Doctor Who S32E1, "The Impossible Astronaut"
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Doctor Who S32E1, "The Impossible Astronaut"
So, folks, what'd you think? I see the Silence constructed that pseudo-TARDIS.
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Re: Doctor Who S32E1, "The Impossible Astronaut"
Spacesuits are bulletproof arn't they? So if anything happens because of her shooting it I will be annoyed.
Re: Doctor Who S32E1, "The Impossible Astronaut"
Pretty good, but one of those episodes that's impossible to judge on its own accord. Still, that's not such a bad thing, since it shows Moffat is moving firmly away from RTD's "stick all the exposition and setup in the first episode and all the action in the second" approach to two-parters.
SpoilerInterlord1 wrote:Spacesuits are bulletproof arn't they? So if anything happens because of here shooting it I will be annoyed.
Re: Doctor Who S32E1, "The Impossible Astronaut"
Well River shot at the astronaut the first time it appeared and didn't do didly to it. Unless her aim really sucks.
Okay episode, though I liked Eleventh Hour more, probably because it was a complete story rather than one half of a two parter. And points to Amy for snapping a picture of a Silent with her phone! That's something I would have done and I'm amazed one of the characters thought to do it as well.
... I still cannot stand River. She just bugs the crap outta me in a way I find hard to put into words. I don't care how tragic her true nature/history turns out to be, I will never ever like that character.
So Time Lords don't actually age? Huh? The first Doctor they met was apparently more than a hundred years older than the Doctor we know, yet he didn't look a day older? Is that how it works with Time Lords, or is there something else going on there?
Okay episode, though I liked Eleventh Hour more, probably because it was a complete story rather than one half of a two parter. And points to Amy for snapping a picture of a Silent with her phone! That's something I would have done and I'm amazed one of the characters thought to do it as well.
... I still cannot stand River. She just bugs the crap outta me in a way I find hard to put into words. I don't care how tragic her true nature/history turns out to be, I will never ever like that character.
So Time Lords don't actually age? Huh? The first Doctor they met was apparently more than a hundred years older than the Doctor we know, yet he didn't look a day older? Is that how it works with Time Lords, or is there something else going on there?
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Re: Doctor Who S32E1, "The Impossible Astronaut"
I think she said something like 'of course not' after her gun did nothing to the astronaut. This would suggest the astronaut is indeed bulletproof.Revy wrote:Well River shot at the astronaut the first time it appeared and didn't do didly to it. Unless her aim really sucks.
She's got to remember she took the photo in the first placeOkay episode, though I liked Eleventh Hour more, probably because it was a complete story rather than one half of a two parter. And points to Amy for snapping a picture of a Silent with her phone! That's something I would have done and I'm amazed one of the characters thought to do it as well.
Nah, she's brilliant.... I still cannot stand River. She just bugs the crap outta me in a way I find hard to put into words. I don't care how tragic her true nature/history turns out to be, I will never ever like that character.
Well, in Last of the Time Lords, the Master made the Doctor age 100 years without regenerating, so that is a bit confusing...So Time Lords don't actually age? Huh? The first Doctor they met was apparently more than a hundred years older than the Doctor we know, yet he didn't look a day older? Is that how it works with Time Lords, or is there something else going on there?
I was left with a massive amount of questions for this episode, but I enjoyed it thoroughly. Obviously, I know the Doctor will be ok, but there was a horrible 'oh shit he's regenerating...oh SHIT no he's not!' moment there I like it when the show breaks its own rules. Steven Moffat is a MASSIVELY superior director than RTD, and the new aliens were a nice original idea. Even if they had mouths like anuses.
As ever, I squirm in anticipation for next week. I give it 5.
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Re: Doctor Who S32E1, "The Impossible Astronaut"
Well I'm sure it'll come up again, unless they intend to make it an unfired Chekhov's Gun.Captain Spiro wrote: She's got to remember she took the photo in the first place
YMMV on that one.Nah, she's brilliant.
