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Faust (1926 film)

Faust – A German Folktale (German: Faust – Eine deutsche Volkssage) is a 1926 silent fantasy film, produced by Ufa, directed by F. W. Murnau, starring Gösta Ekman as Faust, Emil Jannings as Mephisto, Camilla Horn as Gretchen/Marguerite, Frida Richard as her mother, Wilhelm Dieterle as her brother, and Yvette Guilbert as Marthe Schwerdtlein, her aunt. Murnau's film draws on older traditions of the legendary tale of Faust as well as on Goethe's classic 1808 version. Ufa wanted Ludwig Berger to direct Faust, as Murnau was engaged with Variety; Murnau pressured the producer and, backed by Jannings, eventually persuaded Erich Pommer to let him direct the film.

Faust
U.S. theatrical release poster
Directed byF. W. Murnau
Written byHans Kyser
Produced byErich Pommer
StarringGösta Ekman
Emil Jannings
Camilla Horn
Wilhelm Dieterle
Frida Richard
Yvette Guilbert
CinematographyCarl Hoffmann
Music byWerner Richard Heymann (in the premiere)
William Axt (US, uncredited)
Distributed byUfa (Germany)
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (USA)
Release dates
  • 14 October 1926 (1926-10-14) (Berlin, Germany[1])
  • 5 December 1926 (1926-12-05) (US)
Running time
106 minutes
Country Germany
LanguagesSilent film
German intertitles
Budget2 million ℛ︁ℳ︁ (equivalent to €8 million in 2021)
Box office1 million ℛ︁ℳ︁ (equivalent to €4 million in 2021)

Faust was Murnau's last German film, and directly afterward he moved to the United States under contract to William Fox to direct Sunrise: A Song of Two Humans (1927); when the film premiered in the Ufa-Palast am Zoo in Berlin, Murnau was already shooting in Hollywood. Faust has been praised for its special effects and is regarded as an example of German Expressionist film.

Plot edit

The demon Mephisto has a bet with an Archangel that he can corrupt a righteous man's soul and destroy in him what is divine. If he succeeds, the Devil will win dominion over earth.

The Devil delivers a plague to the village where Faust, an elderly alchemist, lives. Though he prays to stop the death and starvation, nothing happens. Disheartened, Faust throws his alchemy books in the fire, and then the Bible too. One book opens, showing how to have power and glory by making a pact with the Devil. He goes to a crossroads as described in the book's procedure and conjures up the forces of evil. When Mephisto appears at the roadside, he induces Faust to make a trial, 24-hour bargain with the Devil. Faust will have Mephisto's service till the sand runs out in an hourglass, at which time the Devil will rescind the pact. At first, Faust uses his new power to help the people of the village, but they shun him when they find out that he cannot face a cross. They stone him and he takes shelter in his home.

Faust then makes a further deal with Mephisto, who gives Faust back his youth and offers him earthly pleasures and a kingdom, in return for his immortal soul. Mephisto tempts Faust with the vision of a beautiful woman. He then takes him to a wedding feast in Parma, to meet the subject of his vision, an Italian Duchess. Faust departs with her, leaving the Devil to kill her groom. Just as Faust is making love to her the sands run out. He is obliged to seal the deal permanently in order to continue his love-making; he is Mephisto's forever.

Faust soon grows weary of debauchery and yearns for "Home". Here Faust falls in love with an innocent girl, Gretchen, who is charmed into loving Faust by a golden chain left by the Devil.

Faust comes to Gretchen's room. The devil rouses the mother who sees them and drops dead from shock. The devil then incites her soldier brother, Valentin, to run home to catch her lover. Valentin and Faust fight a duel. The Devil intervenes and stabs Valentin in the back. He then goes around town shouting "murder". Faust and Mephisto flee on the back of a hellish steed.

Valentin condemns Faust for his murder and his sister as a harlot in his dying breath. She is put in the stocks and subjected to jeering. The girl has a child (by Faust) and ends up in the streets. In a blizzard she sees a vision of a warm cradle and lays her child down on the snow, where the child dies of exposure. Soldiers find her and she is sent to the stake as a murderess. Faust sees what is happening and demands Mephisto take him there. Faust arrives just as the fire has been started to burn his lover. Faust wishes he had never asked to have his youth back. Mephisto smashes the mirror with Faust's reflection and he loses his youth. He runs through the assembled mob towards Gretchen; and it is as an old man that Faust throws himself onto the fire to be with his beloved.

