Grindhouse (Tarantino/Rodriguez, 2007)

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DrewReiber
Joined: Thu Nov 04, 2004 7:27 am

#301 Post by DrewReiber »

sevenarts wrote:I assume you're referring to the first group of women here as being portrayed as "naive or just plain stupid" in comparison to the second group
No, I'm talking about girls in both groups. The depiction of Mary Elizabeth Winstead's character was by far the most condemning.
For me, the most interesting (and even radical) aspect of Tarantino's film was the relatively equal treatment of all the women in terms of character and depth, regardless of whether or not they die and whether or not they get revenge.
Two of the girls in the first group were given zero characterization, specifically the longhaired blonde and their driver friend (from later on). Just sitting and watching people talk does not equal character development, which could easily be defined through choices and action (not the kind you think) in the time Tarantino dedicated to superficial conversations. So much of their dialogue was interchangeable that at least two characters in Death Proof made the same statements regarding films in the same period of 30 minutes, even though they didn't know each other.

Zoe Bell had an entire 8-minute, single shot sequence dedicated to setting up her character through expository dialogue regarding an off-screen, previous event. Kim was established as an angry "gear head" who was a cartoon character we were supposed to buy as deep because she cursed a lot and was a racist. She had 4 or 5 stock lines in every scene with very little variation, and I even started counting them in each episode. Other than their passion for films and cars, many of the girls in the second group had little to do but act like men, or in Abernathy's case, learn to. Again I point to Winstead's character, who was left to be potentially sexually molested and was the only of the four girls to act stereotypically feminine.

I honestly don't see how you could argue that all the girls received equal characterization unless you count time spent onscreen dispensing dialogue as defining.
The usual set-up in this kind of movie is to kill off characters who have committed morally ambiguous actions -- which there is, undoubtedly, plenty of in the first half.
That's not morally ambiguous you're talking about, but morally objectionable. So they went to a bar, drank a bit, but they did not go with the men to have sex and even had a designated driver.
Other than maybe smoking pot, their actions were so bland and of no consequence (you drink at a bar) that I couldn't seriously read what they were doing as deserving of consequence in any setting. Only Butterfly did anything that objectionable, with a lap dance for a stranger we didn't even see. As she was the only girl who seemed to show any definable qualities in those sequences, both vulnerability and apprehension/fearfulness, I was only that much more at a loss to understand what purpose her death served with what was otherwise an assembly of cookie cutter ciphers.
The "message" in so many of those old slasher/killer flicks is that if you have sex, do drugs, drink, party, you will die.
If Tarantino truly believes that he's channeling those elements of a slasher film, then why did the characters seem to be avoiding men? The film also clearly established, before their death, that Stuntman Mike had photographs and was stalking them. Therefore they were not killed as a result of their behavior, but as an inevitable conclusion to a story that had started before the film and was just now being resolved. The slasher film "message" relies on the audience's recognition that the killer's motivations are so ambiguous that only by the presence of these objectionable elements prior to their death will there be some kind of implied reason for their execution. If there was no other logical explanation, and we know they're doing bad things, why else would they be killed?

We have an explanation here, Stuntman Mike likes to rape women with his car and he creates scenarios where he fixates on a number of victims and then executes that plan. The girls' actions are rendered irrelevant, but by the nature of Tarantino's inclusion of said acts we are supposed to believe he has made some kind of achievement in recreating the convention. If their actions don't serve the purpose they did in the films he wishes to emulate, then he is simply referencing these so-called morally objectionable elements and not actually implementing them.

As you said yourself, he took a different direction. But his setup does not support that change in direction, which happens nearly halfway through the film. The new direction renders everything we've seen about the girls completely inert. Why did we just sit through half of a film of this so-called morally objectionable action if it was designed to be meaningless? It's the same problem I had with everything else in the film, in that these episodes exist entirely on their own terms inside of a different movie universe and we're not supposed to think about what impact the content of these chapters have on any other chapter.

That means that there is nothing to be gained from the entire experience and it drops into a completely indulgent and random form of "best of" chunks from whatever film aesthetics Tarantino wishes to visit. Its Kill Bill all over again, except with zero story progression/revelation/development and no through line character that has anywhere to go but get killed. It's my feeling that his attempt to create any cohesive feature doesn't work here because he's more interested in throwing together what he liked from those films (homage) than actually working over the formulas. Now it's a slasher movie, now it's a racecar movie, now it's a rape revenge drama, and so forth. Why? Because these girls are doing potentially bad things, there's the car from that Vanishing Point movie I mentioned several times minutes ago, look they are pissed at that rapist and are going to kill him like in those movies, etc.
Hell, even Scream parodied that moralistic aspect of horror films.
Again, I point out the problem is that the parody here was never established. Yes, some spoofish bits arrived in the final minutes, but you're trying to put everything else into that context. The rest of the film shared absolutely no tone, character or subtext with those final moments (arguably, nothing in the movie shared anything). There is no navigation, only bits that are strewn together with performances and dialogue. Scream was a feature that established its contrived world from the get go, whereas no clear clichés or conventions were visible in Death Proof until... after watching the resolution... you go back trying to find them. You won't. Like Kill Bill, you have a patchwork of ideas that do not necessarily lend themselves to each varying episode, as they are intentionally isolated and the film relies solely on the cumulative effect and through line character to feign cohesion.
But Tarantino takes an interesting route here, in that he gives us a group of party girls -- drinking, dancing, flirting, smoking pot -- who are killed, and yet he completely sides the audience with them, never moralizing, never implying that their deaths are a natural result of their decadence. Instead, the male aggression and rage that kills them is implicated -- not just the obvious Kurt Russell, but the sleazy bar guys who try to prey on the girls and the cheating boyfriend who never shows up.
The boyfriend was a non-existent, off-screen character was only referred to, while the sleazy bar guys literally disappear.
Tarantino is externalizing the (male) preonceptions that underpinned those old slasher flicks.
Because some guys at the bar wanted to sleep with them and the popular director boyfriend didn't show up? There is no relationship there to the guy who rapes people with their car. There's nothing to distinguish those bar guys from any male caricature in the same films you're referring to.
He replaces the slasher moralizing with a more complicated depiction of women that focuses on them as both sexual objects (the many caressing camera movements along their bodies) and as thinking people (the reverent treatment of their sometimes funny, sometimes banal conversations).
You're attempting to rationalize a camera aesthetic that only compliments the most transparently pleasurable and superficial aspects of the narrative. Furthermore, you're trying to say that because people drop a lot of dialogue that it makes them intelligent (this surely wasn't the case with many of them). That it somehow excuses camerawork that would otherwise be seen exactly for what it is in any other scene in any other movie where it serves the same function with the same expository dialogue. You cannot convince me that there was a purpose behind the gratuitous deconstruction of women down to their sexual parts when it's not Mike viewing them or even the bar guys, but only Tarantino's eye existing on it's own terms.

