via GIPHY
:BAD PUN DETECTION WARNING:
The town is Derry, which is pronounced like Dairy, and since I've left this blog out too long there is spoilage ahead...(Daniel Louis Krone was crucified and burned at the stake for making this atrocious pun. May he rest in ashy peace.)
“IT” is a loaded gun from the get go just like “Man of Steel” was. Everyone has what their ideal Superman is in their mind much like I think everyone has their idea of what makes a great Pennywise and for fans of the horror genre Pennywise the Dancing Clown of Derry, Maine is just as iconic as the Man of Steel.
Everyone loves Christopher Reeves as Superman even though after all these years turning back time to save Lois is stupid as fuck! And in 1990 everyone loved Tim Curry as Pennywise…but c’mon fucking spider, fucking Ray Harryhousen spider!!! Ahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh fuck!!!
Our loves in cinema are not always perfect much like love is in reality. Ahhh, the human condition, ain’t it swell. And some of us are still afraid to admit that.
:BAD PUN DETECTION WARNING:
The town is Derry, which is pronounced like Dairy, and since I've left this blog out too long there is spoilage ahead...(Daniel Louis Krone was crucified and burned at the stake for making this atrocious pun. May he rest in ashy peace.)
“IT” is a loaded gun from the get go just like “Man of Steel” was. Everyone has what their ideal Superman is in their mind much like I think everyone has their idea of what makes a great Pennywise and for fans of the horror genre Pennywise the Dancing Clown of Derry, Maine is just as iconic as the Man of Steel.
Everyone loves Christopher Reeves as Superman even though after all these years turning back time to save Lois is stupid as fuck! And in 1990 everyone loved Tim Curry as Pennywise…but c’mon fucking spider, fucking Ray Harryhousen spider!!! Ahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh fuck!!!
Our loves in cinema are not always perfect much like love is in reality. Ahhh, the human condition, ain’t it swell. And some of us are still afraid to admit that.
Do you remember how scary “Nightmare on Elm Street” was? And now do you remember that it features a comically silly scene where a cell phone grows lips and a tongue?
(Super serious horror film you guys...super duper serious) or how about a FUCKING HOME ALONE TRAPS MONTAGE?!?!?!? Was Freddy breaking into that dream-house or the wet bandits? What!?!?!?!?!?! Nightmare on Elm Street Traps Montage
(Super serious horror film you guys...super duper serious) or how about a FUCKING HOME ALONE TRAPS MONTAGE?!?!?!? Was Freddy breaking into that dream-house or the wet bandits? What!?!?!?!?!?! Nightmare on Elm Street Traps Montage
Our loves in cinema are not perfect and for the amazing amount of praise this film is getting IT’s not perfect and for me IT’s not a new classic or anything so richly soaked in hyperbole. IT really isn’t about perfection to me though. The novel isn’t perfect and the miniseries isn’t either. IT is about an idea and I love that idea and the lasting power of that idea has lasted 31 years in the hearts and minds of readers and I know will continue to last for a long long time. The haunted town of Derry, Maine is unique to every reader and viewer and that is truly part of what makes Stephen King's IT magical but is also what makes this material more divisive than most. IT is a story that goads the imagination out of us and reminds us what it’s like to have an imagination and especially one that’s incredibly vulnerable. So I’ve seen the 2017 adaptation of Stephen King’s classic novel IT and well it’s exactly what the novel is…a mixed bag.
I’ve been reading threads and watching other people’s reactions to this new IT film and like a very small percentage of films everyone seems to be getting a completely unique experience out of IT. That is both a good and a bad thing. Most people I speak to get slightly different things out of every movie but the people I speak to, especially people in the horror world, seem to be getting drastically different experiences from IT and that comes to one of the core problems with IT and is probably also what is accredited to its distinctive mass appeal…tone. Tonally 2017’s IT is all over the god damn place.
