the Adam Sandler and Jennifer Aniston comedy Murder Mystery 2. In the new clip, Sandler and Aniston’s characters arrive at a private island where they meet up with their Maharaja friend, played by Adeel Akhtar, and get introduced to his bride-to-be, played by Mélanie Laurent of Inglourious Basterds.
The official synopsis for the film from Netflix reads,
“Four years after solving their first murder mystery, Nick and Audrey Spitz are now full-time detectives struggling to get their private eye agency off the ground when they’re invited to celebrate the wedding of their friend the Maharaja (Adeel Akhtar) on his private island. But trouble follows the Spitzes again when the groom is kidnapped for ransom soon after the festivities begin — making each glamorous guest, family member, and the bride herself a suspect.
The official synopsis for the film from Netflix reads,
“Four years after solving their first murder mystery, Nick and Audrey Spitz are now full-time detectives struggling to get their private eye agency off the ground when they’re invited to celebrate the wedding of their friend the Maharaja (Adeel Akhtar) on his private island. But trouble follows the Spitzes again when the groom is kidnapped for ransom soon after the festivities begin — making each glamorous guest, family member, and the bride herself a suspect.
- 3/8/2023
- by EJ Tangonan
- JoBlo.com
Click here to read the full article.
For France’s premiere film and television trade industry publication, it wasn’t a good look.
The cover photo of the Sept. 30 issue of Le Film Français, a must-read for Gallic filmmakers, featured seven men — Pathé President Jérome Seydoux, surrounded by actors Vincent Cassel, Pierre Niney, François Civil and Pio Marmaï, and actor-directors Guillaume Canet and Danny Boon —under the headline “Objective: Reconquest.”
The backlash was immediate.
“No women, no diversity. Classy!” tweeted French actress Alexandra Lamy (You Choose!). Audrey Diwan, director of Venice Film Festival winner Happening, added ironically, “If we’re bothering you guys, just let us know.”
The magazine quickly apologized, but for many, the incident was illustrative of how far the French industry still has to go.
Si on vous gêne, n’hésitez pas à le dire pic.twitter.com/e0fEZwuGrb
— Audrey Diwan (@AudreyDiwan) September 30, 2022
“The Film Français...
For France’s premiere film and television trade industry publication, it wasn’t a good look.
The cover photo of the Sept. 30 issue of Le Film Français, a must-read for Gallic filmmakers, featured seven men — Pathé President Jérome Seydoux, surrounded by actors Vincent Cassel, Pierre Niney, François Civil and Pio Marmaï, and actor-directors Guillaume Canet and Danny Boon —under the headline “Objective: Reconquest.”
The backlash was immediate.
“No women, no diversity. Classy!” tweeted French actress Alexandra Lamy (You Choose!). Audrey Diwan, director of Venice Film Festival winner Happening, added ironically, “If we’re bothering you guys, just let us know.”
The magazine quickly apologized, but for many, the incident was illustrative of how far the French industry still has to go.
Si on vous gêne, n’hésitez pas à le dire pic.twitter.com/e0fEZwuGrb
— Audrey Diwan (@AudreyDiwan) September 30, 2022
“The Film Français...
- 11/2/2022
- by Scott Roxborough
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
French film and TV trade ‘Le Film Français’ has posted a public apology after the cover photo for its latest weekly publication featuring seven men prompted anger from top female cinema professionals in France, including Venice Golden Lion winner Audrey Diwan and actress Alexandra Lamy.
Alluding to the annual conference of France’s National Federation of French Cinemas (Fncf) in Deauville this week, the cover photo for the September 30 issue features Pathé President Jérome Seydoux, surrounded by Pio Marmaï, Guillaume Canet, Vincent Cassel, François Civil, Pierre Niney and Danny Boon under the headline of “Objective: Reconquest”.
‘Le Film Français’ is a must-read for the French film industry so it was not long before the cover started prompting reactions from top female film professionals in the sector as it landed in their mailboxes on Friday morning.
Director and screenwriter Diwan, who won Venice’s top prize last year for abortion drama Happening,...
Alluding to the annual conference of France’s National Federation of French Cinemas (Fncf) in Deauville this week, the cover photo for the September 30 issue features Pathé President Jérome Seydoux, surrounded by Pio Marmaï, Guillaume Canet, Vincent Cassel, François Civil, Pierre Niney and Danny Boon under the headline of “Objective: Reconquest”.
‘Le Film Français’ is a must-read for the French film industry so it was not long before the cover started prompting reactions from top female film professionals in the sector as it landed in their mailboxes on Friday morning.
Director and screenwriter Diwan, who won Venice’s top prize last year for abortion drama Happening,...
- 9/30/2022
- by Melanie Goodfellow
- Deadline Film + TV
Stars: Adam Sandler, Jennifer Aniston, Luke Evans, Terence Stamp, Gemma Arterton, David Walliams, Danny Boon, John Kani, Adeel Akhtar, Olafur Darri Olafsson, Luis Gerardo Mendez, Shioli Kutsuna, Erik Griffin | Written by James Vanderbilt | Directed by Kyle Newacheck
Murder Mystery, directed by Kyle Newacheck, once again team’s duo Adam Sandler and Jennifer Aniston after their coupling in Just Go With It, released eight years previously in 2011.
Murder Mystery is the sixth entry into Adam Sandler’s infamous Netflix deal after his departure from Sony almost two years ago. It’s been quite the rocky road to balance sufficient entertainment value from Sandler at his new home. With three films out of the six being a horrendous slog to sit through. Thankfully, his latest is one of his better instalments, perhaps his best comedic performance since the late Nineties. All thanks due to the talent of his co-star Jennifer Aniston, who is delightful as Audrey Spitz,...
Murder Mystery, directed by Kyle Newacheck, once again team’s duo Adam Sandler and Jennifer Aniston after their coupling in Just Go With It, released eight years previously in 2011.
