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Review
my favorite western music of last 30 years-3
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Sous
le ciel de Paris/Under the Paris Sky
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No.
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Explanation
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Listen
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Right click to download
Mp3
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001
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Sung
by Edith Piaf
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002
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Sung
by Yves Montand
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003
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Played by accordion
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First see some video about the "Sous
le ciel de Paris" (All video are saved in our web site): |
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002-Three
tenors singing "Sous le ciel de Paris" 2'19"
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005
- Very magnificent Bayang (accordion)
2'33"
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006-A
street little band Ooh La La 3'51"
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007-
Paris in painting
3'13"
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008
- More face of Paris
9'32"
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This song is a theme of the French
movie "Sous le ciel de Paris/Under the Paris Sky". Below
are its information:
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A brief
of the movie (IMDB)
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Sous le
ciel de Paris/La Seine coule à Paris (1951)
Director:
Julien Duvivier
Writers: Julien Duvivier
René Lefèvre
Henri Jeanson
Produced by Arys Nissotti
Pierre O'Connell
Original Music by Jean Wiener
Runtime:114 min
Country:France
Language:French
Color:Black and White
Aspect Ratio:1.37 : 1 more
Sound Mix:Mono (Western Electric Sound System)
Also Known
As (AKA)
Unter dem Himmel von Paris Austria / West Germany
Pariisin taivaan alla Finland
Seine coule à Paris, La France (working title)
Sotto il cielo di Parigi Italy
Sous le ciel de Paris coule la Seine France
Under Paris himmel Sweden
Under the Paris Sky USA
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Cast:
Brigitte Auber .... Denise Lambert
Jean Brochard .... Jules Hermenault
René Blancard .... Le professeur Bertelin (as Rene
Blancard)
Paul Frankeur .... Milou
Raymond Hermantier .... Mathias, l'artiste
Daniel Ivernel .... Georges Forestier
Pierre Destailles .... Michel
Jacques Clancy .... Armand Mestre (as Jacques Clancy
de la Comédi
Christiane Lénier .... Marie-Thérèse (as Christiane
Lenier)
Marie-France .... La petite Colette Malingret
Fran?ois Périer .... Récitant (voice) (as Fran?ois
Perier)
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Plot:
Sous le Ciel de Paris was the second of director Julien
Duvivier's 1950 French films. The story follows the
grim and bloody path trod by an unknown psycho killer.
Duvivier cannily plays the film's melodrama against
the glamorous backdrops of fin de siecle Paris, concentrating
on a handful of people whose lives are profoundly
affected, directly and indirectly, by the fugitive
murder. The best vignettes feature elderly character
actress Sylvie as a spinster devoted to her houseful
of cats, and Brigitte Auber as a wide-eyed country
lass.
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Ce qui suit
dévoile des moments clés de l’intrigue.
Sous le ciel de Paris, durant une journée, nous assistons
aux grands et petits évènements qui se produisent
dans la vie de quelques personnes dont les destins
vont s’interférer. Ainsi, une pauvre vieille demoiselle,
après avoir cherché, en vain, toute la journée de
quoi nourrir ses chats, re?oit la récompense inespérée
d’une mère qui, grace à elle, a retrouvé le soir sa
petite fille égarée depuis le matin. Une jeune fille,
rêvant au grand amour, refuse celui de son ami d’enfance
pour finir sous les coups de couteau d’un sculpteur
sadique. |
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Ce dernier
est abattu par un policier qui a accidentellement
blessé un ouvrier qui rentrait chez lui après l'heureuse
issue d'un mouvement de grève. Hospitalisé d'urgence,
le blessé est sauvé grace à la première opération
à c?ur ouvert pratiquée par un jeune chirurgien qui
vient d'être recalé à son examen d'internat… Sous
le ciel de Paris, tout finit comme le dit la chanson
:
Mais le ciel de Paris
N'est pas longtemps cruel
Pour se faire pardonner
Il offre un arc-en-ciel…
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Commentaire |
Le film foisonne
de tellement d’idées et d’innovations que, paradoxalement,
cela semble l’avoir desservi. à vouloir montrer
les multiples facettes de la capitale en recourant
à une multitude d’expressions filmiques, Julien
Duvivier provoque un flot trop frénétique d’images.