There seems to be a new running gag with the Doctor and funny hats. I wonder if we can guess what kind of silly hats we'll see the Doctor wearing over the course of this season.
And why the hell can't they just tell him? What's with all this "trust us" nonsense? I mean it seems pretty obvious the future Doctor knew full well what was going to happen, or at least planned to avert it somehow. What exactly is the danger of telling him what will happen? If averting those events really will blow up the universe or some paradox silliness, then surely the Doctor will know better than to try and mess with things. And if he does decide to try something, it'll be something that he feels sure won't destroy reality in the process. Give him some credit guys.
Re: Doctor Who S32E1, "The Impossible Astronaut"
I'm actually wondering if the figure in the spacesuit at the beginning was the Doctor, the child was in the suit later on in the episode but that doesn't mean they cant switch at some later point.
I wonder if the Doctors death will be cleared up at the end of the second part or if it will remain for the whole of the series (confidential seems to suggest the latter).
I wonder if the Doctors death will be cleared up at the end of the second part or if it will remain for the whole of the series (confidential seems to suggest the latter).
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Re: Doctor Who S32E1, "The Impossible Astronaut"
Found the start very sluggish - I think some of it was the fact that we see Amy and Rory clearly having lived for a while without the doctor. Not that I'm averse to that, it just seems like quite a big thing - there must have been a goodbye, a parting etc - seems a shame to do that off screen. Especially as this is the fairly fundamental contrivance which the series begins with. Also, everyone felt a bit off in terms of acting, having recently watched the last series again - Rory was ok, largely because he doesn't have much to do, but Amy wasn't convincing for me. And I found the 'look, look, I've read the timetraveller's wife too' stuff a bit heavy - but then I don't care for River much either.
That said, I enjoyed the episode once it got its premise out of the way - I felt the same about the finale from last series. Getting the premise set up seemed to be clunky, but once that was done, it was fairly steady going.
Was quite pleased to see a semi-return to the idea of a cliffhanger ending and a continuous story, especially with a two part split between the series, does seem like a return to the original Who format. No bad thing, in my book.
That said, I enjoyed the episode once it got its premise out of the way - I felt the same about the finale from last series. Getting the premise set up seemed to be clunky, but once that was done, it was fairly steady going.
Was quite pleased to see a semi-return to the idea of a cliffhanger ending and a continuous story, especially with a two part split between the series, does seem like a return to the original Who format. No bad thing, in my book.
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Re: Doctor Who S32E1, "The Impossible Astronaut"
Did they have to repeat the hat gag?
Did anyone find it funny?
Did anyone find it funny?
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Re: Doctor Who S32E1, "The Impossible Astronaut"
A thought occurs... possible spoilage...
Spoiler
Spoiler
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Re: Doctor Who S32E1, "The Impossible Astronaut"
In The Leisure Hive the Doctor is aged 500 years and ends up as an old man. Time Lords age between regenerations, it just happens more slowly than it does with humans.Captain Spiro wrote:Well, in Last of the Time Lords, the Master made the Doctor age 100 years without regenerating, so that is a bit confusing...So Time Lords don't actually age? Huh? The first Doctor they met was apparently more than a hundred years older than the Doctor we know, yet he didn't look a day older? Is that how it works with Time Lords, or is there something else going on there?
I interpret the Master's line in The Sound of Drums as him converting the numbers to their human equivalence so that things would make more sense for his mostly human audience.
Not sure if I like the changes to the opening titles. The extra lens flare on the TARDIS-light in the logo is annoying, and its odd that Smith and Gillian have lightning strikes accompanying their names but Darvill doesn't.
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Re: Doctor Who S32E1, "The Impossible Astronaut"
I liked it, but its one of those episodes where you need to watch the finale to get a feel for how well the story turned out. Some of NuWho first parters looked nice only to be let down by the second episode. So I will just have to see how it goes.
