Weekly Ketchup: The Veronica Mars Movie Kickstarter Campaign Succeeds

Christian Bale and Melissa McCarthy get roles, Trainspotting and Jurassic Park sequels are in motion.

This week's Ketchup includes movie development news stories involving sequels for Horrible Bosses, Trainspotting and the Jurassic Park franchise, as well as new (or possible new) roles for Christian Bale and Melissa McCarthy.


This Week's Top Story

THE KICKSTARTER CAMPAIGN FOR THE VERONICA MARS MOVIE MAKES HISTORY

The idea of the Veronica Mars movie being the top story of any given week might have seemed incredulous (and heck, maybe it still does). The reason that this movie, based upon the 2004-2007 Kristen Bell series, earned the top spot has more to do with its history-making distinction, and more generally, what precedent this story might set, going forward. It was this week that Warner Bros. and Veronica Mars producer Rob Thomas started a Kickstarter campaign for the funding of a Veronica Mars movie that raised its $2 million goal within 11 hours. Initially, it was thought that WB Digital Distribution was going to fund the remainder of the budget, but with almost a month left to go in the campaign, the movie's entire budget will now come from the Kickstarter donations. The people who ponied up the cash will receive a variety of escalating goodies for their contributions, the breakdown of which you can read about here. The ramifications of this story have been quick and much discussed, particularly among fans of various other TV shows who would also like to see the objects of their obsessions get Internet-funded movies. One producer who was quick to quell such speculation was Joss Whedon, who said he has no plans to turn to Kickstarter for a new Firefly/Serenity movie. One problem keeping many such shows from getting the Kickstarter treatment is that, unlike Veronica Mars, many of these cancelled shows (your Pushing Daisies, your Moonlights) require more special effects and larger budgets. Veronica Mars, on the other hand, is basically just about a young reporter who does a lot of talking. And talk, as the saying goes, is cheap. Technicolor fields of CGI flowers and reanimated corpses, not so much.

Fresh Developments This Week

#1 ONE OF THE SIGNS LEADING INTO JURASSIC PARK IV READS SAFETY NOT GUARANTEED

Last year, one of the directors to make the Star Wars Episode VII news (the job that eventually went to J.J. Abrams) was Colin Trevorrow, who made his debut with the indie Safety Not Guaranteed. Eventually, we learned that the genre reboot that Treverrow was actually hinting at was the much lower profile Flight of the Navigator. This week, Colin Trevorrow really did sign on to direct a high profile genre entry with Roman numerals in the title: Jurassic Park IV. Universal Pictures has slated Jurassic Park IV for a release date of June 13, 2014, and Treverrow will be working from a script by Rise of the Planet of the Apes cowriters Rick Jaffa and Amanda Silver.




#2 WILL THE GOOD TIMES MOVIE BE DY-NO-MITE?

There was a time in Hollywood when "TV show adaptations" were one of the hot trends, and nearly every week brought word of a new such project. Nowadays, not so much. So, it's almost refreshing to hear that Sony Pictures and producer Scott Rudin have started development on a movie based upon the 1974-1979 CBS sitcom Good Times. That show is most remembered now for featuring J.J. Walker and a pre-pop-singer TV career for Janet Jackson. In its own time, Good Times was one of a few hit shows for TV producer Norman Lear, who specialized in "social commentary" shows like All in the Family and Maude. Specifically, the title of Good Times was sort of intended to be ironic, as the show was about a working class African American family in Chicago whose struggles suggested they weren't really having such great times. Producer Scott Rudin's other adaptations in the past have included Shaft, Sabrina, and The Manchurian Candidate.


#3 DISNEY'S FANTASY REBOOTS CONTINUE WITH THE BEAST

Following the massive box office takes for Alice in the Wonderland and most recently Oz the Great and Powerful, it's not terribly surprising that Walt Disney Pictures continues to put fantasy reboots into development. This week's newest entry in that growing line of projects is called The Beast, and it's a reinvention of Beauty and the Beast. For this assignment, Disney has hired screenwriter Joe Ahearne, who recently worked with director Danny Boyle on the upcoming film Trance. The Beast is almost certainly a few years away from being produced, but it joins a burgeoning development line that includes the Sleeping Beauty reboot Maleficent, and the new Cinderella (which we also learned this week will not be featuring Emma Watson, as was recently reported).