One of the critics I watched kinda described it like Dolores Claiborne, meets Stand By Me, meets The Monster Squad, with a scary clown thrown in for flavor...and that might also be a great descriptor for the novel as well accept as a much richer experience. via GIPHY
One of the critics I watched kinda described it like Dolores Claiborne, meets Stand By Me, meets The Monster Squad, with a scary clown thrown in for flavor...and that might also be a great descriptor for the novel as well accept as a much richer experience. via GIPHY
I had a totally unique experience as I’m sure everyone else did. I saw this film with my identical twin brother via GIPHY
(twins used for reference) who had seen the miniseries and has also read King’s epic novel just like I had. He’s right handed and I’m left handed. He plays guitar and I work in movies. You get the picture. We’re different. Him and I both have similar experiences with the novel and miniseries though. But we had entirely different reactions to this movie. I enjoyed it. I didn’t love it. IT wasn’t the best horror movie I’ve seen in 10 years or anything drastically hyperbolic but it was worth my time and I will probably own it. My brother on the other hand I think saw a partially entertaining but incredibly wasted opportunity to bring something unique to the screen and took the train to disappointment town. via GIPHY(train used for reference)
2017’s IT (much like my blog) has serious tonal problems and a lack of identity. IT has an atmosphere problem too and IT has a trope problem but then again so did the novel. And while the lack of real atmosphere and the inconsistent tone is inexcusable for a film like this, that is to say a large budget film from a major studio based on a beloved work, I still really enjoyed Andy Muschietti's IT. IT is a mixed bag. IT is cinematic trail-mix. Sometimes you’ll get candy, sometimes you’ll get a nut, and sometimes you’ll get something else...something dark bubbling under the surface of Derry and maybe something will crawl up from the depths of that slime in your own mental sewer known as the ID at the back of your mind.
(twins used for reference) who had seen the miniseries and has also read King’s epic novel just like I had. He’s right handed and I’m left handed. He plays guitar and I work in movies. You get the picture. We’re different. Him and I both have similar experiences with the novel and miniseries though. But we had entirely different reactions to this movie. I enjoyed it. I didn’t love it. IT wasn’t the best horror movie I’ve seen in 10 years or anything drastically hyperbolic but it was worth my time and I will probably own it. My brother on the other hand I think saw a partially entertaining but incredibly wasted opportunity to bring something unique to the screen and took the train to disappointment town. via GIPHY(train used for reference)
2017’s IT (much like my blog) has serious tonal problems and a lack of identity. IT has an atmosphere problem too and IT has a trope problem but then again so did the novel. And while the lack of real atmosphere and the inconsistent tone is inexcusable for a film like this, that is to say a large budget film from a major studio based on a beloved work, I still really enjoyed Andy Muschietti's IT. IT is a mixed bag. IT is cinematic trail-mix. Sometimes you’ll get candy, sometimes you’ll get a nut, and sometimes you’ll get something else...something dark bubbling under the surface of Derry and maybe something will crawl up from the depths of that slime in your own mental sewer known as the ID at the back of your mind.
Or wherever it’s kept.
In the frontal lobe…?
Fuck, I don't know. This review or strange ranting hodgepodge of my thoughts on IT isn’t medically accurate or psychologically accurate. Hell it's probably not grammatically accurate. So like Jerry Smith says, "You better cut me some slacks". Also probably not quote accurate.
In the frontal lobe…?
Fuck, I don't know. This review or strange ranting hodgepodge of my thoughts on IT isn’t medically accurate or psychologically accurate. Hell it's probably not grammatically accurate. So like Jerry Smith says, "You better cut me some slacks". Also probably not quote accurate.
This was a spook-house 80’s creature feature with partially a “Monster Squad” or the “Goonies” tone and also was a serious serious coming of age drama about child abuse, bullying, and still managed to squeeze in a few moments that were pure unsettling horror and jokes that were pure comedy gold. But somehow for me 2017's IT still managed to, for the most part, gel together like a complete work should.
Now to the other elephant in the room.
My final thoughts on the film go like this. If the film had a more consistent tone I think IT could have been a home run. Mike Hanlon and Stan Uris got the shaft. What happens to Eddie in the book with the leper could have been made more scary (and not with the inclusion of blow job offers) but with a better pacing of that moment. The Georgie scene was paced very well and edited well in such a way that even if you knew the story you never really knew when the strike was going to take place and that level of unease even if you knew every single beat of IT is what good editing is and should be but the film loses traction when it becomes "The Monster Squad". That I will note is kind of ironic considering they got rid of the parts from the novel that actually have classic movie monsters.
Here is a well read excerpt I found online of The Death of Eddie Corcoran which is by far and away one of my favorite parts of the book.
