• 9 hours ago
Hidden cinematic treasures await discovery! Join us as we count down our picks for the most overlooked and underappreciated films from the first decade of this century. From mind-bending sci-fi and quirky comedies to powerful dramas and psychological thrillers, these forgotten gems deserve a second look. Which of these cinematic diamonds in the rough have you missed?
Transcript
00:00God loves a terrier!
00:05Welcome to WatchMojo, and today we're counting down our picks for 20 films from this century's
00:09first decade that don't get enough credit. We are only looking at live-action films.
00:14We therefore commit their bodies to the deep, to be turned into corruption.
00:21Number 20, Walk Hard, The Dewey Cox Story
00:24I just know you're gonna fail.
00:26What are you talking about, Edith?
00:28What about my dreams?
00:29Edith, I told you I can't build you a candy house!
00:32It will fall down and the sun will melt the candy! It won't work!
00:36It will if it never rains.
00:38Dewey, you have got to give up your dream!
00:41Two years after the Jolly Cash biopic Walk the Line won an Oscar,
00:44producer-co-writer Judd Apatow came out with an incredible spoof of it.
00:48Walk Hard, The Dewey Cox Story, is a sharp and absurd parody
00:52that aims at every music biopic trope imaginable.
00:55Bells will ring, ting-a-ling-a-ling, ting-a-ling-a-ling, and you'll sing.
01:00Following the life of fictional rock legend Dewey Cox,
01:02the film skewers everything from Walk the Line to Ray.
01:06Nobody can follow Elvis.
01:08Wait, did you say Elvis?
01:10With its outrageous humor, surprisingly catchy songs,
01:13and an all-star cast of comedic heavyweights, it should have been a runway hit,
01:17yet despite rave reviews, it bombed at the box office.
01:21Maybe it was ahead of its time, or maybe audiences weren't ready
01:24for its level of meta-humor.
01:25Either way, Walk Hard has become a cult classic.
01:3519. Lars and the Real Girl
01:42Lars and the Real Girl is the kind of heartfelt oddball story
01:45that, on its face, shouldn't work.
01:47Ryan Gosling delivers a career-defining performance as Lars,
01:51a socially isolated man who finds companionship in Bianca,
01:55a life-sized doll he orders online.
02:01What could have been a crass or ridiculous premise
02:03is instead handled with warmth and compassion.
02:06Long before our current loneliness epidemic,
02:08the film explored loneliness and the human need for connection.
02:22Despite critical acclaim, this quirky gem flew under the radar
02:25for many audiences.
02:27It's a quiet masterpiece that reminds us that even the strangest stories
02:31can hold a mirror to the deepest parts of ourselves.
02:4418. Synecdoche, New York
02:52Mommy, is something wrong with my poop?
02:54No, honey, it's just green.
02:56You probably ate something green.
02:58Synecdoche, New York is the kind of arthouse film
03:00that gets under your skin and refuses to leave.
03:03Written and directed by Charlie Kaufman,
03:05it follows theatre director Caden Cotard, played by Philip Seymour Hoffman.
03:09Do you get high, my friend?
03:14You know, sometimes.
03:17Do you want to nap with me in my car?
03:20I get kind of...
03:24something when I'm stoned.
03:26When Cotard's life falls apart, he finds solace in theatre.
03:30He attempts to recreate his entire life
03:32inside a massive warehouse for a never-ending play.
03:35Daddy can't play now, honey.
03:37Daddy doesn't live with us anymore, baby. He had to go find himself.
03:41It's still a little tight in the toe.
03:44Have an argument. You're having an argument with me. Have it.
03:49It's an intricate, surreal exploration of mortality,
03:52identity, and the futility of artistic ambition.
03:55While critics praise its ambition,
03:57the film's layered narrative and bleak tone
03:59left mainstream audiences puzzled.
04:01But for those who connect with its themes,
04:03Synecdoche, New York is a profound, almost overwhelming experience.
04:08I don't want to do this play now.
04:12I have an idea.
04:15I think.
04:21Sorry to drop in on you. I just wanted to talk to you for a second.
04:24What's going on?
04:25Nothing. What is this you got going on here?
04:28Teaching my class, I guess.
04:30In a circle like that?
04:31Spike Lee's 25th Hour is a raw, deeply reflective drama
04:34that stands as a time capsule of post-9-11 New York City.