Murder Mystery is the sixth entry into Adam Sandler’s infamous Netflix deal after his departure from Sony almost two years ago. It’s been quite the rocky road to balance sufficient entertainment value from Sandler at his new home. With three films out of the six being a horrendous slog to sit through. Thankfully, his latest is one of his better instalments, perhaps his best comedic performance since the late Nineties. All thanks due to the talent of his co-star Jennifer Aniston, who is delightful as Audrey Spitz,...
- 6/18/2019
- by Jak-Luke Sharp
- Nerdly
Exclusive: Holt McCallany fait son entrée en première française avec une nouvelle version de Le Dindon.
That’s right, coming off production of Season 2 of Netflix’s Mindhunter, Holt McCallany is heading to Europe to star in director Jalil Lespert’s version of Le Dindon. The Danny Boon co-starring comedy based on George Feydeau’s iconic 1896 play will be the Justice League actor’s French-language debut.
McCallany will play the role of Wayne, a Parisian-based American whose wife is having a secret affair with Boon’s character.
Having attended theater school in the French capital back in the 1980s and kept a pad there for years, the actor who plays FBI Agent Bill Tench opposite Jonathan Groff in the Netflix crime drama is actually nearly fluent in the language. Which means McCallany will be performing his role in the farce entirely in French, it appears.
He will be in top-flight...
That’s right, coming off production of Season 2 of Netflix’s Mindhunter, Holt McCallany is heading to Europe to star in director Jalil Lespert’s version of Le Dindon. The Danny Boon co-starring comedy based on George Feydeau’s iconic 1896 play will be the Justice League actor’s French-language debut.
McCallany will play the role of Wayne, a Parisian-based American whose wife is having a secret affair with Boon’s character.
Having attended theater school in the French capital back in the 1980s and kept a pad there for years, the actor who plays FBI Agent Bill Tench opposite Jonathan Groff in the Netflix crime drama is actually nearly fluent in the language. Which means McCallany will be performing his role in the farce entirely in French, it appears.
He will be in top-flight...
- 8/21/2018
- by Dominic Patten
- Deadline Film + TV
Julie Delpy: "Blake Edwards is really the inspiration for this film." Photo: Anne-Katrin Titze
Doris Day and Rock Hudson, Pink Panther with Peter Sellers, Wolf Rilla's Village Of The Damned, Mervyn LeRoy's - not Nick Cave's - The Bad Seed and designing with Emmanuelle Duplay and Pierre-Yves Gayraud, came up as Karl Lagerfeld goes underground in Julie Delpy's poking Lolo, starring Vincent Lacoste, Danny Boon, Karin Viard and Delpy herself.
Julie is also featured in Caroline Suh's The 4%: Film’s Gender Problem with Anjelica Huston, Patricia Clarkson, Judd Apatow, Christine Vachon, Mira Nair, Michael Moore, Lake Bell, Amy Berg, James Franco, Kristen Wiig, Michael Mann, Paul Feig, Catherine Hardwicke, A. O. Scott, Sam Taylor-Johnson, Dawn Hudson, Jill Soloway, Mary Harron and Amy Heckerling.
Violette (Julie Delpy): "Of course it's not autobiographical."
In Delpy's vivacious comedy of ill-manners. she plays Violette, divorced mother to a pouting,...
Doris Day and Rock Hudson, Pink Panther with Peter Sellers, Wolf Rilla's Village Of The Damned, Mervyn LeRoy's - not Nick Cave's - The Bad Seed and designing with Emmanuelle Duplay and Pierre-Yves Gayraud, came up as Karl Lagerfeld goes underground in Julie Delpy's poking Lolo, starring Vincent Lacoste, Danny Boon, Karin Viard and Delpy herself.
Julie is also featured in Caroline Suh's The 4%: Film’s Gender Problem with Anjelica Huston, Patricia Clarkson, Judd Apatow, Christine Vachon, Mira Nair, Michael Moore, Lake Bell, Amy Berg, James Franco, Kristen Wiig, Michael Mann, Paul Feig, Catherine Hardwicke, A. O. Scott, Sam Taylor-Johnson, Dawn Hudson, Jill Soloway, Mary Harron and Amy Heckerling.
Violette (Julie Delpy): "Of course it's not autobiographical."
In Delpy's vivacious comedy of ill-manners. she plays Violette, divorced mother to a pouting,...
- 3/26/2016
- by Anne-Katrin Titze
- eyeforfilm.co.uk
Read More: Julie Delpy on Directing and Why She's Neurotic: "I Have All the Problems You Can Possibly Imagine" A love triangle is never easy to maintain, especially when that triangle involves a affable computer geek and a cankerous teenage son. Julie Delpy follows up her last directorial outing, "Two Days in New York," with yet another heartwarmingly funny film concerning romance, middle age and all the hang-ups that come along with it. Written, directed and starring the two-time Academy Award-nominated Delpy, "Lolo" tells the story of Violette (Delpy), a 40-something fashion industry workaholic, who barely has enough time to care for her havoc-wrecking teenage son, Lolo (Vincent Lacoste). But things begin to become more complicated as she begins to fall for a charming and sweet nerd, Jean-Rene (Danny Boon), who starts vying for Violette's heart. Jean-Rene must face obstacle after obstacle in his determination to win over the tumultuous Lolo,...
- 3/1/2016
- by Riyad Mammadyarov
- Indiewire
Plus: Indus, The Cloud 9 launch film, TV fund
FilmRise has picked up from Wild Bunch Us rights to Julie Delpy’s French rom-com Lolo, about a youngster who wreaks havoc on his mother’s budding romance with a computer geek.
Delpy and Danny Boon from French smash Welcome To The Sticks star in the film, which premiered in Venice. FilmRise has set a March 11, 2016, theatrical release.