Les commentaires écrits par Henri Jeanson et dits
par Fran?ois Perrier en voix off servent de fil
rouge en même temps que l'on entend tourner la roue
du Destin avec le bruit de celui de la roulette
des jeux de hasard. Ces chroniques urbaines, tant?t
poétiques, humoristiques, lyriques, gouailleuses
et acerbes tentent, vainement, de lier les multiples
aspects de la Ville lumière. Duvivier va du reportage
artistique (Christian Dior, la haute couture, la
mode) jusqu’au documentaire social et médical (l’occupation
de l’usine par les ouvriers, la vie à l’H?tel-Dieu)
en passant par la narration fictive. En même temps,
il utilise différents styles esthétiques : images
lumineuses pour les scènes au Palais de Chaillot,
aux Tuileries, sur la Seine et ses quais, grisaille
pour les séquences ouvrières, clair-obscur pour
les séquences nocturnes. Le spectateur est abasourdi
par la virtuosité et l’avant-gardisme de Duvivier
qui a tout inventé bien avant la Nouvelle Vague.
Le film se déroule presque totalement en extérieurs.
Caméra au poing, 26 ans avant Claude Lelouch (C'était
un rendez-vous, 1976), le réalisateur déboule à
toute vitesse en voiture écartant devant elle la
circulation (fluide à l'époque) des rues pour rallier
l’h?pital en temps record. On s’essouffle à courir
d’un quartier à l’autre : du Champ-de-Mars en passant
par Chaillot, Mouffetard, Le Marais, les Champs-élysées,
le village (disparu) de Bercy, Ménilmontant (hommage
à Charles Trenet), les Invalides, Montmartre. Le
spectateur ne sait plus où donner de la tête et
a des difficultés à adhérer à chacun des sketches
qui auraient pu faire l’objet d’un film spécifique.
Mademoiselle Perrier et ses chats : Sylvie, incarnation
de la solitude en pleine ville, aussi grande que
la Tour Eiffel, aussi minuscule qu’une fourmi sur
l’immense esplanade des Invalides. Denise, provinciale
na?ve et romantique éperdue, subjuguée et finalement
foudroyée par la fulgurance des beautés et des dangers
de la Ville (Brigitte Auber). La fillette fugueuse
et son petit copain hableur, vrai titi, copie conforme
de Gavroche, partent à l’aventure sur la Seine suivant
la thématique du Bateau ivre d’Arthur Rimbaud (poète
qu'affectionnait Duvivier). Les deux gamins ? voient
?, éblouis, avec leurs yeux innocents, les contrées
invisibles et mystérieuses qui bordent le fleuve.
Le c?ur de l’ouvrier, symbole du c?ur populaire
de Paris (qui, selon Duvivier, doit survivre co?te
que co?te) est amoureusement ramené à la vie par
l’un des anges-gardiens de la capitale (le médecin
Daniel Ivernel). La Seine, artère palpitante du
corps de la Ville, draine vie (les enfants en canot)
et mort (le cadavre dérivant). En même temps, Duvivier,
documentariste et témoin de son temps, nous ramène
à nos préoccupations écologistes actuelles : en
1950, les Parisiens se baignent et pêchent dans
la Seine. On plonge depuis les quais du Louvre,
on pique-nique sur les quais rive gauche (le bistrotier
Paul Frankeur et sa famille) où Duvivier filme sa
séquence d’anthologie : le chanteur Jean Bretonnière
entonne avec ferveur, pour la postérité, pour la
résistance du peuple de Paris, l’immortelle chanson
Sous le ciel de Paris (juste avant l’apparition
d’un déploiement répressif des forces de l’ordre,
frais stigmates de l’occupation allemande). On comprend
alors que l’autre chanson du film est de trop :
C?ur de Paris, interprétée de fa?on guindée par
André Claveau, arrive comme un cheveu sur la soupe
en épilogue du film (et elle sera rapidement oubliée).
Tout cela vient expliquer que c’est la chanson éponyme
qui passera à la postérité et non le film sursaturé
d’un réalisateur majeur du cinéma.
