Fast 6 Soundtrack

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  1. Fast & Furious 6

. ' Released: June 12, 2013 Fast & Furious 6 (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) is the soundtrack to, released digitally to on May 17, 2013, and on CD on May 21, 2013. It mainly features and tracks. Composed the musical score for Fast & Furious 6 since had other commitments with and. The track ' by and reached number six on the, becoming 2 Chainz's most successful single in that country. With the agreement of the record label (owned by Swedish DJ from ), the tracks 'Here We Go' (featuring Swanky Tunes) and 'Quasar' by, a Russian band of DJs, were used in the film.

The remix of The Prodigy's song was used in trailers leading up to the release of Fast & Furious 6. Contents. Track listing No. Title Artist(s) Length 1. ' and 3:47 2. ' featuring 3:24 3. 'Con Locura' Sua featuring Jiggy Drama 3:47 4.

More Fast 6 Soundtrack videos. Fast 6 and its fabulous car chase action scenes were filmed in the U.K. And in Spain on Tenerife. The story line of Fast 6 is where started when Since Dom (Diesel.

Fast & Furious 6 is the soundtrack to Fast & Furious 6, released digitally to iTunes on May 17, 2013, and on CD on May 21, 2013 by Def Jam Recordings.

'HK Superstar' featuring 3:24 5. 'Failbait' featuring 4:49 6. 'Bada Bing' Benny Banks 3:19 7. (Bart B More Remix) 6:13 8. 'Mister Chicken' 3:13 9. 'Here We Go / Quasar' (Hybrid Remix) Hard Rock Sofa and Swanky Tunes 3:23 11. ' featuring 5:06 12.

' featuring and 3:52 Total length: 50:18 Charts Chart (2013) Peak position Australian Albums 10 Austrian Albums 6 Belgian Albums ( Flanders) 37 Belgian Albums ( Wallonia) 63 Danish Albums 32 Dutch Albums 77 French Albums 71 German Albums 13 New Zealand Albums 34 Swiss Albums 8 References. Fast & Furious 6 Soundtrack Movie (2013) Soundtrack List – Tracklist. on (Genres: Soundtrack, Music Released: 17 May 2013 ℗ 2013 Def Jam Records, a division of UMG Recordings, Inc.).

Retrieved April 14, 2015. (in German). Retrieved April 14, 2015. (in Dutch). Retrieved April 14, 2015.

(in French). Retrieved April 14, 2015. Retrieved April 14, 2015. (in Dutch). Retrieved April 14, 2015. Retrieved April 14, 2015. Retrieved April 14, 2015.

Retrieved April 14, 2015. Retrieved April 14, 2015. External links.

Running time 130 minutes Country United States Language English Budget $160 million Box office $788.7 million Fast & Furious 6 (alternatively known as Furious 6 or Fast Six) is a 2013 American directed by and written. It is the sixth installment in. The film stars, and. Fast & Furious 6 follows a professional criminal gang led by (Diesel) who have retired following their successful heist in (2011), but remain wanted fugitives.

Agent Luke Hobbs (Johnson) offers to clear the group's criminal records and allow them to return home in exchange for helping him to take down a skilled mercenary organization led by Owen Shaw (Evans), one member of which is Toretto's presumed-dead lover Letty Ortiz (Rodriguez). Fast & Furious 6 was in development by February 2010 as the first film in the series to move away from the underground car-racing theme of the series' previous films which was considered to have placed a barrier on audience numbers. Pre-production had begun by April 2011, and began in London, England in July 2012. Filming locations also included the, Glasgow, and Los Angeles. The film was first released in the United Kingdom, on May 17, 2013, followed by an international release on May 24, 2013.

A was released on April 3, 2015. Contents. Plot Following their, Dominic 'Dom' Toretto and his professional criminal crew have fled around the world: Dom lives with Elena; his sister Mia lives with Brian O'Conner and their son, Jack; Gisele and Han live together; and Roman and Tej live in luxury. Meanwhile, agent Luke Hobbs and Riley Hicks investigate the destruction of a Russian military convoy by a crew led by former British Major and special ops soldier Owen Shaw. Hobbs persuades Dom to help capture Shaw by showing him a photo of the supposedly long-dead Letty Ortiz, Dom's former lover.

