Christian Cawley's Blog, page 148
January 12, 2015
New BBC Three Show Follows Doctor Who World Tour!
Christian Cawley is a writer at Kasterborous Doctor Who News and Reviews - All the latest Doctor Who news and reviews with our weekly podKast, features and interviews, and a long-running forum.
BBC Three has announced plans to broadcast a new show following 2014’s successful promotional world tour in which Doctor Who stars Peter Capaldi and Jenna Coleman visited countries around the globe to highlight the return of the series.
You may recall that the Doctor Who world tour took in Cardiff, London, Seoul, Sydney, New York and Rio last August, with each event showcased by a public appearance and photoshoot, culminating with a premier screening of Deep Breath in London.
Doctor Who: Earth Conquest – the World Tour premiered on BBC America on August 22nd, but hasn’t been seen in too many placed since.
Previously released in the UK as a Series 8 DVD boxset extra, it will now be shown on BBC Three at 7pm this Friday, January 16th 2015, giving everyone who hasn’t received the DVD/Blu-ray boxset a chance to enjoy it!
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Richard E Grant To Star In New ITV Action Show Jekyll & Hyde
Christian Cawley is a writer at Kasterborous Doctor Who News and Reviews - All the latest Doctor Who news and reviews with our weekly podKast, features and interviews, and a long-running forum.
Original Ninth Doctor, Dr Simeon and The Great Intelligence, Mr Richard E Grant, has landed a key role in a new genre action show for ITV, Jekyll & Hyde, which is the latest reworking of Robert Louis Stevenson’s Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde (fans may recall Steven Moffat’s own Jekyll back in 2007 starring James Nesbitt and Planet of the Dead‘s Michelle Ryan).
Like Jekyll, the conceit behind Jekyll & Hyde is an updating with the main character, played by Tom Bateman (Da Vinci’s Demons) a descendant of the original Dr Jekyll. This time, however, the main character is a grandson, and the show is set in the 1930s.
Richard E Grant, whose long career beyond Doctor Who has seen him take on roles as diverse as an out of work alcoholic actor with delusions of grandeur in Withnail & I (in which he starred with Paul McGann), a hero in Warlock, various villains and even The Spice Girls Movie (not to mention regular appearances in costume dramas on TV and in cinema) will play Sir Roger Bulstrode, who heads the secret government department M10, known as ‘The Invisible Men.’ Also cast in a key role is Last Christmas guest Natalie Gumede is Bella who forms part of a love triangle with Robert. Production on the series starts later this month in Sri Lanka before moving to London from February through July.
Also cast is Ace Bhatti, best known to fans as the father of Rani Chandra in The Sarah Jane Adventures. Four years after Primeval ended it’s good to see ITV finally attempting something involving action, adventure and CGI again!
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Support the One to One Children’s Fund, Ambassador: Jenna Coleman
Christian Cawley is a writer at Kasterborous Doctor Who News and Reviews - All the latest Doctor Who news and reviews with our weekly podKast, features and interviews, and a long-running forum.
Did you know that Jenna Coleman was ambassador for the One to One Children’s Fund? This is asmall charity that aims to help children affected by disease in unde resourced regions.
The video above is around 10 minutes long and features Jenna visiting Africa. It makes for sobering stuff, but we can at least admire Jenna for taking time away from her showbiz life to do her bit for raising attention for the charity.
Of her work with the organisation, the Doctor Who star has said “I feel incredibly moved and inspired by the work this small charity is doing on the ground to ensure children living with HIV not only have access to life-saving treatment, but that they and their families receive constant support in their own community”.
You can support One to One Children’s Fund by visiting www.onetoonechildrensfund.org/donatenow
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January 11, 2015
Titan Comics Editor Reveals More Miniseries – For Classic Doctors!
Philip Bates is a writer at Kasterborous Doctor Who News and Reviews - All the latest Doctor Who news and reviews with our weekly podKast, features and interviews, and a long-running forum.
Fantastic news for fans of Titan Comics’ excellent series: more are on the way!
Editor, Andrew James, has revealed that, after the Ninth Doctor miniseries, further ones starring previous Doctors will be released!
