fbpx
Wikipedia

The Devil's Backbone

The Devil's Backbone (Spanish: El espinazo del diablo) is a 2001 gothic horror film directed by Guillermo del Toro, and written by del Toro, David Muñoz, and Antonio Trashorras. Set in Spain, 1939, during the final year of the Spanish Civil War, the film follows a boy who is left in an orphanage operated by Republican loyalists and haunted by the ghost of a recently-deceased boy. It stars Marisa Paredes, Eduardo Noriega, Federico Luppi, Irene Visedo, Fernando Tielve, and Íñigo Garcés. Released in Spain by Warner Sogefilms on 20 April 2001, the film received highly positive reviews from critics.

The Devil's Backbone
Spanish theatrical release poster
SpanishEl espinazo del diablo
Directed byGuillermo del Toro
Written by
Produced by
Starring
Narrated byFederico Luppi
CinematographyGuillermo Navarro
Edited byLuis De La Madrid
Music byJavier Navarrete
Production
companies
Distributed byWarner Sogefilms (Spain)
Release date
  • 20 April 2001 (2001-04-20) (Spain)
Running time
108 minutes[1][2]
Countries
  • Spain
  • Mexico
LanguageSpanish
BudgetUS$4.5 million
Box officeUS$6.5 million

Plot edit

Casares, a doctor, and his friend's wife Carmen operate a small orphanage in a remote part of Spain during the Spanish Civil War. Helping the couple are Jacinto, the groundskeeper, and his fiancée Conchita, a teacher. Casares and Carmen support the Republican loyalists, and are hiding a large cache of gold being used to back the Republican treasury; the orphanage has also been subject to attacks from Francisco Franco's troops, and an inert bomb sits in the courtyard.

One day, an orphan named Carlos arrives with Ayala and Domínguez, two loyalists. Casares and Carmen take Carlos in, and he soon strikes up a friendship with Jaime, the orphanage bully, as well as Galvez and Owl. However, Carlos soon begins having visions of a mysterious entity, and hears stories about a child named Santi who went missing on the day the bomb was dropped in the courtyard. On his first night at the orphanage, Carlos is dared by Jaime to sneak to the kitchen for water after curfew, and Carlos counters by daring Jaime to go with him. The boys reach the kitchen, but Jaime hurries out after filling his pitcher, leaving Carlos alone. Carlos hears a whisper telling him that "many of you will die." Frightened, Carlos rushes outside, but is caught by Jacinto. The next morning, Casares asks who snuck out after curfew but Carlos claims he went alone. This, as well as Carlos saving Jaime from falling in a cistern, earns him Jaime's friendship.

Jacinto knows of the gold hidden at the orphanage, and uses his affair with Carmen as an opportunity to take her keys and search for the treasure. That night, the boys hear strange noises and Carlos decides to investigate. He sneaks out, and encounters a pale figure of a young boy with a bleeding wound on his head, which causes him to run back into the building. Later, after flipping through Jaime's sketchbook, Carlos finds a drawing of a ghostly figure labeled "Santi", leading him to suspect that Jaime knows more than the other boys.

Casares sees that Ayala has been captured by the nationalists. Fearing Ayala will soon be tortured into revealing the gold’s location at the orphanage, he convinces Carmen that they must evacuate the children immediately. Jacinto overhears the conversation and confronts Carmen, demanding the stash of gold and crassly bringing up their affair in front of Casares. Enraged, Casares points a gun at Jacinto and forces him to leave.

As the orphans and faculty prepare to leave, Conchita discovers Jacinto pouring gasoline around the kitchen. She shoots him in the arm after he mocks her, causing a furious Jacinto to start a fire before fleeing the building. Carmen and fellow teacher Alma attempt to put out the fire, but fail to prevent an explosion; Alma is killed by the blast, as are several of the children. Casares finds a mortally wounded Carmen inside the building, and tearfully stays with her as she dies. Casares decides to remain in the charred orphanage with the surviving children, arming himself for Jacinto's return.