#4 DANNY BOYLE HOPES TO REUNITE TRAINSPOTTING CAST IN 2016 FOR A SEQUEL

In Austin this week for the SXSW Film Festival (to promote Trance), director Danny Boyle revealed that he hopes to get the cast of Trainspotting (including Ewan McGregor, Robert Carlyle, and Jonny Lee Miller) back together in 2016 for a sequel. Screenwriter John Hodge is currently working on the script, which is only loosely based upon author Irvine Welsh's actual sequel called Porno. One reason that 2016 is the target for the sequel is that it will mark the 20th anniversary of the release of Trainspotting. One has to imagine that Begbie, Spud, and Sick Boy are probably still cross at Rent Boy.




#5 HOLLYWOOD'S BIG MOSES PLANS: EXODUS VERSUS GODS AND KINGS

We're all still waiting on the two "White House attack" movies, but Hollywood is already onto its next pair of dueling movies, as two different studios are racing against each other to produce movies about the Biblical figure of Moses. And this week, both projects got fairly major news developments. First up, there is the Warner Bros project Gods and Kings, which Steven Spielberg has now officially dropped out of considering. In Spielberg's place might be Ang Lee, who recently joined Spielberg as a two-time Best Director Oscar winner (for Life of Pi). There's no deal yet for Ang Lee, it's worth noting, but in situations like this where studios are racing against each other, sometimes just the idea of a deal is enough to make the news. In this case, the competition is at 20th Century Fox, where a Moses project called Exodus might just be director Ridley Scott's next film after The Counselor. An advantage that Exodus might have is that it already has an A list actor interested, in the form of Christian Bale. However, just like with Ang Lee, there's no deal in place yet for Bale either.


#6 WWE WRESTLER DAVE BAUTISTA LANDS GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY ROLE AS DRAX THE DESTROYER

Following a casting call that saw Jason Momoa (Game of Thrones) get most of the press, WWE wrestler Dave Bautista has landed the second role in Marvel's Guardians of the Galaxy as Drax the Destroyer. Drax's story stretches back to the 1970s and is correspondingly sort of convoluted, but for the purposes of this movie, let's just say that he's a human who is resurrected as a big green muscle bound warrior type (but not that *other* Marvel green-skinned muscle bound guy). Bautista joins the previously cast Chris Pratt (as Star-Lord), which now leaves just one more actor to be cast (Gamora), and two more voice roles (Groot and Rocket Raccoon), to fill out the five main members of the team.



#7 HORRIBLE BOSSES TRIO RETEAMS FOR BOTH THE SEQUEL AND ONE NIGHT ON THE HUDSON

The ramifications of the July, 2011 box office success of Horrible Bosses continued to be felt this week, a year and a half later. Most obviously, deals were made and in the process of being made for director Seth Gordon and cast members Jason Bateman, Jason Sudeikis, Charlie Day, and Jamie Foxx to reunite for Horrible Bosses 2, along with director Seth Gordon. Three of them (Bateman, Day and Gordon) also are in talks with Universal Pictures to team up for a completely different project called One Night on the Hudson, about a pair of cops who are tasked with escorting a federal witness from New Jersey to Manhattan. Horrible Bosses 2, which is expected to start filming in the late summer of 2013, is expected to happen first.



#8 MELISSA MCCARTHY LANDS DRAMATIC ROLE IN WEINSTEIN COMPANY OSCAR BAIT ST. VINCENT DE VAN NUYS

Like so many before her, Melissa McCarthy appears ready to make the transition from comedic to dramatic actress in the Weinstein Company project St. Vincent De Van Nuys. McCarthy has landed what is being described as a much sought role as a struggling single mother whose 12 year old son is taken care of by a "train wreck" of a neighbor to be played by Bill Murray. St. Vincent De Van Nuys got its start as an entry on the "Black List of Unproduced Screenplays," and it will also mark the directorial debut of its screenwriter Ted Melfi. Filming is expected to start in July while Melissa McCarthy is on hiatus from her CBS sitcom Mike & Molly.