04:38The film follows Edward Norton's Monty
04:40in the final hours before he begins a seven-year prison sentence.
04:44What can I say? I messed up.
04:46As we go along with Monty's journey,
04:48we explore his regret and the fragile connections to his friends.
04:51As the first major movie filmed in NYC after 9-11,
04:54it captures the city's somber, shell-shocked atmosphere
04:57with unflinching honesty.
04:59Monty! Oh my God!
05:01It's all right. It's all right. It's going to be okay.
05:04The haunting visuals, poignant performances,
05:06and a blistering monologue from Norton
05:08elevate it to masterpiece status.
05:10Despite its critical acclaim, 25th Hour remains overshadowed
05:14by flashier films of the era.
05:16I'll tell you I believe in God's kingdom,
05:18and I believe I will be with you again and your mother,
05:20but not in this lifetime.
05:22Number 16, Brick.
05:24It's good to see you, brother.
05:29It's been some time.
05:32Two months.
05:33Directed by Rian Johnson and starring a younger, subtler Joseph Gordon-Levitt,
05:37Brick is one of the best thrillers of the decade,
05:39that no one saw.
05:41Playing out like a hardball detective story set in high school,
05:44Brick borrows heavily from classic noir stories
05:47in the vein of Dashiell Hemet,
05:49and is every bit as entertaining and complex.
05:52I know what you did.
05:54I was in the tunnel.
05:56I saw you hide her.
05:59Toad?
06:00Anyone I tell, it would ruin you some way,
06:02and I'm gonna tell someone.
06:04Are you making an offer?
06:06Maybe.
06:07It has a well-developed story with rich characters,
06:10and the high school setting provides a great modern twist
06:13on the old-school detective story.
06:15Today, it's a cult classic.
06:17You want the whole tale? You want me to tell it to you?
06:20Tell it to me.
06:26Alright. From the top.
06:29Number 15, Primer.
06:31As long as we're going down this road,
06:34I mean, I think we stand to try this.
06:37Primer is a low-budget marvel that redefines sci-fi storytelling
06:40with its mind-bending take on time travel.
06:45What do you think?
06:47Is this normal?
06:49I don't know.
06:51I'm turning it off. Wait.
06:53No, it's running right there.
06:55Not mine.
06:57Okay, I didn't do that.
06:59Written, directed, and starring Shane Carruth,
07:01the film follows two engineers who accidentally invent a time machine.
07:05Abe had taken on the task of quantifying and explaining the device.
07:09But as weeks became months,
07:11their enthusiasm became a slow realization
07:13that they were out of their depth.
07:15Their journeys through time quickly spiral into paranoia
07:18and existential dread.
07:20With its dense dialogue and intricate plotting,
07:22Primer expects audiences to keep up,
07:24offering no easy explanations or hand-holding.
07:27While this complexity turned off casual viewers,
07:29it earned the film a cult following
07:31among those who relish its intellectual challenge.
07:33Made for just $7,000,
07:35Primer proves that you don't need a blockbuster budget
07:38to create a timeless or mind-bending classic.
07:42I'm going to give you this big speech about how we've been friends for a long time
07:45and come to trust and then hold each other.
07:47But how about this instead?
07:49If you need to work this out with me,
07:51promise to do the few small things I ask of you.
07:53I will, in return,
07:55show you the most important thing in any living organism.
08:01Family photos depict smiling faces.
08:08Births.
08:09Weddings.
08:10Holidays.
08:13Children's birthday parties.
08:18People take pictures of the happy moments in their lives.
08:21Robin Williams trades in his trademark offbeat warmth
08:25for a new brand of silent intensity in One Hour Photo.
08:29I process these photos as if they were my own.
08:32It is easily one of the creepiest performances of his career.
08:36Williams plays Cy Parrish, a lonely photo technician
08:39who becomes dangerously obsessed with a family
08:41whose pictures he develops.
08:43The film unfolds as a slow-burn psychological thriller
08:46exploring themes of isolation,
08:48voyeurism,
08:49and the dark underbelly of everyday life.
08:52Cy, are you alright?
08:54I'm fine.
08:58I'll have these for you tomorrow.
09:02Alright. Thanks, Cy.
09:04Bye.