“Each miniseries will be five issues long, and after each miniseries ends, you’ll get a new #1, with a new incarnation of the Doctor and a new creative team,” he explains. “So The Ninth Doctor series will run from March through to July – with a new Doctor taking over that slot in the schedule for five issues from August!”
And he implies that we’ll get new Classic Who: “We want to make sure that fans from every era are getting the chance to read new stories with the Doctors they love, and that they’re being surprised and challenged by those stories, too. How to do that without spooking readers or retailers on a budget – that’s always the balancing act, and one over which we take the greatest of care.”
Frankly, seeing new tales for the past Doctors will be an absolute treat, in much the same way IDW’s Prisoners of Time 50th celebratory series was! These will be in addition to the regular titles for the Tenth, Eleventh and Twelfth Doctors. I wonder which creative teams will be flexing their muscles…
“I’m really passionate about the comics we’re producing,” Andrew continues, “and I hope that that passion, and the love shown by all of the writers and artists who work on them, shines through on every page!”
As ever, keep an eye on Kasterborous for all your Titan comic news, as well as ongoing reviews.
The post Titan Comics Editor Reveals More Miniseries – For Classic Doctors! appeared first on Kasterborous Doctor Who News and Reviews.
Everything You Need To Know About Doctor Who Series 9
James Lomond is a writer at Kasterborous Doctor Who News and Reviews - All the latest Doctor Who news and reviews with our weekly podKast, features and interviews, and a long-running forum.
Welcome, Kasterborite! You’re here… THIS is where we will be amassing every ounce of data we can squeeze out of the interweb on Capaldi’s second hurrah, Doctor Who Series 9.
Over the weeks and months we will be gradually adding to this repository to create the closest thing to a crystal ball. Feel free to muse, hypothesise and fantasize (steady), about the immediate future of Who.
Our sources will be linked to below but of course we cannot guarantee the veracity of what is announced. Plans change and rumors abound – we will endeavour to report ONLY what is said/ written and indicate who said/ wrote it.
Needless to say there will be SPOILERS and you venture below at your peril. You may disagree with the thoughts of your Komrades but please remember the forum rules on conduct. Now, if that’s all clear, park your time capsule, turn on the HADS and feast your eyes on Series 9 info-crumpets below…
Doctor Who Series 9.
Filming commenced on Monday 5th January 2015.
Air date: expected in Autumn (Fall) 2015.
WRITERS:
Steven Moffat
Catherine Treganna
Treganna is the first female writer on Doctor Who since Helen Raynor’s Sontaran two-parter in 2008.
DIRECTORS:
Daniel O’Hara
O’Hara’s CV indicates he will be directing two 60 minute long episodes. These could be the series opener and closer or perhaps the 2015 Christmas special. His previous work includes supernatural drama Being Human and RTD’s Wizards vs. Aliens.
EPISODE TITLES:
The Magician’s Apprentice (Steven Moffat) – Last Christmas end titles.
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[Christmas Special 2015]
Unnumbered titles rumoured:
The first episode to go before the cameras is rumoured to be called Written in the Stars (from Twitter #DWSR)
CAST:
Peter Capaldi: The Doctor
Jenna Coleman: Clara Oswald (presumed)
Michelle Gomez: Missy
In DWM 480 Gomez stated that she would be returning in Series 9 as Missy.
Paul Kaye: Prentis
According to doctorwhotv, Actor/ Comedian Paul Kaye will be playing a character called “Prentis” in a Block One episode.
Known for recent work in Ripper Street and a saucy turn as Thoros of Myr in Game of Thrones. Kaye does a natty line in sinister, quirky and unpredictable types. If you caught the Sunday Show back in the late 90s you might have caught his celebrity-baiting comic creation Dennis Pennis. Parental ADVISORY.
The post Everything You Need To Know About Doctor Who Series 9 appeared first on Kasterborous Doctor Who News and Reviews.
Learn How To Say Shut Up The Doctor Who Way [VIDEO]
Christian Cawley is a writer at Kasterborous Doctor Who News and Reviews - All the latest Doctor Who news and reviews with our weekly podKast, features and interviews, and a long-running forum.