The following night, Jaime reveals to Carlos the details of Santi's disappearance: Jaime and Santi had been collecting slugs at the cistern, when they spotted Jacinto attempting to open the safe where the gold was kept. Jaime managed to escape, but Jacinto cornered Santi and attempted to threaten him into keeping silent. In anger, Jacinto shoved Santi against a stone wall, giving him a severe head injury and sending him into shock. A panicked Jacinto then tied stones to Santi before sinking his body in the cistern. A terrified Jaime then ran into the courtyard, only to have the bomb land several feet from him moments later.

Jaime insists that he is no longer scared of Jacinto, and will kill him if he returns. Conchita attempts to walk to the nearest town for help when she encounters Jacinto and two associates driving back to the orphanage to claim the gold. Jacinto threatens her with a knife, telling her to apologize for shooting him, but she insults him instead, and he stabs her to death.

Carlos has a final encounter with Santi's ghost, who he is no longer afraid of after hearing the circumstances of his death. The ghost quietly demands that Carlos bring Jacinto to him.

Casares dies of his injuries as Jacinto and his associates reach the orphanage and imprison the orphans while they search for the gold. The two other men eventually grow impatient and leave, but Jacinto finds and takes the stash. Meanwhile, Jaime encourages the children to fight back, and they fashion weapons from sharpened sticks and broken glass. The ghost of Casares then comes to free them, unlocking the door, leaving behind a monogrammed handkerchief. The children attack Jacinto in the cellar, finally pushing him into the cistern where he had dumped Santi's body. Weighed down by the gold he was carrying, Jacinto struggles to resurface, but Santi's ghost appears from the depths and drags him to his death.

As the remaining children leave the orphanage and head to town, Casares' ghost watches them from the doorway.

Cast edit

  • Fernando Tielve as Carlos, an orphan. He is described by del Toro in the DVD commentary as a force of innocence. Tielve had originally auditioned as an extra before Guillermo del Toro decided to cast him as the lead. This was his film debut. Both Tielve and his co-star Iñigo Garcés had cameos as guerrilla soldiers later in Pan's Labyrinth (2006).
  • Íñigo Garcés as Jaime, the orphanage bully who later befriends Carlos.
  • Eduardo Noriega as Jacinto, the caretaker.
  • Marisa Paredes as Carmen, the administrator of the orphanage.
  • Federico Luppi as Dr. Casares, the orphanage doctor.
  • Junio Valverde [es] as Santi, an orphan who becomes a ghost.
  • Irene Visedo as Conchita, Jacinto's fiancée.

Production edit

It was independently produced by Agustín Almodóvar as an international co-production between Spain and Mexico, and was filmed in Madrid.[3]

Guillermo del Toro wrote the first draft before writing his debut film Cronos (1993). This "very different" version was set in the Mexican Revolution and focused not on a child's ghost but a "Christ with three arms".[4] According to del Toro, and as drawn in his notebooks, there were many iterations of the story, some of which included antagonists who were a "doddering ... old man with a needle," a "desiccated" ghost with black eyes as a caretaker (instead of the living Jacinto who terrorizes the orphans), and "beings who are red from head to foot."[5]

As mentioned in the "Spanish Gothic" interview on the DVD, the name of the movie was initially to be taken from the "Devil's Backbone" mountain range setting in Mexico; this was changed when the movie wound up being set in Spain.[6] One scene showed jars of a liqueur the doctor owned, each containing spiced rum called “Limbo water”, preserving a fetus that died from spina bifida. The doctor said the drink was rumored to cure impotence and was sold to fund the school. This became the origin of the name.[7][8][9]

As to motivation for the villain, according to the actor who portrayed him, Eduardo Noriega, Jacinto "suffered a lot when he was a child at this orphanage. Somebody probably treated him wickedly: this is his heritage. And then there is the brutalizing effect of the War." Noriega further notes that "What Guillermo did was to write a biography of Jacinto (which went into Jacinto's parents, what they did in life, and more) and gave it to me."[10]

DDT Studios in Barcelona created the final version of the crying ghost (victim and avenger) Santi, with his temple that resembled cracked, aged porcelain.[5]

Reception edit

On Rotten Tomatoes the film has a 92% rating based on 119 reviews, with an average rating of 7.6 out of 10. The website's critical consensus reads, "Creepily atmospheric and haunting, The Devil's Backbone is both a potent ghost story and an intelligent political allegory."[11] It also has a weighted average score of 78 out of 100 on Metacritic based on 30 critic reviews, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[12]

