(Francis Coppola on the set of Youth Without Youth.)
FRANCIS COPPOLA GOES BACK TO BASICS
by Alex Simon
Perhaps more than any other filmmaker in history, Francis Coppola has tasted the fruits of phenomenal success, and also suffered the tortures of the damned. After becoming arguably the most successful director of the 1970s with his quartet of films that are regarded as the pinnacle of American filmmaking (The Godfather I & II, The Conversation, Apocalypse Now won a cumulative 11 Academy Awards), Coppola’s life in the 1980s was met with a series of professional disappointments and personal tragedy: a series of ambitious films from his Zoetrope Studios were financial and critical disasters. In 1986, his eldest son, Gian-Carlo, was killed in a boating accident.
In the interim, Coppola never stopped working, with more than 30 films to his credit as director, nearly 70 as producer, and 25 as screenwriter (Coppola won a Best Screenplay Oscar in 1970 for Patton). In addition, the Coppola family has joined the ranks of the Fondas and Hustons in the number of talented progeny they have sired over several generations: Coppola’s sister Talia Shire is an Academy-Award nominated actress; his late father Carmine Coppola was an Oscar-winning film composer; daughter Sofia is an Oscar-winning screenwriter and the first woman to be nominated for an Oscar as Best Director; and nephew Nicolas Cage (real last name Coppola) is an Oscar-winning actor and has been a renowned international star for nearly 20 years. Son Roman is also a successful filmmaker and producer.
After a ten year hiatus from directing, his last feature being the 1997 John Grisham adaptation of The Rainmaker, Francis Coppola returns to his avant-garde roots that began in the mid-60s with films like You’re a Big Boy Now and The Rain People. Youth Without Youth stars Tim Roth as Dominic Matei, an elderly Romanian man in 1938 who, just before he is about to commit suicide, is struck by lightning and miraculously survives. Not only does he survive, but he finds that his body has begun aging in reverse, making him a young man again during the rise of Fascism in Europe of the late 1930s. Gifted not only with a second chance at life, but also renewed youth, Dominic finds that he has the rare gift of having the body of a young man, but the wisdom of an aged one. He re-expereinces a first great love affair, and a series of moral choices that dictate the course of his second life. Based on the writings of religious and philosophical scholar Mircea Eliade, Youth Without Youth offers some of the most stunning imagery (equal parts beautiful and repellent) put onto film in recent memory, and refreshingly asks more questions than it answers. Not for every taste, to be sure, and in no danger of being set up for sequel to be helmed by Michael Bay, Francis Coppola seems to have come full-circle with this fascinating, and challenging cinematic work.
I sat down with Mr. Coppola recently, during a short respite before he was off traveling the world once again, this time to Argentina, where he is in pre-production on his next film, Tetro.
This is one of those films that has many different layers to it, both conscious and unconscious. Was it the complexity of the story that drew you to it?
Francis Coppola: Absolutely, but I’m not sure that it’s such a complex story. My feeling was always that, like Hamlet, we all know what’s going on here: a guy’s father is murdered and the guy plots revenge. That’s what Hamlet is on the surface. The story of Youth Without Youth is exotic and certainly a lot of crazy things happen, not unlike an episode of "The Twilight Zone" in some ways, but it’s not difficult to understand what it’s about.
But it’s really more about the subtext than the context.
Well, the subtext is a different story, and what I think is the real fun of it. You can think about it and relate to it in terms of where you are in your own life, maybe see it again at different times in your life and each time it will take on a new meaning. That’s what’s fun for me.
I feel like I might have to see it a couple more times to really feel as though I’ve seen the film.
But I would argue that you didn’t miss any of the story the first time you saw it. What you missed perhaps, were some of the implications, but you’re supposed to miss them. Again, not that this is Hamlet, but you could enjoy that play simply on the level of a murder mystery, and you should. You shouldn’t feel that you can’t enjoy it because it’s somehow over your head. It’s not over your head. It’s over everybody’s head. It’s meant to be a positive thing that the story can always be changing and taking on new meaning for you as your life changes and things take on new meanings. We live in a time of dramatized criminology where we have to have all the clues and have all the questions be answered in sixty minutes, or less. But this is not that kind of a story. Some of the mysteries here have to do with the nature of existence and who could pinpoint that? You could get into a long conversation about why you can’t, and that’s something that I enjoy doing.
This is a return to avant-garde filmmaking for you.
Well, that would be a privilege…
Your early films: You’re a Big Boy Now, and The Rain People were certainly avant-garde, as was The Conversation and Rumble Fish. Plus, if you look throughout your body of work, there are avant-garde elements in virtually all of your films. Obviously it’s an artistic movement which had a profound effect on you. Were those the elements of Youth Without Youth that made you want to step back behind a camera again, after ten years?