One perfect example is at the very beginning of the film when the camera focuses on one the crotch of one of the girls who has to pee, only followed up later in a bit of dialogue (when they were also alone) discussing how some people get off watching the other person pissing. This does not serve male aggression, or any established exploitative genre, but does enlighten us on yet another fetish Tarantino wishes to fixate on as pleasurable.
The women in the first segment all die, it's true -- but this alone hardly marks them out as stupid, especially since they didn't have the chance for survival and revenge that the second group did. And just on the level of character, I felt as though these women were every bit as complex, well-depicted, and interesting as those in the second half.
What made them complex? I didn't see anything other than a lot of talk describing how they were going to fool some people, how excited they were that Jungle Julia was getting attention and where they might score some pot. As characters, most of them were not defined as anything more than part of a group consciousness that was looking to consume entertainment. You yourself argued that they were depicted as the general fodder setup in slasher films to enjoy excess and then be slaughtered. Again, I would argue that outside perhaps Butterfly, they were perfect examples of genre cannon fodder. We just had to spend a lot more time staring at them before any purpose they served was intentionally omitted.
As for the second half, I think it's clearly true that the girls' revenge here is a co-option of specifically *male* violence. And I think it's equally clear that Tarantino is consciously calling attention to the fact that it's male violence, which is why the whole ending sequence functioned, for me, as a joyous parody of these conventions.
Why is it joyous? What is so wonderfully funny about something so horrible? And what conventions are you referring to? You just said he side-stepped that slasher formula and went for something entirely different. Furthermore, his use of the camera is just as implicated in enjoying this glorified violence as his fictional characters.
The implications of anal rape when the girls are chasing Russell, the over-the-top cheerleader dancing in the final freeze frame -- it's so deliberately exaggerated that these scenes can only function as a simultaneous celebration and critique of the conventions of male violence.
Where is the critique? The film celebrates and even stretches each moment of victory as they beat the man to death. The same can be said of the innocent motorists who were mowed down by the “heroinesâ€
DrewReiber
Joined: Thu Nov 04, 2004 7:27 am

#302 Post by DrewReiber »

exte wrote:The trailers show that she gives him a lap dance, so that sequence may really help the film, in all manners of speaking...
The movie needs some serious context and actual character development. Kurt Russell claims the longer version will "make sense", so I can only imagine that they lost a whole sequence or two rather than just a 2 minute long lap dance. The Cannes Film Festival edit's running time will no doubt shine a light on this possibility.
DrewReiber wrote:By the way, do you think Craig Brewer is feeling good about any of the BO news for Grindhouse, perhaps feeling vindicated for his ode to a forgotten genre, despite its performance at the theaters, as well?
I doubt it. Brewer didn't have an established audience like either Tarantino or Rodriguez, not to mention the fact that both filmmakers had been previously successful with the similar From Dusk Till Dawn. Whatever killed Grindhouse has far more to do with a marketing or presentation problem far removed from Black Snake Moan.
exte wrote:Pretty shocking coming from you, Drew. There's a lot I've posted in response to you that you've thrown out the window, like the Ratner/Tarantino bit about supportive crew, etc...
No offense, Exte, but I didn't bother responding because I didn't understand what the point of bringing up Brett Ratner was. I still don't. He's such an unrelated director to any of the points I was making that I simply don't know what I'm supposed to say to that.
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kinjitsu
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#303 Post by kinjitsu »

DrewReiber
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#304 Post by DrewReiber »

One of the problems in the transition from Miramax to The Weinstein Company is that they had to change most of their business model. A lot of people never seemed to figure out that while the Weinsteins' pocketbook came from Disney, they had a lot of room to write off or entirely bury sure-to-fail ventures (Prozac Nation anyone?). I'm sure some of you remember how a mysterious 55+ unreleased feature films suddenly appeared shortly after their exit from Miramax, leaving their successors with the damage control.

I have little doubt that the brothers are now able to claim that the failure in releasing those films happened *after* their departure, because they just swept those projects under the carpet (some were as old as 4 years or more) until they could find a way to shift the responsibility to another party. After all, if they didn't put the films out, how can they be at fault for those 55 box office flops? Throughout the 90's, it became more and more obvious that divisions like Dimension made the bulk of their credibility from holding large market shares. How many franchises became fodder, theatrical or direct-to-video, that just wouldn't stop coming out? Franchises like Mimic, Hellraiser, Halloween... lines like Wes Craven Presents... how could any business rely solely on flooding the marketplace with product when we all know you need to show consistent returns to run a successful business. Or did they?