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About
the director Julien Duvivier
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Julien Duvuvier
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Julien Duvuvier (left)
on the set of Anna Karenina
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Whilst unquestionably
one of the most important film-makers in the history
of French cinema, Julien Duvivier has never achieved
the status accorded to other great directors of his
country, such as his contemporaries Jean Renoir, Marce
Carné and René Clair. The main reason for this was perhaps
Duvivier’s versatility, his ability and willingness
to tackle a wide range of subjects of varying degrees
of merit. In between making films of sublime artistic
merit he would occupy himsef with lesser works, often
on commission, to supply the need for popular films.
Paradoxically, it would often be his less impressive
films that would prove to be more successful commercially
than his greater films. Duvivier’s film making career
spanned nearly half a century and comprises 67 films.
This includes over a score of films which are now regarded
as masterpieces, and it is on the quality of these films
that the director should be judged. Many other film-makers,
including Jean Renoir and Igmar Bergman, regarded him
as a man of rare talent, not just a master technician,
but a great poet as well.
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Julien Duvivier
was born in Lille, France, on 8 October 1896. He started
out as a stage actor in Paris in 1915. He worked at
the Odéon under the direction of the reactionary André
Antoine, whose realist approach left a lasting impression
on the young Duvivier. In 1918, he started working for
cinema, as a part-time screenwriter and assistant director
to such masters as Louis Feuillade and Marcel L'Herbier.
His first film, Haceldama ou le prix du sang (1919),
was not a worthy effort and has been described as one
of the least promising debuts in cinematic history.
During the 1920s, undeterred by this
first failure, Duvivier continued making films. His
first notable success was in 1925, with his poignant
adaptation of Jules Renard’s Poil de Carotte (which
he later remade in 1932, one of his favourite works).
This resulted in an invitation from from producers
Marcel Vandal and Charles Delac to work for their
film production company, Film d’Art. Here, Duvivier
stayed for nine years, perfecting his craft as a film-maker
and learning the value of team work.
In was in the 1930s, with the arrival
of sound, that Duvivier’s career as a film director
suddenly took off. By the end of the decade he had
earned an international reputation as one of the most
important French film-makers of his generation. His
successes included such works as David Golder (1930),
Poil de Carotte (1932), La Tête d'un homme (1933),
La Bandera (1935), Un Carnet du Bal (1935), La Belle
équipe (1936) and Pépé le Moko (1937).
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Duvivier’s
first major success was David Golder (1930), which starred
acting heavyweight Harry Baur. That actor would subsequently
work with Duvivier on another great film, La Tête d’un
homme, playing Inspector Maigret in one of the earliest
screen adaptations of a Georges Simenon novel. Baur
also appears in Un Carnet du Bal (1935), Duvier’s first
and most successful attempt at a “films à sketches”.
Another legendary actor who would achieve
prominence thanks to Duvivier was Jean Gabin, who starred
in three of the defining French films of the 1930s:
La Bandera (1935), La Belle équipe (1936) and Pépé le
Moko (1937). What connects these films, in addition
to Gabin’s remarkable performance, is a distinctive
style of French cinema, termed poetic realism, which
was very much in vogue in this period. Duvivier (along
with Marcel Carné and Jean Grémillion) was one of the
few directors to master poetic realism and Pépé-le-Moko
is often cited as one of the finest examples of this
style of French cinema.
It was the international success of
Pépé-le-Moko which earned Duvivier an invitation from
MGM in 1938 to direct a lavish Hollywood musical,
The Great Waltz, a biography of the composer Johann
Strauss. Duvivier returned to America during World
War Two where he made a number of big-budget films,
most notably Tales of Manhattan (1942) and Flesh and
Fantasy (1943).
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After the
war, Duvivier returned to his native France, but had
great difficulty regaining his former popularity, having
been displaced by those directors who had remained in
France during the German occupation. His 1946 film Panique,
a grim depiction of human greed and hysteria, proved
to be a commercial failure and was viciously written
off by the critics as a return to poetic realism of
the 1930s. Today, this is regarded as an unequivocal
masterpiece, one of the greatest films made during the
1940s.
In the late 1940s and 1950s, Duvivier’s
more serious films show a marked change from the poetic
realism of the 1930s to a far darker kind of realism
which explored the worst qualities of human nature.
Examples of this are to be found in Sous le ciel de
Paris (1951) and Voici le temps des assassins (1956).