Those first three you mentioned were original screenplays, which is what I want to get back to doing. A lot of directors have a hiatus between films, usually about three years, especially if you’re writing your own stuff, because it takes two years to write something. So I don’t think it’s that unusual for a director to be absent for a while, unless you’re talking about someone who’s just a big director, who’s got three or four scripts being developed for him all the time, and he just keeps working because he wants to work every year. In my case, I was searching for what my little niche would be. I didn’t want to be a “big director” directing big, complicated movies with big stars for big studios. You know, the sort of movie that’s going to have a lot of producers and notes, and that kind of thing. You look at a movie today, and you’ve got a dozen producers listed. I also didn’t necessarily want to do a film just because I thought it would be a hit, and make me a lot of money, because I’ve got plenty of money. What I really was looking for was some kind of personal fulfillment, so I was trying to write this ambitious screenplay called Megalopolis, which was about utopia, which sort of got tough after 9/11, and I didn’t know how to deal with that story, which was set in New York, without somehow incorporating the tragedy of the Twin Towers. So I was sort of trapped, and a little depressed, and then ultimately a friend of mine who I had given my script to and was an associate of Eliade, suggested I read some of his work. Because even in Megalopolis, there were a lot of inquiry into the nature of consciousness and time, and she said “You have to read some Eliade,” and when I read Youth Without Youth it was like I had been hit by lightning, and I thought ‘Gee, I could just go off and make this. I could fly off to Romania, use my own money, and the kind of technology that I had done when I was young and made films like The Rain People, and just have all the equipment in a truck and ship it there.’ And although this is a big picture, I approached the production in such a logical way, that I could afford to make it exactly as I wanted to. In the process, I was able to fix this part of my life that was so frustrating.
So in many ways, there were parallels between your own life and that of the Tim Roth character.
Yes, and I realized that. I thought it was good that I was making a movie about something that I was going through at the time. I felt that when I was young, I was catapulted into an old man’s career with The Godfather, which I made when I was about 30. I wanted to be a young filmmaker, but here I was, a big Hollywood filmmaker. So I thought, why not at 67, try to have a young, student filmmaker experience. That’s why I tried to hire young people: my cinematographer was barely 28, and try to make a movie with young eyes.
A few months back, I interviewed William Friedkin, who’s going through the exact same thing in terms of going back to his roots, as are many directors of your generation. His latest film, Bug, primarily takes place on a single set with two characters. Throughout our talk, Billy kept commenting on how if he were in his 20s today, he probably wouldn’t be in the movie business, simply because the kinds of stories that he likes to tell aren’t being funded by studios anymore.
What would he be doing now?
We didn’t get into that, but I know for the past decade he’s been directing operas. So maybe he’d be focusing more on the stage, or on writing.
Well, I think filmmaking is the most exciting art form there is. First of all, it’s young, which means it’s going to continue to evolve, and it also encompasses so many other art forms. What Billy says is certainly true. It’s a tough time because the studios which used to owned by showmen and wacky guys like Jack Warner and Darryl Zanuck who really loved movies are now owned by big communications czars who are more interested in the stock price of their companies than they are in movies, so it’s tough. There’s not a big variety of filmmaking happening anymore. Everything has got to be a big-budget blockbuster, because that’s the only way they can support what they’ve got going. I understand that it’s tough to even get a drama made today. But it was always tough, even when Billy and I started.
I think Billy’s point was, and Peter Bogdanovich made this same point when we spoke a few years ago, when you guys started out in the mid-60s, the guys who ran the studios were interested in telling the same stories that you were. Today, that simply isn’t the case.
They’re not even interested in telling stories anymore. They’re just interested in making money, which they always were, but with a difference: if Sam Goldwyn could do a picture like The Best Years of Our Lives, he was proud to do this beautiful drama, and to have it make money. But success today is defined differently, I think. The prize is the big stock price, and the G5 jet, and whatever it is. They’re not show people so much. They’re business people. I mean, Zanuck was a writer for many years, and Warner and Goldwyn had come out of the early days of exhibition, so they were coming at it from a different mind set. Harvey (Weinstein) is like that. Harvey is the most like the old guys: he’s tough and vulgar and it might be a nightmare to work with him, although I never have, but still he loves movies and he wants to have the best movie of the year, every year.
So when your kids Roman and Sofia expressed interest in entering the business, you didn’t discourage them at all?
No, I disagree with Billy on that. I think it’s still the most exciting art form in the world, and I don’t think kids should be discouraged from anything they want to do. I mean, what’s the point of life, to see who dies with the most toys? My answer would be to die with the best memories.
I agree with you, but I don’t think a lot of the power structure of Hollywood does.
No? What about somebody like Mark Cuban? He seems like he likes his toys.
He’s also got good taste. He’s put his name on some interesting pictures.
Yeah, that’s true.
Let’s get back to Youth Without Youth. It’s a picture with an epic scope. Was shooting in Eastern Europe with a crew from that region make it a different experience than shooting in the U.S. with Americans?
The crew was amazing but the primary thing that made it different was the fact that it was a masterpiece of production: because I put up my own money, I was able to eliminate a lot of the waste that comes through banking arrangements and completion bonds and various studio affiliations…you’d be surprised how much creative financing goes on. So the trick was I said ‘We’re going, and they money is there,’ and because of that, we didn’t have to jump through other people’s hoops. And the crews there also work for far less than the crews here. We made it with a 100% Romanian crew, with the exception of hair and makeup because I knew that would be important and I wanted the very best. Those two people for hair and makeup wound up costing me almost as much as the entire rest of the crew! In terms of everything else, it all becomes fewer: the number of people you have to have on-set, the number of people making decisions. It was really wonderful.