When the Weinsteins were booted out of Miramax, Entertainment Weekly published some fascinating details about the fiscal relationship between Harvey Weinstein and Michael Eisner. Harvey admitted to being able to increase their annual budget by simply asking Michael to expand it. Their eventual fallout had a lot to do with this, as stockholders became increasingly frustrated and outraged that the little indie company purchased specifically to create lower-budgeted fare had somehow reached Touchstone proportions with single feature production budgets over $100 million (ex. Gangs of New York). They felt that Miramax, under the supervision of the Weinsteins, had far overstepped their bounds and put part the business models of the Disney-owned feature divisions at risk of competing with each other. This debacle coincided with recent and increasing pressure on the now strained relationship between Eisner and the brothers (or anybody at the company besides Jerry Bruckheimer), and the Weinsteins became two more victims as a result of the mismanagement under Eisner's regime. It was even said had Eisner been pushed out a little earlier that things might have been different, but I don't know if I believe that.

Regardless, now that the Weinsteins were on their own they had to completely finance their own projects and the model I described above, of simply flooding the marketplace with product from an ever-increasing blank check, was no longer an option. I'm sure many of you also recall the Weinsteins' infamous tendency to monopolize the U.S. market for asian films, by simply purchasing all domestic rights and leaving those films unreleased for years at time, and in some cases forever. Well, they don't have the capital to pull that kind of crap anymore. This became especially obvious when they purchased rights to The Promise, only to turn around and immediately sell it to another distributor. Finding similar difficulty in just generating more franchise horror fodder, they've also turned their more popular franchises into remakes with more well known creators. Rob Zombie was hired for Halloween and Clive Barker has been hired to help restart Hellraiser. In another attempt to raise the interest levels of their genre titles, Bob Weinstein purchased the rights to a number of Stephen King books in a similar fashion to Dino DeLaurentiis' model over 25 years ago.

The biggest problem with Grindhouse is that this is where their top tier genre talent was supposed to start the ball rolling and help them establish a Lionsgate-esque foothold with horror audiences. It was also the project that the industry had marked for where and when The Weinstein Company would turn itself around. The trailer for Halloween was attached and they even setup what would obviously spin into further features, with faux trailers like Machete. Undoubtedly, Grindhouse would have served as a label that would function in a similar fashion to Tarantino's admirable, but failed attempt to launch his Rolling Thunder Pictures line a decade ago (it was probably killed by the transition from laserdisc to DVD). We probably could have also expected a new Grindhouse double-feature every year. All of this... their reputation, their new marketing label, their plan to establish an audience with "Your friends at the Weinstein Company"... it all just completely imploded in one weekend.

I can understand why the Weinsteins are thinking about separating the features and re-releasing them, because it just isn't simply about the money anymore. It's about making sure that we, the audience, at least walked away with some kind of idea as to what they were trying to do and that we can still look forward to more projects in a similar vein. It isn't just about saving the domestic theatrical revenue, which it may very well be too late. It's about making sure Grindhouse isn't a complete failure on every level, leaving them with years worth of marketing and planning flushed down the toilet. It's about trying to save their biggest attempt thus far to establish credibility and general awareness in such a huge market. Sure, their company could bounce back from this critically financial and marketing misstep, but they would like to think it wasn't all for nothing.
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Antoine Doinel
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#305 Post by Antoine Doinel »

DrewReiber wrote:I can understand why the Weinsteins are thinking about separating the features and re-releasing them, because it just isn't simply about the money anymore. It's about making sure that we, the audience, at least walked away with some kind of idea as to what they were trying to do and that we can still look forward to more projects in a similar vein. It isn't just about saving the domestic theatrical revenue, which it may very well be too late. It's about making sure Grindhouse isn't a complete failure on every level, leaving them with years worth of marketing and planning flushed down the toilet. It's about trying to save their biggest attempt thus far to establish credibility and general awareness in such a huge market. Sure, their company could bounce back from this critically financial and marketing misstep, but they would like to think it wasn't all for nothing.
I was with you until this last paragraph.

This has nothing to with making sure the audience can get an idea of what the project was all about (if that were the case, they wouldn't hack into two pieces). It's about one thing and the only thing the Weinsteins have ever cared about: Money.

I can pretty much guarantee you, that after this is over (which is a long, long way from now after they've milked multiple DVD releases) you will never hear the words "grind" or "house" together from the Weinsteins again. If this "misstep" has taught them anything, it's that they can no longer bank on the names of Tarantino and to a lesser extent Rodriguez anymore. While Rodriguez has wisely taken the "one for them, one for me" approach (one family flick for every R-rated one), Tarantino has ridden the Weinstein gravy train. They allowed his every indulgence (vanity DVD label, producer credits on foreign films) and used his name as a bargaining chip as much as they could've but it appears the buck stops here. It will be interesting to see what the budget for Tarantino's next flick (supposedly the long gesetating Inglorious Bastards which he claims he will complete writing during the press tour for Grindhouse) and what kind of freedoms (or restraints) he will be allowed.

As for Rodriguez, he's safe. The Sin City sequels will make Bob Weinstein's Dimension Films a shitload of money which will keep everyone very happy.

As for credibility, this isn't the first time a Weinstein project has "imploded" nor will it be the last. They dealt with these kinds of missteps even during their golden years at Miramax. Their reputation was built on created on being the little company that produced (or acquired) Oscar winners. Where was the press when their Oscar-bait Bobby, complete with an ensemble cast, and Academy ready subject matter tanked both critically and commerically?