Steven Moffat is a rude man. One only has to look at the double entendres and insults that litter his work all the way back to Press Gang to see that he is a potty mouthed scribe, keen on constructing some embarrassing situations for his many creations, resulting in shock, dread and shame from them.
And then there’s “shut up”. The most simple, obtuse response to hearing things you don’t like, a phrase that has wrongly found its way into the Doctor’s own vast lexicon over the past few months.
Frankly, this level of basic rudeness is in sharp contrast to who the Doctor really should be, but just in case you enjoy the various choruses of machine gun rudeness – a far cry from the inventive x-rated expletives of Malcolm Tucker – then click play above, where you will hear “every Shut Up!, Hush!, Shhh, Be Quiet, etc… from Doctor Who Series 8 through to Last Christmas.”
Enjoy.
But don’t be rude.
The post Learn How To Say Shut Up The Doctor Who Way [VIDEO] appeared first on Kasterborous Doctor Who News and Reviews.
Has The Doctor Already Met His Next Companion?
Rebecca Crockett is a writer at Kasterborous Doctor Who News and Reviews - All the latest Doctor Who news and reviews with our weekly podKast, features and interviews, and a long-running forum.
Welcome, once again dear reader, to the Kasterborous Speculation Game, where we take a spin on the wheel of What Will Happen Next!
For those of you that are first timers to the game, let me tell you more about it. Once every year or so, since the great rebirth of Who in 2005, we are gifted with a new series of episodes. After that time, we (ie the fandom) LOVE to gather ’round our tea kettles and speculate on What Will Happen Next! while we wait for the powers that be (ie the Beeb, Steven Moffat) to bless us with new episodes. Now, while I’ve not been around in the fandom as long as others, I’m pretty safe betting that this same game has been played, well, since the beginning of the fandom. And we are hardly the first to do this, but I daresay we seem to have made it almost an art form.
From endless rounds of Who Will Be The Next Doctor? to What Did That Mean? to Is It All Connected? to the perennial (sometimes weekly) favourite Is “X” Really Dead? we love to postulate on the what, where, when, and why of it all. So, shall we play our game?! Today’s question – Have we seen the next companion?
Be honest – raise your hand if you thought we’d see more of Danny Pink traveling with the Doc and Clara than what ended up happening. We had a pair for so long with the Eleventh Doctor that when the character of Danny Pink was announced, many of us just automatically assumed that he’d be some form of another Rory, the significant other to the Doctor’s companion who eventually becomes a full fledged companion himself. But what we got was quite the opposite, someone in Clara’s life that knew about the Doctor and didn’t want anything to do with him and who thought that Clara should leave him as soon as possible. So now that we know she’s decided to stick around, what would happen if someone joined her? And what about when the day comes when Clara really does leave? We all know the Doctor shouldn’t travel alone.
So let’s play!
Courtney Woods
Out of all the people the Doctor has met this season, I think Courtney would be the best thing to happen to him in a long time. This is supposed to be a “children’s programme” after all, isn’t it? So what about adding someone who is still a child to the TARDIS? Granted, she would need supervision, but that’s where Clara comes in – she is Courtney’s teacher and can make sure she is safe. But it would be a good opportunity to have someone in the TARDIS that is just as much of a troublemaker as the Doctor is and maybe bring out a nice old grandpa type quality in the Doctor, maybe soften him a bit, give him the chance to act like a teacher. Plus the innocence of a child, the joy at seeing new worlds, might make the stress of trying to find Gallifrey more bearable. Since we all figure we know what Courtney will eventually become, thanks to Clara’s sticky notes, wouldn’t it be interesting to see some of that story, how it all starts out? Imagine if she was the one along for the ride when the TARDIS did once again really land on Gallifrey. All of the things that a human could learn…
Bonus: Courtney has already been on two trips in the TARDIS and knows what it’s like to have an adventure with the Doctor. So if she went, she’d already know what she was getting herself into.
Osgood
OF COURSE we would all love to see Osgood have an adventure or two with the Doctor. I mean really, we all know that her role was partly a stand-in for the fandom as a whole, the lucky one of any of us that would most certainly run off with the Doctor if he ever came along. Wearing Four’s scarf, Ten’s sandshoes, Eleven’s bowtie, she looks like she stepped out of a Doctor Who convention. But there is that small matter of her seemingly being dead. But then again, some people tend not to stay dead on Doctor Who… (See – it’s a round of Is “X” Dead?!)