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Dom and his crew accept the mission in exchange for their amnesty, allowing them to return to the United States. In London, Shaw's hideout is found, but this is revealed to be a trap, distracting them and the police while Shaw's crew performs a heist at an Interpol building. Shaw flees by car, detonating his hideout and disabling most of the police, leaving Dom, Brian, Tej, Han, Gisele, Hobbs, and Riley to pursue him. Letty arrives to help Shaw, shooting Dom without hesitation before escaping. Back at their headquarters, Hobbs tells Dom's crew that Shaw is stealing components to create a deadly device, intending to sell it to the highest bidder.

Meanwhile, Shaw's investigation into the opposing crew reveals Letty's relationship with Dom, but she is revealed to be suffering from amnesia. Dominic's crew learns that Shaw is connected to a drug lord, Arturo Braga. Brian returns to Los Angeles as a prisoner to question Braga, who says Letty survived the explosion that seemingly killed her; Shaw took her in after discovering her amnesia. With FBI help, Brian is released from prison, regrouping with the team in London. Dom challenges Letty in a street racing competition; afterwards, he returns her cross necklace he had kept. After Letty leaves, Shaw offers Dom a chance to walk away, threatening to otherwise hurt his family, but Dom refuses. Tej tracks Shaw's next attack to a Spanish NATO base.

Shaw's crew assaults a highway military convoy carrying a computer chip to complete his deadly device. Dom's crew interferes while Shaw, accompanied by Letty, commandeers a tank, destroying cars en route. Brian and Roman manage to flip the tank before it causes further damage, resulting in Letty being thrown from the vehicle and Dom risking his life to save her. Shaw and his crew are captured, but reveal Mia has been kidnapped by Shaw. Hobbs is forced to release Shaw, and Riley, revealed to be Shaw's covert accomplice, leaves with him; Letty chooses to remain with Dom. Shaw's group board a large moving aircraft on a runway as Dom's crew gives chase.

Dom, Letty, and Brian board the craft; Brian rescues Mia, escaping in an onboard car. The plane attempts take-off, but is held down by excess weight as the rest of the team tether the plane to their vehicles.

Gisele sacrifices herself to save Han from Shaw's henchman; Letty kills Riley and escapes to safety, but Dom pursues Shaw and the computer chip. As the plane crashes into the ground, Shaw is thrown from it, seriously injuring him, and Dom drives a car out of the exploding plane. Dom reunites with his crew, and gives the chip to Hobbs to secure their pardons. Dom and the others return to his old family home in Los Angeles. Hobbs and Elena, now working together, arrive to confirm the crew's freedom; Elena accepts that Dom loves Letty.

As Roman says grace over the crew's meal, Dom asks Letty if the gathering feels familiar; she answers 'no, but it feels like home.' In a, Han is involved in a car chase when he is suddenly broadsided by an oncoming car. The driver walks away from the scene after leaving Letty's cross necklace by the crash, and calls Dom as Han's car fatally explodes, saying, '.' . as, a former criminal, and professional street racer who has retired after their successful heist of $100 million with his crew in Brazil and is now staying with Elena. as, a former agent turned criminal and professional street racer who has retired and settled down with his wife, Mia, and their son, Jack.

as, a Diplomatic Security Service (DSS) agent who allies with Dom following his last encounter with Dom and his team in. as, Dom's former lover who has suffered from amnesia and was presumed dead in until she was found by Shaw.

She has amnesia and is working alongside his crew, but later chooses to remain with Dom and his team. as, Dom's sister, a former member of his team, and Brian's wife.

as, a former criminal from and Brian's childhood friend, as well as a member of Dom's team. as Tej Parker, an ex-street racer and mechanic, as well as Brian and Roman's friend who was introduced in, also a member of Dom's team. as, a professional street racer and Dom's former business partner in the, also a member of his team. He is in a relationship with Gisele. as, a former agent who previously worked as a liaison for Braga and aided Dom and Brian in capturing him by revealing his hideout in.

Fast & Furious 6

She has since become one of the members on Dom's team. She is also in a relationship with Han. as Owen Shaw, a former British soldier who leads a group of skilled mercenaries to steal high-tech devices worth billions on the black market. He hijacked a military convoy, which brings him into conflict with Dom. as Riley Hicks, a DSS agent who partners up with Hobbs to take down Shaw's mercenaries.