The Grindhouse "fiasco" is a fake issue only being written about because it involves Tarantino, Weinstein and a big marketing campaign that (supposedly) went nowhere. There is an audience for this movie but I think we wouldn't be talking about budgets and failures if this movie had simply been handled better. If anything Grindhouse should've been handled by Dimension - who have a proven track record of handling this sort of material - and not the Weinstein Company. But then again, if anything holds true about the Weinsteins, they've never, ever known how to market even surefire box-office and critically hailed films properly.
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Antoine Doinel
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#306 Post by Antoine Doinel »

tavernier wrote:
Antoine Doinel wrote:Thirdly, as my girlfriend pointed out, Grindhouse is the kind of film that almost demands to be seen at late night and midnight screenings. I actually wonder what the matinee ticket sales for this film were versus screenings after six.
I saw it at noon on Monday at a popular multiplex in Manhattan's Union Square area, and there were 10 people in the theater. Now, the movie was on 4 screens every hour, but still...
Well, this may lend credence to my "night movie only" theory because apparently Grindhouse is the top film draw in NY.
DrewReiber
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#307 Post by DrewReiber »

Antoine Doinel wrote:This has nothing to with making sure the audience can get an idea of what the project was all about (if that were the case, they wouldn't hack into two pieces). It's about one thing and the only thing the Weinsteins have ever cared about: Money.
Every point I made about credibility and marketing for the next year is intrinsically connected to money issues. Perhaps I made that issue confused towards the end, but establishing credibility with the genre audience is exactly what they wanted to do to increase the likelyhood of generating better interest with later ventures, Grindhouse or not. Inside the industry, they needed to show promise so it would be easier to finance similar projects down the pipeline.

I specifically singled out the domestic theatrical revenue as less important because the Weinsteins, as they have already stated several times, are looking to do better in international theatrical markets and home video. If they can raise interest before the international release with Cannes, or improve US awareness before domestic video release with a split theatrical format, they're going to focus on those options. Every statement Harvey Weinstein has made since the opening weekend points to a committed interest in trying to turn the situation for Grindhouse around rather than just write it off.
I can pretty much guarantee you, that after this is over (which is a long, long way from now after they've milked multiple DVD releases) you will never hear the words "grind" or "house" together from the Weinsteins again.
The problem with this attitude is that it dumping the "Grindhouse" moniker does not help them at all. If anything, that would be a passive aggressive and ultimately destructive mistake. There will still already be two full length feature films marketed and distributed around the world, and potentially the whole huge double-feature still set for the UK and later on US/UK DVD. If they manage to see the numbers they expected or they do far better on home video, then they'll do what they've always done and continue to churn out titles under the banner.

Bob Weinstein still has two unreleased Robert Rodriguez films on DVD that could easily be (re)marketed in that manner, and Rodriguez has an entirely new film that is 1/3 complete. With such a misjudgement on marketing two new movies, there's also less of a chance that Tarantino will be able to finance his war remake. He's been developing that Mandarin-language Kung Fu movie ever since he wrapped Kill Bill and wants to release it under the same pretense as Death Proof. I just don't think you're paying attention to how much they have at stake and you're just prescribing to what the most short-term, angry response could or would be from the Weinsteins. That's not at all in line with what they've been saying or where their longterm interest is.
If this "misstep" has taught them anything, it's that they can no longer bank on the names of Tarantino and to a lesser extent Rodriguez anymore.
Has it? Harvey Weinstein's tracking says that neither the south nor midwest had any idea what the hell Grindhouse was. Look, I go to one of the biggest universities in Florida and I can't tell you how many people I've run into who like these filmmakers had no idea they even had a new movie coming out. If that isn't the biggest example of marketing failure I've ever seen, I don't know what is.
As for Rodriguez, he's safe. The Sin City sequels will make Bob Weinstein's Dimension Films a shitload of money which will keep everyone very happy.
A big indicator for the future of the Grindhouse label, or at least the commercial and feature development ideas behind it (if they dropped the name), will be the fate of that additional week of photography that Rodriguez wanted during Sin City 2's production to wrap Machete.
As for credibility, this isn't the first time a Weinstein project has "imploded" nor will it be the last.
Is there a reason you keep quoting me? I'm not sure if you're meaning for me to read it as intentionally condescending.

Anyway, I don't think Halloween is going to go over too well but then it's probably too early to tell.
The Grindhouse "fiasco" is a fake issue only being written about because it involves Tarantino, Weinstein and a big marketing campaign that (supposedly) went nowhere.
Please explain this, as the statement does not make any sense to me.
There is an audience for this movie but I think we wouldn't be talking about budgets and failures if this movie had simply been handled better. If anything Grindhouse should've been handled by Dimension - who have a proven track record of handling this sort of material - and not the Weinstein Company.
I was under the impression that Dimension had handled it. Their mistake was choosing to go the ambiguous route, a word they specifically used when talking about marketing the film back in February (Variety). If anything, no one involved in this double-feature - the Weinstein Company or Dimension - knew what they were doing because their sole understanding of how to market the film was based off conversations from the makers of the films.
But then again, if anything holds true about the Weinsteins, they've never, ever known how to market even surefire box-office and critically hailed films properly.
I'm no fan of the Weinsteins, but that's a blantantly false statement. From Dusk Till Dawn did pretty damn well and it wasn't all that different from Grindhouse. In fact, it's the most obvious counter-example anyone would ever find.
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Antoine Doinel
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#308 Post by Antoine Doinel »

DrewReiber wrote:The problem with this attitude is that it dumping the "Grindhouse" moniker does not help them at all. If anything, that would be a passive aggressive and ultimately destructive mistake. There will still already be two full length feature films marketed and distributed around the world, and potentially the whole huge double-feature still set for the UK and later on US/UK DVD. If they manage to see the numbers they expected or they do far better on home video, then they'll do what they've always done and continue to churn out titles under the banner.
I'm sure they will market the hell out of the current Grindhouse because they have to. But they had already decided to split the films for foreign markets because they would have less of an appreciation of what grindhouse is. Moving forward, it wouldn't make sense for them to develop titles under a banner they have already acknowledged that foreign markets don't get and that they haven't even been able to market to North Americans.
DrewReiber wrote:I just don't think you're paying attention to how much they have at stake and you're just prescribing to what the most short-term, angry response could or would be from the Weinsteins. That's not at all in line with what they've been saying or where their longterm interest is.
I really wish I could believe that the Weinsteins are trying to "develop" the talents of Tarantino and Rodriguez but would they honestly stick by them if they didn't bring in the cash first? Would Grindhouse even have been developed if either Sin City or Kill Bill bombed? The bottom line is, if Tarantino or Rodriguez weren't financially successful, the Weinsteins would invest considerably less in them. The Weinsteins still like to think they are filmmakers instead of producers. Even Kevin Smith, another one of their stable of golden boy filmmakers, fought them and eventually lost over the casting of Fletch Won.
DrewReiber wrote:Has it? Harvey Weinstein's tracking says that neither the south nor midwest had any idea what the hell Grindhouse was. Look, I go to one of the biggest universities in Florida and I can't tell you how many people I've run into who like these filmmakers had no idea they even had a new movie coming out. If that isn't the biggest example of marketing failure I've ever seen, I don't know what is.
I think a larger question is: did regular filmgoers in the South and Midwest even know who Tarantino and Rodriguez were in the first place? When a film is being sold on those names (and starring B-level celebs like Kurt Russel) there is a marketing failure but also a fundamental misunderstanding of Tarantino's appeal. There is no reason this film should've gone national, at least without a limited build up first. There is a reason the film is number one in New York.
DrewReiber wrote:Is there a reason you keep quoting me? I'm not sure if you're meaning for me to read it as intentionally condescending.