Gretchen recognizes Faust and sees him in her heart as a young man again as the fire consumes them together. Their spirits rise to the heavens. The angel reveals to Mephisto that he has lost the bet because Love has triumphed over all.

Cast edit

Production, release history and restoration edit

Production history edit

Murnau's Faust was the most technically elaborate and expensive production undertaken by Ufa until it was surpassed by Metropolis the following year. Filming took six months, at a cost of 2 million ℛ︁ℳ︁ (only half was recovered at the box office). According to film historians, Faust seriously affected studio shooting and special effects techniques. Murnau uses two cameras, both filming multiple shots; many scenes were filmed time and again. As an example, a short sequence of the contract being written on parchment in fire took an entire day to film.

Intertitles edit

The task of writing the intertitles was originally assigned to Hans Kyser [de], a German novelist and playwright who had moved into screenwriting. He decided to combine various lines from the original folk tale, Christopher Marlowe's Doctor Faustus and Goethe's Faust, Part 1, as well as providing some of his own.[2] However, his efforts were disliked by the Ufa production team, and Gerhart Hauptmann, one of Germany's leading playwrights and winner of the Nobel prize for literature, was engaged instead.[3] Hauptmann agreed to write his own completely new intertitles for 40,000 ℛ︁ℳ︁, twice what Ufa had offered. Kyser found out, and there was an exchange of vituperative letters between the two writers.[3]

The film received a pre-release showing with Hauptmann's intertitles at the Ufa-Pavillon am Nollendorfplatz on 26 August 1926.[4][5] Unfortunately, Ufa's directors felt that Hauptmann's titles were even worse: Ufa informed Hauptmann just a week before the premiere of "unexpected difficulties", and in the end Faust opened with Kyser's intertitles at the Ufa-Palast am Zoo on 14 October 1926.[3][5] Hauptmann's verses were separately printed as a brochure for sale in cinemas.

Variant cuts edit

There were several versions created of Faust, several of them prepared by Murnau himself. The versions are quite different from one another. Some scenes have variants on pace, others have actors with different costumes and some use different camera angles. For example, a scene with a bear was shot with both a person in costume and an actual bear. In some versions, the bear simply stands there. In one version, it actually strikes an actor.

Overall, five versions of Faust are known to exist out of the over thirty copies found across the globe: a German original version (of which the only surviving copy is in the Danish Film Institute), a French version, a late German version which exists in two copies, a bilingual version for Europe prepared by Ufa, and a version prepared by Murnau himself for MGM and the US market (July 1926).

Restoration and versions known to exist edit

The copy of the original German version lacks a number of scenes. With the copies available, a 106-minute reconstructed version has been released by Kino International with English intertitles on DVD. A commentary is also an optional extra on the DVD. The original intertitles have also been recovered.

The US version includes titles and scenes filmed especially by Murnau, where for example the scene in which Aunt Marthe offers Mephisto a drink that he rejects as causing heartburn: in the US version, Mephisto rejects the drink for having had alcohol, an ironic reference to Prohibition in the United States; again in the US version, Mephisto offers Marta a necklace, from the Great Khan of the Tartars, rather than the cousin from Lombardy, as Murnau believed the US audience would not have heard of Lombardy. One scene was done with a text juxtaposition, as again, Murnau believed the American audience would not grasp the imagery by itself. This is also the only version having the originally conceived finale of the ascension of Faust and Gretchen into Heaven. In all others, the scene is rather more conceptual. Books appearing in the film were labeled or any plans with text were shot twice, in German and in English.

The bilingual version was prepared to be shown aboard trans-Atlantic ships traveling from Hamburg to New York City. Therefore, they catered to both American and German audiences.

The French version is generally believed to represent the poorest choice of scenes, both including the largest number of filming errors (e.g., showing assistants holding doors, actors slipping, Gretchen stepping on her dress, showing the stage maquette). It does hold takes that do not exist in any other versions, however.