Meanwhile, he was making popular comedies such as
Le Petit monde de Don camillo (1951), the first in
a series of films starring the popular actor Fernandel.
This film won him a prize at the Venice Film Festival
in 1951.
Duvivier’s last great film was Pot-Bouille
(1957), which combines the grim realism of Zola’s
novel with popular farce. Le Diable et les dix commandements
(1962) is less impressive but shows Duvivier’s flair
for comedy and, thanks to its all-star cast, proved
to be a popular success. On 30 October 1967, shortly
after completing his final film, Diaboliquement v?tre,
Julien Duvivier died tragically in a car accident,
aged 71. (here)
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About
the composer Jean Wiener
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Biography
Date of Birth 19 March 1896, Paris, France
Date of Death 8 June 1982, Paris,
France
French composer Jean Wiener penned
the scores for theatrical and music hall productions
and numerous films. He also composed orchestral works
such as his Concerto for Accordion and Orchestra.
In film, he has worked with such directors as
Renoir, Becker,
Duvivier,
and Bresson.
Wiener's daughter, Elisabeth, became an actress.(here)
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Edith Piaf (1915 - 1963)
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Overview
Date of Birth:19 December 1915, Paris, France
Date of Death:10 October 1963, Plascassier, Alpes-Maritimes,
France |
Mini Biography
When one thinks of Edith Piaf, one
thinks of love, sorrow and music. One did not breathe
without the other two. Born in Paris practically on
the streets on December 19, 1915, she struggled from
day one, the daughter of street performers. The mother,
a singer, eventually abandoned both Edith and her
father for a solo career. Piaf spent her youth entertaining
passers-by, receiving little formal education in the
process. She often accompanied her father's acrobat
street act with her singing and at various times was
forced to live with various relatives, in alleys or
in cheap hotels. An aborted love affair left her with
a baby girl at age 17, but little Marcelle died of
meningitis at 2 years old. Devastated, Piaf returned
to the streets she knew, now performing solo.
Her fortunes finally changed when an impresario, Louis
Leplee, mesmerized by what he heard, offered the starving
but talented urchin a contract. He alone was responsible
for taking her off the streets at age 20 and changing
her name from Edith Gassion to "La Mome Piaf" (or
"Kid Sparrow"). Piaf grew in status entertaining in
elegant cafes and cabarets and became a singing sensation
amid the chic French society with her throbbing vocals
and raw, emotional power. From 1936 Piaf recorded
many albums and eventually became one of the highest
paid stars in the world. She was first embroiled in
scandal when her mentor, Leplee, was murdered and
she was held for questioning. She managed to survive
the messy affair and carry on while her ever-growing
society circle now began to include such elite members
as writer/director Jean Cocteau. Piaf also took to
writing and composing around this time; one of the
over 80 songs she wrote included her signature standard,
"La vie en rose." Although she appeared sporadically
in films, it was live audiences that sustained her.
Piaf later toured the United States to branch out
internationally. America was slow to accept the melodramatic
Piaf but she persevered and eventually won legions
of fans. She also continued a series of affairs with
the likes of actor Paul Meurisse, composer Henry Contet
and, most notably, boxing champion Marcel Cerdan.
The latter's death in a 1949 plane crash left Piaf
devastated and many claim this was the beginning of
her downfall. Piaf had a life-long habit of involving
herself heart and soul in the launching of her lovers'
careers. Over the years this would include Yves Montand, Charles Aznavour and Eddie Constantine. Two serious
car accidents suffered in 1951 led to a morphine and
alcohol addiction that left Piaf's life skidding out
of control despite a potentially happy marriage in
1952 to actor Jacques Pills. Though slowly crippled
by severe arthritis, a series of spectacular comebacks
in concert and recordings would follow over the years
but her health would slowly waste her away. Her last
appearance was at the Paris Olympia, racked and hunched
over with pain and barely able to stand. Her last
recorded song was "L'homme de Berlin" in 1963, the
year of her death. She died in poverty on the same
day as her friend Cocteau and at the age of 47, the
same age as her equally tortured American counterpart,
Judy
Garland. Piaf left many debts for her second husband
(and protege Theo Sarapo, who was twenty years younger
(he died in 1970, at age 34). Piaf's funeral was massive
yet, because of her lifestyle, was forbidden a Mass.