Tell us about how you like to work with actors. I’ve been a fan of Tim Roth for years, and he does terrific work in this.
Tim is one of those actors who’s always done good work, but has never had his day in the sun, where they say “Wow! Look at what he can do.” They did it with Nicolas (Cage) finally, after Leaving Las Vegas. And Tim gives a tremendous performance. He had to be 24 and he had to be 94 and every age in between. Plus, he had to have a heartbreaking love story, whereas he’s largely played villains before. Plus, his head is wrapped in gauze during a big chunk of the film, so he’s just acting with his eyes.
You’re known for giving actors a great deal of latitude. Is your philosophy to cast well, and then get out of the way?
Well, it’s more complicated than that. I always do a couple weeks of rehearsal and I have a theory that during the early phase of the movie, one-by-one the actors find their character. Once they find their characters, then they are the person. For example, if I said to you ‘Alex, I want you to go down the hall and slap the press lady,’ and you said “Well, okay. If I have to.” You would do it as Alex would do it. But if you’re Tim Roth and after two or three weeks you’ve arrived at who your character is, whatever I ask you to do, you’re going to do it in character. You’ll know the character better than I do. So in that sense, I do give the actors a lot of leeway because I want the best for them, and I want their characters to come alive. But I do lots of things to put you in the context. I love using props, and laying them on actors, in a way making very narrow the path that you’re going to go through. So if you Alex are going to play Dominic, I’m going to surround you with Dominic props and Dominic stimulus and give you a Dominic labyrinth to go through. So you’ll be acting in a very free way, but you’re also in a route that’s been made for you that can’t miss.
And sometimes you do that on the spur of the moment. I heard that you’re the one who dropped that cat into Brando’s lap during the opening scene of The Godfather to help him get into character.
Yeah, and it was a cat that just happened to be wandering around the soundstage. It helped Marlon to focus. He was talking to the other person in the scene, but he was also focusing on petting and playing with the cat that was on his lap. It put him in the moment.
So do you block during your rehearsals?
No, we do more improvisations and games and odd things that I think of or other things that people suggest that might lead the actor to click into who they are. I’ll tell you a Billy Friedkin story. On The French Connection, Gene Hackman was playing the part of Popeye Doyle. He said in the first few weeks, he had no idea who he was. He said “I put on this funny porkpie hat, and was talking fast…and at one point in the morning, it was cold and I went to craft service and got a cup of coffee and a donut and I dunked the donut in the coffee, took one bite of the donut and then I tossed the donut in the street. Then I heard a voice say ‘That’s him! That’s Popeye.’” And it was Friedkin, who had watched the whole thing. So sometimes, some little moment can give you the key to the entire character.
Now that DVDs have become the new cinematheque, and you’ve recorded commentary tracks for some of your most famous films, is it easier for you to watch your work with some time behind it?
I don’t watch my work, really. Once in a while I’ll be in a hotel room, and I’ll notice they’re playing one of my films on TV. Last I was in Lima, Peru and they were playing Jack, with Robin Williams. And I liked it, and remembered liked working with those kids. When they ask me to do a commentary, they sit me in front of a screen and I usually haven’t seen the film, as with Dracula most recently, and then I just say whatever I think while I’m watching it. Once I finish a film, I’m usually done with it. I’m much more interested in the new one than I am in the old one. Although sometimes it’s a very pleasant experience. One of my films that’s one of my favorites is Rumble Fish, made in the period when I supposedly wasn’t making good movies, but I think Rumble Fish is as good as any movie I’ve ever made.
But oftentimes artists are their own worst critics. I’ve interviewed many filmmakers who have gone back to their work that was excoriated at the time of its release and they think that it’s actually pretty good. I’ve also spoken with others who’ve had the opposite experience.
Yeah, I don’t agree with what a lot of the critics have said about my work. Certainly, The Outsiders would fall under that category and the version we put out on DVD with the extra footage I think is really terrific. Even Jack, which I watched last week, I realize that nobody liked it, but I must say it was a production where I was a director-for-hire, I thought it was a very sweet movie. And Big, which was essentially the same idea, which was my first objection as to why anyone would want to make Jack, with a film as good as Big already out there. I think Big is certainly the better film of the two, because it was the first time that idea was done, and maybe Robin wasn’t the best for that kind of mawkish character. He can be absolutely brilliant, but maybe I let him be a bit too sentimental in Jack. People seemed to resent the fact that a guy like me, who is supposedly a more intellectual, avant-garde filmmaker, would make a film like Jack.
Yeah, that was the reaction that I remembered. When people see a Francis Coppola picture, they’re raising the bar higher than they would for most other filmmakers, and they want something more serious, or at least something that’s perhaps somewhat elevated from the rest of the pack.
But there are all kinds of movies…
I agree with you. But human beings, especially critics and scholars, like to pigeonhole people.
Definitely. And from the artist’s point of view, that can be very frustrating, and hurtful.
I know a lot of your work has been heavily influenced by the Italian neo-realists: Rossellini, De Sica, Visconti, Pasolini. Who are some of your other influences?