Reception edit

Faust was a "financial flop". German critics disliked the adaptation from its source texts and Gösta Ekman's performance.[6]

In later years, the film has been called one of seven "canonical examples of German Expressionist cinema".[7] Film review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes reported an approval rating of 94%, based on 31 reviews, with a rating average of 8.59/10.[8]

A 2006 review in The New York Times called it "one of the most astonishing visual experiences the silent cinema has to offer."[9] Japanese film director Shinji Aoyama listed Faust as one of ten greatest films of all time in 2012. He said, "I always want to remember that movies are made out of the joy of the replica. The fascination of movies is not their realism, but how to enjoy the "real". In that sense, I always have Faust in my mind as I face a movie, make a movie, and talk about a movie."[10]

Legacy edit

The Readers Library Publishing Company published in 1926 a "Readers Library Film Edition", an adaptation of the film plot to novel form written by Hayter Preston and Henry Savage.[11] The "Bald Mountain" scene served as the inspiration for the "Night on Bald Mountain" sequence in Walt Disney's 1940 animated film Fantasia.

Notes edit

  • In 1995, the American Composer Timothy Brock composed a soundtrack to the film, which has been released on CD by K Records and the 1996 Laserdisc release of the film.
  • In 2003, a DVD was released in Spain, containing a detailed documentary by Filmoteca Española on the making of Faust, as well as a comparative analysis of the several copies and versions released.
  • In 2004, British musician and composer Geoff Smith composed a new soundtrack to the film for the hammered dulcimer, which he performed live as an accompaniment to the film.
  • In 2005, a DVD was released featuring new music written by Dutch jazz composer Willem Breuker. Willem Breuker Kollektief performed the score as live accompaniment to the film in a number of locations.[12]
  • In 2006, A DVD version of the film was released with a new soundtrack performed on the harp by Stan Ambrose.
  • In 2007, UK-based American composer Jean Hasse (Visible Music) wrote a score for chamber orchestra to accompany the film. John Traill conducted performances in Bristol (Victoria Rooms) and London (Barbican Cinema 1) in October 2007.
  • In 2016, Swiss-born composer Daniel Schnyder, joined by other musicians, performed his own original soundtrack for the film when it was screened at the National Gallery of Art in Washington.[13]
  • In 2022, guitarist Steve Gunn performed his own original soundtrack for the film when it was screened at the City Dudes blindfolded film program in New York City.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Faust, eine deutsche Volkssage (GER 1926)". filmhistoriker.de.
  2. ^ Kreimeier 1999, pp. 136–7.
  3. ^ a b c Kreimeier 1999, pp. 137.
  4. ^ Conrad, Andreas (30 July 2014). . Potstdamer Neuesten Nachrichten (in German). Archived from the original on 8 January 2017. Retrieved 8 January 2017.
  5. ^ a b "Faust". Filmportal.de (in German). Retrieved 1 January 2019.
  6. ^ Cultural studies of modern Germany : history, representation, and nationhood. University of Wisconsin Press. 1993. ISBN 978-0299140106.
  7. ^ Film : a critical introduction. Laurence King. 2005. ISBN 978-1856694421.
  8. ^ "Faust (1926) - Rotten Tomatoes". Rotten Tomatoes.com. Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 10 November 2016.
  9. ^ Kehr, Dave (19 September 2006). "New DVD's: F. W. Murnau's 'Phantom'". The New York Times.
  10. ^ Aoyama, Shinji (2012). . Sight & Sound. Archived from the original on 27 August 2012.
  11. ^ Preston, Hayter; Savage, Henry (1926). Faust. London: The Readers Library Publishing Company Ltd.
  12. ^ "Willem Breuker Kollektief Performs a New Score for Faust," at dryden.eastmanhouse.org Archived 28 June 2013 at archive.today (viewed 26 June 2013).
  13. ^