She is later revealed to be Shaw's double agent who secretly helps Shaw and his team escape custody during his chase in Spain. as Arturo Braga, an ex-drug lord who was imprisoned by Brian, who is revealed to have a connection to Shaw after his last encounter with Brian.

as Stasiak, a sarcastic FBI agent and Brian's former colleague who was formerly at odds with Brian. as Elena Neves, a former Rio police officer who has moved into the United States, since becoming Dom's love interest and later working alongside Hobbs as his new partner in the DSS. as Ivory, a member of Shaw's team, who is a lethal killer alongside Jah. While attempting to flee on his motorcycle, he is shot dead by Gisele. as Klaus, a member of Shaw's team who is a body builder and strongman, as well as a hacker at ease. as Firuz, a member of Shaw's team, who works as a mechanic, providing Shaw's team with flip cars and harpoon guns.

He is killed in a shootout while trying to kill Gisele and Riley. as Jah, a member of Shaw's team who is cold-blooded and skilled with martial arts and parkour during his fight with Han and Roman. as Vegh, Shaw's right-hand woman, and a highly trained female assassin in his team. as Adolfson, a member of Shaw's team, who acts as a sniper and infiltrator, providing cover for his team while allowing the others to escape. Has an uncredited cameo role in the film.

Appears uncredited in a cameo scene amid the. Production Development In February 2010, Diesel confirmed that production of was commencing and also announced that a sixth installment was being planned. In January 2011, producer Neal H. Moritz said more: In Vin and my mind we already know what the sixth movie is, we’ve already been talking about it. Vin and I have had numerous conversations about what that might be. And we’re starting to get serious about it right now.

We just finished Fast Five like 4 or 5 weeks ago and we just needed a break, and now we’re gonna start focusing on that. In April 2011 it was confirmed that Chris Morgan had already begun work on a script for a potential sixth film at the behest of Universal Studios.

It was also confirmed that Universal intended to transform the series from street-racing action into a series of heist films with car chases in the vein of (1969) and (1971), with Fast Five as the transitional movie. Universal chairman Adam Fogelson said: The question putting Fast Five and Fast Six together for us was: Can we take it out of being a pure car culture movie and into being a true action franchise in the spirit of those great heist films made 10 or 15 years ago? Fogelson said that the racing aspect had put a 'ceiling' on the number of people willing to see films in the series, and that, by turning it into a series where car driving ability is just one aspect of the film, he hoped to increase the series' audience. On Johnson's character, Fogelson added 'Johnson also wants to appear in and be integral to the action in Fast Six.' On June 24, 2011, Universal Pictures announced that the anticipated sequel was scheduled for release on May 24, 2013. Moritz and Diesel returned as producers and Lin returned to direct. In an interview with, Lin revealed that he had, after discussions with Diesel, storyboarded, and edited a twelve-minute finale for Fast Six before filming was completed on Fast Five.

Lin said he shot the footage as he was unsure at the time if there would be a sequel or if he would be able to direct it, but he wanted to have input on how any sequel would end. On October 21, 2011, the Los Angeles Times reported that Universal was considering filming two sequels— Fast Six and — with a single story running through both films; both written by Morgan and directed by Lin. On December 20, 2011, Diesel stated that Fast Six would be split into two parts, with writing for the two films occurring simultaneously. On the decision, Diesel said: We have to pay off this story, we have to service all of these character relationships, and when we started mapping all that out it just went beyond 110 pages. The studio said, 'You can't fit all that story in one damn movie!'

On April 23, 2012, it was announced that fighter Gina Carano was in negotiations to play a member of Hobbs' team. On May 1, 2012, Michelle Rodriguez was confirmed to be reprising her role as Letty Ortiz, and it was announced that Welsh actor Luke Evans had been offered a role as a villain. Evans was confirmed to join the cast on May 9, 2012, portraying the leader of a heist gang. On July 27, 2012, Joe Taslim was confirmed to appear as a villain, Jah. On February 15, 2012, Johnson confirmed that Fast Six would begin filming in May 2012, with some of the production to take place in the United Kingdom and Germany.