Plus, she’s the only one on this list that has never actually stepped foot into the TARDIS. All the rest have in some form!
Missy
Oh boy. This would be interesting to say the least. The Doctor and the Mas…err the Mistress in the same TARDIS together. Would they even be able to get anywhere? All I can see is constant scheming and evil planning on Missy’s part, trying to stop the Doctor from doing anything. After a while she’d drive him even more mad than he already is. And let’s not forget all the things Missy’s previous incarnations have done to the TARDIS. The Blue Box wouldn’t be too happy carrying around the Master as a passenger no matter what form he was in. Plus, she too is seemingly dead. Seemingly. Which means we’ll be seeing more of her soon enough.
But the Mistress and the Doctor, together searching for Gallifrey would be interesting, given their past history and previous friendship. Clara might almost feel like a third wheel…
Psi and Saibra
This would end up making it a quartet on the TARDIS. I honestly can’t imagine having one without the other, though that is possible. But in my thinking, Psi and Saibra are linked, having been the Doctor’s “partners in crime” in Time Heist. But are either worthy of becoming the Doctor’s traveling companions? I’m on the fence about this pair.
I mean, sure, who wouldn’t want a tech whiz aboard a living machine that always needs repairs? It might be nice to have someone a tech savvy aboard but we all know the Doctor might (re: would) get jealous having someone else work on his only ever constant companion. Plus there is Psi’s background to consider – he was a robber and a hacker. While the Doctor doesn’t generally care that much about someone’s life before he came along, he might think twice before having such a person on board the TARDIS, given the wealth of information she has stored in her data core. All that future info might be a bit too tempting for a hacker. Psi did show incredible loyalty though, in being willing to erase even the memories of those he loved in order to protect them. Loyalty is something the Doctor seems to respect a great deal.
Having someone with the potential to be a shape changer as a companion might just come in handy for all those new worlds. It would only take an instant for Saibra to look like she was a native. The Doctor himself is a bit of a shape changer, so having her aboard would be someone he might share a different understanding with than his other companions. But again, what about her background? We know that she couldn’t really control the power very well while she was with the Doctor, and she assumedly took whatever that was to help suppress it so she might not have the ability any more. Her ability is really all we know about her.
Shona McCullough
I’m sorry but to me, while Faye Marsay was quite lovely in Last Christmas, there really isn’t a lot that makes me want to see more of her Shona McCullough aboard the TARDIS. While she did boogie her way into many people’s hearts, I’m not sure she has much potential beyond that, and if anything, the Doctor usually tends to take along those that are in some way exceptional. There are a good number of fans out there that would argue in her defense, however, stating that she was brave trying to dance her way through that room, that she was sassy and had a great attitude – she’s the one that told the Doctor he looked like a magician – and that she dreams of a better life and of being a scientist – all things that would make a great companion.
It would also be interesting having two women in the TARDIS with the Doctor, with neither one of them even remotely thinking of him as a love interest. That’s certainly a dynamic we haven’t seen before in nuWho. Having both Shona and Clara in the TARDIS could lead to having Clara being a mentor to her or just a friend that helps her understand how the Doctor is, and have it be something of a transitional period before Clara decides to truly leave. Also, given her comment on what he’s dressed like, if Shona were to join the TARDIS crew, she might just jokingly call herself “the magician’s assistant.”
So that’s my bit of speculation for this round of the game. What about you, dear reader? What do you think of my assessment of these possible new companions? What previously seen character would you like to see on board the TARDIS?
The post Has The Doctor Already Met His Next Companion? appeared first on Kasterborous Doctor Who News and Reviews.
January 10, 2015
How The Planned 1990s American Doctor Who Might Have Turned Out…
Nick Kitchen is a writer at Kasterborous Doctor Who News and Reviews - All the latest Doctor Who news and reviews with our weekly podKast, features and interviews, and a long-running forum.