#9 ROBERT DUVALL AND VINCENT D'ONOFRIO TO PLAY ROBERT DOWNEY JR'S FAMILY IN THE JUDGE

We've known for a while that Robert Downey Jr. was going to star in the Warner Bros dramedy The Judge, but this week was when we finally learned who will play the title character. Robert Duvall will play Downey's father, a small town judge who is the main suspect in the murder case of the mother of Downey's character, who's a successful attorney himself. Vincent D'Onofrio (Law and Order: Criminal Intent) has also been cast as Downey's older brother. The Judge will be directed by David Dobkin (Fred Claus, The Change Up), whose last three films have all earned "Rotten" scores on the RT Tomatometer, which is why The Judge is the lowest rated of this week's stories. However, Downey, Duvall and D'Onofrio -- in addition to sharing final initials -- are all fine actors, which just barely saved The Judge from being the week's sole Rotten Idea.

Rotten Ideas of the Week

No single movie story seemed "Rotten" enough for this category this week. Huzzah! We all got a week off from horrible movie studio ideas.

For more Weekly Ketchup columns by Greg Dean Schmitz, check out the WK archive, and you can contact GDS via Facebook.

Comments

Stepping Razor

Stepping Razor

How in the world is a "Good Times" movie project not a rotten idea? Schmitz must have started out writing this week's ketchup intent on not having any entries in the rotten ideas section.

Mar 15 - 05:00 PM

Dick Travis

Mick Travis

Exactly: I'd rather see a "Sanford & Son" movie than a "Good Times" movie.

Mar 15 - 05:12 PM

Stepping Razor

Stepping Razor

It would be possible to make a good, smart, funny "Sanford & Son" movie. If in the right hands. But no matter who does "Good Times," it will just be plain silliness, likely even a modern-day minstrel show. No actor with any self-respect would play J.J. Either that, or they'd have to be super desperate for a role. Hollywood may as well follow up
"Good Times" with "Urkel: The Movie."

Mar 15 - 11:12 PM

Janson Jinnistan

Janson Jinnistan

"Good Times" was actually the more mature, smarter show. The point is that JJ should not be the focus, but be one of the three siblings, each of them fleshed out. The heart of the show was James and Flo, and any film version needs to recognize that dynamic.

Mar 16 - 08:51 AM

Matthew R.

Matthew Reimer

I god darn hope that "Maude" or "All In The Family" won't be the sequel.

Mar 15 - 08:42 PM

Ryan Gibson

Ryan Gibson

what Christina said I am inspired that a mom able to profit $6631 in 1 month on the computer. did you look at this web site... www.Snag4.com

Mar 18 - 09:11 AM

Lukas Riker

Lukas Riker

ERR MAIII GERRDD!!!...TRAINSPOTTING SEQUEL!!...awesome

Mar 15 - 05:31 PM

Joshua

Joshua "LF" Mitchell

How is the Beauty and the Beast remake not a rotten idea? The original is perfect, stay away from it.

Mar 15 - 05:32 PM

Scappy D.

Scappy Doo

Disney's version of Beauty and the Beast is hardly an original. This story has been adapted into film a ton of times.

Mar 15 - 07:42 PM

Bram S.

Bram Sterling

I agree with Joshua "LF". Beauty and the Beast remake should not be happening...

Mar 15 - 08:54 PM

Frisby2007

Frisby 2007

It is NOT a remake! Neptune, does anyone around here not know what the hell remake means? Next I'll be hearing people call Nolan's Batman movies remakes.

Mar 15 - 11:44 PM

Janson Jinnistan

Janson Jinnistan

Jean Cocteau. Look into it.

Mar 16 - 12:07 AM

Brad and Netflix

Bradly Martin

Anybody remember that CBS Films Beauty in the Beast Remake? So awful but kind of funny Awful for the first 30 minutes at least.

Mar 16 - 09:57 AM

Eldest2005

Christopher Aull

It's not a remake. It's going to be a darker reimagining like what was done with Snow White and the Huntsman and Jack the Giant Slayer.

Mar 17 - 07:52 AM

Cool G.

Cool Guy

Er...it does say Seth Gordon at another part of the paragraph (which is right), but Jason Bateman isn't the director of Horrible Bosses....

Mar 15 - 05:51 PM

Jared Gullage

Jared Gullage

Really, none of those ideas seemed Rotten enough? Really?

Mar 15 - 05:54 PM

Alberto Zeeky

Alberto Zeeky

Confused on how a sequel to Horrible Bosses will go about, I mean they already took care of their bosses and I hope they don't go Hangover 2 in repeating the same formula.