Johnson stated that the two intended sequels would no longer be filmed simultaneously because of weather issues in filming locations, and that production on Fast Seven would only begin after the completion of Fast Six. However, filming did not officially begin until July 30, 2012. In February 2013, it was confirmed that the film would be titled Fast & Furious 6. Principal photography Filming began on July 30, 2012, in London, England, and in. While Fast & Furious 6 became only the third production to be allowed to film in (a scene involving Diesel and Rodriguez drag racing), Lin was unable to obtain permission to shoot an elaborate action sequence there involving an exploding oil tanker, and so a replica of the landmark was built at Shepperton. The production were given only two minutes every hour to shut down the area for filming. The London shoot including filming on.

Stunt and car chase scenes began filming on location in, Scotland on August 29, 2012, and were scheduled to conclude on September 16, 2012. The shoot took place entirely at night and involved approximately 250 crew, but none of the central cast. Sets were built on site for the scenes including a large car showroom. Filming was scheduled to take place at the former Royal Air Force base in late August 2012 until early September 2012.

Shooting also occurred on Spain's including the island of and. Filming had been intended to take place in, France, but was relocated to the islands to take advantage of a larger tax rebate (38%) that was estimated to lower filming costs by $20 million. On October 11, 2012, Walker suffered an during a stunt, forcing the production to film around his scenes until he recovered. A scene involving a plane crash began filming at the former station, on October 30, 2012, and was scheduled to conclude on November 9.

Filming for a car chase scene took place on in, and also the over four days in November 2012. Two days of filming were spent at 's, which served as a nightclub. The final phase of filming took place in beginning on December 1, 2012.

The shoot returned the series to the filming location of the original, and required the garage setting of that film to be rebuilt by carpenters. By December 17, 2012, it was reported that filming had concluded. Post-production was heavily condensed; by March 2013, Lin was attempting to complete approximately 18 months' worth of post-production in a 12-week period. Lin was aided by five film editors, specialist teams focused on visual effects and color timing, and sound mixers that required two movie-theater-sized stages alone. Stunts For Owen Shaw's Flip Car, Lin tasked the film's vehicle designer with developing a car capable of driving head first into moving vehicles and flipping them into the air. McCarthy and his team designed a fully functional, low to the ground, car with a ramp on its front that allowed it to catapult other cars into the air while keeping the Flip Car driver safe.

For Rodriguez's and Carano's fight in the London Underground, producers refused to let the pair attempt a stunt where their characters battle over a stair rail and fall down a stairwell, fearing a serious injury would derail filming; stunt women performed the practical stunt. Morgan's scripted rendition of the fight was described as a on steroids, but Rodriguez provided input to turn it into more of a street fight. Rodriguez said: 'Originally in the script, it was a lot more 'Terminator'-esque — too far-fetched to be believed. Things just happened so quick and then I'm on top?

Justin and I had to bust our booties to get it more realistic. I was like, 'This woman needs to kick my ass!' ' Rodriguez and Carano rehearsed their fight choreography over two months, with trained fighter Carano undergoing extra practice to ensure her strikes looked credible without hitting hard enough to harm Rodriguez.

Under the direction of fight choreographer Olivier Schneider, the fight was designed to be brutal but realistic, representing Carano's 'cop with fight training' and Rodriguez's street fighting. The parkade explosion Shaw lures Dom's team into combined on-set pillars that could be detonated alongside dust mines which could be used as a reference for the digital artists to create the appearance of the structure sinking into itself. A scene involving Evans' character commandeering a tank was originally intended to use CGI to portray the vehicle crushing cars along a Spanish highway, but the final scene used practical effects as the tank really ran over approximately 250 cars during filming. The scene was shot over a three-mile stretch of highway in Tenerife lined with holiday resorts that had to be digitally removed to create a desolate appearance. The segment's finale that sees Roman leap to a nearby car and the tank flip was created digitally.