"The terror, which would not end for another twenty-eight years if it ever did end-began, so far as I know or can tell, with a boat made from a sheet of newspaper floating down a gutter swollen with rain." is one of the most beautiful opening lines of any novel.
The Georgie scene, the most iconic scene from the book, and miniseries, in my mind was pitch perfect and if the film had kept that tone I may be on the boat calling IT a new masterpiece.
via GIPHY
IT takes you back to childhood if you grew up on films from the 80’s. IT takes you back like a phone call among friends brought the losers back to Derry and like the monster in the film has divided audiences in completely unique ways. It doesn’t really matter where IT found you on the spectrum. 2017's IT seems to be having a sincere effect on the horror world, horror fans, and the zeitgeist in general much like the miniseries did to those who grew up on IT and much like the book did to anyone who has read IT. The glamours of the beast transform and change to whatever monster and fear lies inside of you and it seems much like Bob Gray, the Dancing Clown of Derry, Pennywise is still manifesting its shape of fear inside of a new audience and that is very special.
Pennywise has taken something from us all and given us something back. He has reminded us what it feels like to be a vulnerable child and what it's like to have an imagination and for some who had trouble connecting with the children in the film reminded us what it's like to loose that part of our childhood to the monster of time and memory and maybe that's why they're called the losers. It's not because they're 'losers' in the obvious sense that it implies but because they've all lost something to this clown and the adult monsters of Derry. They've lost, like so many of us have, what it means to be a child again and in some way any incarnation of this story reminds us what it's like to have that back just a little bit and just enough to imagine a grinning face in the storm drain inviting us to float down there.
But never forget Stephen King's epic novel IT was and is always about the sacred bonds of real friendships. “Maybe there aren't any such things as good friends or bad friends - maybe there are just friends, people who stand by you when you're hurt and who help you feel not so lonely. Maybe they're always worth being scared for, and hoping for, and living for. Maybe worth dying for too, if that's what has to be. No good friends. No bad friends. Only people you want, need to be with; people who build their houses in your heart.” And there is real magic in that prose.
IT could have been a new horror classic but for me IT was just an entertaining film based on a source I love. The best horror experiences I've had in the past couple of years are . . .
Perhaps all IT (2017) needed for me was more Junji Ito and less "The Monster Squad" but then again to each his own.
My ideal director for this source material would have been Guillermo Del Toro though. His understanding of atmosphere, fairytales, boogymen, the link between boogymen and real world monsters, and childhood trauma would have done well with this material and it's fun to note his new film "The Shape of Water", which is getting great reviews, is about a monster in the water...but maybe, just maybe, this monster lurking from the depths is about something different than our repressed ID. Maybe this monster is something else
but I still liked what we got.
And however you feel there will always be 3 Pennywise's; Tim Curry, Bill Skarsgard, and the one inside of your mind.
The best place to experience the deeply troubled and haunted town of Derry, Maine is, as always with stories, inside your own mind and in your dreams and nightmares.
And that's where Pennywise will always be that place where you aren't sure if you're awake or still dreaming, oh fuck wait nevermind that's Peter Pan.
Okay let’s now address the elephant in the room….
“Hey you elephant get up on out of my room!!!”
God I have no idea how that elephant keeps sneaking in here.
Now to the other elephant in the room.
No space turtle (although references, yippee)
and no . . . . THIS PART OF MY BLOG HAS BEEN DELETED OUT! SORRY FOLKS. THE SUBJECT MATTER CONTAINED IN THIS ASPECT HAS BEEN EJECTED SO THAT I CAN WRITE MORE ON THIS SUBJECT AND ELABORATE MORE ON IT AND POSSIBLY GET IT PUBLISHED IN A REAL PUBLICATION OUTSIDE OF MY BLOG . . . . HIDDEN HORROR'S IN IT < ~ (Here is the questionable easter egg hunt and find.)
via GIPHY
Now that I've presented you with some vague food for thought above is a visual palette cleanser.
Let's discuss a tiny bit about Easter Eggs and visual cues in the film and by discuss I mean just read and discuss IT amongst yourselves:
First of all I'd like to note that the film literally has Easter Eggs in it. An no one has made a pun about that yet out of all that I've watched on lists of Easter Eggs in the film.