All in all though, it was a good movie and the fact that you have the 3 main characters and Foxx's side character. Although Farrell, Aniston, and Spacey were very amusing in their roles.

Mar 15 - 06:05 PM

Brad and Netflix

Bradly Martin

I think Hangover two repeated a lot of the same gags (losing some body trying to find them, having a small Mammal with them, Mike Tyson Randomly showing up) but didn't have the same theme. By the end of two though (unlike one) everything is found out AND ITS FINE BECAUSE THEY ARE JUST ANGELS WHO LIKE TO PARTY YEEEAAAH! While in the first one they made sure to keep there depravity and shameful adventure a secret because of how Depraved and Shameful it was. That's what was really missing from the second one, Shame. Shame is hilarious!

But yeah, I feel like I'm the only guy in the world that thought Horrible Bosses was boring, so I don't care about any boring sequel.

Mar 16 - 10:01 AM

Lee Augustus

Lee Augustus

I'm just wondering: Is this e-begging?

Mar 15 - 08:21 PM

Typhon

Typhon Q

#3. Watch it be about how the Beast turned into the Beast.

#5. 2012 - Snow White vs Snow White
2013 - White House vs White House
Now - Moses vs Moses
What's next?

Mar 15 - 09:07 PM

Brad and Netflix

Bradly Martin

Kramer vs Kramer

Mar 16 - 10:02 AM

Rated NCC-1701

Rated NCC-1701

The Tick vs The Tick

Mar 16 - 09:50 PM

Rated NCC-1701

Rated NCC-1701

Dan vs Dan

Mar 16 - 09:50 PM

Lance Reeder

Lance Reeder

Ash vs Ash...Good, bad...I'm the one with the gun.

Mar 19 - 05:35 PM

Myron

Myron Kinsey

Veronica Mars was one of the most boring and insufferably "hip" pieces of excrement to come out in a long time. That being said, I miss the WB.

Mar 15 - 09:42 PM

Frisby2007

Frisby 2007

The Beauty & the Beast reboot is the only interesting news this week. Also, how is there no rotten news? Did they not hear that Disney finally decided to put aside their hand-drawn feature-length movies & work on more shitty CGI ones instead? (Tangled still being their only exception)

Mar 15 - 11:43 PM

King  S.

King Simba

That news is a couple weeks old and they never said they're quitting hand drawn animation for good, just that they currently have no hand drawn animated films in development. This is similair to the case of Tangled when rumors were afloat before the film's release that it was going to be their last princess movie when it was simply that they had no princess movies in development and now three years later we're getting Frozen (which I'm going to go out on a limb and say that it'll blow all the recent live action fairy tales we've gotten out of the water and will become Disney's first non-Pixar film to win the oscar for best animated feature).

Mar 16 - 02:47 AM

Troy Solomon

Troy Solomon

when will this guy give up and accept that CGI isn't that bad as he makes it out to be? Also why do you keep on using the term "shitty" to describe everything that you don't like? And why is Tangled the only exception of the only good CGI film Disney has ever made, what about Wreck-it Ralph? That film was just as good if not better than Tangled. I'm going to hell for even questioning your logic aren't I?

Mar 16 - 07:13 AM

Brad and Netflix

Bradly Martin

The short film paper was also 100% CGI made to look hand-drawn. So there is that too.

Mar 16 - 10:04 AM

Frisby2007

Frisby 2007

*Paperman

And that short was done BLENDING hand-drawn & CG methods.

Mar 17 - 12:23 AM

Brad and Netflix

Bradly Martin

It was 100% CG, there was absolutely no Paper in the filming of Paperman. Personally I think it's great that CG can be used to imitate what Cartoons were like when I was a kid. I just think it's irritating that people think it's an old school hand drawn short. Especially with how out of place the clearly CG paper airplanes looked. Heads up, South Park isn't construction Paper anymore.

Mar 17 - 01:34 AM

Frisby2007

Frisby 2007

You should do research before calling out such crap. There was paper invoked in Paperman, only someone ignorant & stupid would deny it even after watching the making of it.