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Re: Doctor Who S32E1, "The Impossible Astronaut"
I had strong feeling that wasn't the last we've seen of that sort of non-Gallifreyian TARDIS and it bore a lot of asthetical similarities to the Pandorica, the feeling of vindication is wonderful. But I doubt it's the same counterfeit TARDIS from last time, the Silence's more sinister, somewhat cruder TARDISes might be around in huge numbers if there's already a huge army of the Silence lurking beneath the surface of our planet, with their timeships presumably used as power/control hubs for their endless underground warrens and tunnels.NecronLord wrote: I see the Silence constructed that pseudo-TARDIS.
A Silent drone is a cross between a Roswell Grey and the Slender Man, their mind wiping ability is an unnerving and practical trait. Are you thinking what I thinking about their possible origin?
Spoiler
'Alright guard, begin the unnecessarily slow moving dipping mechanism...' - Dr. Evil
'Secondly, I don't see why "income inequality" is a bad thing. Poverty is not an injustice. There is no such thing as causes for poverty, only causes for wealth. Poverty is not a wrong, but taking money from those who have it to equalize incomes is basically theft, which is wrong.' - Typical Randroid
'I think it's gone a little bit wrong.' - The Doctor
'Secondly, I don't see why "income inequality" is a bad thing. Poverty is not an injustice. There is no such thing as causes for poverty, only causes for wealth. Poverty is not a wrong, but taking money from those who have it to equalize incomes is basically theft, which is wrong.' - Typical Randroid
'I think it's gone a little bit wrong.' - The Doctor
Re: Doctor Who S32E1, "The Impossible Astronaut"
well..........I find Greys and the slender man and distorted humanoid shapes to be creepy in general.
so I was approprately freaked out.........and the bathroom scene was scarier than the tunnel scene.
so I was approprately freaked out.........and the bathroom scene was scarier than the tunnel scene.
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Re: Doctor Who S32E1, "The Impossible Astronaut"
I missed Doctor Who Confidential, but at the end of the new episode the TV voice over said something about writing your own mini episode of Doctor Who? Does anyone know anything about that, or did I misshear?
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Re: Doctor Who S32E1, "The Impossible Astronaut"
A solid ..... meh for me. Not bad, but not good just plain middle of the road. Though I am a big fan of Mark Sheppard so I'm looking forward to more FBI Man the 3rd.
Also Moose I made that prediction last season so I got first dibs on the "I knew it!" if it comes through.
Also Moose I made that prediction last season so I got first dibs on the "I knew it!" if it comes through.
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Re: Doctor Who S32E1, "The Impossible Astronaut"
SpoilerA Silent drone is a cross between a Roswell Grey and the Slender Man, their mind wiping ability is an unnerving and practical trait. Are you thinking what I thinking about their possible origin?
Spoiler
I'm really starting to like the Silence as a new enemy. It would be nice if they took their place among the Daleks, Cybermen, and Weeping Angels and made more than one appearance.
Yeah, I've always taken the subtext of the Birther movement to be, "The rules don't count here! This is different! HE'S BLACK! BLACK, I SAY! ARE YOU ALL BLIND!?
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Re: Doctor Who S32E1, "The Impossible Astronaut"
Given that they were massively set up in the last season, i would be very surprised if they turned out to be an one-shot villain.
I think i'll love this episode, but i'll keep my judgment until the second part.
I think i'll love this episode, but i'll keep my judgment until the second part.
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Re: Doctor Who S32E1, "The Impossible Astronaut"
I just realised that all the stuff at the start of the episode could be setting up stuff for later in the season. So IIRC there was:
- Those guys in the mansion finding The Doctor in the ladies room. (What period were they? Looked like either English Civil War cavaliers or French Muskateers to me (based on their appearences in pop culture not actual historical stuff))
- Another thing that Rory was reading in a book.
- The Doctor in a Laurel and Hardy film.