Sources edit

External links edit

faust, 1926, film, this, article, about, 1926, film, murnau, other, uses, faust, disambiguation, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challen. This article is about the 1926 film by F W Murnau For other uses see Faust disambiguation This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Faust 1926 film news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message Faust A German Folktale German Faust Eine deutsche Volkssage is a 1926 silent fantasy film produced by Ufa directed by F W Murnau starring Gosta Ekman as Faust Emil Jannings as Mephisto Camilla Horn as Gretchen Marguerite Frida Richard as her mother Wilhelm Dieterle as her brother and Yvette Guilbert as Marthe Schwerdtlein her aunt Murnau s film draws on older traditions of the legendary tale of Faust as well as on Goethe s classic 1808 version Ufa wanted Ludwig Berger to direct Faust as Murnau was engaged with Variety Murnau pressured the producer and backed by Jannings eventually persuaded Erich Pommer to let him direct the film FaustU S theatrical release posterDirected byF W MurnauWritten byHans KyserProduced byErich PommerStarringGosta EkmanEmil JanningsCamilla HornWilhelm DieterleFrida RichardYvette GuilbertCinematographyCarl HoffmannMusic byWerner Richard Heymann in the premiere William Axt US uncredited Distributed byUfa Germany Metro Goldwyn Mayer USA Release dates14 October 1926 1926 10 14 Berlin Germany 1 5 December 1926 1926 12 05 US Running time106 minutesCountryGermanyLanguagesSilent filmGerman intertitlesBudget2 million ℛ ℳ equivalent to 8 million in 2021 Box office1 million ℛ ℳ equivalent to 4 million in 2021 Faust was Murnau s last German film and directly afterward he moved to the United States under contract to William Fox to direct Sunrise A Song of Two Humans 1927 when the film premiered in the Ufa Palast am Zoo in Berlin Murnau was already shooting in Hollywood Faust has been praised for its special effects and is regarded as an example of German Expressionist film Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production release history and restoration 3 1 Production history 3 2 Intertitles 3 3 Variant cuts 3 4 Restoration and versions known to exist 4 Reception 5 Legacy 6 Notes 7 See also 8 References 9 Sources 10 External linksPlot editThe demon Mephisto has a bet with an Archangel that he can corrupt a righteous man s soul and destroy in him what is divine If he succeeds the Devil will win dominion over earth The Devil delivers a plague to the village where Faust an elderly alchemist lives Though he prays to stop the death and starvation nothing happens Disheartened Faust throws his alchemy books in the fire and then the Bible too One book opens showing how to have power and glory by making a pact with the Devil He goes to a crossroads as described in the book s procedure and conjures up the forces of evil When Mephisto appears at the roadside he induces Faust to make a trial 24 hour bargain with the Devil Faust will have Mephisto s service till the sand runs out in an hourglass at which time the Devil will rescind the pact At first Faust uses his new power to help the people of the village but they shun him when they find out that he cannot face a cross They stone him and he takes shelter in his home Faust then makes a further deal with Mephisto who gives Faust back his youth and offers him earthly pleasures and a kingdom in return for his immortal soul Mephisto tempts Faust with the vision of a beautiful woman He then takes him to a wedding feast in Parma to meet the subject of his vision an Italian Duchess Faust departs with her leaving the Devil to kill her groom Just as Faust is making love to her the sands run out He is obliged to seal the deal permanently in order to continue his love making he is Mephisto s forever Faust soon grows weary of debauchery and yearns for Home Here Faust falls in love with an innocent girl Gretchen who is charmed into loving Faust by a golden chain left by the Devil Faust comes to Gretchen s room The devil rouses the mother who sees them and drops dead from shock The devil then incites her soldier brother Valentin to run home to catch her lover Valentin and Faust fight a duel The Devil intervenes and stabs Valentin in the back He then goes around town shouting murder Faust and Mephisto flee on the back of a hellish steed Valentin condemns Faust for his murder and his sister as a harlot in his dying breath She is put in the stocks and subjected to jeering The girl has a child by Faust and ends up in the streets In a blizzard she sees a vision of a warm cradle and lays her child down on the snow where the child dies of exposure Soldiers find her and she is sent to the stake as a murderess Faust sees what is happening and demands Mephisto take him there Faust arrives just as the fire has been started to burn his lover Faust wishes he had never asked to have his youth back Mephisto