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Shaft (2000 film)

Shaft is a 2000 action crime thriller film co-written, co-produced, and directed by John Singleton and starring Samuel L. Jackson in the title role with Vanessa Williams, Jeffrey Wright, Christian Bale, Dan Hedaya, Busta Rhymes, Toni Collette and Richard Roundtree. It is a sequel to the 1971 Shaft film, in which Jackson plays the nephew of John Shaft. The film opened at the number-one position at the box office when it debuted June 16, 2000. It received mixed reviews on Metacritic, but the critical consensus on Rotten Tomatoes praises Jackson's charisma.

Shaft
Theatrical release poster
Directed byJohn Singleton
Screenplay by
Story by
  • John Singleton
  • Shane Salerno
Based onShaft
by Ernest Tidyman
Produced by
Starring
CinematographyDonald E. Thorin
Edited by
Music byDavid Arnold
Production
company
New Deal[1]
Distributed byParamount Pictures[1]
Release date
  • June 16, 2000 (2000-06-16)
Running time
100 minutes[1]
Countries
LanguageEnglish
Budget$46 million[2]
Box office$107.2 million[2]

Plot edit

In 1998, called in to investigate the grievous assault of Trey Howard outside a restaurant, NYPD Detective John Shaft arrests Walter Wade Jr., the son of a wealthy real estate tycoon, after noticing blood on him. Wade claims self-defense. Shaft notices an injured waitress, Diane Palmieri, eyeing Wade, and unsuccessfully tries to coax a statement from her.

Trey's friend tells Shaft that when she and Trey entered the restaurant, Wade racially harassed him. Trey humiliated Wade back and left the restaurant, pursued by Wade. Shaft looks for Diane but she has left. Trey goes into a seizure and dies; when Wade mocks Trey, Shaft punches Wade on the nose, and does it again after being threatened with reassignment to another precinct. At the trial, the judge grants Wade bail of $200k. He later calls Shaft to thank him for breaking his nose, and says he has fled to Switzerland.

Two years later, Wade returns to the U.S., and Shaft greets and arrests him, with the help of cab driver Rassan posing as Wade’s limo driver. Shaft's friends throw him a celebratory party where the elder "Uncle" John Shaft appears, the same character from the 1971 movie, and warns him that Wade's wealth raises his chances of acquittal. While Wade is temporarily detained at police headquarters, Dominican drug lord Peoples Hernandez, whom Shaft previously arrested, befriends him. At the hearing, the judge has Wade surrender his passport and sets bail at $1 million. Shaft resigns from the police force, vowing to bring Wade to justice on his own terms.

Shaft searches for Diane but only locates her mother Ann, while Wade offers his deceased mother's jewelry to hire Peoples to go after her. Peoples wants Wade to join him in his drug business, but agrees to the job provided that Wade sells the jewelry. Peoples hires Shaft's former colleague officers Jack Roselli and Jimmy Groves to tail Shaft; the pair reveal a snitch among Peoples' gang who had told Shaft what was happening. Disguised, Shaft and his former partner, Detective Luger, mug Wade of the money he gathered from selling the jewelry. He then plants the money on Roselli and Groves, and makes Peoples think they are double-crossing him. However, after getting word that Shaft has left the scene, they follow him.

Having traced a phone call, Shaft eventually locates Diane, but Peoples' gang attacks them. In the shootout, Shaft kills Peoples' little brother. Diane's brothers Mikey and Frankie arrive to retrieve her, but Mikey is stabbed by Peoples. Shaft, Diane, Rasaan, and Frankie regroup at Rasaan's apartment, but are secretly followed by Roselli and Groves. Diane tells Shaft her eyewitness account of Wade murdering Trey. Wade threatened her to keep silent, and she was forced to accept a payoff provided that she disappear. Meanwhile, Peoples angrily attacks Wade over his brother's death.

Roselli and Groves stake out Rassan's apartment but when Carmen arrives and starts asking questions, they shoot her in the chest. Peoples' gang attack, but Shaft shoots back at them to defend the group while Diane and the others flee. Roselli and Groves catch Shaft, who commands Carmen, who was wearing a bulletproof vest, to shoot them. Peoples and his gang pursue and end up crashing Rassan's car. When Peoples holds Diane hostage, Shaft persuades him to fight without weapons, but after a momentary faceoff, they draw backup handguns, with Shaft killing Peoples first.