- The thing River mentioned with [Name] the Fish, was the name Jim? (I'm putting good odds on this since in her previous episodes she name dropped the Crash of The Byzantium and The Pandorica, both of which came through.)
And quite possibly the most important one, possibly the biggest groundbreaking thing in Doctor Who ever ....
- The Doctor for some reason will start to prefer a Stetson over a Fez.
Anyone else thinking that given what happened part way through the episode that those are foreshadowing? Or just me?
- Those guys in the mansion finding The Doctor in the ladies room. (What period were they? Looked like either English Civil War cavaliers or French Muskateers to me (based on their appearences in pop culture not actual historical stuff))
- Another thing that Rory was reading in a book.
- The Doctor in a Laurel and Hardy film.
- The thing River mentioned with [Name] the Fish, was the name Jim? (I'm putting good odds on this since in her previous episodes she name dropped the Crash of The Byzantium and The Pandorica, both of which came through.)
And quite possibly the most important one, possibly the biggest groundbreaking thing in Doctor Who ever ....
- The Doctor for some reason will start to prefer a Stetson over a Fez.
Anyone else thinking that given what happened part way through the episode that those are foreshadowing? Or just me?
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Re: Doctor Who S32E1, "The Impossible Astronaut"
I BELIEVE IT WAS SOME KIND OF CONTEST IN honor for the death of Sahara Jane smith's actress.Revy wrote:I missed Doctor Who Confidential, but at the end of the new episode the TV voice over said something about writing your own mini episode of Doctor Who? Does anyone know anything about that, or did I misshear?
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"Set Flamethrowers to... light electrocution"
It's not enough to bash in heads, you also have to bash in minds.
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Re: Doctor Who S32E1, "The Impossible Astronaut"
I finally tracked it down online. It was a challenge to write a 3 minute script, and the winner would have their script filmed. Sounds exactly the kind of thing I'd love to try, except ... it's for kids aged 9-11.lordofchange13 wrote:I BELIEVE IT WAS SOME KIND OF CONTEST IN honor for the death of Sahara Jane smith's actress.
Damn. I wish I was a kid again. Stupid linear progression of time
Re: Doctor Who S32E1, "The Impossible Astronaut"
Eh, don't worry about that one. Opportunities for Doctor Who-related stuff sometimes come up here. In fact, there was actually a Big Finish competition that I was thinking about entering a few months ago, but I stopped short of submitting my script when I realised it didn't really fit the brief they'd put up. I've still got the script on file, just in case.
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Re: Doctor Who S32E1, "The Impossible Astronaut"
They most certainly will, it's pretty obvious.Captain Spiro wrote:SpoilerI'm really starting to like the Silence as a new enemy. It would be nice if they took their place among the Daleks, Cybermen, and Weeping Angels and made more than one appearance.
Spoiler
The Sheppards are well recognisable veterans of sci-fi/cult television, they both played elderly and youngish versions of the same character before in an episode of NCIS, Mark Sheppards' dad turned up in goofy episode of Voyager and played an ill fated Narn admiral in Babylon 5, I liked their inclusions.
The only thing I genuinely dislike about this story so-far is the death of the 1100 year old 11th Doctor; self-indulgent and emotionally flaccid (and this is from a apologist of the 10th Doctor's regeneration), but I liked the first confirmed sighting of the Silence, the introduction to Canton Everett Delaware III, the use of letters again to arrange meetings across time-space, and the location shooting in a North American desert (looks great, but a bit disposable like the location shooting at the UAE).