The scene featuring Diesel smashing his car through the nose of a Soviet-era cargo aircraft during takeoff was conceived by Lin while producing Fast & Furious in 2009. At the time, the stunt was too expensive to film and did not fit into that film's story, but Lin commissioned digital pre-visualization artists to develop a mock-up of the idea. He attempted to revive the concept for Fast Five but the technology available proved insufficient and it still did not organically fit into the story. Filming the climactic scene practically was considered unfeasible as it involved throwing tanks through the air and having cars race alongside the moving aeroplane at 100 miles per hour. Lin opted to build various plane sets instead: a thirty foot high, seventy five foot long, fifty foot wide replica of the complete with wheels; the tail of the plane with a ramp allowing the cars to drive in and out; and a full scale build of the central fuselage, with wings, engines and the nose, that could be set on fire. For Dom's car to explode through the plane's nose, a Dodge Charger was placed on a pneumatic cannon mounted inside a ramp which was then towed by a 4x4 truck, all concealed behind the plane's nose replica. This was then clad in material soaked in flammable materials.

The cannon fired the Charger through the nose as the material is ignited for the practical effect. The stunt driver had a burning 40-ton plane rig chasing them down the runway afterwards. The scene involved more than 200 crew members, and over 350 visual effects (VFX) artists at VFX studio to complete. A typical shot of the craft's destruction could take over 100 man days to complete. The VFX team combined the filmed explosions and smoke with digital augmentations to place the plane into the scene. Marketing The film's first trailer was released during the 2013 on February 3. Among the six film trailers that launched at the event, Fast & Furious 6 generated widespread attention on social media, more than the other films (including and ) combined according to data collection agency Fizziology.

The extended version of the trailer had been viewed over 16 million times by February 17. The trailer's success was partially attributed to the film's stars promoting the trailer on their personal social networks. The Fast and the Furious series marketing attempted to cultivate an online fan base which was also considered to have helped promote the film; the filmmakers responded to fan interaction, conducted an online poll to decide the title of Fast & Furious 6, brought back the character of Letty Ortiz based on fan feedback and encouraged fans to document the film's production with unofficial photos.

Universal marketing co-president Michael Moses said: 'We’re trying to remove the studio filter as much as possible, which is a little scary because you’re ceding control. But it makes for more authentic and organic interaction with fans.' The Super Bowl trailer, titled 'Breathe', won two for Best Action TV Spot and Best Summer Blockbuster 2013 TV Spot, and the marketing campaign received a further three nominations: Summer 2013 Blockbuster Trailer and Best Sound Editing for the 'Trailer' trailer, and Best Teaser Poster. A 15-piece clothing line was also produced in partnership with, including T-shirts, jackets, caps and watches. Continuing their partnership from Fast Five, the Facebook game by Cie Games and the theater chain (REG) collaborated with Universal in a cross-media marketing promotion. Car Town allowed players to view the trailer for the film in an REG-branded, in-game drive-in theater. The game also featured missions and locations based on the plot of the film, and allowed players to join forces with Fast & Furious 6 characters.

REG offered players of Car Town the ability to purchase tickets in-game via for films at REG theaters. By buying these tickets in-game, players were given promotional codes which in turn allowed them to unlock a virtual 2013 SRT8. Release The premiere of Fast & Furious 6 took place on May 7, 2013, at the in Leicester Square, London. The film was released in the United Kingdom on May 17, 2013, with the North American release on May 24. While the film is officially titled Fast & Furious 6, its on-screen title card displays the title as simple Furious 6.

Box office Fast & Furious 6 earned $239 million in North America and $550 million elsewhere for a worldwide total of $789 million. Calculating in all expenses, estimated that the film made a profit of $135.1 million. Worldwide, it is the sixth highest-grossing and the fourth highest-grossing film.

On the weekend of June 14–16, 2013, it became the second highest-grossing film in the Fast and the Furious franchise worldwide behind Furious 7, as well as separately in North America and outside North America. Outside North America, it is the highest-grossing film in the series, the second highest-grossing Universal film and the second highest-grossing 2013 film. In the United Kingdom, the film took $4.4 million during its opening day from 462 screens, the biggest opening day for both The Fast and the Furious franchise and Universal in that market, the second-highest opening of 2013 behind Iron Man 3 ($4.7 million), and the number 1 film of the day with 54% of the market. It finished as the number 1 film of the weekend, taking a total of $13.8 million; this figure made it the biggest opening for the franchise, Universal, a Vin Diesel or Dwayne Johnson film, and the second-biggest opening of 2013 again behind Iron Man 3 ($17.6 million).