Shaft assures Trey's mother Carla about the new trial conditions, however, when Wade arrives, she shoots him several times and is subsequently arrested for avenging her son. Back at the police station, Shaft reiterates to Carmen his preference to be a private detective. The two are then visited by John's uncle who stops by to visit. A woman then comes through asking them for help filing assault charges against her abusive boyfriend. Initially hesitant, Shaft agrees to help her his way. Shaft and his uncle go to confront the boyfriend, along with Rassan, whom Shaft presents with a new car.

Cast edit

Production edit

Singleton was a fan of the original film, which he said had wide appeal beyond its stereotype as a blaxploitation film,[3] and he had sought to remake the film since he was young.[4] Shaft started at MGM, but the studio did not like Singleton's vision: Don Cheadle as the son of the original Shaft.[5] After crime films by Quentin Tarantino became popular in the 1990s, producer Scott Rudin took an interest in Shaft and suggested taking it to Paramount Pictures.[6] Paramount picked up the project in 1997[7] after paying back MGM's development costs. Singleton said MGM balked at a $25 million film that they viewed as targeted to black audiences.[6] Singleton and Shane Salerno wrote the original screenplay. Rudin vetoed the idea of a father-son team-up and brought in Richard Price to do rewrites,[8] as he considered the original script to be too risque.[4]

Rudin insisted on hiring a big name actor as the lead.[6] Will Smith and Wesley Snipes were considered for the role of John Shaft.[4] Snipes, responding to rumors that he was passed over, said he turned down the role because of the script, which he felt did not respect black culture or the original film.[9] John Leguizamo was initially cast for the role of Peoples Hernandez.[10] When Leguizamo left the production, Wright was cast.[4] Singleton considered Lauryn Hill for the role of Carmen Vasquez.[11] Jackson was unsure of accepting the role because he did not think of Shaft as being middle-aged, but he came to view his age as not an issue.[12] With Jackson cast, the original Shaft was rewritten to be his uncle rather than his father to explain their smaller age gap.[6]

Price's rewrites, and Rudin's insistence that they follow them, proved controversial with Singleton and Jackson. One point of contention was the lack of sex scenes, which had been a major element in the original film. Jackson attributed this change to political correctness. Another point was Shaft's involvement with the police. Price fleshed out Shaft's career with the police.[13] Jackson praised Price's ability to write police procedurals but did not like how long it took for Shaft to become a private eye. Rudin thought it more believable for Shaft to be protected by his badge, but Jackson demanded that Shaft quit the police force earlier; Jackson prevailed, and the scenes were rewritten.[14] Singleton was careful from early on to ensure the character was hip. He felt Price's rewrites got Shaft's attitude wrong and inserted the wrong kind of pop cultural references. Jackson refused to say some of the lines, believing them to be racially insensitive or untrue to the character, drawing Rudin's ire.[12] When Singleton and Jackson criticized Price's action sequences, Rudin asked them to compromise by shooting twice: once according to Price's script and another as they wished, but Jackson was unwilling to risk having his objections overruled during editing.[15]

Salerno described the post-production as "brutal" but said it came together despite the opposing views of the film.[11] Roundtree's and Bale's scenes were reduced in editing. Rudin said Paramount forced them to reduce Roundtree's screen time, whereas one of Bale's fight scenes was deleted to give more time to Wright.[16]

Release edit

Critical reception edit

On Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 67% based on 115 reviews and an average rating of 6.1/10. The site's critical consensus reads, "With a charismatic lead, this new Shaft knows how to push the right buttons."[17] On Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 50/100 based on 33 reviews, which the site rates as "mixed or average reviews".[18] Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "B+" on an A+ to F scale.[19]

Box office edit

The film opened at the box office at #1 with $21.7 million.[20] By the end of its run, Shaft had grossed $70.3 million in the domestic box office and $107.2 million worldwide, against a $46 million budget.[2]

Merchandise edit

In 2000, McFarlane Toys released a Shaft (Samuel L. Jackson) action figure as part of their Movie Maniacs series three toy line. Accessories included are a handgun, sunglasses and a replica of the film's poster with a skulls and bones base.