Anyway, I don't think Halloween is going to go over too well but then it's probably too early to tell.
I didn't realize I was quoting you so I didn't mean to be condescending.

It will be interesting to see what happens with Halloween since it's being released on Labor Day weekend; it might be the same mess all over again. I was honestly shocked it wasn't coming out in October.
DrewReiber wrote:
The Grindhouse "fiasco" is a fake issue only being written about because it involves Tarantino, Weinstein and a big marketing campaign that (supposedly) went nowhere.
Please explain this, as the statement does not make any sense to me.
It's a fake issue insofar as it blames everything but the Weinsteins themselves. What could the Weinsteins honestly expect with a three hour plus film, with B-list lead actors (I'm not counting the cameos here), opening on a traditionally family oriented movie going weekend. Not to mention, the kind of film that isn't exactly matinee fare. This isn't about audience indifference, or even ineffective marketing (I saw more TV spots for this film that any other this spring). This is about the Weinsteins trying to show a niche market film down a mainstream audiences throat and getting burned.

Most of what I've read in the press is about how moviegoers like "dumb" films. Joe Carnahan insipidly blogged with much vitriol that people weren't going to see this movie. But as the numbers from New York and I'm sure other urban markets show, Grindhouse is killing. But it's not a film for mainstream audiences - at least not without the kind of build up needed to spur interest from the Midwestern and Southern states.
DrewReiber wrote:I was under the impression that Dimension had handled it. Their mistake was choosing to go the ambiguous route, a word they specifically used when talking about marketing the film back in February (Variety). If anything, no one involved in this double-feature - the Weinstein Company or Dimension - knew what they were doing because their sole understanding of how to market the film was based off conversations from the makers of the films.
I just double-checked and it's even more baffling that Dimension - who usually turn niche films to gold - fumbled this one. I don't think the marketing was the issue. Every ad I saw was "2 films, 2 filmmakers" - I'm not sure how much more clear you could be.
DrewReiber wrote:I'm no fan of the Weinsteins, but that's a blantantly false statement. From Dusk Till Dawn did pretty damn well and it wasn't all that different from Grindhouse. In fact, it's the most obvious counter-example anyone would ever find.
For at least two years during the '90s Dimension Films was the profitable arm of Miramax while the main entity was hemorraging money. I'm not going to pull my books off the shelf to find specific examples, but Harvey Weinstein's modus operandi, made worse during the years with Disney, was to acquire as much product as possible - not films, product - bulk release them (or bury them if he couldn't figure out a way to market it) and if one or two picked up steam throw money at for Awards campaigns and further advertising. Miramax's success wasn't necessarily knowing a great film when they saw one, but figuring out what was generating buzz and then making sure no other studio got their hands on it.

It's not suprising that now left with a less money to buy films, and relying more on their own tastes, that the Weinstein Company is stumbling out of the gate.

Drew, I think we agree on a lot except just how much blame the Weinsteins should take, how much they "care" about their directors and how much cache with the average filmgoer Tarantino's name has.
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exte
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#309 Post by exte »

DrewReiber wrote:If anything, no one involved in this double-feature - the Weinstein Company or Dimension - knew what they were doing because their sole understanding of how to market the film was based off conversations from the makers of the films.
EXACTLY. The articles linked throughout this thread provide a telling picture of how the Weinsteins just couldn't say no to these guys, particularly when it came to the length of this picture. If each was truly one hour long as they were slated to be, then we wouldn't be talking about this 'marketing' debacle right now...
Antoine Doinel wrote:But then again, if anything holds true about the Weinsteins, they've never, ever known how to market even surefire box-office and critically hailed films properly.
I took exception with this, too. Didn't their phenomenon begin with The Crying Game?

UPDATED: I read your follow up to Drew, but your original statement was worded so provocatively, I jumped to conclusions. I'm still not sure if you believe such a blanket statement, though. And, how does one separate "critically hailed films" from "figuring out what was generating buzz"?

On the subject of the Weinsteins, do you all remember PTA talking about some unnamed studio honcho who wanted to take him in, but Mr. Anderson had 'heard about that guy' and wanted no part of it? It was connected to Gwyneth Paltrow at the time, somehow, so to me it always sounded like Harvey. I think this was on the Hard Eight or Boogie Nights commentary, but pretty sure it was the former. Anyway, does anyone know if there's a longer story to that somewhere, or was it too casual an incident/episode between the two?
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sevenarts
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#310 Post by sevenarts »

DrewReiber wrote:Zoe Bell had an entire 8-minute, single shot sequence dedicated to setting up her character through expository dialogue regarding an off-screen, previous event. Kim was established as an angry "gear head" who was a cartoon character we were supposed to buy as deep because she cursed a lot and was a racist. She had 4 or 5 stock lines in every scene with very little variation, and I even started counting them in each episode. Other than their passion for films and cars, many of the girls in the second group had little to do but act like men, or in Abernathy's case, learn to. Again I point to Winstead's character, who was left to be potentially sexually molested and was the only of the four girls to act stereotypically feminine.