Mar 17 - 03:10 AM

Frisby2007

Frisby 2007

You just don't get it, do you? Would you rather hear me call something I don't like using the term "abomination"? Because I'd gladly use that instead (perfect word to describe films like Chicken Little & Cars[2]). Wreck-it-Ralph, while I only saw the first half of that movie (before it ever came out in theaters) was so predictable (and quite uninteresting by far). As predictable as a movie by Pixar or something from Disney Channel. And Tangled is Disney's only good film not just because it doesn't have characters that look like grotesque barbie doll & Pixar model rip-offs, but because it did everything a real Disney animated right; from looking gorgeous, having some old-fashioned story-telling, characters I can actually relate to, & actually having that good old hand-drawn feel to it but in CGI; something none of other Disney's CG films had. And not to mention that it is also one of the best animated films along with The Princess & the Frog, Winnie the Pooh, ParaNorman, Corpse Bride, Frankenweenie, & any film done by Studio Ghibli in the past decade.

Mar 17 - 12:16 AM

Matthew R.

Matthew Reimer

Hey, maybe if you saw the rest of Wreck-It Ralph you'd like it more. It starts off kind of slow and all the cameos are kind of rushed but it has a great ending and a climax that is very surprising.

Mar 17 - 08:30 AM

Frisby2007

Frisby 2007

I heard that, & I assumed that is possibly got better in the next half, so maybe. But in the mean time I'm in no real rush to continue watching it.

Mar 17 - 11:35 AM

Typhon

Typhon Q

Just because a movie is hand drawn doesnt make it good.

Mar 16 - 05:55 PM

Frisby2007

Frisby 2007

I could give less of a shit if the movie is good; a hand drawn (and stop-motion) movie will still get more respect from me than any other medium of animation.

Mar 17 - 12:06 AM

Brad and Netflix

Bradly Martin

You're hiding from the future Man! CG is the wave of the Future!! Tin Tin Looked fantastic and was a great adventure story. Wave of the Future friend!

Mar 17 - 01:36 AM

Frisby2007

Frisby 2007

I don't give a rat's ass what the future is; I want all of these companies to stop with all the ugly CGI movies & get to working on hand drawn & stop-motion movie, not something done for the cash cow.

Mar 17 - 03:12 AM

Troy Solomon

Troy Solomon

wow just wow. I am speechless at how fucking shallow you are. If companies want to make a animated movie that is made with CGI, that's their decision not yours. Somebody really needs to punch you in the face after saying bullshit like that. Particularly a CGI animator.

Mar 17 - 09:04 AM

Brad and Netflix

Bradly Martin

You gotta learn not to be so pissed off about this Man. You'll be miserable! Especially with the 8-10 CGI animated films being released this year alone!

Mar 17 - 02:55 PM

Frisby2007

Frisby 2007

And the 10 animated films coming out this year are supposed to mean what to me?

Mar 18 - 01:50 AM

Janson Jinnistan

Janson Jinnistan

Again, the problem seems to be underestimating the importance of the projects by giving them to relative noobs. "Jurassic Park" deserves a technical pro, "Good Times" deserves Paul Mooney (but seriously, Scott Sanders? Malcolm Lee? Hell, Jimmy Witherspoon can write better material than Phil Johnston), and "Horrible Bosses" needs more Jimmi Simpson, and the Moses movies are just a red wash. Scott owes us a "Prometheus" instead, anyway.

Mar 16 - 12:15 AM

King  S.

King Simba

Nolan wasn't exactly the first name you'd think of to helm a Batman movie and look how that turned out.

Granted, the track record of low budget directors helming a film in a massive franchise has been mixed at best (for every Christopher Nolan, you've got a Gavin Hood), but still I'd rather they pick a director of a critically acclaimed film than someone like Roland Emmerich.

Mar 16 - 02:51 AM

Janson Jinnistan

Janson Jinnistan

Another problem is that the rolodex is so slim. "Tech pro"? For some reason Emmerich is the first name to come up? Kosinski? Blomkamp? Stephen Chow? Maybe Hollywood needs to open their horizons. Ovredal, or that guy from "Troll Hunter"? Does the skill-set needed to make "SNG" match what's needed for "JP4"?
And as for the directors you mentioned below, all of them had to do "proving" films before given the franchises. Nolan's "Memento" and "Insmonia", Jackson's "Frighteners", and Raimi worked in a variety of genre work (Quick and the Dead, Simple Plan) plus his earlier "Darkman" made him a very reasonable choice. Plus, Nolan benefitted from lower expectations, Jackson's LOTR budget was reasonable (compared to the 200+ million budgets). I never thought I'd say it, but I think Favreau is a more qualified choice. (It's also interesting to bring up Forster and Hood - their earlier films, character dramas, don't show the Nolan-Jackson-Raimi kinetic skill required for these kinds of high-action blockbusters. Skill-sets.