smashes the mirror with Faust s reflection and he loses his youth He runs through the assembled mob towards Gretchen and it is as an old man that Faust throws himself onto the fire to be with his beloved Gretchen recognizes Faust and sees him in her heart as a young man again as the fire consumes them together Their spirits rise to the heavens The angel reveals to Mephisto that he has lost the bet because Love has triumphed over all Cast editGosta Ekman as Faust Emil Jannings as Mephisto Camilla Horn as Gretchen Frida Richard as Gretchen s mother William Dieterle as Valentin Gretchen s brother Yvette Guilbert as Marthe Schwerdtlein Gretchen s aunt Eric Barclay as Duke of Parma Hanna Ralph as Duchess of Parma Werner Fuetterer as ArchangelProduction release history and restoration editProduction history edit Murnau s Faust was the most technically elaborate and expensive production undertaken by Ufa until it was surpassed by Metropolis the following year Filming took six months at a cost of 2 million ℛ ℳ only half was recovered at the box office According to film historians Faust seriously affected studio shooting and special effects techniques Murnau uses two cameras both filming multiple shots many scenes were filmed time and again As an example a short sequence of the contract being written on parchment in fire took an entire day to film Intertitles edit The task of writing the intertitles was originally assigned to Hans Kyser de a German novelist and playwright who had moved into screenwriting He decided to combine various lines from the original folk tale Christopher Marlowe s Doctor Faustus and Goethe s Faust Part 1 as well as providing some of his own 2 However his efforts were disliked by the Ufa production team and Gerhart Hauptmann one of Germany s leading playwrights and winner of the Nobel prize for literature was engaged instead 3 Hauptmann agreed to write his own completely new intertitles for 40 000 ℛ ℳ twice what Ufa had offered Kyser found out and there was an exchange of vituperative letters between the two writers 3 The film received a pre release showing with Hauptmann s intertitles at the Ufa Pavillon am Nollendorfplatz on 26 August 1926 4 5 Unfortunately Ufa s directors felt that Hauptmann s titles were even worse Ufa informed Hauptmann just a week before the premiere of unexpected difficulties and in the end Faust opened with Kyser s intertitles at the Ufa Palast am Zoo on 14 October 1926 3 5 Hauptmann s verses were separately printed as a brochure for sale in cinemas Variant cuts edit There were several versions created of Faust several of them prepared by Murnau himself The versions are quite different from one another Some scenes have variants on pace others have actors with different costumes and some use different camera angles For example a scene with a bear was shot with both a person in costume and an actual bear In some versions the bear simply stands there In one version it actually strikes an actor Overall five versions of Faust are known to exist out of the over thirty copies found across the globe a German original version of which the only surviving copy is in the Danish Film Institute a French version a late German version which exists in two copies a bilingual version for Europe prepared by Ufa and a version prepared by Murnau himself for MGM and the US market July 1926 Restoration and versions known to exist edit The copy of the original German version lacks a number of scenes With the copies available a 106 minute reconstructed version has been released by Kino International with English intertitles on DVD A commentary is also an optional extra on the DVD The original intertitles have also been recovered The US version includes titles and scenes filmed especially by Murnau where for example the scene in which Aunt Marthe offers Mephisto a drink that he rejects as causing heartburn in the US version Mephisto rejects the drink for having had alcohol an ironic reference to Prohibition in the United States again in the US version Mephisto offers Marta a necklace from the Great Khan of the Tartars rather than the cousin from Lombardy as Murnau believed the US audience would not have heard of Lombardy One scene was done with a text juxtaposition as again Murnau believed the American audience would not grasp the imagery by itself This is also the only version having the originally conceived finale of the ascension of Faust and Gretchen into Heaven In all others the scene is rather more conceptual Books appearing in the film were labeled or any plans with text were shot twice in German and in English The bilingual version was prepared to be shown aboard trans Atlantic ships traveling from Hamburg to New York City Therefore they catered to both American and German audiences The French version is generally believed to represent the poorest choice of scenes both including the largest number of filming errors e g showing