Singapore-based media holding company Indus Media Entertainment and New Zealand’s The Cloud 9 Screen Entertainment Group have announced a $100m content creation fund. Cloud 9’s development slate includes rom-com The Cowboy And The Dancer.
FilmRise has picked up from Wild Bunch Us rights to Julie Delpy’s French rom-com Lolo, about a youngster who wreaks havoc on his mother’s budding romance with a computer geek.
Delpy and Danny Boon from French smash Welcome To The Sticks star in the film, which premiered in Venice. FilmRise has set a March 11, 2016, theatrical release.
Singapore-based media holding company Indus Media Entertainment and New Zealand’s The Cloud 9 Screen Entertainment Group have announced a $100m content creation fund. Cloud 9’s development slate includes rom-com The Cowboy And The Dancer.
- 12/23/2015
- by jeremykay67@gmail.com (Jeremy Kay)
- ScreenDaily
It has taken a few years since her last turn behind with camera with "2 Days In New York," but Julie Delpy is keeping things frothy for next directorial effort "Lolo," and the first international trailer has arrived for what looks to be her most broadly crowdpleasing movie yet. Read More: Watch: 40-Minute Roundtable With Greta Gerwig, Julie Delpy, Brie Larson, Kathryn Hahn & More Delpy also stars in the movie alongside Danny Boon, Vincent Lacoste and Karin Viarde in the story follows the sophisticated Violet, who meets the dweeby Jean—René and sparks fly, but there's just one problem: Violet's son Lolo, who will make life hell for the new man in her life. It's pretty broad stuff, and feels like a movie we've seen at least a couple of times before, but hopefully Delpy has a couple of tricks up her sleeve in the script she wrote. "Lolo" opens in France on October 28th.
- 7/8/2015
- by Kevin Jagernauth
- The Playlist
Julie Delpy is getting ready to return behind the camera with her next directorial effort "Lolo." And while plot details seem to be thin on the ground at the moment, it has emerged that Danny Boon, Vincent Lacoste and Karin Viarde make up part of the cast. Delpy and Boon will play a husband and wife with Lacoste as their "antisocial" son. Production will begin soon and the film is scheduled to hit theaters in France in October 2015. [via Film Divider] Aaron Paul is lining up alongside Jamie Dornan for Alexandre Aja's "The 9th Life Of Louis Drax." Penned by Max Minghella, the story "begins on Louis Drax's ninth birthday, when he suffers a near-fatal fall. In order to reveal the strange circumstances surrounding the young boy's accident, Dr. Allan Pascal (Dornan) is drawn into a thrilling mystery, testing the boundaries of fantasy and reality." Production starts next month. [The Wrap] Bryan Cranston and Matt Damon both.
- 9/24/2014
- by Kevin Jagernauth
- The Playlist
Dany Boon, Gérard Depardieu and Catherine Frot have emerged as the highest paid actors in France last year.
Actor Danny Boon They head the league table in an annual survey by the newspaper Le Figaro, which is of particular interest this year following the outburst by Vincent Maraval, one of the chiefs of production company Wild Bunch, who blasted Gallic star wages and the generous subsidy system for cinema in an article in Le Monde at the start of the year.
Top of the poll is Dany Boon with 3.6 millions euros (for four films), followed by Gérard Depardieu with 2.3 million euros (four films), Catherine Frot with 2.2 million euros (three films), Gad Elmaleh at 2.1 million euros (three films) and Alain Chabat with two million euros (one film).
The newspaper suggest that Boon is the best paid actor in Europe, thanks to the success of Welcome To The Sticks (Bienvenue chez les Ch'tis...
Actor Danny Boon They head the league table in an annual survey by the newspaper Le Figaro, which is of particular interest this year following the outburst by Vincent Maraval, one of the chiefs of production company Wild Bunch, who blasted Gallic star wages and the generous subsidy system for cinema in an article in Le Monde at the start of the year.
Top of the poll is Dany Boon with 3.6 millions euros (for four films), followed by Gérard Depardieu with 2.3 million euros (four films), Catherine Frot with 2.2 million euros (three films), Gad Elmaleh at 2.1 million euros (three films) and Alain Chabat with two million euros (one film).
The newspaper suggest that Boon is the best paid actor in Europe, thanks to the success of Welcome To The Sticks (Bienvenue chez les Ch'tis...
- 2/19/2013
- by Richard Mowe
- eyeforfilm.co.uk
Here are a few interesting and/or noteworthy projects that were recently added to IMDbPro's database of development titles:
The Night Stalker – Many people might not remember Darin McGavin's as Kolchak in the short-lived '70s supernatural crime series (even fewer might recall Stuart Townsend's turn in the much shorter-lived remake). But, Johnny Depp must've been a fan. He's developing a feature adaptation of the show with Disney and his Infinitum Nihil.
Jamaica – Seth Rogen and his Superbad super-partner Evan Goldberg are backing Jonathan Levine's comedy about a teenager who travels to the Caribbean with his grandmother.
We Froze the First Man – Oscar winner Errol Morris has tapped Paul Rudd to star in his Mad Men-era, non-docu dramedy about the early days of cryogenics. Stranger Than Fiction scribe Zach Helm wrote the screenplay, which was inspired by a Robert F. Nelson's memoir "We Froze the First Man" and an segment from NPR's "This American Life".
Fly Me to the Moon – Diane Kruger and Danny Boon star in this French production directed by Pascal Chaumeil. The romcom centers on a happily-engaged woman with a plan to break her family curse where every first marriage ends in divorce.
Banjo & Matilda –Bruce Beresford (Driving Miss Daisy) directs this Australian drama written by Young Einstein co-writer David Roach (whatever happened to Yahoo Serious?) . The film follows a city poet and journalist who travels to the edge of the outback in order to track down a political agitator.