I honestly don't see how you could argue that all the girls received equal characterization unless you count time spent onscreen dispensing dialogue as defining.
You're right of course that each girl didn't receive equal characterization. I think it's fair to say, though, that as a group, the first group was given a pretty much equal level of attention and compassion in comparison to the second group. Granted, we're not talking about real deep characterization here, in any of the cases, but I don't buy for a second that Tarantino was simply treating the more feminine characters as "stupid" while the more masculine-acting ones were glorified. Indeed, within both groups there seemed to be a dynamic of one or two dominant women who tend to lead their more traditionally "feminine" friends. You can call that masculinizing the women if you want, but it's more like the real-life dynamic that you'd see in pretty much any group of friends, male, female, or mixed. In the first group, Jungle Julia's the dominant career woman and local celebrity, while in the second the "gearhead" characters are the dominating ones.

I also don't buy, incidentally, that simply liking cars or stunts makes a woman "masculine."
That's not morally ambiguous you're talking about, but morally objectionable. So they went to a bar, drank a bit, but they did not go with the men to have sex and even had a designated driver.
Other than maybe smoking pot, their actions were so bland and of no consequence (you drink at a bar) that I couldn't seriously read what they were doing as deserving of consequence in any setting. Only Butterfly did anything that objectionable, with a lap dance for a stranger we didn't even see. As she was the only girl who seemed to show any definable qualities in those sequences, both vulnerability and apprehension/fearfulness, I was only that much more at a loss to understand what purpose her death served with what was otherwise an assembly of cookie cutter ciphers.
I'm certainly not implying that I found anything morally objectionable about anything the girls were doing, not even the lap dance. I'm talking about the conservative morality of the slasher flick, where inevitably the couple having sex on lovers' lane or the girl drinking at a party are the first to get the knife in the throat. The unspoken assumption is that they're being punished. And this is, of course, an entirely unconscious morality. It's immaterial what the killer's motives, if any, might be. It's only important that the audience see that the girl does something "bad" and then later dies. It's one of the biggest problems with that old formula, providing an uncomfortable undercurrent to many a horror film.

For me, Tarantino's film inverts that old cliche quite simply by siding the audience entirely with the girls, and by externalizing the sexual conflicts of the situation to completely reject the conservative morality of punishment. I gather that you didn't enjoy the characters in the first half as much as I did, which may make what I have to say next rather unconvincing. But regardless of whether you felt it worked or not, I think it is obvious that Tarantino is trying very hard to get us to like these girls, just spending time with them, enjoying their banter and their easiness with each other. The dialogue, like all of Tarantino's dialogue, is highly stylized, and yet despite this artificiality the overall atmosphere is realistic -- in that I bought this group as friends and had fun listening to them interact. We're totally on their side. At the same time, Tarantino is constantly reminding us of male sexual exploitation -- the guys who aim to get the girls drunk, the boyfriend who never shows. This last by itself is nothing radical of course, but in the context of the slasher genre -- which is clearly one of the genre forms Tarantino is channelling here -- it's a total inversion of the normal situation.
The slasher film "message" relies on the audience's recognition that the killer's motivations are so ambiguous that only by the presence of these objectionable elements prior to their death will there be some kind of implied reason for their execution. If there was no other logical explanation, and we know they're doing bad things, why else would they be killed?

We have an explanation here, Stuntman Mike likes to rape women with his car and he creates scenarios where he fixates on a number of victims and then executes that plan.
This is exactly what I'm saying, though. Tarantino is inverting the slasher film norms. Instead of the audience implicitly condemning the girls for their "bad" behavior, we're recognizing the male sexual impetuses behind the killings. The girls do the same things they would do in a "slasher" movie before they die -- drink, smoke pot, flirt and give lapdances, drive drunk -- and yet the structure that Tarantino has set up does not condemn them for these things. Instead, he makes it clear what's really going on here.
The girls' actions are rendered irrelevant, but by the nature of Tarantino's inclusion of said acts we are supposed to believe he has made some kind of achievement in recreating the convention. If their actions don't serve the purpose they did in the films he wishes to emulate, then he is simply referencing these so-called morally objectionable elements and not actually implementing them.
Or, he's recontextualizing them in order to critique them. I'll be the first to say when Tarantino's borrowings are simply aesthetic and empty -- see most of Kill Bill, which is fun nevertheless -- but I certainly think that Death Proof has more to it.
You're attempting to rationalize a camera aesthetic that only compliments the most transparently pleasurable and superficial aspects of the narrative. Furthermore, you're trying to say that because people drop a lot of dialogue that it makes them intelligent (this surely wasn't the case with many of them). That it somehow excuses camerawork that would otherwise be seen exactly for what it is in any other scene in any other movie where it serves the same function with the same expository dialogue. You cannot convince me that there was a purpose behind the gratuitous deconstruction of women down to their sexual parts when it's not Mike viewing them or even the bar guys, but only Tarantino's eye existing on it's own terms.
Well, I'm certainly not trying to say these characters are particularly intelligent, or particularly stupid for that matter. They're just people, and Tarantino allows us to simply see them talk and talk and talk the way people do. He's always done this -- he grants pride of place to the most inconsequential dialogue, the most trivial conversations and topics and ideas that people express when they're talking to each other. And he spices it up and gives it edge so it's not watching-paint-dry boring, but that's the way his dialogue really is at essence -- his characters talk about hamburgers, and foot massages, and sex, and their jobs, and people they know, etc. You can say what you want about Tarantino's dialogue, but one thing it's emphatically not is expository, the way the dialogue in most horror flicks is. In most films of this type, the characters don't get much of substance to say, and maybe they get a few lines "darkly" foreshadowing their own impending deaths. They certainly don't get the kind of time and attention that Tarantino devotes to these women.