I love Fellini’s films, both the pre-La Dolce Vita films, which was a revelation and the films he did after that. I love Kurosawa because he just made so many great films. He was a case where his new film was as great as anything he’d done before. I don’t know how he was able to do it. I loved the French New Wave and Truffaut, and Antonioni, and Rossellini was like the father to them all…Visconti with Rocco and His Brothers…
One of my favorite films.
That’s the kind of movie I’m making in Argentina next. It’s the story of brothers.
I read somewhere that the banquet scene at the end of Visconti’s The Leopard was what influenced the wedding scene at the opening of The Godfather.
No, on the third Godfather I looked at The Leopard a lot, but on the first one, I based it on my family weddings. (laughs) I quite loved Wajda’s Ashes and Diamonds which is quite possibly one of the greatest films ever made. I love G.W. Pabst. I love the silent films: Murnau’s Sunrise.
Did you study Murnau’s Nosferatu before doing Dracula?
Not really. I looked much more at Carl Dreyer’s Vampyr, which is quite different. Nosferatu is quite obviously the greatest vampire story ever made. I couldn’t get 100% with Bergman, but there are some Bergman films I adore, like Smiles of a Summer Night, Wild Strawberries…there have been such great movies made in the hundred years of their existence, even in the first thirty years. But G.W. Pabst was always one of my favorites. Eisenstein is another one.
I know you got an early break working for the legendary Roger Corman. What was that like?
It wasn’t so much a break, as it was a real job. I had never worked so hard for such a small amount of money in my life. The thrill of it was, you really were learning the reality of production and how to really get out there and make movies for a little money and how not to waste money. Roger clearly was a businessman. He was a Stanford engineer, a good guy, and he was doing it because he was smart. I treasure the years I worked for him. I started out as his assistant, and he was a wonderful character.
Tell us about the new picture you’re doing in Argentina.
It’s a very personal film made on a similar scale of Youth Without Youth, although not quite as big. I have Matt Dillon, Javier Bardem, Klaus Maria Brandauer. It’s a story of brothers and fathers, sort of like a Greek myth, or so people have told me. A lot of it is taken from my own memories. I’m consciously going into my Tennessee Williams period, which I’ve always wanted to do. I’m praying for the ghost of Elia Kazan to come and occupy me, because there’s no greater director of actors that ever lived.
Yeah, I also think he was one of the great blenders of cinema-verite style realism and pure cinematic filmmaking.
Yeah, he made so many great movies, but look at Baby Doll, and how striking it still is, 50 years later. What’s the one he did with Lee Remick and Andy Griffith about the radio personality?
A Face in the Crowd.
A Face in the Crowd! Splendor in the Grass, which was one of the most heartbreaking love stories you could ever tell.
He was also one of the great discoverers of screen talent. You’ve also always had an eye for discovering new faces.
I’ve been lucky enough to have some wonderful associates. Fred Roos, who helped me with the casting of The Godfather, and we still work together. Listen, it’s such a privilege to be able to make films, and I’m so grateful that I got wealthy through some surprise of fate that allowed me to finance them. Speaking of, Billy could finance his own movies. He’s rich. He should.
Which brings us back to the beginning of our conversation: how so many of the so-called “Easy Riders and Raging Bulls” are returning to their roots as filmmakers.
There’s no question. For so long, there were filmmakers like the late Michael Ritchie, Fielder Cook, Hal Ashby, there was just such a great heritage of filmmakers who were once out there. Now, speaking for myself, I just want to make personal films and the phrase that you keep using, which I’m going to steal, which is “avant-garde” films, that’s what I want to do. I want to make films you haven’t seen before. I’m so tired of going to a movie theater and seeing a story I’ve seen before. Even if it’s an important director like a Michael Mann, they’re clearly in it to be a part of the studio mill. I know there are a lot of my colleagues who feel the same way I do, and want to make personal films. Maybe a lot of them have been married a lot of times, and can’t quite afford to do what I’m doing. If you’re supporting five families, it’s hard to stop making a lot of money. Look at someone like Brian De Palma. He just keeps making movies, and finds ways to get the money from a variety of sources. I wish George Lucas would take some of his fortune now and make some personal art films, because he’s a very talented filmmaker. No one even knows what George is truly capable of.
It seems like he’s focused more on developing the technological side of his business.
It’s this kind of silly blockbuster competition of who has more billions of dollars. But George is a fabulous avant-garde filmmaker, and the day he just walks out there and takes three 16mm cameras…it’s just one of the greatest wastes of talent that he keeps making Star Wars over and over again. Star Wars was a stunning achievement but now, I wish George would show us the other side of him.
It seems like Spielberg is someone who does do that. It’s like a “one for them” and “one for me” philosophy.
Yeah, Spielberg did Empire of the Sun, which was one of the better films of that period and also discovered Christian Bale as a child. Even Munich I thought was the best film of that year. He took some flack for it, but to have the guts to say the unsayable that maybe everyone in that whole conflict is partly to blame, and he tried to do that. I have nothing but admiration for Steven, and for all filmmakers who make personal films. That’s why we got into this in the first place. That’s why we’re here.
FRANCIS COPPOLA INTERVIEW!