If you know of something in the works, you can submit it via our online submission form.
The Night Stalker – Many people might not remember Darin McGavin's as Kolchak in the short-lived '70s supernatural crime series (even fewer might recall Stuart Townsend's turn in the much shorter-lived remake). But, Johnny Depp must've been a fan. He's developing a feature adaptation of the show with Disney and his Infinitum Nihil.
Jamaica – Seth Rogen and his Superbad super-partner Evan Goldberg are backing Jonathan Levine's comedy about a teenager who travels to the Caribbean with his grandmother.
We Froze the First Man – Oscar winner Errol Morris has tapped Paul Rudd to star in his Mad Men-era, non-docu dramedy about the early days of cryogenics. Stranger Than Fiction scribe Zach Helm wrote the screenplay, which was inspired by a Robert F. Nelson's memoir "We Froze the First Man" and an segment from NPR's "This American Life".
Fly Me to the Moon – Diane Kruger and Danny Boon star in this French production directed by Pascal Chaumeil. The romcom centers on a happily-engaged woman with a plan to break her family curse where every first marriage ends in divorce.
Banjo & Matilda –Bruce Beresford (Driving Miss Daisy) directs this Australian drama written by Young Einstein co-writer David Roach (whatever happened to Yahoo Serious?) . The film follows a city poet and journalist who travels to the edge of the outback in order to track down a political agitator.
If you know of something in the works, you can submit it via our online submission form.
- 7/15/2011
- by Eric Greene
- IMDbPro News
DVD Playhouse December 2010
By
Allen Gardner
America Lost And Found: The Bbs Story (Criterion) Perhaps the best DVD box set released this year, this ultimate cinefile stocking stuffer offered up by Criterion, the Rolls-Royce of home video labels, features seven seminal works from the late ‘60s-early ‘70s that were brought to life by cutting edge producers Bert Schneider, Steve Blauner and director/producer Bob Rafelson, the principals of Bbs Productions. In chronological order: Head (1968) star the Monkees, the manufactured (by Rafelson, et al), American answer to the Beatles who, like it or not, did make an impact on popular culture, particularly in this utterly surreal piece of cinematic anarchy (co-written by Jack Nicholson, who has a cameo), which was largely dismissed upon its initial release, but is now regarded as a counterculture classic. Easy Rider (1969) is arguably regarded as the seminal ‘60s picture, about two hippie drug dealers (director Dennis Hopper...
By
Allen Gardner
America Lost And Found: The Bbs Story (Criterion) Perhaps the best DVD box set released this year, this ultimate cinefile stocking stuffer offered up by Criterion, the Rolls-Royce of home video labels, features seven seminal works from the late ‘60s-early ‘70s that were brought to life by cutting edge producers Bert Schneider, Steve Blauner and director/producer Bob Rafelson, the principals of Bbs Productions. In chronological order: Head (1968) star the Monkees, the manufactured (by Rafelson, et al), American answer to the Beatles who, like it or not, did make an impact on popular culture, particularly in this utterly surreal piece of cinematic anarchy (co-written by Jack Nicholson, who has a cameo), which was largely dismissed upon its initial release, but is now regarded as a counterculture classic. Easy Rider (1969) is arguably regarded as the seminal ‘60s picture, about two hippie drug dealers (director Dennis Hopper...
- 12/20/2010
- by The Hollywood Interview.com
- The Hollywood Interview
Lots of interesting news is coming from offshore and so I am starting my own "wire service". When I get the news, I'll post a line and the link for those who are interested in following the links. This one I particularly like because I like the film so much and it came to U.S. via Colcoa where Overbrook made a remake deal with Danny Boon, the same director, for a the English language remake to be released 2013. Welcome to the Sticks, the French comedy about a postal civil servant in France being relocated to the North of France,…...
- 10/4/2010
- Sydney's Buzz
Review originally published on March 18, 2010 as part of our SXSW coverage.
Favored French filmmaker Jean-Pierre Jeunet (Delicatessen, Amelie) returns to delight audiences once again with Micmacs, his sixth feature film. Astounding visuals are abundant, washing the screen an alluring aura of cinematography. What sets Micmacs apart is its unabashedly comical nature, drawing influence from the silent masters. A love of Buster Keaton and Charlie Chaplin is clearly present, making Micmacs a whimsically wild ride.
Danny Boon (The Valet) plays Bazil, an unlucky man. As a boy, Bazil.s father was killed when a landmine exploded. His father was attempting to dispose of the explosive device. Now a grown man, Bazil works a simple job in a little video rental shop. On one otherwise normal and eventless day, a stray bullet ricochet.s into Bazil.s shop and plunks him in the head. Fortunate to survive, the doctors flip a coin...
Favored French filmmaker Jean-Pierre Jeunet (Delicatessen, Amelie) returns to delight audiences once again with Micmacs, his sixth feature film. Astounding visuals are abundant, washing the screen an alluring aura of cinematography. What sets Micmacs apart is its unabashedly comical nature, drawing influence from the silent masters. A love of Buster Keaton and Charlie Chaplin is clearly present, making Micmacs a whimsically wild ride.
Danny Boon (The Valet) plays Bazil, an unlucky man. As a boy, Bazil.s father was killed when a landmine exploded. His father was attempting to dispose of the explosive device. Now a grown man, Bazil works a simple job in a little video rental shop. On one otherwise normal and eventless day, a stray bullet ricochet.s into Bazil.s shop and plunks him in the head. Fortunate to survive, the doctors flip a coin...