09:05Williams' portrayal of Cy is both unsettling and tragically human.
09:08Showing a side of the beloved actor that few had seen before.
09:11Despite critical praise,
09:13One Hour Photo never quite reached the heights
09:16of Williams' more mainstream hits.
09:18And if these pictures have anything important to say
09:21to future generations, it's this.
09:27I was here.
09:30I existed.
09:34Hey, Chris.
09:35How close is this to full brightness?
09:38Danny Boyle's Sunshine is a gripping sci-fi thriller
09:41that's equal parts awe-inspiring and nerve-wracking.
09:44Set in the not-too-distant future,
09:46it follows a crew of astronauts tasked with
09:49reigniting our solar system's dying sun.
09:51But in truth, we already have the oxygen reserves
09:54to make it there and a quarter way back.
09:56The film is a stunning visual spectacle,
09:58oscillating between almost poetic beauty
10:00and white-knuckled terror.
10:02We've been down to investigate damaged area.
10:07Okay, guys.
10:09Nice and easy.
10:11Nice and easy.
10:13Alex Garland's screenplay
10:15balances high-concept science with human struggle.
10:18The stellar ensemble cast, pun intended,
10:20delivers intense and shockingly grounded performances.
10:24We do not have enough oxygen reserves
10:26to get us to our payload delivery point.
10:30Let alone to survive the return journey.
10:32So cancel the ticker tape parade.
10:35The third act's shift into psychological horror
10:37isn't for everyone,
10:39and to some it feels off-putting.
10:41Still, Sunshine remains a visually
10:43and emotionally powerful film
10:45that deserves more love.
11:0012. Confessions of a Dangerous Mind
11:02Sometimes as a younger man,
11:04I stretch the truth to get what I want.
11:06Directed by George Clooney,
11:08and with an all-star cast that includes
11:10Drew Barrymore, Julia Roberts, and Clooney himself,
11:13it really is a wonder why this movie never caught on.
11:16Hey, what's through my wall?
11:18Oh, some guy called Goldberg.
11:21Goldberg? Larry Goldberg?!
11:24The film follows the biographical story of Chuck Barris,
11:27a game show host who claimed to be an assassin
11:29working for the CIA.
11:31If you notice, Jim, I got a TV show on there.
11:33I don't need to kill people for hire anymore.
11:35No, you don't need to, but you'd like to.
11:37The actors are all fantastic,
11:39most notably the perpetually underrated
11:41Sam Rockwell as Barris,
11:43and the sets and cinematography capture the era perfectly.
11:46Mixing dark humor with intense drama,
11:48the movie finds a perfect balance
11:50and creates a unique, sadly,
11:52overlooked experience.
11:54I worked for the CIA.
11:56You understand?
11:57And I killed people.
12:00I killed a lot of people.
12:03You understand?
12:06I killed a lot of people.
12:0811. I'm Not There
12:10Can I smoke in here?
12:12You sound, for someone so widely known,
12:14a bit fatalistic.
12:16I'm not fatalistic.
12:17Inspired by the life of timeless performer Bob Dylan,
12:20this movie uses non-traditional techniques
12:22to achieve its distinctive feel.
12:24Many famous actors portray the different facets of Dylan,
12:26including Heath Ledger and Christian Bale,
12:28but it's Cate Blanchett who steals the show,
12:31Two words.
12:33Raving queen.
12:35Cosmic amphetamine brain.
12:37I dig Shakespeare.
12:39receiving an Academy Award nomination
12:41for her stellar performance.
12:43It's a weird and intimidating film,
12:45but it's all for the sake of artistic merit,
12:47and in that sense, the film is flawless.
12:50Dylan even praised the movie and its actors
12:52in a Rolling Stone article,
12:54calling them incredible.
12:56Sex are two things that really hang people up.
13:01And why that is,
13:05I'll never fully understand.
13:07So at least it wasn't overlooked by its subject.
13:10Now I'll cry tonight
13:14Like I cried the night before
13:17And I'll fleece on the house
13:20But I'll dream about the door
13:2310. Moon
13:2510 years is a long haul, you know.
13:27It's way, way, way, way, way too long.
13:31I'm talking to myself on a regular basis,
13:35so time to go home, you know what I mean?