Anyway, Tarantino also has a very adolescent aspect to his character, undoubtedly the part of him that revels in these women as sexual beings, and also the part that throws in that unintentionally hilarious scene where the girls gush over being given a mix tape -- every dorky guy's dream finally on celluloid. But it's important to stress that Tarantino's sexual side does not exist in a vacuum, and it has to be measured against his equally apparent willingness to show long stretches of time when these women emphatically do NOT exist as sexual objects, when they simply talk and hang around. And, not incidentally, they do not make themselves available as sex objects to those around them in the film. So does Tarantino think they're sexy? Sure. Does he make this readily apparent on-screen at times? Of course. But I think it's also clear that he respects and likes them in other ways too, and that his portrayal of these women and their sexuality is much more than just the occasional T&A camerawork.
Where is the critique? The film celebrates and even stretches each moment of victory as they beat the man to death. The same can be said of the innocent motorists who were mowed down by the “heroinesâ€
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#311 Post by Cinesimilitude »

I think it's awesome that possibly the least intellectual film of the year has inspired this much discussion. to think that blood and titties could be a catalyst for what the last 4 pages have become is mind boggling.
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John Cope
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#312 Post by John Cope »

SncDthMnky wrote:I think it's awesome that possibly the least intellectual film of the year has inspired this much discussion.
But it's better than that; in fact, I thought it was brilliant overall and that was certainly not how I expected to react. I'm glad I was able to catch this before it was severed in half as the experience of seeing the whole thing on an UltraScreen in a strip mall suburb was surreal to say the least.

I can totally understand why this would tank though since it depends for its maximum effectiveness on a knowledge of and appreciation for a marginal subgenre of moviemaking. I was amused to see the paper signs posted to the doors of the theater as I entered which were basically there to reassure viewers that Grindhouse was meant to look as it does. No matter how much I can intellectually grasp it, I still can't quite understand how people can just go into these things with absolutely no foreknowledge. Still, I know it happens all the time; people arrive at the theater and scan the marquee like it's the menu at McDonalds. This would also explain the guy who brought his seven or eight year old daughter to this. In all honesty that proved to be a rather big distraction for me. She wasn't particularly annoying, it's just that I couldn't get my head around why he would choose to do this. They didn't seem too repelled by much either, though I was when the girl asked her dad what was meant by one character's promise to have another character "blow" someone. And, yes, I found it profoundly disturbing when she and several others started giggling during Kurt Russell's attempts to cleanse his wounds.

But this is, at the same time, exactly what makes Grindhouse great. It risks a lot, especially in the astonishing Tarantino segment, by its willingness to be misinterpreted. Make no mistake, if this is a great film it is because of its profound dialogue with a post-modern sensibility. It is far more accomplished in that sense than Tarantino's wayward and bloated Kill Bill. Certainly some can and will engage with it purely on a surface level and it is to the directors' credit that their films accommodate such engagement; they really have to or the whole project would fall apart. But if they are only appreciated on this level they probably won't leave much of an impression except as a cult item. I suspect a confusion over just what was accomplished here and how to sell that has added to the confusion in marketing. It's easier, I'm sure, to try and spin this as a gleeful vanity project, hyping its novelty gimmick. But this does the film a terrible disservice.

Planet Terror is of considerably lesser significance than Death Proof but it is a very necessary way in, establishing the idea that these are not "tributes" or "homages" to grindhouse pictures but really an extension of their basic conceit. The idea being, what kinds of implicit social prejudices would these films depict if they were around today? The Rodriguez section is better at making that connection to the past and he is more willing to subordinate his own aesthetic to the determining principles of these films (though this may be giving him too much credit as his aesthetic seems to have been forged from the start by replicating this model). The elements he traffics in are also more overtly indebted to familiar convention. Nonetheless, he also establishes what will become central in Tarantino's film--the contemporary glamorization of strong women, often confused with brutal women and often just another form of the same ol' fetishistic objectification (check out the horrifying G4 channel if you want further evidence). This is not overlooked in Planet Terror and comes through when Rodriguez amps up the absurdity of this particular brand of female strength or "empowerment". He follows up moments of iconic posturing with moments that negate any dramatic advancement, attempting to indicate that there is nothing here to ultimately invest in. Still, the value of Planet Terror is primarily in its position as a lead in to the Tarantino where the full point of the project comes to bear.

At first, I thought Death Proof would actually be the lesser work as it seemed too enamored yet again with Tarantino's all too obvious personal fixations. They don't necessarily translate and he doesn't care and that's fine but that indifference might damage the larger ambition of the piece. Add to that, I am one of those who has long held that Jackie Brown is his one truly great film as it is the only one in which he attempts to escape the suffocating grasp of these personal obsessions; in Jackie Brown they were put to good use in a way that suggested he was willing to grow up and could find ways in which superficial affectations revealed hidden depths. But since this breakthrough he has apparently regressed, not only with Kill Bill but also in his embrace of celebrity privilege and the desire to surround himself with the despicable likes of Eli Roth (his cameo in Death Proof was cringe inducing). All these negatives are why the current film is so bracing and revelatory; it's important enough to demand a re-evaluation of past efforts.