- 7/16/2010
- by Travis Keune
- WeAreMovieGeeks.com
Jean-Pierre Jeunet was born on September 3, 1953 in Roanne, France. His career in cinema began with making short animated films with his creative partner, Marc Caro. Jeunet and Caro’s mind-blowing feature-length debut was Delicatessen (1991). The duo went on to create the magnificently imaginative The City of Lost Children (1995) which opened the 1995 Cannes Film Festival. 20th Century Fox then entrusted Jeunet with the direction of their fourth Alien film – Alien: Resurrection (1997) – which also marked Jeunet’s separation from Caro. Jeunet’s solo directing career continued with his most successful film to date and the film that best represents his unbridled love for cinema – Amelie (2001). His next pairing with Amelie star Audrey Tautou – A Very Long Engagement (2004) – didn’t fare quite as well in the box office but it was still critically appreciated. And now Jeunet has created the fantastical world of Micmacs (2010)… Jeunet is one of my favorite directors of the...
- 6/22/2010
- by Don Simpson
- SmellsLikeScreenSpirit
Editor’s Note: this review was written at SXSW 2010.
Rating 4/5
Director: Jean-Pierre Jeunet
Writer(s): Jean-Pierre Jeunet and Guillaume Laurant
Cast: Danny Boon, Yolande Moreau, Dominique Pinon
It is my suspicion that Jean-Pierre Jeunet is a nostalgic man. His is a world where one man’s trash is another man’s treasure indeed and he takes great delight in the things that you and I discard. I imagine that his backyard is riddled with buried treasure, time capsules for future visitors. His films seem to hang on a similar theme of loss and material possession and Micmacs is no different. Marked by his trademark visual style, Micmacs differs from films like Amelie, Delicatessen, and The City Of Lost Children in that this has a clear-cut narrative that includes an overt political statement.
Read more on Theatrical Review: Micmacs À Tire-larigot…...
Rating 4/5
Director: Jean-Pierre Jeunet
Writer(s): Jean-Pierre Jeunet and Guillaume Laurant
Cast: Danny Boon, Yolande Moreau, Dominique Pinon
It is my suspicion that Jean-Pierre Jeunet is a nostalgic man. His is a world where one man’s trash is another man’s treasure indeed and he takes great delight in the things that you and I discard. I imagine that his backyard is riddled with buried treasure, time capsules for future visitors. His films seem to hang on a similar theme of loss and material possession and Micmacs is no different. Marked by his trademark visual style, Micmacs differs from films like Amelie, Delicatessen, and The City Of Lost Children in that this has a clear-cut narrative that includes an overt political statement.
Read more on Theatrical Review: Micmacs À Tire-larigot…...
- 5/29/2010
- by Ronnita Miller
- GordonandtheWhale
Favored French filmmaker Jean-Pierre Jeunet (Delicatessen, Amelie) returns to delight audiences once again with Micmacs, his sixth feature film. Astounding visuals are abundant, washing the screen an alluring aura of cinematography. What sets Micmacs apart is its unabashedly comical nature, drawing influence from the silent masters. A love of Buster Keaton and Charlie Chaplin is clearly present, making Micmacs a whimsically wild ride.
Danny Boon (The Valet) plays Bazil, an unlucky man. As a boy, Bazil.s father was killed when a landmine exploded. His father was attempting to dispose of the explosive device. Now a grown man, Bazil works a simple job in a little video rental shop. On one otherwise normal and eventless day, a stray bullet ricochet.s into Bazil.s shop and plunks him in the head. Fortunate to survive, the doctors flip a coin to decide he.s better off having the bullet left lodged in is head,...
Danny Boon (The Valet) plays Bazil, an unlucky man. As a boy, Bazil.s father was killed when a landmine exploded. His father was attempting to dispose of the explosive device. Now a grown man, Bazil works a simple job in a little video rental shop. On one otherwise normal and eventless day, a stray bullet ricochet.s into Bazil.s shop and plunks him in the head. Fortunate to survive, the doctors flip a coin to decide he.s better off having the bullet left lodged in is head,...
- 3/18/2010
- by Travis
- WeAreMovieGeeks.com
It's a wrap! The Martin Gropius Bau is empty and the final pickups follow. This is a work in progress and readers are invited and welcome to contribute. Presales have returned in reaction to the reduced number of finished films on offer over the past two markets. Presales applies across the board from Us to French and even Italian films. English language films are increasingly coming out of the major non English language territories but local product is impacting sales on Us films internationally. Business was quickly wrapped up but it was done with a healthy number of buys reported. Lower prices have become accepted but the market must have product as this event proved.
Adriana Chiesa has licensed Federico Moccia’s teen trilogy to Savor to Spain. The first title, Sorry If I Love You (Scusa Ma Ti Chiamo Amore) grossed $27m when released by Medusa on 600 prints in Italy.
Adriana Chiesa has licensed Federico Moccia’s teen trilogy to Savor to Spain. The first title, Sorry If I Love You (Scusa Ma Ti Chiamo Amore) grossed $27m when released by Medusa on 600 prints in Italy.
- 3/9/2010
- by Sydney
- Sydney's Buzz
Year: 2009
Directors: Jean-Pierre Jeunet
Writers: Jean-Pierre Jeunet & Guillaume Laurant
IMDb: link
Trailer: link
Review by: The Crystal Ferret
Rating: 5 out of 10
Basil lost his father to a landmine during the Algerian war, his mother to some sanitarium in the aftermath, and his childhood to St Peter’s Needle in some generic religious boarding school. Our story kicks in, thirty years later, with an adult Basil nearly losing his life to some stray bullet during a shootout on the doorstep of his video-rental store.
After quite a time in hospital and with the bullet still firmly lodged in his brain, he returns to his day to day life to find his apartment locked down, his property stolen, and his job gone. The only compensation he will get from the video store is the spent cartridge from his new leaded friend.
He will try and survive on his own in the street...
Directors: Jean-Pierre Jeunet
Writers: Jean-Pierre Jeunet & Guillaume Laurant
IMDb: link
Trailer: link
Review by: The Crystal Ferret
Rating: 5 out of 10
Basil lost his father to a landmine during the Algerian war, his mother to some sanitarium in the aftermath, and his childhood to St Peter’s Needle in some generic religious boarding school. Our story kicks in, thirty years later, with an adult Basil nearly losing his life to some stray bullet during a shootout on the doorstep of his video-rental store.