The film opened in fifty-nine territories the following weekend alongside the North American opening, placing as the number 1 film in each and earning $160.3 million; it set opening-weekend records in the United Arab Emirates, the Middle East, and Argentina (the latter was first surpassed by ). In China, the Fast & Furious 6 opened to $6.9 million, making it Universal's highest-grossing film in the territory. It earned its 66th number 1 opening, earning $23.6 million during its opening weekend, $3 million of which came from IMAX screenings. In North America, Fast & Furious 6 debuted simultaneously with the comedy and the animated feature. It opened for midnight showings on May 23, 2013, in 2,409 theaters. It took $6.5 million, nearly doubling Fast Five 's midnight gross ($3.8 million) which faced less direct competition.

On its opening day, Fast & Furious 6 earned $38.7 million (including midnight earnings) from 3,659 theaters. The film finished the 4-day Memorial Day weekend in first place, taking $117.0 million, which was the fourth-highest 4-day Memorial Day opening. The audience was diverse, with Latinos representing 32%, women 49%, and 57% over the age of 25. Critical reception Fast & Furious 6 received generally positive reviews from critics. On, the film has a rating of 69%, based on 188 reviews, with an of 6.2/10. The site's critical consensus reads, 'With high-octane humor and terrific action scenes, Fast & Furious 6 builds upon the winning blockbuster formula that made Fast 5 a critical and commercial success.' Gives the film a score of 61 out of 100, based on 39 critics, which indicates 'generally favorable reviews'.

Polls reported that the average grade moviegoers gave the film was an 'A' on a scale of A+ to F. Fast & Furious 6 was generally considered to effectively mix absurd action scenes and outrageous stunts with a predictable but enjoyable plot and character dialog. 's Jim Vejvoda said that the film is a crowd pleaser whose fun moments outweighed failed attempts at humor and unintentionally comical dialog. Other reviewers highlighted the likable cast, ludicrous action, playful approach to the plot, and ability to immerse the audience in the high speed chases and conflict between the two opposing gangs. 's Ben Rawson-Jones said the tone successfully mixed self-conscious spectacle with the central characters' teamwork, bonding and familial spirit. Conversely, 's Chris Cabin said the film was smug, cynical and insubstantial that delivered overly sentimental drama and forced comedy that seemed unaware 'of how dumb the material is'.

's Tim Robey labeled the film as slow-witted with a random and generic plot, and 's Derek Adams said the film featured puerile dialog, daft performances and flat comic repartee. Said that the film forsakes realistic set-pieces (comparing it to the 2012 superhero film ), which undermined any attempts at creating tension. 's Owen Williams noted that Fast & Furious 6 lacked the same surprise as Fast Five without Johnson's antagonist Hobbs, and suggested that the large cast of returning characters had made Evans' Owen Shaw unable to make an impression as the new villain. Scenes of dialog and character progression were criticized as slow, and laughably bad. Evans' Owen Shaw was repeatedly singled out as a refreshing and charismatic addition to the cast, though others described the character as generic and dull.

Lin's direction of the action set-pieces was described as lavish and exquisite. The cinematography received a mixed response.

's Scott Foundas appreciated the attention to spatial geography and complicated, single, continuous shots which were compared to the best of and films, and Rawson-Jones said that the nocturnal races in London made excellent use of the environment. 's Todd McCarthy considered that the action scenes were cut too fast, failed to provide a sense of speed for the vehicles and were mired by poor angles and nocturnal settings that obscured the view. 's Matthew Turner considered that the action lacked imagination, with the London-based segments amounting to little more than a geographically inaccurate race past landmarks. Main article: composed the musical score for Fast & Furious 6.

In addition to Vidal's score, tracks by composer from the franchise's previous installments are also featured in the film. A soundtrack album to the film was released by on May 21, 2013. It features many and tracks, including songs by, and many others. Video games A, titled, was released on May 21, 2013.

Developed by and published by for, and, the game's story ties into the events in Fast & Furious 6, including bridging the events between the story of the film and those of its predecessor Fast Five, as well as the story of other films in the franchise. It is a -style action game and received mainly negative reviews. A mobile game, Fast & Furious 6: The Game, was developed by Exploding Barrel Games and published by studio.

It was released on May 16, 2013, for, and devices. The story of Fast & Furious 6: The Game runs parallel to that of Fast & Furious 6, allowing players to race and customize vehicles alongside characters from the film.

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