Roger Ebert awarded the film 3 stars out of 4 and compared it favorably to The Others, another ghost story released later in the same year.[13] Christopher Varney, of Film Threat, claimed: "That 'The Devil's Backbone' makes any sense at all – with its many, swirling plotlines – seems like a little wonder."[citation needed] A. O. Scott, of The New York Times gave the film a positive review, and claimed that "The director, Guillermo del Toro, balances dread with tenderness, and refracts the terror and sadness of the time through the eyes of a young boy, who only half-understands what he is witnessing."[14]

Steve Biodrowski from Cinefantastique Online described the film as "rich in texture, characterization and themes. Besides being genuinely creepy, it is also surprisingly moving. It is, quite probably (and this is not a back-handed compliment) the saddest horror movie ever made." He also praised the performances as well as the special effects, which he declared as "some of the best ever seen, easily matching work from the best US facilities; in fact, in at least one way they are even better."[15][16]

The film was ranked at number 61 on Bravo's list 100 Scariest Movie Moments for its various scenes in which the ghost is seen.[17] Bloody Disgusting ranked the film at number 18 in their list Top 20 Horror Films of the Decade, with the article calling the film "elegant and deeply-felt... it’s alternately a gut-wrenching portrait of childhood in a time of war and a skin-crawling, evocative nightmare."[18]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "The Devil's Backbone - El Espinazo del Diablo (15)". British Board of Film Classification. 13 September 2001. Retrieved 21 August 2021.
  2. ^ "The Devil's Backbone (2001)". The Criterion Collection. Retrieved 21 August 2021.
  3. ^ Kermode, Mark (30 July 2013). "The Devil's Backbone: The Past Is Never Dead . . ". The Current. The Criterion Collection.
  4. ^ "Guillermo del Toro Q&A at Hero Complex Film Festival 2013". 12 May 2013. Archived from the original on 21 December 2021. Retrieved 24 May 2013 – via YouTube.
  5. ^ a b del Toro, Guillermo (2013). Cabinet of Curiosities: My Notebooks, Collections, and Other Obsessions. Zicree, Marc Scott. (1st ed.). New York: Insight Editions / HarperCollins. pp. 102–103, 105. ISBN 978-0-06-208284-8. OCLC 857566627.
  6. ^ Galloway, Chris (11 August 2013). "The Devil's Backbone". CriterionForum.org. Retrieved 28 February 2022.
  7. ^ Mariamidze, Magda (June 2019). "The Devil's Backbone: Unveiling the Secrets of the Ghost Story". 25yearslatersite.com. Retrieved 31 January 2022.
  8. ^ Jones, Kimberley (15 March 2002). "The Devil's Backbone". Austin Chronicle. Retrieved 31 January 2022.
  9. ^ Weiskind, Ron (22 February 2002). "Devil's Backbone, The". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Retrieved 31 January 2022.
  10. ^ Olson, Danel; Baquero, Ivana; del Toro, Guillermo; Tielve, Fernando (2015). "Interview". Guillermo del Toro's The Devil's Backbone and Pan's Labyrinth: Studies in the Horror Film (1st ed.). Lakewood, Colorado: Centipede Press. pp. 269–280. ISBN 978-1-61347-101-2. OCLC 923553438.
  11. ^ "The Devil's Backbone". Rotten Tomatoes. Fandango Media. Retrieved 21 August 2021.
  12. ^ "The Devil's Backbone (2001)". Metacritic. CBS Interactive. Retrieved 21 August 2021.
  13. ^ Ebert, Roger (21 December 2001). "The Devil's Backbone". RogerEbert.com. Retrieved 21 August 2021.
  14. ^ Scott, A.O. (21 November 2001). "Film Review; Dodging Bombs and Ghosts in Civil War Spain". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331.
  15. ^ Biodrowski, Steve (30 December 2007). . Cinefantastique Online. Archived from the original on 6 January 2008.
  16. ^ Biodrowski, Steve (2001). "The Devil's Backbone – Horror Film Review". Cinefantastique Online. Retrieved 2 February 2021.
  17. ^ "Greatest Scariest Movie Moments and Scenes: D-1". Filmsite. Retrieved 21 August 2021.
  18. ^ "00's Retrospect: Bloody Disgusting's Top 20 Films of the Decade...Part 1". Bloody Disgusting. 15 December 2009. Retrieved 21 August 2021.