After quite a time in hospital and with the bullet still firmly lodged in his brain, he returns to his day to day life to find his apartment locked down, his property stolen, and his job gone. The only compensation he will get from the video store is the spent cartridge from his new leaded friend.
He will try and survive on his own in the street...
- 11/3/2009
- QuietEarth.us
Just because, you know, having a whopping eight teasers released a full three months before release just isn’t enough, the first proper theatrical trailer for Jean-Pierre Jeunet’s Micmacs A Tire-Larigot has just arrived. This one starts off identically to the first of the series of teasers, focusing in tight on Danny Boon’s character, but don’t worry - it soon expands out to include the rest of the cast and showcases the intricately designed, off kilter world that Jeunet has created beautifully.
Is it better to live with a bullet lodged in your brain, even if it means you might drop dead any time? Or would you rather have the bullet taken out and live the rest of your life as a vegetable? Are zebras white with black stripes or black with white stripes? Is scrap metal worth more than landmines? Can you get drunk from eating waffles?...
Is it better to live with a bullet lodged in your brain, even if it means you might drop dead any time? Or would you rather have the bullet taken out and live the rest of your life as a vegetable? Are zebras white with black stripes or black with white stripes? Is scrap metal worth more than landmines? Can you get drunk from eating waffles?...
- 7/10/2009
- by Todd Brown
- Screen Anarchy
We’re big fans of Jean-Pierre Jeunet — the whimsical genius behind Delicatessen, The City of Lost Children and Amelie — so of course we're highly anticipating his new movie Micmacs a tire-larigot.
Jeunet’s latest, Micmacs a tire-larigot, revolves around one man’s quest to destroy two weapons manufacturers, which he blames for his life’s misfortunes. Bazil (Danny Boon) is the son of a bomb disposal expert who died in Morocco from an explosive device. Years later, he is struck by a stray bullet in the head, which must remain wedged there, leading to strange side effects. After losing his job, Bazil assembles a rag-tag team and sets out on a quest for vengeance.
Thanks to Twitch, the teaser trailer is now available online. Use the player below to check it out.
Micmacs a tire-larigot — which literally translated means something like "Intrigues to one's heart's content" — is due in French cinemas on Oct.
Jeunet’s latest, Micmacs a tire-larigot, revolves around one man’s quest to destroy two weapons manufacturers, which he blames for his life’s misfortunes. Bazil (Danny Boon) is the son of a bomb disposal expert who died in Morocco from an explosive device. Years later, he is struck by a stray bullet in the head, which must remain wedged there, leading to strange side effects. After losing his job, Bazil assembles a rag-tag team and sets out on a quest for vengeance.
Thanks to Twitch, the teaser trailer is now available online. Use the player below to check it out.
Micmacs a tire-larigot — which literally translated means something like "Intrigues to one's heart's content" — is due in French cinemas on Oct.
- 6/30/2009
- CinemaSpy
PARIS -- French director Daniele Thompson will follow up her 2006 hit "Avenue Montaigne" with "Le Code a Change", set to star a flock of famous French faces, producer Thelma Films said Monday.
Despite its title, which in English means, "The Code Has Changed", Thompson will stick to her winning formula of a Paris-based ensemble dramedy featuring the creme de la creme of Gallic talent and focusing on the lives of wealthy Parisians.
Co-produced by Alain Terzian's Alter Films, "Code" stars Karin Viard, Danny Boon, Marina Fois, Marina Hands, Emmanuelle Seigner, Patrick Bruel, Patrick Chesnais, Pierre Arditi and Laurent Stocker.
Keeping with family tradition, Thompson's son Christopher, co-writer of "Montaigne", will co-star in the pic.
The story brings together a potpourri of personalities from the Parisian upper class for a humorous, emotionally charged dinner that unveils deceiving appearances and uncovered truths.
After penning the scripts for French films "La Grande Vadrouille" (1966) and "The Adventures of Rabbi Jacob" (1973) alongside her father Gerard Oury, "Montaigne" will be Thompson's fourth turn in the director's chair.
Despite its title, which in English means, "The Code Has Changed", Thompson will stick to her winning formula of a Paris-based ensemble dramedy featuring the creme de la creme of Gallic talent and focusing on the lives of wealthy Parisians.
Co-produced by Alain Terzian's Alter Films, "Code" stars Karin Viard, Danny Boon, Marina Fois, Marina Hands, Emmanuelle Seigner, Patrick Bruel, Patrick Chesnais, Pierre Arditi and Laurent Stocker.
Keeping with family tradition, Thompson's son Christopher, co-writer of "Montaigne", will co-star in the pic.
The story brings together a potpourri of personalities from the Parisian upper class for a humorous, emotionally charged dinner that unveils deceiving appearances and uncovered truths.
After penning the scripts for French films "La Grande Vadrouille" (1966) and "The Adventures of Rabbi Jacob" (1973) alongside her father Gerard Oury, "Montaigne" will be Thompson's fourth turn in the director's chair.
- 2/26/2008
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
PARIS -- French director Christian Carion and actor Guillaume Canet are back in the holiday spirit after their 2005 hit "Merry Christmas" with a new collaborative effort, "Farewell", a spy thriller based on the eponymous novel by Serguei Kostine.
After "Christmas" nabbed a foreign-language Oscar nomination in 2006 and sold nearly 2 million tickets at the Gallic boxoffice, the actor-director team is heading from World War I to the Cold War for the story of a lieutenant-colonel from the KGB who chose to betray the former USSR for France.