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- Cooper Crest
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- costumes
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- crime
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- crops
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- csa
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- curt pavola
- Curtis Hanson
- Cybill
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- Cybill Shepherd.
- Cyrus Nowrasteh
- cys
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- dash
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- david cobb
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- Day
- deadly force
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- degarmo's
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- delegates
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- democracy
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- demolition
- Dennis Farina
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- density
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- department
- DERT
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- design
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- deskoba
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- developmental
- DGA
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- Dianne Wiest
- Dick Cavett
- dick pust
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- dinner
- dioxin
- Dirk Bogarde
- Dirk Bogarde.
- Dirty Dancing
- disabilities
- dispensary
- distillery
- district
- district plan
- diversity
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- dog park
- dog wash
- dogs
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- Dominic Sherwood
- Don Simpson
- Dorothy Dandridge
- Dorothy Stratten
- Doubt
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- downing
- downtown
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- downy woodpecker
- Dracula
- dredging
- dress
- drew hansen
- Drexel
- drinking
- drug court
- drug free zone
- drugs
- dylan carlson
- E.J. Zita
- eagle
- earthquake
- east bay
- eastside
- Easy Rider
- ecology
- economic
- economic development
- economy
- ecosystems
- Ed Westwick
- Ed Zwick
- Eddie Bunker
- Edgar Alan Poe.
- edibles
- Edie Falco
- education
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- EIS
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- election
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- electricity
- elementary
- Elf
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- Elliot Gould
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- Elvis Presley
- emergency
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- Emilio Estevez
- eminent domain
- Emma Roberts
- Emmy
- endurance
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- Enter the Dragon
- enterprise for equity
- Entrevistas
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- environmental cleanup
- equipment
- eric christensen
- Eric Idle
- Eric Roberts
- Ernest Hemingway
- Errol Morris
- esterly
- estuary
- Eugene O'Neil
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- event
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- evergreen estates
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- falls development llc
- falls terrace
- family
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- farming
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- farms
- Fast Times
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- Faye Dunaway
- federal
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- feel the burn
- feelings
- fellowship of reconciliation
- Ferris Bueller's Day Off
- festival
- film
- finance
- finn
- fire
- fire department
- firefighters
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- first day of spring
- fish
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- Fish Tank
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- Five Easy Pieces
- fix democracy first
- fixer upper
- flak
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- food production
- force
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- forum
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- foundation
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- fracking
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- Francis Coppola
- francis huffman
- Francois Ozon
- Francois Truffaut
- Frank Capra
- Frank Darabont
- Frank Langella
- Frank Sinatra.
- fred beckey
- Fred Coe
- fred finn
- Fred Zinnemann
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- friends
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- frogs
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- funding
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- george heidgerken
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- good faith
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- governor jay Inslee
- gracie Anderson
- gracious space
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- graffiti
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- Grande Holiday Ballroom
- grande terrace
- grande terrace at Capitol Lake
- grande terrace on capitol lake
- grange
- grant
- great blue heron
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- Greg Kinnear
- griswold's
- groomer
- grooming
- groundwater
- groupthink
- grow
- growth
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- guild
- guinea pigs
- gun
- gunn
- Guy Pearce
- H.R. 2270
- habitat
- hair
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- hannah hart
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- HB 1437
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- HB 2907
- HB 2908
- HBO
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- Heathers
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- heights
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- Henry Fonda
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- If...
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- imminent
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- Introducing Dorothy Dandridge
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- it's the
- it's the water
- Jack Lemmon
- Jack Nicholson
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- James Coburn.
- James Dean
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- Jamie Dornan
- Jan De Bont
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- JBLM
- Jean-Luc Godard
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- Jeff Bridges
- jeff davis
- jennifer sprague
- Jennifer srague
- Jerry Bruckheimer
- jerry farmer
- Jerry Zucker
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- Joe Versus the Volcano
- Joel Sarnow
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- John Cale
- John Cassavetes
- John Cleese
- John F. Kennedy.
- John Ford
- John Frankenheimer
- John Goodman
- John Guare
- John Hughes
- John Huston
- John Lennon
- John Milius
- John Patrick Shanley.
- John Profumo
- John Sayles
- John Schlesinger.
- John Singleton
- John Stockwell
- john t. williams
- John Travolta
- John Woo
- jon potter
- jon tunheim
- Jonathan Demme
- jones
- Jordan
- Joseph Morgan
- Joseph Sargent
- Josh Brolin
- Josh Hartnett.
- joslyn rose trivett
- journalism
- journalist
- joyce McDonald
- Joyce McKinney
- jr.
- juan carlos ruiz duran
- jubilee
- judy bardin
- Julia Roberts
- Juliette Binoche
- june jubilee
- Jungle Fever
- justice
- justified
- Kafka
- KAOS
- Karen Black
- Karen fraser
- karen johnson
- Kate Bosworth
- Kate Winslet
- Keaton Simons
- keep film in washington
- Ken Loach
- Ken Russell
- Kent State
- kerensa mabwa
- Kevin Bacon
- Kevin Spacey
- keystone
- kids
- kim Andresen
- King of the Gypsies
- Kirk Douglas
- Kit Harington
- kittens
- Klaus Kinski
- Koch brothers
- kory pearce
- Kris Kristofferson.