Soundtrack edit

A soundtrack containing hip hop and R&B music was released on June 6, 2000 by LaFace Records. It peaked at #22 on the Billboard 200 and #3 on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums.

Sequel edit

Despite having an identical title, the 2019 film acts as a second remake-sequel to both this 2000 film and the originals starring Richard Roundtree. The 2019 release stars Jessie Usher as J.J. Shaft, an FBI agent and the son of Samuel L. Jackson's character. Both Jackson and Roundtree reprise their roles, but the film retroactively reveals that Roundtree's character is actually the biological father of Jackson's John Shaft, mentioning that Shaft Sr. spent years pretending to be his uncle.[21] Unlike the 2000 film and the 1970s trilogy, the 2019 installment received mixed-to-negative reviews and failed at the box office.[22][23]

Further reading edit

  • Aldous, Steve (2015). "Shaft Returns". The World of Shaft: A Complete Guide to the Novels, Comic Strip, Films and Television Series. McFarland. pp. 211–219. ISBN 9781476622231.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e "Shaft (2000)". AFI Catalog of Feature Films. Retrieved February 2, 2023.
  2. ^ a b c Shaft at Box Office Mojo
  3. ^ Johnson, Tricia (October 4, 1999). "Director John Singleton sets the record straight on his Shaft remake". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved February 2, 2023.
  4. ^ a b c d Leigh, Danny (September 5, 2000). "John Singleton: Shaft, the melodrama". The Guardian. Retrieved February 2, 2023.
  5. ^ Morris, Mark (June 24, 2000). "Can it still be just a black thing?". The Observer. Retrieved February 2, 2023.
  6. ^ a b c d Whipp 2009, p. 108.
  7. ^ Busch, Anita M. (June 30, 1997). "Shaft shifts to Paramount". Variety. Retrieved February 2, 2023.
  8. ^ Whipp 2009, pp. 108–109.
  9. ^ "Snipes blasts Shaft". TV Guide. August 16, 2000. Retrieved February 2, 2023.
  10. ^ Hindes, Andrew; Petrikin, Chris (April 30, 1999). "Leguizamo may get Singleton's Shaft". Variety. Retrieved February 2, 2023.
  11. ^ a b Salerno, Shane (May 15, 2019). "My Time Making 'Shaft' With John Singleton".
  12. ^ a b Whipp 2009, p. 103.
  13. ^ Whipp 2009, pp. 102–103.
  14. ^ Whipp 2009, p. 109.
  15. ^ Whipp 2009, pp. 104–105.
  16. ^ Whipp 2009, pp. 109–110.
  17. ^ Shaft at Rotten Tomatoes
  18. ^ "Shaft (2000)". Metacritic. Retrieved February 2, 2023.
  19. ^ D'Alessandro, Anthony (June 14, 2018). "'Superfly' Buzzes To $1.2M In Wednesday Opening". Deadline Hollywood. Penske Business Media. Retrieved June 14, 2018.
  20. ^ Linder, Brian (June 19, 2000). "Weekend Box Office: Titan A.E. Gets the Shaft". IGN. Retrieved April 10, 2022.
  21. ^ Mike Reyes (June 4, 2019). "Why Shaft Is Changing The Relationship Between Samuel L. Jackson And Richard Roundtree's Characters". CINEMABLEND.
  22. ^ "Shaft Reviews". Metacritic. CBS Interactive. Retrieved May 3, 2020.
  23. ^ "The Biggest Box Office Flops of 2019 (So Far)". The New York Observer. June 25, 2019.