Others on here have already noted much of what makes this extraordinary so I will confine myself for the moment to just one aspect. In reflecting the changing mores of our times, QT asks us to consider how much has really changed. The picture is very carefully scripted, though it may not seem so at first. It actually has the lean sculpture of a short story, with an arc all too legible after the fact. I don't believe for a minute that we are meant to cheer on the girls at the end, but I do believe that Tarantino knows that we will. It is partially an automatic response, siding with the victimized who refuse to be victims but it is also a fashionable response (the same kind of thing that drives Aja's High Tension and which is so ferociously undermined in its infamous finale). I think Tarantino wants to confront us with the basic fact that we admire strength and resolve and have little sympathy for weakness; our capacity for a humane and tender compassion is what's at issue. The last 15 seconds or so, which Barmy seemed to like so much, should be horrific to us as we are well aware of the kinds of critiques leveled against the implicit social reasoning of earlier grindhouse films which were meant to be taken straight and swallowed subtext and all with no complaint. Death Proof becomes more and more fantastical as it moves inexorably forward and culminates in this sequence that is designed in its bluntness and abruptness to cause us to question our existing sympathies. But does it? Part of QT's tip off to us is the Rosario Dawson character herself. He takes great pains to very gradually develop our understanding of this character and the fact that she is not meant to be seen as inherently aggressive and "empowered" as the other two women she ends up with (the reference to the absent child is yet another suggestion of cultural forces that are consistently read as an encumberment upon women). It is also no mistake that the other more docile woman is left behind by the more "empowered" and "advanced" as a perfectly acceptable collateral for an abstract male figure defined by his primitive responses. Dawson's slow development of a sense of freedom and power will, I'm sure, be seen as positive by many but they ignore the fact that it is a process to begin with and that someone always has the authority to shape it. And that's what lies at the heart of this film, I think. Stuntman Mike is an ugly figure to be sure but if we sympathize with him at all it is not simply because we may be more conditioned to as that is the dominant model; if we sympathize with him it's because QT has leveled out the playing field of brutality and barbarism so that all things being equal all violence shocks and repels. Or not, and that is also at issue.

What may come across to some as well is the fact that Stuntman Mike represents a certain male dismay, curdled and turned to rage. And this is not just because women are treated equally and have the right to be whatever they want but that so many would choose the same thing as a form of their supposed empowerment; that that "same thing" is only a mirror reflection of the power mongering and aggressive viciousness that defined what was so hated in the male populace. In his own twisted way, Stuntman Mike acts as a roar of despondent hostility, reacting to the fact that a critical human component of nurtured gentleness has become passe.
Last edited by John Cope on Wed Apr 18, 2007 9:12 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Mr Sausage
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#313 Post by Mr Sausage »

DrewReiber wrote:What is so wonderfully funny about something so horrible?
Wait a minute, so you're taking the moral highground over a serial killer being himself killed in a faux-exploitation film, yet you find nothing objectional about Planet Terror having the same kind of humour in excessive amounts?
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Barmy
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#314 Post by Barmy »

I don't recall any titties (or much blood, for that matter) in DP.
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The Elegant Dandy Fop
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#315 Post by The Elegant Dandy Fop »

Barmy wrote:I don't recall any titties (or much blood, for that matter) in DP.
You see tits in the Eli Roth trailer and blood is spread out in certain scenes like when Kurt Russell kills his first victim, and the decapitated teen in Thanksgiving.

Not too much blood actually.
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Barmy
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#316 Post by Barmy »

Yes, all the good stuff was in Thanksgiving. Can someone write a 2000 word essay on how Roth's film subtley represents a critique of bourgeois society or whatever?
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#317 Post by scalesojustice »

looks like i saw the best parts of the film on youtube.
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Fletch F. Fletch
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#318 Post by Fletch F. Fletch »

GreenCine Daily has been documenting the fallout of the Grindhouse box office debacle. I like what Eric Kohn said in the New York Press:
If the recent box office disappointment of Grindhouse itself recalls the miniscule awareness of original grindhouse movies, then the movie has managed a brilliant bout of performance art
.
And then there is the usual bit of tantalizing gossip over at David Wells' site:
WELLS (Quoting an anonymous "marketing analyst"): "Harvey has been running scared recently -- he's not the guy he was a year or two years ago. ... It's starting to look like it might be over for the Weinstein's now. It's almost time for the fire sale and the funeral. You can't keep putting out movies that don't make money, although The Nanny Diaries might do some business. But the creditors, I'm hearing, are looking to get out, and there isn't going to be any more money from them. The Weinsteins have fucked a lot of people and are hated. They have to go to festivals to get films. Too many people are allied against them."
The Reeler has a nice collection of comments from various people, here.

Annnd, Tarantino is doing press for the movie in the UK and made some interesting comments...
"I don't want the trailers in it. I am still arguing with the Weinsteins about that. I think it needs to be a stand-alone experience and doesn't need them - or the Grindhouse moniker."
Hmm... is QT already distancing himself from the whole Grindhouse thing as a bit of PR damage control? Is he hoping (or deluding himself) that he'll recapture past glory at Cannes this year?
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#319 Post by Antoine Doinel »

Fletch F. Fletch wrote:
"I don't want the trailers in it. I am still arguing with the Weinsteins about that. I think it needs to be a stand-alone experience and doesn't need them - or the Grindhouse moniker."
Hmm... is QT already distancing himself from the whole Grindhouse thing as a bit of PR damage control? Is he hoping (or deluding himself) that he'll recapture past glory at Cannes this year?
Gosh, Tarantino is trying to cover his own ass? Say it ain't so..... :roll:
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The Elegant Dandy Fop
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#320 Post by The Elegant Dandy Fop »

"I don't want the trailers in it. I am still arguing with the Weinsteins about that. I think it needs to be a stand-alone experience and doesn't need them - or the Grindhouse moniker."
Hmm... is QT already distancing himself from the whole Grindhouse thing as a bit of PR damage control? Is he hoping (or deluding himself) that he'll recapture past glory at Cannes this year?
Yeah, he already knows it's going to make his movie look bad. Admitally, they're much better than Death Proof.
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Barmy
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#321 Post by Barmy »

Actually what the film doesn't need is "Death Proof".
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#322 Post by toiletduck! »

Out of context Tarantino quotes are as good as worthless. You'll never find two that match.

-Toilet Dcuk
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Highway 61
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#323 Post by Highway 61 »

Is anyone else delighting in the failure of the Weinstein Company as much as I am?
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Barmy
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#324 Post by Barmy »

yes
rs98762001
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#325 Post by rs98762001 »

Yes. Especially if their depiction in Biskind's book is even 10% true.
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