External links edit

devil, backbone, spanish, espinazo, diablo, 2001, gothic, horror, film, directed, guillermo, toro, written, toro, david, muñoz, antonio, trashorras, spain, 1939, during, final, year, spanish, civil, film, follows, left, orphanage, operated, republican, loyalis. The Devil s Backbone Spanish El espinazo del diablo is a 2001 gothic horror film directed by Guillermo del Toro and written by del Toro David Munoz and Antonio Trashorras Set in Spain 1939 during the final year of the Spanish Civil War the film follows a boy who is left in an orphanage operated by Republican loyalists and haunted by the ghost of a recently deceased boy It stars Marisa Paredes Eduardo Noriega Federico Luppi Irene Visedo Fernando Tielve and Inigo Garces Released in Spain by Warner Sogefilms on 20 April 2001 the film received highly positive reviews from critics The Devil s BackboneSpanish theatrical release posterSpanishEl espinazo del diabloDirected byGuillermo del ToroWritten byGuillermo del Toro David Munoz Antonio TrashorrasProduced byAgustin Almodovar Bertha NavarroStarringMarisa Paredes Eduardo Noriega Federico Luppi Irene Visedo Fernando Tielve Inigo GarcesNarrated byFederico LuppiCinematographyGuillermo NavarroEdited byLuis De La MadridMusic byJavier NavarreteProductioncompaniesEl Deseo S A Tequila Gang Sogepaq Canal Espana Anhelo ProduccionesDistributed byWarner Sogefilms Spain Release date20 April 2001 2001 04 20 Spain Running time108 minutes 1 2 CountriesSpain MexicoLanguageSpanishBudgetUS 4 5 millionBox officeUS 6 5 million Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 4 Reception 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksPlot editCasares a doctor and his friend s wife Carmen operate a small orphanage in a remote part of Spain during the Spanish Civil War Helping the couple are Jacinto the groundskeeper and his fiancee Conchita a teacher Casares and Carmen support the Republican loyalists and are hiding a large cache of gold being used to back the Republican treasury the orphanage has also been subject to attacks from Francisco Franco s troops and an inert bomb sits in the courtyard One day an orphan named Carlos arrives with Ayala and Dominguez two loyalists Casares and Carmen take Carlos in and he soon strikes up a friendship with Jaime the orphanage bully as well as Galvez and Owl However Carlos soon begins having visions of a mysterious entity and hears stories about a child named Santi who went missing on the day the bomb was dropped in the courtyard On his first night at the orphanage Carlos is dared by Jaime to sneak to the kitchen for water after curfew and Carlos counters by daring Jaime to go with him The boys reach the kitchen but Jaime hurries out after filling his pitcher leaving Carlos alone Carlos hears a whisper telling him that many of you will die Frightened Carlos rushes outside but is caught by Jacinto The next morning Casares asks who snuck out after curfew but Carlos claims he went alone This as well as Carlos saving Jaime from falling in a cistern earns him Jaime s friendship Jacinto knows of the gold hidden at the orphanage and uses his affair with Carmen as an opportunity to take her keys and search for the treasure That night the boys hear strange noises and Carlos decides to investigate He sneaks out and encounters a pale figure of a young boy with a bleeding wound on his head which causes him to run back into the building Later after flipping through Jaime s sketchbook Carlos finds a drawing of a ghostly figure labeled Santi leading him to suspect that Jaime knows more than the other boys Casares sees that Ayala has been captured by the nationalists Fearing Ayala will soon be tortured into revealing the gold s location at the orphanage he convinces Carmen that they must evacuate the children immediately Jacinto overhears the conversation and confronts Carmen demanding the stash of gold and crassly bringing up their affair in front of Casares Enraged Casares points a gun at Jacinto and forces him to leave As the orphans and faculty prepare to leave Conchita discovers Jacinto pouring gasoline around the kitchen She shoots him in the arm after he mocks her causing a furious Jacinto to start a fire before fleeing the building Carmen and fellow teacher Alma attempt to put out the fire but fail to prevent an explosion Alma is killed by the blast as are several of the children Casares finds a mortally wounded Carmen inside the building and tearfully stays with her as she dies Casares decides to remain in the charred