13:40Another movie with an amazing performance by Sam Rockwell,
13:43Moon is a grossly underrated science fiction film
13:46that attempts to tackle heavy themes and questions
13:49while looking great in the process.
13:51Sam, you suffered a slight concussion in the crash
13:53and have incurred minor injuries.
13:55But all in all, the prognosis is good.
14:00I'm happy to see you again.
14:02The movie follows an astronaut as he faces a crisis
14:05after being alone for three years on the moon.
14:07It's a dark and lonely picture
14:09filled with elegant, spacious cinematography.
14:12But it's Rockwell's Oscar-snubbed performance
14:14that pulls at our heartstrings.
14:1690 seconds.
14:17Stop.
14:18You ever been out this far?
14:20No.
14:21Signal failure.
14:22Never have.
14:23It could be considered the next great sci-fi experience
14:27if people would actually watch it.
14:29I asked her if she wanted to go get an ice cream cone
14:32or something dorky like that.
14:34She said, let's get a drink.
14:39I said, okay.
14:41What do you...
14:42Number nine, Best in Show.
14:44Cookie and I work as a team, although I do nothing.
14:47She does all the work with Winky.
14:50Yay!
14:51It took the comedic brilliance of Christopher Guest
14:54to figure out how to make a dog show the setting
14:56of one of America's greatest comedy films.
14:58And he's saying, I'm ready.
15:00That's when you know he's ready for a show.
15:02Because he says, I'm ready.
15:03I'm ready.
15:04I'm ready.
15:05See, at that, I know he's ready.
15:06Shot in a mockumentary style,
15:08Best in Show follows a quirky and absurd ensemble
15:10of dog enthusiasts as they prepare
15:12for the prestigious Mayflower Kennel Club dog show.
15:15God loves a terrier.
15:20Yes, he does.
15:22God loves a terrier.
15:26That's because small, sturdy, bright, and true,
15:30they give their love to you.
15:33From neurotic yuppies to eccentric trainers,
15:36the characters are as lovable as they are ridiculous.
15:39The huge ensemble is led by future Schitt's Creek stars
15:42Eugene Levy and Catherine O'Hara.
15:44You, Winky, look at this.
15:48You.
15:49Yes.
15:50That's it.
15:51He's a natural.
15:52He's just so natural.
15:53And look at his face.
15:54Could he be sweeter or more loving?
15:56And the group is all about attitude.
15:58While comedy fans adore it,
16:00Best in Show was a quiet, intellectual quirk fest
16:03lost in an era of in-your-face humour.
16:06Backyard, front yard, or the park.
16:10Number 8, Stranger Than Fiction
16:12This isn't boarding school, Miss Pascal.
16:14You stole from the government.
16:15Some of the best films of the 2000s
16:17are small movies with big stars
16:19that defy genre conventions.
16:21Enter Stranger Than Fiction.
16:23I don't know how to kill Harold Crick.
16:25That's why they sent you.
16:28Yes, to help you.
16:31How are you going to help me?
16:33You, who never thinks of leaping off buildings,
16:35what great inspiration will you bestow on me?
16:38Because I'll tell you, the quaint ideas I'm sure
16:40you've gathered in your adorable career as an assistant
16:42are to know a bear when faced with killing a man.
16:45A rare Will Ferrell dramedy.
16:47While caught in absurd situations,
16:49Ferrell plays Harold Crick relatively straight.
16:53Crick is an IRS auditor
16:55whose meticulously mundane life is upended
16:57when he begins hearing a narrator
16:59describe both his every move
17:01and his impending death.
17:03He began it the same way he always did.
17:07When others' minds would...
17:09Hello, is someone there?
17:11The film is an oh-so-delicate balance
17:13between humour, existential musings
17:15and heartfelt emotion.
17:17Emma Thompson, Maggie Gyllenhaal and Dustin Hoffman
17:19deliver standout performances
17:21and its clever premise and touching exploration
17:23of free will and destiny
17:25make it a truly unique experience.
17:27It's a book about a man
17:29who doesn't know he's about to die
17:31and then dies.
17:33But if the man does know he's going to die
17:35and dies anyway, dies willingly
17:37knowing he could stop it,
17:39then...
17:41Not the type of man you want to keep alive.
17:43Number 7. In Bruges.
17:45To put it bluntly,
17:47In Bruges is hands down
17:49one of the smartest, deftest comedies ever made.