Most Whovians love the Paul McGann Doctor. You needn’t look any further than massive amount of views the McGann starring 50th Anniversary Special minisode, Night of the Doctor, racked up on YouTube and iPlayer to see the popularity of the short lived (on the TV, anyway) Eighth Doctor. Likewise, most fans of the show know that the 1996 TV Movie aired in the US on Fox was meant to spur on a new continuation of the classic series.
What you may not know is that a partnership between CBS, Amblin, and the BBC began developing an attempt at a US adaptation in 1994 that would have seen the Doctor in a slightly different way than what we saw in the TV Movie. Various resources have attempted to catalogue and preserve this unmade vision of Doctor Who (such as Philip Segal and Gary Russell’s Doctor Who: Regeneration and early Kasterborous interview subject Jean-Marc Lofficier’s The Nth Doctor
, not to mention the error-riddled page at The Hidden Planet) and it is all very interesting, to say the very least.
The crux of the material comes from a “writer’s guide” that was penned by John Leekley, the apparent writer and producer for the planned series. It detailed the Doctor’s history, and among other things, outlines for several episodes. Based on what has been posted of what some refer to as the “Leekley Bible”, it’s apparent that the plan was to borrow heavily from the plot lines of several classic Doctor Who episodes, with little original stories being produced. For example, here is the outline for what Leekley titled, The Daleks:
“The Doctor is captured by the Time Lords and by decree of his brother and Lord President of Gallifrey, the Master, is sent to Skaro to prevent the creation of the Daleks. The Time Lords have foreseen that the Daleks become the major destructive for in the galaxy. The Doctor meets with Davros, the Kaleds chief scientist and they work together to stop the mutation of the Kaled race, which he believes will evolve to become Daleks. They divert their efforts to create a protective case for the mutants so that they can survive. The Doctor realises that Davros is modifying the mutants to remove their emotions and increasing their desire to kill, and creating the daleks. From here on in it follows the story of ‘Genesis of the Daleks’, however it is revealed that the Master has manipulated the Doctor into helping create the Daleks, so that he can take control of them and control the galaxy. The Doctor uses the TARDIS to go back to the point where he initially arrived at in order to kill Davros by wiping out the small nuclear device that powers his chair, but he can’t do it. ‘Some things are not for men to decide, we are not Gods.'”
The collaboration between studios and Leekley also sought to redesign the two most well known Who villains: the Daleks and the Cybermen, now relabelled “Cybs”.
The Daleks are described as being more spider-like and sketches produced for Amblin are far more menacing than any Dalek design we’ve seen in the classic or modern Who eras (save perhaps Series 3’s Human Dalek…very disturbing!). They may have looked something like this:
The Cybermen Cybs appeared more like Star Wars‘ Tusken Raiders with cybernetic enhancements. Also potentially better designed for “behind the couch” moments than the “Iron Man-esque” design we’ve had since Series 7.
Differences aside, some of the Leekley series premiere concepts did find their way into the 1996 TV Movie, mainly being the Master as the main antagonist and the Doctor being half-human on his mother’s side (what we’ve conveniently dusted aside as a crazy comment was a central plot point in the earlier proposed series). Leekley’s “pilot” took place on Galifrey and also featured Cardinal Borusa and the Daleks. Of note is that there is no mention of a regeneration sequence, thus how we arrived from the McCoy Doctor to this Doctor would have been unseen, much like the beginnings of the Ninth Doctor. There is also no mention of McGann being cast as this series’ Doctor, which means we could have had an entirely different Eighth Doctor.
Of course, history is what it is and we had Paul McGann as our wonderful Eighth Doctor in place of this initial attempt at reviving Doctor Who in the US (some sources indicate that it is Steven Spielberg who demanded Leekley be fired, which resulted in the scrapping of the Leekley material). While this writer believes it for the best, it does make one wonder what would have been had this version of the Doctor graced our screens for a pilot or a full season. Some of the concepts are interesting, but remaking classic episodes seems a bit of waste. While it would have been mostly new to American viewers, it would seem almost sacrilege to remake Genesis of the Daleks or Tomb of the Cybermen, especially given the performances of Troughton and Baker, respectively.
What do you think, fellow Kasterborites? Would you have wanted to see this version of Doctor Who made? Or even with it’s missteps, are you happier with the TV Movie?