External links edit

shaft, 2000, film, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, shaft, 2000, film, news, newspapers, books, schol. 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 Shaft 2000 film news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Shaft is a 2000 action crime thriller film co written co produced and directed by John Singleton and starring Samuel L Jackson in the title role with Vanessa Williams Jeffrey Wright Christian Bale Dan Hedaya Busta Rhymes Toni Collette and Richard Roundtree It is a sequel to the 1971 Shaft film in which Jackson plays the nephew of John Shaft The film opened at the number one position at the box office when it debuted June 16 2000 It received mixed reviews on Metacritic but the critical consensus on Rotten Tomatoes praises Jackson s charisma ShaftTheatrical release posterDirected byJohn SingletonScreenplay byRichard Price John Singleton Shane SalernoStory byJohn Singleton Shane SalernoBased onShaftby Ernest TidymanProduced byScott Rudin John SingletonStarringSamuel L Jackson Vanessa Williams Jeffrey Wright Christian Bale Dan Hedaya Busta Rhymes Toni Collette Richard RoundtreeCinematographyDonald E ThorinEdited byJohn Bloom Antonia Van DrimmelenMusic byDavid ArnoldProductioncompanyNew Deal 1 Distributed byParamount Pictures 1 Release dateJune 16 2000 2000 06 16 Running time100 minutes 1 CountriesGermany 1 United States 1 LanguageEnglishBudget 46 million 2 Box office 107 2 million 2 Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 4 Release 4 1 Critical reception 4 2 Box office 4 3 Merchandise 5 Soundtrack 6 Sequel 7 Further reading 8 References 9 External linksPlot editIn 1998 called in to investigate the grievous assault of Trey Howard outside a restaurant NYPD Detective John Shaft arrests Walter Wade Jr the son of a wealthy real estate tycoon after noticing blood on him Wade claims self defense Shaft notices an injured waitress Diane Palmieri eyeing Wade and unsuccessfully tries to coax a statement from her Trey s friend tells Shaft that when she and Trey entered the restaurant Wade racially harassed him Trey humiliated Wade back and left the restaurant pursued by Wade Shaft looks for Diane but she has left Trey goes into a seizure and dies when Wade mocks Trey Shaft punches Wade on the nose and does it again after being threatened with reassignment to another precinct At the trial the judge grants Wade bail of 200k He later calls Shaft to thank him for breaking his nose and says he has fled to Switzerland Two years later Wade returns to the U S and Shaft greets and arrests him with the help of cab driver Rassan posing as Wade s limo driver Shaft s friends throw him a celebratory party where the elder Uncle John Shaft appears the same character from the 1971 movie and warns him that Wade s wealth raises his chances of acquittal While Wade is temporarily detained at police headquarters Dominican drug lord Peoples Hernandez whom Shaft previously arrested befriends him At the hearing the judge has Wade surrender his passport and sets bail at 1 million Shaft resigns from the police force vowing to bring Wade to justice on his own terms Shaft searches for Diane but only locates her mother Ann while Wade offers his deceased mother s jewelry to hire Peoples to go after her Peoples wants Wade to join him in his drug business but agrees to the job provided that Wade sells the jewelry Peoples hires Shaft s former colleague officers Jack Roselli and Jimmy Groves to tail Shaft the pair reveal a snitch among Peoples gang who had told Shaft what was happening Disguised Shaft and his former partner Detective Luger mug Wade of the money he gathered from selling the jewelry He then plants the money on Roselli and Groves and makes Peoples think they are double crossing him However after getting word that Shaft has left the scene they follow him Having traced a phone call Shaft eventually locates Diane but Peoples gang attacks them In the shootout Shaft kills Peoples little brother Diane s brothers Mikey and Frankie arrive to retrieve her but Mikey is stabbed by Peoples Shaft Diane Rasaan and Frankie regroup at Rasaan s apartment but are secretly followed by Roselli and Groves Diane tells Shaft her eyewitness account of Wade murdering Trey Wade threatened her to keep silent and she was forced to accept a payoff provided that she disappear Meanwhile Peoples angrily attacks Wade over his brother s death Roselli and Groves stake out Rassan s apartment but when Carmen arrives and starts asking questions they shoot her in