Pennywise's mouth while original to some visually seems to be directly inspired by films like "Wicked City" (gif below), Beetlejuice (poster seen in Bill's bedroom) and "The Company of Wolves". Company of Wolves Transformation and Beetlejuice Transformation
(*Of course if not references to film probably just references to things like a goblin shark, whose jaw is probably the origin of this more obscure monster trope.)
Everyone seems to have mentioned the Tracker Bros. shirt, The Christine inspired shirt, the car from Sleepwalkers (Car from Sleepwalkers Easter Egg), The Freese's Shirt, and the Tim Curry clown doll in the clown room and so so so much more so I'm sure if you go digging you'll find things buried deep in the film so I'm just going to mention a few things and then link lists that have already done the research for me.
Pennywise's eyes don't reflect in the water in the basement scene is another wonderfully subtle touch as well as the fact that one of his eyes is staring directly into the camera lens when he kills Georgie. So to the people who said this film has no subtlety and all the scares were jump-scares...well nope this film has plenty of subtle things. You were just distracted by everything else going on to notice them. But then again that is the nature of subtlety but is also what will increase the re-watchability and longevity of this film.
Here are two great videos by New Rockstars on some of the references in IT and one by Looper but in a film this dense I don't think it would be possible to catch them all. New Rockstars How IT Redefines Fear (Oh there's a subliminal flash frame shot in this video if you can catch it.) and New Rockstars IT Easter Eggs plus Looper IT Easter Eggs and there are tons and tons of these lists online if you are curious.
Oh,
But additional things I don't see too many people mentioning online are the addition of the bulb head design created for Tommy Lee Wallace's IT in 1990. Also to note it kinda looks like a babies head, something that Skarsgard modeled the performance after, and also an inflated balloon but Wallace on the IT (1990) commentary noted that he just wanted to use the appliance to make Curry seem subtly off and otherworldly in a way your mind can't quite place a finger on it.
Oh the subtle blue makeup above Tim Curry's eyes could be a reference to Pogo the Clown or John Wayne Gacy as he's known.
Namely tarantulas. And also to note an italian folk song surrounding death is called a tarantella. Here is an example of one from "Interview with the Vampire", Lestat's Tarantella. (Link not working.) Although I don't think Ben Wallfisch, the composer, utilized one in the film but did create a motif similar to Freddy's infamous '1, 2, Freddy's coming for you, 3, 4, better lock your door', so that's always fun. Yes I remember the movie marquee and oh yeah 5 is the one about the baby. But since I mentioned Tarantella's I think I'll point out that musical reference the film uses is from an old nursery rhyme Oranges and Lemons and yes much like most nursery rhymes it does have a sinister theme.
Oh the 'I Love Derry' balloon that Patrick Hockstetter sees is a subtle reference to the gay panic themes of the novel which features a gay man being murdered wearing an 'I Love Derry' hat if I remember correctly and I won't go into the gay themes of the novel because that would be an essay that could be its own book.
But that's another reason why this meme of Pennywise and the Babadook as lovers is bothering me. The entity literally capitalizes on the fears of a recently murdered gay man at the hands of homophobic rednecks at the beginning of the novel and while the Babadook's gay icon origins is a rather interesting story Pennywise, a monster that capitalizes on the gay panic of the 1980's, definitely shouldn't be a gay icon in the slightest. But it's a fucking super cute drawing so who am I to ruin anyone's fun. Of course to note (as it has been noted) it is hinted that the creature is female and if IT is not then it is a shapeshifting entity with no sex whatsoever. Unless deadlights are its own kind of sex. Kinky, kinky, deadlights. I'm too lazy to write a comprehensive and funny joke about gay nightclubs with lights in them.
But if I were to talk about the novel, the miniseries, and this movie, and all of its rich and detailed nuances here this blog would be way, way, way, too long.
To go over everything I noticed watching and researching this film would be incredibly pedantic and to talk about how the book, miniseries, and this new film affected me would be equally pedantic and I don't want this blog to go to the weeds.
Now that I've presented you with some vague food for thought above is a visual palette cleanser.
Let's discuss a tiny bit about Easter Eggs and visual cues in the film and by discuss I mean just read and discuss IT amongst yourselves:
First of all I'd like to note that the film literally has Easter Eggs in it. An no one has made a pun about that yet out of all that I've watched on lists of Easter Eggs in the film.