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Doctor Who Director Fiona Cumming, 1937-2015
Jonathan Appleton is a writer at Kasterborous Doctor Who News and Reviews - All the latest Doctor Who news and reviews with our weekly podKast, features and interviews, and a long-running forum.
Sad news to report with the death on New Year’s Day of Fiona Cumming who directed four stories in the Fifth Doctor era of Doctor Who.
Fiona Cumming’s directing credits for the programme included a number of key moments, including the debut of Peter Davison as the Doctor in Castrovalva (1982) and the introduction of new companion Peri together with extensive overseas filming in Planet of Fire (1984).
Perhaps her finest achievements as a director for Doctor Who, however, were her two stories for Season 20 in 1983. Snakedance saw the return of the Mara and has come to be regarded as one of the series’ most intricate and characterful stories (check out Robert Shearman’s contributions on the DVD release for a thoughtful analysis). Enlightenment later that season gave us some of the finest effects work ever produced in Doctor Who, with the reveal of the vessels floating in space at the end of the first episode one of the all-time classic episode endings.
She started her career as an actress, an early appearance coming in a 1963 episode of Dr Finlay’s Casebook, and took a number of roles in film and television, including as an announcer for Border Television.
In 1964 she made the move into production and served as Assistant Floor Manager on The Massacre of St Bartholomew’s Eve in the William Hartnell era. She later worked as Production Assistant on The Highlanders and The Seeds of Death, both with Patrick Troughton’s Doctor, and The Mutants with Jon Pertwee.
After becoming a staff director with the BBC in 1974 she directed some of their leading dramas including Z Cars, Angels and Play for Today. Other genre credits besides Doctor Who were The Omega Factor (1979) and the episodes Sarcophagus and Rumours of Death for the third series of Blake’s Seven (1980).
Interestingly, Fiona was scheduled to direct The Ultimate Evil by Wally K Daly for Season 23 but this was cancelled when the programme was put on hiatus. She didn’t return as a director to Doctor Who but had a brief cameo role as a tourist in part one of Silver Nemesis and stayed close to producer John Nathan-Turner, joining up with him to work on projects for Teynham Productions.
In later years she was happy to discuss her work on Doctor Who with regular guest appearances at conventions and as an interviewee on DVD releases of her stories. She oversaw preparation of a special edition re-edit of Enlightenment for that story’s release as part of the Black Guardian trilogy box set in 2009, and just a few months ago recalled her time working on Doctor Who.
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January 9, 2015
Doncaster’s Digi-Con Welcomes Peter Davison & Paul McGann
Christian Cawley is a writer at Kasterborous Doctor Who News and Reviews - All the latest Doctor Who news and reviews with our weekly podKast, features and interviews, and a long-running forum.
By ‘eck, ducks, head off ta Donnie this weekend an’ you’ll spot a pair of bleeding Time Lords, by thunder!
Ahem. Yes, it is this weekend in which the former stars of Doctor Who, Paul McGann and Peter Davison will be attending Digi-Con “the ultimate geek weekend” at Doncaster Racecourse.
A spokesman said: “Digi-Con is a new weekend long convention. It will bring a variety of special guests, panels, shows and over 100 trader tables to appease your geeky needs!”
If you’re in South Yorkshire or even Derbyshire, this is definitely an event that you should make some effort to get to, if only for the presence of those two esteemed actors. Let’s face it, they are two of the most popular actors of their generations beyond Doctor Who, both having successful careers before and beyond the show, so there is plenty to ask them (and if you get stuck, fall back on All Creatures Great and Small and Withnail & I for inspiration!)
Other guests include Darth Vader actor Dave Prowse while attractions include a life size Simpsons sofa, vehicles from The A-Team and Knight Rider, the usual Daleks and TARDIS and even a Battlestar Galactica reproduction.
Digi-Con opens at 10am – 9am for VIP ticket holders – and is open until 8pm on both Saturday and Sunday to all ages, although under 12’s must of course be accompanied by an adult over the age of 16.
Missed tickets? You should be able to buy them at the venue. Find out more at digi-con.co.uk.
The post Doncaster’s Digi-Con Welcomes Peter Davison & Paul McGann appeared first on Kasterborous Doctor Who News and Reviews.
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