Set in Moscow in 1981, the film is set to start shooting in early 2008. Russian actor Nikita Mikhalkov will co-star opposite Canet in the project co-produced by Christophe Rossignon's Nord-Ouest Prods. with Bertrand Faivre's Le Bureau.
Carion, who co-wrote the script with Eric Raynaud, also is in development on Nord-Ouest's "La Guerre de l'Eau", starring Mathilde Seigner and Danny Boon.
After "Christmas" nabbed a foreign-language Oscar nomination in 2006 and sold nearly 2 million tickets at the Gallic boxoffice, the actor-director team is heading from World War I to the Cold War for the story of a lieutenant-colonel from the KGB who chose to betray the former USSR for France.
Set in Moscow in 1981, the film is set to start shooting in early 2008. Russian actor Nikita Mikhalkov will co-star opposite Canet in the project co-produced by Christophe Rossignon's Nord-Ouest Prods. with Bertrand Faivre's Le Bureau.
Carion, who co-wrote the script with Eric Raynaud, also is in development on Nord-Ouest's "La Guerre de l'Eau", starring Mathilde Seigner and Danny Boon.
- 8/31/2007
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
PARIS -- Rachid Bouchareb's Days of Glory, Pascale Ferran's Lady Chatterley and Guillaume Canet's Tell No One dominate the nominations for this year's Cesar Awards, France's top film honors, with each film vying for nine awards, organizers said Friday.
Alain Resnais' Coeurs and Xavier Giannoli's When I Was a Singer trail with eight and seven nominations, respectively.
Days of Glory, a harrowing portrayal of North Africans who fought to liberate France during World War II, followed up its foreign-language Oscar nomination with nine Cesar noms including best film, director and original script.
Tell No One, Guillaume Canet's adaptation of Harlan Coben's thriller, also bagged nine nominations, including best film, director and actor (Francois Cluzet).
Lady Chatterley, a critics' favorite that picked up the Louis Delluc prize in December, rounded out the trio with nominations in the best film, director and actress (Marina Hands) categories.
Philippe Lioret's adolescent drama Don't Worry, I'm Fine, also will compete in the best film category, nabbing a total of five nominations including best director and female newcomer (Melanie Laurent).
Cecile de France, who took last year's supporting actress Cesar, will compete against herself in the best actress category for her roles in When I Was a Singer and Avenue Montaigne. Catherine Frot (The Page Turner), Charlotte Gainsbourg (I Do) and Marina Hands (Lady Chatterley) also will vie for the prize.
Nominees in the best actor category include Michel Blanc, who plays a farmer in French boxoffice hit You're So Beautiful; Alain Chabat, for his hilarious portrayal of a reluctant lover in I Do; Gerard Depardieu, for his role as a worn-out ballroom singer in When I Was a Singer; Jean Dujardin, who plays the French reincarnation of James Bond in OSS 117; and Francois Cluzet, a man searching for his missing wife in Tell No One.
Singer, Glory and Beautiful will vie for best original screenplay alongside Avenue Montaigne and Jean-Philippe while No One, Chatterley, OSS 117 and Don't Worry will compete with Alain Resnais' ensemble hit Private Fears in Public Places in the best adaptation category.
Christine Citti (Singer), Mylene Demongeot (French California) and Bernadette Lafont (I Do) will compete for the best supporting actress prize with French singer Dani (Avenue Montaigne) and this year's Cesars ceremony host, Valerie Lemercier (Montaigne).
The nominees for best supporting actor are Danny Boon (The Valet), Francois Cluzet (Four Stars), Andre Dussollier (No One), Guy Marchand (Inside Paris) and Kad Merad (Don't Worry).
Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu's Babel, Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris' Little Miss Sunshine, Ang Lee's Brokeback Mountain, Stephen Frears' The Queen and Pedro Almodovar's Volver will compete for best foreign-language film.
Alain Resnais' Coeurs and Xavier Giannoli's When I Was a Singer trail with eight and seven nominations, respectively.
Days of Glory, a harrowing portrayal of North Africans who fought to liberate France during World War II, followed up its foreign-language Oscar nomination with nine Cesar noms including best film, director and original script.
Tell No One, Guillaume Canet's adaptation of Harlan Coben's thriller, also bagged nine nominations, including best film, director and actor (Francois Cluzet).
Lady Chatterley, a critics' favorite that picked up the Louis Delluc prize in December, rounded out the trio with nominations in the best film, director and actress (Marina Hands) categories.
Philippe Lioret's adolescent drama Don't Worry, I'm Fine, also will compete in the best film category, nabbing a total of five nominations including best director and female newcomer (Melanie Laurent).
Cecile de France, who took last year's supporting actress Cesar, will compete against herself in the best actress category for her roles in When I Was a Singer and Avenue Montaigne. Catherine Frot (The Page Turner), Charlotte Gainsbourg (I Do) and Marina Hands (Lady Chatterley) also will vie for the prize.
Nominees in the best actor category include Michel Blanc, who plays a farmer in French boxoffice hit You're So Beautiful; Alain Chabat, for his hilarious portrayal of a reluctant lover in I Do; Gerard Depardieu, for his role as a worn-out ballroom singer in When I Was a Singer; Jean Dujardin, who plays the French reincarnation of James Bond in OSS 117; and Francois Cluzet, a man searching for his missing wife in Tell No One.
Singer, Glory and Beautiful will vie for best original screenplay alongside Avenue Montaigne and Jean-Philippe while No One, Chatterley, OSS 117 and Don't Worry will compete with Alain Resnais' ensemble hit Private Fears in Public Places in the best adaptation category.
Christine Citti (Singer), Mylene Demongeot (French California) and Bernadette Lafont (I Do) will compete for the best supporting actress prize with French singer Dani (Avenue Montaigne) and this year's Cesars ceremony host, Valerie Lemercier (Montaigne).