orphanage with the surviving children arming himself for Jacinto s return The following night Jaime reveals to Carlos the details of Santi s disappearance Jaime and Santi had been collecting slugs at the cistern when they spotted Jacinto attempting to open the safe where the gold was kept Jaime managed to escape but Jacinto cornered Santi and attempted to threaten him into keeping silent In anger Jacinto shoved Santi against a stone wall giving him a severe head injury and sending him into shock A panicked Jacinto then tied stones to Santi before sinking his body in the cistern A terrified Jaime then ran into the courtyard only to have the bomb land several feet from him moments later Jaime insists that he is no longer scared of Jacinto and will kill him if he returns Conchita attempts to walk to the nearest town for help when she encounters Jacinto and two associates driving back to the orphanage to claim the gold Jacinto threatens her with a knife telling her to apologize for shooting him but she insults him instead and he stabs her to death Carlos has a final encounter with Santi s ghost who he is no longer afraid of after hearing the circumstances of his death The ghost quietly demands that Carlos bring Jacinto to him Casares dies of his injuries as Jacinto and his associates reach the orphanage and imprison the orphans while they search for the gold The two other men eventually grow impatient and leave but Jacinto finds and takes the stash Meanwhile Jaime encourages the children to fight back and they fashion weapons from sharpened sticks and broken glass The ghost of Casares then comes to free them unlocking the door leaving behind a monogrammed handkerchief The children attack Jacinto in the cellar finally pushing him into the cistern where he had dumped Santi s body Weighed down by the gold he was carrying Jacinto struggles to resurface but Santi s ghost appears from the depths and drags him to his death As the remaining children leave the orphanage and head to town Casares ghost watches them from the doorway Cast editFernando Tielve as Carlos an orphan He is described by del Toro in the DVD commentary as a force of innocence Tielve had originally auditioned as an extra before Guillermo del Toro decided to cast him as the lead This was his film debut Both Tielve and his co star Inigo Garces had cameos as guerrilla soldiers later in Pan s Labyrinth 2006 Inigo Garces as Jaime the orphanage bully who later befriends Carlos Eduardo Noriega as Jacinto the caretaker Marisa Paredes as Carmen the administrator of the orphanage Federico Luppi as Dr Casares the orphanage doctor Junio Valverde es as Santi an orphan who becomes a ghost Irene Visedo as Conchita Jacinto s fiancee Production editThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it October 2015 It was independently produced by Agustin Almodovar as an international co production between Spain and Mexico and was filmed in Madrid 3 Guillermo del Toro wrote the first draft before writing his debut film Cronos 1993 This very different version was set in the Mexican Revolution and focused not on a child s ghost but a Christ with three arms 4 According to del Toro and as drawn in his notebooks there were many iterations of the story some of which included antagonists who were a doddering old man with a needle a desiccated ghost with black eyes as a caretaker instead of the living Jacinto who terrorizes the orphans and beings who are red from head to foot 5 As mentioned in the Spanish Gothic interview on the DVD the name of the movie was initially to be taken from the Devil s Backbone mountain range setting in Mexico this was changed when the movie wound up being set in Spain 6 One scene showed jars of a liqueur the doctor owned each containing spiced rum called Limbo water preserving a fetus that died from spina bifida The doctor said the drink was rumored to cure impotence and was sold to fund the school This became the origin of the name 7 8 9 As to motivation for the villain according to the actor who portrayed him Eduardo Noriega Jacinto suffered a lot when he was a child at this orphanage Somebody probably treated him wickedly this is his heritage And then there is the brutalizing effect of the War Noriega further notes that What Guillermo did was to write a biography of Jacinto which went into Jacinto s parents what they did in life and more and gave it to me 10 DDT Studios in Barcelona created the final version of the crying ghost victim and avenger Santi with his temple that resembled cracked aged