17:51I'm not being funny, we can't stay here.
17:53We've got to stay here until he rings.
17:55What if he doesn't ring for two weeks?
17:57Then we stay here for two weeks.
17:59Written and directed by Martin McDonagh,
18:01the film follows hitmen Ray and Ken,
18:03played by Colin Farrell and Brendan Gleeson.
18:05We are doing what I want to do.
18:07Ray botched a job,
18:09so they're hiding out in the picturesque
18:11Belgian town of Bruges.
18:13The duo's chemistry is electric,
18:15with Farrell's guilt-ridden rookie
18:17clashing perfectly against Gleeson's
18:19wary veteran.
18:21The gorgeous medieval backdrop contrasts sharply
18:23with the film's bloody, morally complex
18:25narrative. With witty dialogue,
18:27poignant themes of redemption,
18:29and a career-defining turn from Farrell,
18:31In Bruges was a critical powerhouse.
18:33Can I have my gun back please?
18:39What am I going to do, Ken?
18:43What am I going to do?
18:45Just keep moving.
18:47It received only a limited release in the US,
18:49but its audience mainly grew thanks to DVD sales
18:51and, eventually, streaming.
18:53The little boy.
18:55That's right, Ray.
18:57The little boy.
19:01Excuse me, I have urgent business
19:03with these young gentlemen.
19:05Tom Hanks has made an entire career
19:07of being a relatable everyman.
19:09You can literally count the movies where he plays
19:11a bad guy on one hand.
19:13One of those films was 2002's Row 2 Perdition.
19:15You are not to speak of this to anyone.
19:17You understand?
19:19Not to anyone.
19:21It's a haunting crime drama about a murderous father
19:23seeking vengeance while accompanied
19:25by his young son.
19:27Paul Newman shines as Hank's conflicted boss
19:29and father figure in one of his final roles.
19:31Mistakes.
19:33We all make them, God knows.
19:35The film's sadistic assassin chills the bone
19:37every time he appears on screen
19:39and the film's cinematography paints every frame
19:41like a sombre masterpiece,
19:43from rain-soaked streaks to the iconic
19:45final showdown on a misty beach.
19:47Smile.
19:51It's a gripping tale of loyalty, legacy
19:53and a cost of redemption.
19:55Give me the gun, Michael.
20:01Come on.
20:03Give me the gun.
20:11Number 5. Master and Commander
20:13The Far Side of the World.
20:15Hold the gun and cruise to deck.
20:17Rigman ropes over the stern and pull the boats in.
20:19Fresh off his turn as Maximus in Gladiator,
20:21Russell Crowe donned a blonde wig
20:23for his next period film.
20:25Sail trimmers to their stations!
20:27Get the sails over, lad! She's over-braking!
20:29Master and Commander is a nautical epic
20:31based on the award-winning book series
20:33about Napoleonic war hero Jack Aubrey.
20:35Crowe's Aubrey is a brilliant
20:37yet headstrong leader
20:39supported by his best friend,
20:41doctor and naturalist,
20:43Dr. Stephen Maturin.
20:45The film's attention to historical detail
20:47is unparalleled,
20:49from the creak of wooden decks
20:51to the thundering cannons.
20:53Viewers are immersed in the Napoleonic wars.
20:55The film won widespread critical acclaim,
20:57getting numerous Oscar nominations.
21:15The audience wasn't huge
21:17as the film was overshadowed by 2003's
21:19Pirates of the Caribbean
21:21The Curse of the Black Pearl.
21:27No, I didn't kill him. He wanted in.
21:31Why?
21:35I didn't want him to come in
21:37and he insisted. I said,
21:39you gotta stay at home, but he doesn't listen.
21:41He's such a stupid son of a bitch.
21:43An overlooked classic in the crime comedy genre,
21:45this movie centers on a thief
21:47who is posing as an actor in Hollywood
21:49that gets caught in the middle of a murder investigation.
21:51I didn't. I believe that I did not.
21:53What do you mean? You said you don't remember.
21:55Well, that's my point. If I don't remember
21:57because I was that drunk, then how could I have ever gotten it up?
21:59And I know that this is outrageous
22:01and it's not normal. I'm not pretending that I'm normal.
22:03I just, I'm just checking that.