the chest Peoples gang attack but Shaft shoots back at them to defend the group while Diane and the others flee Roselli and Groves catch Shaft who commands Carmen who was wearing a bulletproof vest to shoot them Peoples and his gang pursue and end up crashing Rassan s car When Peoples holds Diane hostage Shaft persuades him to fight without weapons but after a momentary faceoff they draw backup handguns with Shaft killing Peoples first Shaft assures Trey s mother Carla about the new trial conditions however when Wade arrives she shoots him several times and is subsequently arrested for avenging her son Back at the police station Shaft reiterates to Carmen his preference to be a private detective The two are then visited by John s uncle who stops by to visit A woman then comes through asking them for help filing assault charges against her abusive boyfriend Initially hesitant Shaft agrees to help her his way Shaft and his uncle go to confront the boyfriend along with Rassan whom Shaft presents with a new car Cast editSamuel L Jackson as Detective John Shaft Vanessa Williams as Detective Carmen Vasquez Jeffrey Wright as Peoples Hernandez Christian Bale as Walter Wade Jr Mekhi Phifer as Trey Howard Busta Rhymes as Rasaan Dan Hedaya as Detective Jack Roselli Ruben Santiago Hudson as Detective Jimmy Groves Josef Sommer as Curt Fleming Lynne Thigpen as Carla Howard Trey s mother Toni Collette as Diane Palmieri Philip Bosco as Walter Wade Sr Pat Hingle as Hon Dennis Bradford Lee Tergesen as Detective Luger Daniel von Bargen as Lt Kearney Francisco Coqui Taveras as Lucifer Peoples brother Sonja Sohn as Alice a friend of Shaft Peter McRobbie as Lt Cromartie Elizabeth Banks as Trey s Friend Andre Royo as Tattoo Gloria Reuben as Sgt Council Richard Roundtree as Uncle John Shaft Roundtree originated the John Shaft character in the 1971 film Production editSingleton was a fan of the original film which he said had wide appeal beyond its stereotype as a blaxploitation film 3 and he had sought to remake the film since he was young 4 Shaft started at MGM but the studio did not like Singleton s vision Don Cheadle as the son of the original Shaft 5 After crime films by Quentin Tarantino became popular in the 1990s producer Scott Rudin took an interest in Shaft and suggested taking it to Paramount Pictures 6 Paramount picked up the project in 1997 7 after paying back MGM s development costs Singleton said MGM balked at a 25 million film that they viewed as targeted to black audiences 6 Singleton and Shane Salerno wrote the original screenplay Rudin vetoed the idea of a father son team up and brought in Richard Price to do rewrites 8 as he considered the original script to be too risque 4 Rudin insisted on hiring a big name actor as the lead 6 Will Smith and Wesley Snipes were considered for the role of John Shaft 4 Snipes responding to rumors that he was passed over said he turned down the role because of the script which he felt did not respect black culture or the original film 9 John Leguizamo was initially cast for the role of Peoples Hernandez 10 When Leguizamo left the production Wright was cast 4 Singleton considered Lauryn Hill for the role of Carmen Vasquez 11 Jackson was unsure of accepting the role because he did not think of Shaft as being middle aged but he came to view his age as not an issue 12 With Jackson cast the original Shaft was rewritten to be his uncle rather than his father to explain their smaller age gap 6 Price s rewrites and Rudin s insistence that they follow them proved controversial with Singleton and Jackson One point of contention was the lack of sex scenes which had been a major element in the original film Jackson attributed this change to political correctness Another point was Shaft s involvement with the police Price fleshed out Shaft s career with the police 13 Jackson praised Price s ability to write police procedurals but did not like how long it took for Shaft to become a private eye Rudin thought it more believable for Shaft to be protected by his badge but Jackson demanded that Shaft quit the police force earlier Jackson prevailed and the scenes were rewritten 14 Singleton was careful from early on to ensure the character was hip He felt Price s rewrites got Shaft s attitude wrong and inserted the wrong kind of pop cultural references Jackson refused to say some of the lines believing them to be racially insensitive or untrue to the character drawing Rudin s ire 12 When Singleton and Jackson criticized Price s action sequences Rudin asked them