porcelain 5 Reception editOn Rotten Tomatoes the film has a 92 rating based on 119 reviews with an average rating of 7 6 out of 10 The website s critical consensus reads Creepily atmospheric and haunting The Devil s Backbone is both a potent ghost story and an intelligent political allegory 11 It also has a weighted average score of 78 out of 100 on Metacritic based on 30 critic reviews indicating generally favorable reviews 12 Roger Ebert awarded the film 3 stars out of 4 and compared it favorably to The Others another ghost story released later in the same year 13 Christopher Varney of Film Threat claimed That The Devil s Backbone makes any sense at all with its many swirling plotlines seems like a little wonder citation needed A O Scott of The New York Times gave the film a positive review and claimed that The director Guillermo del Toro balances dread with tenderness and refracts the terror and sadness of the time through the eyes of a young boy who only half understands what he is witnessing 14 Steve Biodrowski from Cinefantastique Online described the film as rich in texture characterization and themes Besides being genuinely creepy it is also surprisingly moving It is quite probably and this is not a back handed compliment the saddest horror movie ever made He also praised the performances as well as the special effects which he declared as some of the best ever seen easily matching work from the best US facilities in fact in at least one way they are even better 15 16 The film was ranked at number 61 on Bravo s list 100 Scariest Movie Moments for its various scenes in which the ghost is seen 17 Bloody Disgusting ranked the film at number 18 in their list Top 20 Horror Films of the Decade with the article calling the film elegant and deeply felt it s alternately a gut wrenching portrait of childhood in a time of war and a skin crawling evocative nightmare 18 See also editList of Spanish films of 2001 List of ghost filmsReferences edit The Devil s Backbone El Espinazo del Diablo 15 British Board of Film Classification 13 September 2001 Retrieved 21 August 2021 The Devil s Backbone 2001 The Criterion Collection Retrieved 21 August 2021 Kermode Mark 30 July 2013 The Devil s Backbone The Past Is Never Dead The Current The Criterion Collection Guillermo del Toro Q amp A at Hero Complex Film Festival 2013 12 May 2013 Archived from the original on 21 December 2021 Retrieved 24 May 2013 via YouTube a b del Toro Guillermo 2013 Cabinet of Curiosities My Notebooks Collections and Other Obsessions Zicree Marc Scott 1st ed New York Insight Editions HarperCollins pp 102 103 105 ISBN 978 0 06 208284 8 OCLC 857566627 Galloway Chris 11 August 2013 The Devil s Backbone CriterionForum org Retrieved 28 February 2022 Mariamidze Magda June 2019 The Devil s Backbone Unveiling the Secrets of the Ghost Story 25yearslatersite com Retrieved 31 January 2022 Jones Kimberley 15 March 2002 The Devil s Backbone Austin Chronicle Retrieved 31 January 2022 Weiskind Ron 22 February 2002 Devil s Backbone The Pittsburgh Post Gazette Retrieved 31 January 2022 Olson Danel Baquero Ivana del Toro Guillermo Tielve Fernando 2015 Interview Guillermo del Toro s The Devil s Backbone and Pan s Labyrinth Studies in the Horror Film 1st ed Lakewood Colorado Centipede Press pp 269 280 ISBN 978 1 61347 101 2 OCLC 923553438 The Devil s Backbone Rotten Tomatoes Fandango Media Retrieved 21 August 2021 The Devil s Backbone 2001 Metacritic CBS Interactive Retrieved 21 August 2021 Ebert Roger 21 December 2001 The Devil s Backbone RogerEbert com Retrieved 21 August 2021 Scott A O 21 November 2001 Film Review Dodging Bombs and Ghosts in Civil War Spain The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Biodrowski Steve 30 December 2007 Film Review The Devil s Backbone Cinefantastique Online Archived from the original on 6 January 2008 Biodrowski Steve 2001 The Devil s Backbone Horror Film Review Cinefantastique Online Retrieved 2 February 2021 Greatest Scariest Movie Moments and Scenes D 1 Filmsite Retrieved 21 August 2021 00 s Retrospect Bloody Disgusting s Top 20 Films of the Decade Part 1 Bloody Disgusting 15 December 2009 Retrieved 21 August 2021 External links editOfficial website The Devil s Backbone at IMDb The Devil s Backbone at AllMovie The Devil s Backbone at Box Office Mojo Portals nbsp Film nbsp Spain nbsp Mexico nbsp 2000s nbsp Speculative fiction nbsp Horror Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Devil 27s Backbone amp oldid 1183997090, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.