assistants holding doors actors slipping Gretchen stepping on her dress showing the stage maquette It does hold takes that do not exist in any other versions however Reception editThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it November 2016 Faust was a financial flop German critics disliked the adaptation from its source texts and Gosta Ekman s performance 6 In later years the film has been called one of seven canonical examples of German Expressionist cinema 7 Film review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes reported an approval rating of 94 based on 31 reviews with a rating average of 8 59 10 8 A 2006 review in The New York Times called it one of the most astonishing visual experiences the silent cinema has to offer 9 Japanese film director Shinji Aoyama listed Faust as one of ten greatest films of all time in 2012 He said I always want to remember that movies are made out of the joy of the replica The fascination of movies is not their realism but how to enjoy the real In that sense I always have Faust in my mind as I face a movie make a movie and talk about a movie 10 Legacy editThe Readers Library Publishing Company published in 1926 a Readers Library Film Edition an adaptation of the film plot to novel form written by Hayter Preston and Henry Savage 11 The Bald Mountain scene served as the inspiration for the Night on Bald Mountain sequence in Walt Disney s 1940 animated film Fantasia Notes editIn 1995 the American Composer Timothy Brock composed a soundtrack to the film which has been released on CD by K Records and the 1996 Laserdisc release of the film In 2003 a DVD was released in Spain containing a detailed documentary by Filmoteca Espanola on the making of Faust as well as a comparative analysis of the several copies and versions released In 2004 British musician and composer Geoff Smith composed a new soundtrack to the film for the hammered dulcimer which he performed live as an accompaniment to the film In 2005 a DVD was released featuring new music written by Dutch jazz composer Willem Breuker Willem Breuker Kollektief performed the score as live accompaniment to the film in a number of locations 12 In 2006 A DVD version of the film was released with a new soundtrack performed on the harp by Stan Ambrose In 2007 UK based American composer Jean Hasse Visible Music wrote a score for chamber orchestra to accompany the film John Traill conducted performances in Bristol Victoria Rooms and London Barbican Cinema 1 in October 2007 In 2016 Swiss born composer Daniel Schnyder joined by other musicians performed his own original soundtrack for the film when it was screened at the National Gallery of Art in Washington 13 In 2022 guitarist Steve Gunn performed his own original soundtrack for the film when it was screened at the City Dudes blindfolded film program in New York City See also editList of films made in Weimar GermanyReferences edit Faust eine deutsche Volkssage GER 1926 filmhistoriker de Kreimeier 1999 pp 136 7 a b c Kreimeier 1999 pp 137 Conrad Andreas 30 July 2014 Hauptsache historisch Potstdamer Neuesten Nachrichten in German Archived from the original on 8 January 2017 Retrieved 8 January 2017 a b Faust Filmportal de in German Retrieved 1 January 2019 Cultural studies of modern Germany history representation and nationhood University of Wisconsin Press 1993 ISBN 978 0299140106 Film a critical introduction Laurence King 2005 ISBN 978 1856694421 Faust 1926 Rotten Tomatoes Rotten Tomatoes com Rotten Tomatoes Retrieved 10 November 2016 Kehr Dave 19 September 2006 New DVD s F W Murnau s Phantom The New York Times Aoyama Shinji 2012 The Greatest Films Poll Sight amp Sound Archived from the original on 27 August 2012 Preston Hayter Savage Henry 1926 Faust London The Readers Library Publishing Company Ltd Willem Breuker Kollektief Performs a New Score for Faust at dryden eastmanhouse org Archived 28 June 2013 at archive today viewed 26 June 2013 Web archive orgSources editEisner Lotte H Murnau A Shadows book Berkeley California University of California Press 1973 ISBN 978 0 520 02425 0 Kreimeier Klaus 1999 The Ufa Story A History of Germany s Greatest Film Company 1918 1945 University of California Press ISBN 9780520220690 Los cinco Faustos documentary film by Filmoteca Espanola External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Faust 1926 film Faust on YouTube Faust at IMDb nbsp Faust at AllMovie Complete film of Faust at archive org Interview with Stan Ambrose Faust at Arts amp Faith Top100 Spiritually Significant Films Archived 8 August 2013 at the Wayback Machine DVD review by Gary Johnson Improvisation on Faust of Murnau on YouTube by Pierre Pincemaille with the organ of Church of St Ouen Rouen on 16 May 2014 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Faust 1926 film amp oldid 1205277128, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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