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'Secondly, I don't see why "income inequality" is a bad thing. Poverty is not an injustice. There is no such thing as causes for poverty, only causes for wealth. Poverty is not a wrong, but taking money from those who have it to equalize incomes is basically theft, which is wrong.' - Typical Randroid
'I think it's gone a little bit wrong.' - The Doctor
'Secondly, I don't see why "income inequality" is a bad thing. Poverty is not an injustice. There is no such thing as causes for poverty, only causes for wealth. Poverty is not a wrong, but taking money from those who have it to equalize incomes is basically theft, which is wrong.' - Typical Randroid
'I think it's gone a little bit wrong.' - The Doctor
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Re: Doctor Who S32E1, "The Impossible Astronaut"
For those of you wondering what I'm doing here after stating I haven't a means to see the show.... well, I'm taking the Fifth. Either that, or this is my 2012 self posting this.
Time Lords aren't human, and I'd explain it by saying they don't react to physical stress as we do – with each regeneration The Doctor tends to get younger looking (with Eleven as an extreme) whereas the Gallifreyans that stayed home all tended to look middle-aged to elderly no matter how old, as best I recollect. Perhaps what we look at and say “Oh, he's so young and fresh!” they look at and say “Great balls of fire! He's been through the ringer, look how wrecked he is!”
Spoiler
I am completely baffled by the “Rory the Roman” reference – but DON'T explain it to me, I'm assuming it's explained in the second half of the Series Five I haven't seen yet. (Apparently, like River Song, I'm not always meeting The Doctor in the proper order either. I haven't done “Roman Rory” yet).
Spoiler
Other tidbits I like was the exchange between River and The Doctor regarding Nixon where she calls him a hippie (oh, so 60's!) and he calls her an archeologist.
I'm wondering if Canton is gay and that's why he referred to wanting to get married as a crime and why he was kicked out of the FBI.
In regards to spoilers next time – clearly, The Doctor spends some time as a prisoner, what with the chains and beard and all – I'm assuming he's held by the Americans. Which is puzzling, because in 1969 America how could the US keep The Doctor confined against his will? This is a guy who saves the universe barehanded, no plan, no backup, no TARDIS, not even his screwdriver sometimes. Unless he lets himself be held? Or maybe the Americans don't rely on fancy tech and just has guys with guns stand around him for a long time? The other thing – if they do hold him that long they have to figure out at some point he's not human in which case where's the guys in the white lab coats who want to do a dissection?
Alright, I'm probably overthinking this....
Ha-ha-ha-ha Good one.Interlord1 wrote:Spacesuits are bulletproof arn't they?
SpoilerSpoiler
Given prior shooting dispalys, we know her skill does not suck, therefore something else is going on. Given that the astronaut used some form of energy weapon on The Doctor it might be reasonable to conclude that there is some technology involved that goes beyond 1969 NASA capabilities.Revy wrote:Well River shot at the astronaut the first time it appeared and didn't do didly to it. Unless her aim really sucks.
One of the things I like about this show, and that's been improving over the years, is that The Doctor's companions aren't complete blithering idiots, do display some intelligence occasionally amongst the screaming for help and running about, and sometimes their competence is integral to the plot.And points to Amy for snapping a picture of a Silent with her phone! That's something I would have done and I'm amazed one of the characters thought to do it as well.
I'm suspecting something else – how likely is it that The Doctor would go 200 years with regenerating, given how many bodies he's gone through already? He's averaging a new face every 82 years based on his reported age of 909, and we know that since he started gallivanting around the universe there have been times he's gotten a new body much quicker than that. A perception filter perhaps? He would, of course, want them to recognize him, how better than taking on the appearance of one of his prior faces?So Time Lords don't actually age? Huh? The first Doctor they met was apparently more than a hundred years older than the Doctor we know, yet he didn't look a day older? Is that how it works with Time Lords, or is there something else going on there?
Time Lords aren't human, and I'd explain it by saying they don't react to physical stress as we do – with each regeneration The Doctor tends to get younger looking (with Eleven as an extreme) whereas the Gallifreyans that stayed home all tended to look middle-aged to elderly no matter how old, as best I recollect. Perhaps what we look at and say “Oh, he's so young and fresh!” they look at and say “Great balls of fire! He's been through the ringer, look how wrecked he is!”