22:05Co-stars Robert Downey Jr. and Val Kilmer
22:07share terrific chemistry
22:09and the movie features one of Downey Jr.'s most overlooked roles
22:11as he is truly hilarious.
22:13Here we all are.
22:15Ike, Mike, and mustard.
22:17What the hell does that mean?
22:19The comedy is sharp and the action is gritty
22:21with the movie blending so many genres together
22:23it becomes a biting satire
22:25on classic, hard-edged stories.
22:27What happened then? You had to kill her, huh?
22:29Harry, will you put a sock in it?
22:31I'm just asking a question.
22:33Yeah, if you ask questions, then it seems like we don't know anything,
22:35like we're fishing.
22:37This movie was written and directed by Wes Anderson
22:39and features all of his trademark
22:41quirkiness, eccentricity, and originality.
22:43Bravo!
22:45What fun!
22:47Steve, I'd like to introduce you to Antonia Cooke.
22:49She's the new head of the film society.
22:51You must be so excited.
22:53I hope so. You think it went okay?
22:55Which makes for a fun, if awkward, time.
22:57It's filled with terrific performances
22:59by an all-star cast,
23:01most notably Bill Murray as Steve.
23:03So what happened in your opinion?
23:07What are you talking about?
23:09Well, don't you think the public perception of your work
23:11has significantly altered in the last five years?
23:13That's your first question?
23:15I thought this was supposed to be a puff piece.
23:17A man who sets out to find the shark
23:19that killed his best friend.
23:21While Wes is becoming more popular today,
23:23this movie proved too strange for audiences,
23:25receiving mixed reviews
23:27and bombing with a box office performance
23:29of only $35 million.
23:31Please don't make fun of me.
23:33I just wanted to flirt with you.
23:35Number two, The Assassination of Jesse James
23:37by the coward Robert Ford.
23:39I've already robbed a railroad train.
23:41I'm sitting in a rocking chair chatting
23:43with none other than Jesse James.
23:45A unique title for a unique movie.
23:47The audience know right away what they're getting into.
23:49Jesse mentioned that me and Cummins were in cahoots?
23:53Is that so?
23:55Oh dear, I went on and said too much, have I?
23:57Which is a terrific story
23:59leading up to the titular historic killing
24:01of Jesse James by Robert Ford.
24:03Starring Brad Pitt and Casey Affleck,
24:05respectively, they become their characters
24:07through hypnotic performances.
24:13Excuse me.
24:15See, I changed right on in
24:17and interrupted you.
24:19And the movie is completed by memorably
24:21beautiful and desolate cinematography.
24:23It deserves a spot in the pantheon
24:25of great westerns.
24:27Sadly, it bombed at the box office
24:29and has failed to make an impression.
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25:01Hollywood is rife with films based on
25:03a true story, but few filmmakers were
25:05as brave or speculative as
25:07David Fincher in his film Zodiac.
25:13I'm gonna need elimination prints
25:15from your staff. Does anyone here didn't touch
25:17this letter?
25:19The film is a
25:21deep dive into the real life Zodiac
25:23killer case, following a pair of journalists
25:25and a detective as they try to
25:27uncover the identity of the infamous murderer.
25:29I'm reading this book,
25:31Homicide Investigation by Lemone Snyder.
25:33Lemone. I'm looking for patterns.
25:35No. You can't think of
25:37this case in normal police terms.
25:39Why not? You got four crime scenes.
25:41Solano, Vallejo, Berryessa,
25:43and here. Not a single
25:45usable print of the first three or
25:47any of the letters. Fincher's trademark
25:49precision brings the 1970s to
25:51life, immersing viewers in the paranoia
25:53and unease that gripped California
25:55during the killer's spree. Our bodies
25:57found the next morning in a parking lot
25:59stabbed to death. Its deliberate pacing
26:01and chilling atmosphere elevated
26:03above standard crime dramas.
26:05At the time though, it struggled to find an audience
26:07before becoming a cult classic.
26:09Last time I saw this face
26:11was July 4th, 1969.
26:17I'm very sure that's the man
26:19who shot me. Think we missed the mark?
26:21Drop your favorite hidden gem in the
26:23comments. This helmet
26:25contains our last supply.
26:27Oh king,
26:29I believe your wisdom shall save
26:31us all.
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