Pennywise's mouth while original to some visually seems to be directly inspired by films like "Wicked City" (gif below), Beetlejuice (poster seen in Bill's bedroom) and "The Company of Wolves". Company of Wolves Transformation and Beetlejuice Transformation
(*Of course if not references to film probably just references to things like a goblin shark, whose jaw is probably the origin of this more obscure monster trope.)
Everyone seems to have mentioned the Tracker Bros. shirt, The Christine inspired shirt, the car from Sleepwalkers (Car from Sleepwalkers Easter Egg), The Freese's Shirt, and the Tim Curry clown doll in the clown room and so so so much more so I'm sure if you go digging you'll find things buried deep in the film so I'm just going to mention a few things and then link lists that have already done the research for me.
Pennywise's eyes don't reflect in the water in the basement scene is another wonderfully subtle touch as well as the fact that one of his eyes is staring directly into the camera lens when he kills Georgie. So to the people who said this film has no subtlety and all the scares were jump-scares...well nope this film has plenty of subtle things. You were just distracted by everything else going on to notice them. But then again that is the nature of subtlety but is also what will increase the re-watchability and longevity of this film.
Here are two great videos by New Rockstars on some of the references in IT and one by Looper but in a film this dense I don't think it would be possible to catch them all. New Rockstars How IT Redefines Fear (Oh there's a subliminal flash frame shot in this video if you can catch it.) and New Rockstars IT Easter Eggs plus Looper IT Easter Eggs and there are tons and tons of these lists online if you are curious.
Is Georgie's mom dressed like the woman from "Let's Scare Jessica To Death" before she turns into Pennywise in the projector sequence?
even the article I found this photo on that references little Easter Eggs didn't even mention Pennywise is in the mural. Jesus christ man he's right there! Run motherfuckers!!!
And if you know anything about the Novel IT you'd know that the creature at the end of the book manifests itself in the form of a spider. While I'd already mentioned before that the turtle is referenced in the film twice. I haven't seen any other article regarding Easter Eggs in this film that mentions that there is a subtle nod to the spider as well in what I think is a beautifully elegant design choice for Pennywise.
Those beautiful buck teeth and while yes some of his behaviorisms and mannerisms is like that of something trying to imitate a baby...'We all float down there, yes we do, yes we do' as in with Richie after the leper sequence teeth like that are similar to that of spiders and babies with buck teeth.Namely tarantulas. And also to note an italian folk song surrounding death is called a tarantella. Here is an example of one from "Interview with the Vampire", Lestat's Tarantella. (Link not working.) Although I don't think Ben Wallfisch, the composer, utilized one in the film but did create a motif similar to Freddy's infamous '1, 2, Freddy's coming for you, 3, 4, better lock your door', so that's always fun. Yes I remember the movie marquee and oh yeah 5 is the one about the baby. But since I mentioned Tarantella's I think I'll point out that musical reference the film uses is from an old nursery rhyme Oranges and Lemons and yes much like most nursery rhymes it does have a sinister theme.
Oh the 'I Love Derry' balloon that Patrick Hockstetter sees is a subtle reference to the gay panic themes of the novel which features a gay man being murdered wearing an 'I Love Derry' hat if I remember correctly and I won't go into the gay themes of the novel because that would be an essay that could be its own book.
But that's another reason why this meme of Pennywise and the Babadook as lovers is bothering me. The entity literally capitalizes on the fears of a recently murdered gay man at the hands of homophobic rednecks at the beginning of the novel and while the Babadook's gay icon origins is a rather interesting story Pennywise, a monster that capitalizes on the gay panic of the 1980's, definitely shouldn't be a gay icon in the slightest. But it's a fucking super cute drawing so who am I to ruin anyone's fun. Of course to note (as it has been noted) it is hinted that the creature is female and if IT is not then it is a shapeshifting entity with no sex whatsoever. Unless deadlights are its own kind of sex. Kinky, kinky, deadlights. I'm too lazy to write a comprehensive and funny joke about gay nightclubs with lights in them.
But if I were to talk about the novel, the miniseries, and this movie, and all of its rich and detailed nuances here this blog would be way, way, way, too long.
To go over everything I noticed watching and researching this film would be incredibly pedantic and to talk about how the book, miniseries, and this new film affected me would be equally pedantic and I don't want this blog to go to the weeds.