- Krzysztof Kieslowski
- L.A. Confidential
- La Boheme
- lacey
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- lake
- Lambert Wilson
- land trust
- land use
- Larry Goodman
- Latino
- Lauren Bacall
- Lauren Hutton
- Laurence Fishburne
- Laurence Olivier
- law
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- Lawrence goodman
- LBA woods
- leadership
- leadership council
- league of women voters
- Lee Harvey Oswald
- Lee Marvin
- legendary loc
- legislation
- legislative
- legislature
- Leslie Cheung
- leslie Cushman
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- Liam Neeson
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- Lindsay Anderson
- line
- Links
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- Little Hollywood
- liz lyman
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- local
- local government
- location
- long lake
- longmire
- loss
- lot
- LOTT
- LOTT clean water alliance
- Lou Reed
- Louis Malle
- love
- love our local fest
- Love Story
- low
- lower elwha klallam
- Luc Besson.
- Lucille Ball
- luke davis
- Luke Evans
- Luscino Visconti
- machine
- Mad Max
- madison elementary school
- madison scenic
- Maggie Cheung
- makeover
- Malcolm McDowell
- Malibu
- malice
- man with a gun
- management
- manufacturing
- maple
- marathon park
- Marc Forster
- marc hayes
- marco Rosaire rossi
- marco rossi
- marijuana
- marine
- Marlon Brando
- Married Life
- marriott
- martin luther king jr
- Martin Scorsese
- marx
- mary hall
- Mary Tyler Moore.
- MASH
- master plan
- Matt Bomer
- matt grant
- Matthew Broderick
- max brown
- Max Irons
- Max Schreck
- Mayor
- mazama
- mcallister park
- mcallister springs
- McCabe and Mrs. Miller
- McGregor
- McLane Creek Nature Trail
- medical
- Medium Cool
- meeting
- meetings
- meg martin
- Mel Gibson
- Mel Gibson.
- melinda spencer
- Melissa Leo
- Member Interviews
- Member Opinion Pieces
- memorial
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- Meryl Streep
- message
- meth
- methamphetamine
- metropolitan parks district
- Mexico
- Michael Apted
- Michael Caine
- Michael chun
- Michael Cimino
- Michael Douglas
- Michael Fassbender
- Michael Palin
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- Michael Pressman
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- michael savoca
- Michael Sheen
- Michelangelo Antonioni
- michelle morris
- Michelle Pfeiffer
- Mickey Rourke
- middle east
- Midnight Express
- Mike Hodges
- Mike Leigh
- Mike Nichols
- mike savoca
- military
- miller
- minimum wage
- ministry
- Mishima
- Mistake on the Lake
- Misty Upham
- mixed
- Moe Tucker
- money
- Monica Bellucci
- Monster's Ball
- Monty Python
- Moonlighting
- Moonstruck
- Morgan Freeman
- morningside
- moss lake
- Moulin Rouge
- mount rainier
- mountaineers
- moxlie creek
- MPAA.
- Mrs. Harris
- mt. rainier
- mud bay
- Mumford
- mural
- murder
- murray
- mutual funds
- My Own Worst Enemy
- mystery
- mystery envelope
- NAMI
- Nancy Armstrong
- Nancy Meyers
- narcotics
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- Nathan Lane
- nathaniel jones
- Nathaniel West
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- native American
- Native Plant Salvage
- native species
- natural
- nature
- navigation channel
- nearshore
- necessary
- needles
- neighborhood
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- Neil Simon
- Neo Realism
- Nevada barr
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- New Moon Café
- New Orleans
- new year's day
- New York
- Nicholas Ray
- Nick Nolte
- Nicolas Cage
- Nicole Kidman
- night
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- nisqually
- Nisqually indian tribe
- nisqually national wildlife refuge
- no barrier
- nobility of policing
- Norman Mailer
- north thurston high school
- northwest
- nursing
- nuts
- O Lucky Man
- oak
- oak tree preserve
- oak tree preserve llc
- oak trees
- oaks
- office
- officer
- officers
- oil
- old
- old brewery
- old brewhouse
- Old Brewhouse Foundation
- Old Vic
- Oliver Reed
- Oliver Stone
- olmstead brothers
- Oly
- olyecosystems
- Olymp
- Olympia
- olympia high school
- Olympia Sheet Metal
- olympia supply
- Omar Epps
- opd
- open public meetings act
- open space
- ordinance
- Oregon
- Oregon spotted frog
- Oregon white oak
- organic
- organize
- Ornette Coleman
- Orson Welles
- Oscar
- Other Media Coverage
- Otis Redding
- Out of Sight
- outdoor education
- Outtakes
- owls
- oyster house
- PAHs
- panorama point
- paradise inn
- Paramount
- PARC Foundation
- Paris Texas
- park
- parking
- parking garage
- parks
- parks and recreation
- Part I
- Part II
- Part III
- partlow
- partners
- party
- patience
- Patricia Arquette
- Patricia Clarkson
- patricia pyle
- Patrick Swayze
- patrol
- Paul Haggis
- paul masiello
- Paul McCartney
- Paul Newman
- paul pickett
- Paul Schneider
- Paul Schrader
- paul schryver
- Paul Shrader
- Paul Thomas Anderson
- Paul Verhoeven
- Paul Verhoeven.