Spoiler
I was wondering if the figure in the space suit was River Song, given the repeated hints that she kills The Doctor, though it wouldn't work for the timeline.Bedlam wrote:I'm actually wondering if the figure in the spacesuit at the beginning was the Doctor, the child was in the suit later on in the episode but that doesn't mean they cant switch at some later point.
I am completely baffled by the “Rory the Roman” reference – but DON'T explain it to me, I'm assuming it's explained in the second half of the Series Five I haven't seen yet. (Apparently, like River Song, I'm not always meeting The Doctor in the proper order either. I haven't done “Roman Rory” yet).
I am finding it mildly amusing, I just don't want to see it every episode. It's no more annoying than the Third's Jelly Baby thing.barnest2 wrote:Did they have to repeat the hat gag?
Did anyone find it funny?
Spoiler
I thought the incident we saw was the one Rory was reading about in the book2000AD wrote:I just realised that all the stuff at the start of the episode could be setting up stuff for later in the season. So IIRC there was:
- Those guys in the mansion finding The Doctor in the ladies room. (What period were they? Looked like either English Civil War cavaliers or French Muskateers to me (based on their appearences in pop culture not actual historical stuff))
- Another thing that Rory was reading in a book.
Oh, please no! Do NOT Americanize The Doctor! Let him get Stetsons while he's in the States, but don't make it a permanent feature. Part of the appeal to me about the show is that it is NOT American.- The Doctor for some reason will start to prefer a Stetson over a Fez.
I think there is a CRAPLOAD of foreshadowing going on, and some of it we won't pick up on until further in the season.Anyone else thinking that given what happened part way through the episode that those are foreshadowing? Or just me?
I believe that was Monument Valley in Utah.Big Orange wrote:... and the location shooting in a North American desert (looks great, but a bit disposable like the location shooting at the UAE).
Other tidbits I like was the exchange between River and The Doctor regarding Nixon where she calls him a hippie (oh, so 60's!) and he calls her an archeologist.
I'm wondering if Canton is gay and that's why he referred to wanting to get married as a crime and why he was kicked out of the FBI.
In regards to spoilers next time – clearly, The Doctor spends some time as a prisoner, what with the chains and beard and all – I'm assuming he's held by the Americans. Which is puzzling, because in 1969 America how could the US keep The Doctor confined against his will? This is a guy who saves the universe barehanded, no plan, no backup, no TARDIS, not even his screwdriver sometimes. Unless he lets himself be held? Or maybe the Americans don't rely on fancy tech and just has guys with guns stand around him for a long time? The other thing – if they do hold him that long they have to figure out at some point he's not human in which case where's the guys in the white lab coats who want to do a dissection?
Alright, I'm probably overthinking this....
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Now I did a job. I got nothing but trouble since I did it, not to mention more than a few unkind words as regard to my character so let me make this abundantly clear. I do the job. And then I get paid.- Malcolm Reynolds, Captain of Serenity, which sums up my feelings regarding the lawsuit discussed here.
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Now I did a job. I got nothing but trouble since I did it, not to mention more than a few unkind words as regard to my character so let me make this abundantly clear. I do the job. And then I get paid.- Malcolm Reynolds, Captain of Serenity, which sums up my feelings regarding the lawsuit discussed here.
If a free society cannot help the many who are poor, it cannot save the few who are rich. - John F. Kennedy
Sam Vimes Theory of Economic Injustice
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Re: Doctor Who S32E1, "The Impossible Astronaut"
Incidentally, people complaining about the materialisation effect - I forget if it was here or elsewhere - in the trailers have nothing to worry about.
The Invisible thing is kinda cool, too, the last time that was done was back in Pat Troughton's reign as Doctor Who albeit accidentally. The scanner worked back then too.
The Invisible thing is kinda cool, too, the last time that was done was back in Pat Troughton's reign as Doctor Who albeit accidentally. The scanner worked back then too.
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