After seeing the film a friend of mine had called me to talk about it and ask me questions from the novel and perhaps in time he’ll pick up that book and let its magic wash over his imagination. He'd recently ordered the miniseries online which will open up the narrative of Derry, Maine further and that is what I do really love about this new film. IT (2017) is opening people up to the treasured story and lighting up people's imagination around Derry and King's masterful coming of age novel.
My final thoughts on the film go like this. If the film had a more consistent tone I think IT could have been a home run. Mike Hanlon and Stan Uris got the shaft. What happens to Eddie in the book with the leper could have been made more scary (and not with the inclusion of blow job offers) but with a better pacing of that moment. The Georgie scene was paced very well and edited well in such a way that even if you knew the story you never really knew when the strike was going to take place and that level of unease even if you knew every single beat of IT is what good editing is and should be but the film loses traction when it becomes "The Monster Squad". That I will note is kind of ironic considering they got rid of the parts from the novel that actually have classic movie monsters.
Here is a well read excerpt I found online of The Death of Eddie Corcoran which is by far and away one of my favorite parts of the book.
"The terror, which would not end for another twenty-eight years if it ever did end-began, so far as I know or can tell, with a boat made from a sheet of newspaper floating down a gutter swollen with rain." is one of the most beautiful opening lines of any novel.
The Georgie scene, the most iconic scene from the book, and miniseries, in my mind was pitch perfect and if the film had kept that tone I may be on the boat calling IT a new masterpiece.
IT takes you back to childhood if you grew up on films from the 80’s. IT takes you back like a phone call among friends brought the losers back to Derry and like the monster in the film has divided audiences in completely unique ways. It doesn’t really matter where IT found you on the spectrum. 2017's IT seems to be having a sincere effect on the horror world, horror fans, and the zeitgeist in general much like the miniseries did to those who grew up on IT and much like the book did to anyone who has read IT. The glamours of the beast transform and change to whatever monster and fear lies inside of you and it seems much like Bob Gray, the Dancing Clown of Derry, Pennywise is still manifesting its shape of fear inside of a new audience and that is very special.
Pennywise has taken something from us all and given us something back. He has reminded us what it feels like to be a vulnerable child and what it's like to have an imagination and for some who had trouble connecting with the children in the film reminded us what it's like to loose that part of our childhood to the monster of time and memory and maybe that's why they're called the losers. It's not because they're 'losers' in the obvious sense that it implies but because they've all lost something to this clown and the adult monsters of Derry. They've lost, like so many of us have, what it means to be a child again and in some way any incarnation of this story reminds us what it's like to have that back just a little bit and just enough to imagine a grinning face in the storm drain inviting us to float down there.
But never forget Stephen King's epic novel IT was and is always about the sacred bonds of real friendships. “Maybe there aren't any such things as good friends or bad friends - maybe there are just friends, people who stand by you when you're hurt and who help you feel not so lonely. Maybe they're always worth being scared for, and hoping for, and living for. Maybe worth dying for too, if that's what has to be. No good friends. No bad friends. Only people you want, need to be with; people who build their houses in your heart.” And there is real magic in that prose.
IT could have been a new horror classic but for me IT was just an entertaining film based on a source I love. The best horror experiences I've had in the past couple of years are . . .
And the scariest horror experience I've had in most recent years doesn't even go to a film. It goes to a videogame titled P.T. featuring a Ghost named Lisa.
Perhaps all IT (2017) needed for me was more Junji Ito and less "The Monster Squad" but then again to each his own.
My ideal director for this source material would have been Guillermo Del Toro though. His understanding of atmosphere, fairytales, boogymen, the link between boogymen and real world monsters, and childhood trauma would have done well with this material and it's fun to note his new film "The Shape of Water", which is getting great reviews, is about a monster in the water...but maybe, just maybe, this monster lurking from the depths is about something different than our repressed ID. Maybe this monster is something else
And however you feel there will always be 3 Pennywise's; Tim Curry, Bill Skarsgard, and the one inside of your mind.
The best place to experience the deeply troubled and haunted town of Derry, Maine is, as always with stories, inside your own mind and in your dreams and nightmares.
And that's where Pennywise will always be that place where you aren't sure if you're awake or still dreaming, oh fuck wait nevermind that's Peter Pan.
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