Mar 16 - 09:11 AM

Anubhav Panigrahy

Anubhav Panigrahy

Isnt the Sleeping Beauty reboot titled Maleficent and not Malevolent??

Mar 16 - 12:20 AM

Steven Potgeter

Steven Potgeter

Yes but wouldn't the latter title make for a more interesting movie?

Mar 16 - 05:54 AM

Frisby2007

Frisby 2007

No

Mar 17 - 12:17 AM

James B.

James Bradford

Sounds more like a lazy horror director's movie.
Insidious. Sinister. Malevolent.

Mar 18 - 05:55 AM

King  S.

King Simba

I'm happy for fans of Veronica Mars for finally being able to get the movie off the ground, though I fear some studio executive is looking at how quickly Veronica Mars was able to get the budget it needed and thinking "hey, that's a great idea, let's start having the movie going audience pay for the budgets of films".

Not sure about the hiring Colin Trevorrow for the director of Jurassic Park 4. Some of the best blockbusters in the past decade or so were helmed by directors who had only had previous experience in low budget films (Peter Jackson, Christopher Nolan, Sam Raimi, etc) but you've also got directors that as soon as they go into big budget territory they forget everything that made their previous films great (Marc Forstor, Gavin Hood, etc). Plus, I'm not sure what more can you do with a franchise which has been feeling more and more tired out with each new film.

I think one could easily make a case for Horrible Bosses 2 and Beauty and the Beast getting ranked rotten, given how unnecessary the former feels and the track record of fairy tale adaptations so far in regards to the latter. I mean could Disney at least do a live action adaptation of a fairy tale they haven't already done in animated form? This is partly why I'm looking forward to Frozen more than any live action fairy tale adaptation. I couldn't care less about the new Beauty and the Beast disney movie (which I'm sure will only be a shadow of the animated version). My only concern is that this will cause Warner Bros to want to rush their own version meaning they'll probably replace Guillermo del Toro. If that happen, I'm going to....going to....whine and complain on the internet some more I guess.

A former wrestler in a role in Guardians of the Galaxy? I'm going to take a wild guess and say the character is going to be the strong silent type.

Mar 16 - 03:16 AM

Justin D.

Justin D.

Good Times the movie is not a rotten idea, why?

Mar 16 - 08:57 AM

Brad and Netflix

Bradly Martin

I also feel like I was one of the few that wanted to see a Guardians of the Galaxy movie. With each new bit of Casting news the film get's worse and worse. Batista isn't just a wrestler, he's got some of the worst Mic and Charisma in the WWE (when he was in it) This films gonna be the Iron Man 2 of Phase 2.

Mar 16 - 10:07 AM

BMS1234

brandon sideleau

I'm really looking forward to JP IV now...the series needs a fresh pair of eyes and the writers of Planet of the Apes definitely know how to give us a good story. 'Horrible Bosses' was an underrated gem as well if you ask me, usually I;m against comedy sequels but I really wouldn't mind seeing those 3 together again.

Mar 16 - 12:11 PM

JC Martel

JC Martel

Anybody knows how to delete one particular RT friend ?

Mar 16 - 10:39 PM

Frisby2007

Frisby 2007

To their profile; remove friend.

Mar 17 - 12:21 AM

JC Martel

JC Martel

Thanks pal.

Mar 17 - 10:37 AM

Frisby2007

Frisby 2007

Any time.

Mar 18 - 01:51 AM

Jose Rojas

Jose Rojas

Am I the only one who thinks that Bautista being cast as Drax the Destroyer should be a rotten idea? He's not a good actor. It's seems like one of those choices that they went for size rather than talent.

Mar 18 - 08:01 AM

Lance Reeder

Lance Reeder

Yeah, but it's not like Drax necessarily needs Daniel Day Lewis to bring him to life. He's not exactly the greatest character to begin with. Poor Man's Thanos or Mongul without, you know, the interesting.

Mar 19 - 05:43 PM

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