The nominees for best supporting actor are Danny Boon (The Valet), Francois Cluzet (Four Stars), Andre Dussollier (No One), Guy Marchand (Inside Paris) and Kad Merad (Don't Worry).
Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu's Babel, Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris' Little Miss Sunshine, Ang Lee's Brokeback Mountain, Stephen Frears' The Queen and Pedro Almodovar's Volver will compete for best foreign-language film.
- 1/26/2007
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
PARIS -- Rachid Bouchareb's "Days of Glory", Pascale Ferran's "Lady Chatterley" and Guillaume Canet's "Tell No One" dominate the nominations for this year's Cesar Awards, France's top film honors, with each film vying for nine awards, organizers said Friday.
Alain Resnais' "Coeurs" and Xavier Giannoli's "When I Was a Singer" trail with eight and seven nominations, respectively.
"Days of Glory", a harrowing portrayal of North Africans who fought to liberate France during World War II, followed up its foreign-language Oscar nomination with nine Cesar noms including best film, director and original script.
"Tell No One", Guillaume Canet's adaptation of Harlan Coben's thriller, also bagged nine nominations, including best film, director and actor (Francois Cluzet).
"Lady Chatterley", a critics' favorite that picked up the Louis Delluc prize in December, rounded out the trio with nominations in the best film, director and actress (Marina Hands) categories.
Philippe Lioret's adolescent drama "Don't Worry, I'm Fine", also will compete in the best film category, nabbing a total of five nominations including best director and female newcomer (Melanie Laurent).
Cecile de France, who took last year's supporting actress Cesar, will compete against herself in the best actress category for her roles in "When I Was a Singer" and "Avenue Montaigne". Catherine Frot ("The Page Turner"), Charlotte Gainsbourg ("I Do") and Marina Hands ("Lady Chatterley") also will vie for the prize.
Nominees in the best actor category include Michel Blanc, who plays a farmer in French boxoffice hit "You're So Beautiful"; Alain Chabat, for his hilarious portrayal of a reluctant lover in "I Do"; Gerard Depardieu, for his role as a worn-out ballroom singer in "When I Was a Singer"; Jean Dujardin, who plays the French reincarnation of James Bond in "OSS 117"; and Francois Cluzet, a man searching for his missing wife in "Tell No One".
"Singer", "Glory" and "Beautiful" will vie for best original screenplay alongside "Avenue Montaigne" and "Jean-Philippe" while "No One", "Chatterley", "OSS 117" and "Don't Worry" will compete with Alain Resnais' ensemble hit "Private Fears in Public Places" in the best adaptation category.
Christine Citti ("Singer"), Mylene Demongeot ("French California") and Bernadette Lafont ("I Do") will compete for the best supporting actress prize with French singer Dani ("Avenue Montaigne") and this year's Cesars ceremony host, Valerie Lemercier ("Montaigne").
The nominees for best supporting actor are Danny Boon ("The Valet"), Francois Cluzet ("Four Stars"), Andre Dussollier ("No One"), Guy Marchand ("Inside Paris") and Kad Merad ("Don't Worry").
Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu's "Babel", Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris' "Little Miss Sunshine", Ang Lee's "Brokeback Mountain", Stephen Frears' "The Queen" and Pedro Almodovar's "Volver" will compete for best foreign-language film.
Alain Resnais' "Coeurs" and Xavier Giannoli's "When I Was a Singer" trail with eight and seven nominations, respectively.
"Days of Glory", a harrowing portrayal of North Africans who fought to liberate France during World War II, followed up its foreign-language Oscar nomination with nine Cesar noms including best film, director and original script.
"Tell No One", Guillaume Canet's adaptation of Harlan Coben's thriller, also bagged nine nominations, including best film, director and actor (Francois Cluzet).
"Lady Chatterley", a critics' favorite that picked up the Louis Delluc prize in December, rounded out the trio with nominations in the best film, director and actress (Marina Hands) categories.
Philippe Lioret's adolescent drama "Don't Worry, I'm Fine", also will compete in the best film category, nabbing a total of five nominations including best director and female newcomer (Melanie Laurent).
Cecile de France, who took last year's supporting actress Cesar, will compete against herself in the best actress category for her roles in "When I Was a Singer" and "Avenue Montaigne". Catherine Frot ("The Page Turner"), Charlotte Gainsbourg ("I Do") and Marina Hands ("Lady Chatterley") also will vie for the prize.
Nominees in the best actor category include Michel Blanc, who plays a farmer in French boxoffice hit "You're So Beautiful"; Alain Chabat, for his hilarious portrayal of a reluctant lover in "I Do"; Gerard Depardieu, for his role as a worn-out ballroom singer in "When I Was a Singer"; Jean Dujardin, who plays the French reincarnation of James Bond in "OSS 117"; and Francois Cluzet, a man searching for his missing wife in "Tell No One".
"Singer", "Glory" and "Beautiful" will vie for best original screenplay alongside "Avenue Montaigne" and "Jean-Philippe" while "No One", "Chatterley", "OSS 117" and "Don't Worry" will compete with Alain Resnais' ensemble hit "Private Fears in Public Places" in the best adaptation category.
Christine Citti ("Singer"), Mylene Demongeot ("French California") and Bernadette Lafont ("I Do") will compete for the best supporting actress prize with French singer Dani ("Avenue Montaigne") and this year's Cesars ceremony host, Valerie Lemercier ("Montaigne").
The nominees for best supporting actor are Danny Boon ("The Valet"), Francois Cluzet ("Four Stars"), Andre Dussollier ("No One"), Guy Marchand ("Inside Paris") and Kad Merad ("Don't Worry").
Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu's "Babel", Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris' "Little Miss Sunshine", Ang Lee's "Brokeback Mountain", Stephen Frears' "The Queen" and Pedro Almodovar's "Volver" will compete for best foreign-language film.
- 1/26/2007
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
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