to compromise by shooting twice once according to Price s script and another as they wished but Jackson was unwilling to risk having his objections overruled during editing 15 Salerno described the post production as brutal but said it came together despite the opposing views of the film 11 Roundtree s and Bale s scenes were reduced in editing Rudin said Paramount forced them to reduce Roundtree s screen time whereas one of Bale s fight scenes was deleted to give more time to Wright 16 Release editCritical reception edit On Rotten Tomatoes the film holds an approval rating of 67 based on 115 reviews and an average rating of 6 1 10 The site s critical consensus reads With a charismatic lead this new Shaft knows how to push the right buttons 17 On Metacritic the film has a weighted average score of 50 100 based on 33 reviews which the site rates as mixed or average reviews 18 Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of B on an A to F scale 19 Box office edit The film opened at the box office at 1 with 21 7 million 20 By the end of its run Shaft had grossed 70 3 million in the domestic box office and 107 2 million worldwide against a 46 million budget 2 Merchandise edit In 2000 McFarlane Toys released a Shaft Samuel L Jackson action figure as part of their Movie Maniacs series three toy line Accessories included are a handgun sunglasses and a replica of the film s poster with a skulls and bones base Soundtrack editMain article Shaft 2000 soundtrack A soundtrack containing hip hop and R amp B music was released on June 6 2000 by LaFace Records It peaked at 22 on the Billboard 200 and 3 on the Top R amp B Hip Hop Albums Sequel editMain article Shaft 2019 film Despite having an identical title the 2019 film acts as a second remake sequel to both this 2000 film and the originals starring Richard Roundtree The 2019 release stars Jessie Usher as J J Shaft an FBI agent and the son of Samuel L Jackson s character Both Jackson and Roundtree reprise their roles but the film retroactively reveals that Roundtree s character is actually the biological father of Jackson s John Shaft mentioning that Shaft Sr spent years pretending to be his uncle 21 Unlike the 2000 film and the 1970s trilogy the 2019 installment received mixed to negative reviews and failed at the box office 22 23 Further reading editAldous Steve 2015 Shaft Returns The World of Shaft A Complete Guide to the Novels Comic Strip Films and Television Series McFarland pp 211 219 ISBN 9781476622231 References edit a b c d e Shaft 2000 AFI Catalog of Feature Films Retrieved February 2 2023 a b c Shaft at Box Office Mojo Johnson Tricia October 4 1999 Director John Singleton sets the record straight on his Shaft remake Entertainment Weekly Retrieved February 2 2023 a b c d Leigh Danny September 5 2000 John Singleton Shaft the melodrama The Guardian Retrieved February 2 2023 Morris Mark June 24 2000 Can it still be just a black thing The Observer Retrieved February 2 2023 a b c d Whipp 2009 p 108 Busch Anita M June 30 1997 Shaft shifts to Paramount Variety Retrieved February 2 2023 Whipp 2009 pp 108 109 Snipes blasts Shaft TV Guide August 16 2000 Retrieved February 2 2023 Hindes Andrew Petrikin Chris April 30 1999 Leguizamo may get Singleton s Shaft Variety Retrieved February 2 2023 a b Salerno Shane May 15 2019 My Time Making Shaft With John Singleton a b Whipp 2009 p 103 Whipp 2009 pp 102 103 Whipp 2009 p 109 Whipp 2009 pp 104 105 Whipp 2009 pp 109 110 Shaft at Rotten Tomatoes Shaft 2000 Metacritic Retrieved February 2 2023 D Alessandro Anthony June 14 2018 Superfly Buzzes To 1 2M In Wednesday Opening Deadline Hollywood Penske Business Media Retrieved June 14 2018 Linder Brian June 19 2000 Weekend Box Office Titan A E Gets the Shaft IGN Retrieved April 10 2022 Mike Reyes June 4 2019 Why Shaft Is Changing The Relationship Between Samuel L Jackson And Richard Roundtree s Characters CINEMABLEND Shaft Reviews Metacritic CBS Interactive Retrieved May 3 2020 The Biggest Box Office Flops of 2019 So Far The New York Observer June 25 2019 Whipp Glenn 2009 Can Ya Dig It John Singleton Interviews University Press of Mississippi ISBN 978 1 60473 115 6 External links editShaft official website at the Wayback Machine archive index Shaft at IMDb nbsp Shaft at AllMovie Shaft at Box Office Mojo Shaft at Rotten Tomatoes Shaft at Metacritic nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Shaft 2000 film amp oldid 1212833488, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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