- Paul Wesley
- PAX
- Paz Vega
- PBIA
- peace
- Pear Blossom Place
- Pearl Harbor
- Pedro Almodovar
- Peliculas
- Penny Marshall
- pension
- people's house
- percival landing
- permit
- permits
- Perry Lopez
- pet parade
- petco
- Peter Bart
- Peter Bogdanovich
- Peter Fonda
- peter Schmidt
- Peter Stormare
- peter tassoni
- Peter Weir
- petition
- pets
- petsmart
- pflag
- pharmacy
- Phil Ochs
- Phil Spector
- Philip Seymour Hoffman
- Phillip Noyce
- Phoenix
- photocall
- Photoshoot
- physical
- physics
- Picket Line News
- Pierce Brosnan
- pigskin
- pike place market
- Pina
- Pina Bausch
- pipeline
- pit bulls
- plan
- planned action
- planned parenthood
- planning
- plato
- Platoon
- polar bear plunge
- police
- police shooting
- policing
- politics
- poor
- port
- port of Olympia
- port townsend
- porta potties
- portadas
- portfolios
- Portland
- Portraits
- position 3
- Posters
- pot
- poverty
- Premiere
- preparedness
- preservation
- press
- Press Conference
- pride
- priest point park
- Prime Suspect
- Princess Diana
- prison
- privacy
- private
- Prizzi's Honor
- process
- produce
- production
- progressive
- property
- property tax
- prosecutor
- PRSA
- PSE
- pub
- public
- public health
- public involvement
- public records act
- public restrooms
- public works
- puget sound
- puget sound energy
- puget sound partnership
- pump
- puppies
- Q&A
- Queen Elizabeth
- Quentin Tarantino
- questions
- race
- rachel corrie
- Rachel the pig
- racial
- racism
- Rafael ruiz
- rafah
- railroad
- railroad conference
- rain
- rainbow
- Rainbow Ceramics
- Ralph Fiennes
- ray Guerra
- real estate
- reclaimed water
- records requests
- recount
- recreation
- Red Cliff
- Red Curtain Trilogy
- redskins
- refuge
- rehab
- reiko callner
- reinhold messner
- relationships
- Remington Steele
- renewal
- report
- representative
- reptiles
- Requiem for a Dream
- residential
- resiliency
- reskilling
- restaurant
- restoration
- Restrepo
- restrooms
- results washington
- retreat
- review board
- revistas
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- Revolutionary Road
- rhenda strub
- rich hoey
- rich smith
- Richard Donner
- Richard Gere
- Richard Lester
- Richard Nixon
- Ridley Scott
- rights
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- river
- river ridge high school
- Road House
- Road to Perdition
- rob kirkwood
- Rob Reiner
- rob Richards
- Robert Aldrich
- Robert Altman
- Robert De Niro
- Robert Evans
- Robert F. Kennedy
- Robert Forster
- Robert Heinlein
- Robert MacNamara
- Robert Mitchum
- Robert Pattison
- Robert Redford
- Robert Shaw. Jacqueline Bissett
- Robert Towne
- Robocop
- rocket stoves
- rocks
- Rod Lurie
- Rod Serling
- Rodney
- Roger Corman
- Roger Spottiswoode
- Rolling Stone
- Roman Polanski
- Romeo and Juliet
- Ron Howard.
- Ronnie Roberts
- rookery
- roots
- Rosemary's Baby
- rossi
- rotary
- rotary club
- Round Midnight
- Roy Scheider
- ruiz
- Rumor Patrol
- Runaway Train
- running start
- Russell Crowe
- Rutger Hauer
- ruth brownstein
- ryan donald
- Ryan Gosling
- Ryu
- safeplace
- safety
- safeway
- sales tax
- salmon
- salt marsh
- salvation army
- Sam Claflin
- Sam Fuller
- sam hunt
- Sam Mendes
- Sam Peckinpah
- Sam Raimi
- Samuel adams
- Samuel L. Jackson
- sandra romero
- Sandy
- santa
- sato
- Saturday Night Fever
- scans
- scherer water
- Schmidt House
- school
- school lunches
- schools
- science
- Scorsese
- Scott Hicks
- scott yoos
- screencaps
- sea level rise
- sea water
- seahawks
- Sean Connery
- Sean Penn
- seattle
- Sebastian Junger
- Selby
- self-sufficiency
- SEPA
- series
- services
- sewers
- Shadow of the Vampire
- Shakespeare
- Sharon rice
- Sharon Stone
- sheet metal
- sheida sahandy
- shell midden
- shelter
- Shelton
- sherri goulet
- Shirley MacLaine
- shoes
- Shohreh Aghdashloo
- shooting
- shoreline
- Sid Viscious
- sidewalk
- sidewalks
- Sidney Lumet
- sierra Nevada
- signature chasing
- signatures
- skills
- sleet
- Sling Blade.