It was the only time since WWII that Parisian traffic
was completely stopped. A museum was dedicated in
her honor. Piaf remains the epitome of the French
singer in heart, soul, style and passion; for many
Piaf IS France.(IMDB)
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La rose de France
A swirling, impressionistic portrait
of an artist who regretted nothing, writer-director
Olivier Dahan's La Vie en Rose stars Marion Cotillard
in a blazing performance as the legendary French icon
Edith Piaf. From the mean streets of the Belleville
district of Paris to the dazzling limelight of New
York's most famous concert halls, Piaf's life was
a constant battle to sing and survive, to live and
love. Raised in her grandmother's brothel, Piaf was
discovered in 1935 by nightclub owner Louis Leplee
(Gerard Depardieu), who persuaded her to sing despite
her extreme nervousness. Piaf became one of France's
immortal icons, her voice one of the indelible signatures
of the 20th Century.
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Edith
Piaf Basic Facts:
Edith Piaf was born Edith Giovanna Gassion on December
19, 1915 in Paris, France. She died on either October
10 or October 11, 1963 (the date is frequently disputed)
in Cannes, France. Edith Piaf stood at only 4'8".
She was married twice and had one child who died in
infancy.
Edith Piaf's Tragic Early Life:
Legend has it that Edith Piaf was born on the streets
of Paris on a cold winter night to a 17-year-old mother
who was a café singer and a father who was a street
acrobat. Her mother soon abandoned her, and she was
sent to live with her paternal grandmother, who was
the madam of a brothel. She was completely blind from
ages 3-7, and she claimed to have been miraculously
cured when the prostitutes prayed for her on a religious
pilgrimage.
Edith Piaf's Teen Years:
In 1929, Edith Piaf left the brothel and joined her
father as a street performer. At age 16, Edith Piaf
fell in love with a young man named Louis Dupont and
bore his child. Sadly, their daughter, named Marcelle,
died before the age of two of meningitis.
Edith Piaf Gets Discovered:
Louis Leplee, the owner of a popular Paris nightclub,
discovered Piaf in 1935 and invited her to perform in
his club. It was Leplee who gave Edith her nickname,
"La M?me Piaf" (The Little Sparrow), in reference
to her height. She adopted this as her stage name. Years
of touring brought Piaf moderate financial success,
but great popularity.
Edith Piaf During World War II:
During the World War II German occupations of Paris,
Piaf cleverly won the hearts of the high-ranking Nazis,
thus giving her access to French prisoners of war, many
of whom she helped escape.
Worldwide Success and More
Tragedy:
After WWII ended, Edith Piaf began to tour the world,
achieving international fame and popularity. In 1951,
Piaf was in a car accident, and her injuries resulted
in a lifelong addiction to morphine. |
Edith
Piaf's Many Loves:
Edith Piaf's true love was boxer Marcel Cerdan, though
they never married. Cerdan died in 1949. Piaf subsequently
married singer Jacques Pills in 1952. They divorced
in 1956. In 1962, Piaf married singer/actor Theo Sarapo,
who was twenty years her junior. They stayed married
until Piaf's death. Along the way, Piaf had many other
lovers.
Edith Piaf's Death:
Piaf died of cancer in 1963, near Cannes. The date is
disputed; it is said that she actually passed on October
10, but her official date of death is October 11. Her
husband, Theo Sarapo, was with her at the time. Piaf
is buried in Pere Lachaise Cemetery in Paris.
Edith Piaf's Most Famous Songs:
Edith Piaf is considered by most to be the greatest
French singer in history. Her best-known songs are "La
Vie en Rose," "Hymne à L'Amour," "Les
Trois Cloches" and "Non, Je Ne Regrette Rien."(here) |
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A resource of the songs
by Verycd
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001
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Various.Artists.-.[Chanson.International.Best(2002)].Special.(MP3).rar
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141.4M
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002
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Various.Artists.-.[Sous.le.Ciel.de.Paris].Special.(MP3).rar
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44.3M
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003
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Various.Artists.-.[Sous.le.Ciel.de.Paris.II].Special.(MP3).rar
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29.0M
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