- small
- smart
- snickers bars
- snow
- solar
- solid waste advisory committee
- Somethings Gotta Give
- Sorcerer
- soule
- South Africa
- south Puget sound community college
- south sound estuary association
- Spanish
- special
- SPEECH
- Spike Lee
- Spokane
- sprinklers
- SPSCC
- Squaxin Tribe
- SSCFLT
- st. martin's university
- st. peter's hospital
- staff
- stand up for hillary
- Stanley Kubrick
- Stanley Tucci
- Star 80
- Star Wars
- Starbucks
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- state
- statue
- steh-chass
- Stella Adler
- Stephen Frears
- Stephen Hawking
- Stephen Hopkins
- Stephen King
- Sterling Hayden
- Sterling Morrison
- Steve Buscemi
- Steve McQueen
- Steven Soderbergh
- Steven Spielberg
- Steven Weber
- Stills
- stonewall
- stop work order
- stories
- stormwater
- strategy
- Stream Team
- StreamTeam
- street
- Strictly Ballroom
- Strike Reading
- Strike TV
- stroke
- students
- suburbs
- sue gunn
- sue patnude
- summer
- sun
- Sundance
- Sundance.
- SUNY Purchase
- Support Our Supporters
- surgical associates
- surveillance
- sustainability
- sustainable
- swearing in
- SWONA
- Sydney Pollack
- sylvester park
- Tabloid
- Tacoma
- Tacoma Rail
- Taking Chance
- tanasee
- tanasse
- tar sands
- task force
- tatoosh
- Tatum O'Neal
- tax
- Taxi Driver
- TCAT
- TCTV
- teachers
- tears
- technology
- Technologyhttp://www.blogger.com/img/gl.link.gif
- teenagers
- television
- Temple Beth Hatfiloh
- tenant rights
- Terence Malick
- Terence Stamp
- Terry Gilliam
- Terry Jones
- TESC
- Texas
- thanksgiving
- The Bad News Bears
- The Beach Boys
- The Beatles
- The Black Dahlia
- The Bucket List
- The Cherry Orchard
- The Coen Brothers
- the cold within
- The Darjeeling Limited
- The Dark Knight
- The English Patient
- the evergreen state college
- The Exorcist
- The Farm
- The French Conneciton
- The Godfather
- The Goonies
- The Green Hornet
- The Green Mile.
- The Grifters
- The Hinges
- the kiss
- The Last Picture Show
- The Long Good Friday
- The Matrix
- The Natural
- The New York Times
- The Night Porter
- the people's house
- The Perfect Storm
- the pet works
- The Player
- The Princess of Montpensier
- The Queen
- The Quiet American
- The Royal Tenenbaums
- The Rutles
- The Sex Pistols
- The Shawshank Redemption
- The Stoning of Soraya M.
- the stranger
- The Thin Blue Line
- The Thomas Crown Affair.
- The Usual Suspects
- The Velvet Underground
- The Wachowski brothers
- The Walker
- The Woodsman
- The World is Not Enough
- The Wrestler
- thea foss waterway
- theater
- Theresa nation
- Thinkfilm
- Thomas Jane.
- three wishes
- thrives
- Thurston
- thurston county
- Thurston first bank
- thurston thrives
- thurstontalk
- thurton county
- tiffany
- Tim Conway
- Tim Hetherington
- Tim Robbins
- timothy stokes
- To Live and Die in L.A.
- together!
- tolerance
- tom and Leticia barrett
- Tom Hanks
- Tom Hiddleston
- tom schrader
- Tommy Lee Jones
- Tony Blair.
- Tony Curtis
- Tony Leung
- Tony Scott.
- Total Recall
- tower
- TPP
- tracks
- tradition
- traditions
- traffic
- trailers
- trails
- training
- transformer
- transition
- transparency
- transportation
- tree
- trees
- tribe
- tribes
- Trigger Street
- Triggerstreet.com
- Triway
- troy dana
- TRPC
- True Romance
- trust
- Truthdig
- Tsuki Nursery
- tumwater
- Twipics
- U.S. Constitution
- U2
- Under Fire
- Under Suspicion
- union
- union gospel mission
- united churches
- united churches of olympia
- United Hollywood Live
- United Hollywood News
- united way
- unity in the community
- university
- Up in the Air
- urban
- USC
- use of force
- utility
- vacancy
- validated
- valley athletic club
- valve
- vandalism
- vegan
- venue
- Vera Farmiga
- Verna Bloom
- verna myers
- vested
- vesting
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- veterans day
- VFW Post 318
- vic's pizza
- video
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- Videos
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- Vietnam veterans
- view
- views
- viewsheds
- Ving Rhames
- Viola Davis
- violations
- Violent Cop
- virgil adams
- vision
- volt
- volunteers
- vote
- voters
- Wages of Rebellion
- walker john
- walking
- Wall Street
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- walt bowen
- Walter Hill
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- WAmend
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- warren buffett
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- washington state
- WASPC
- wastewater
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- waterless toilets
- watershed
- Watershed Park
- way
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- weather
- wedding
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- wendy frankel reed
- wendy tanowitz
- Werner Herzog
- Wes Anderson
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- west Olympia pet hospital
- Western
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- westside
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- whodunit?
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- work plan
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- X-Men Origins: Wolverine
- xl
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