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Pages tagged “michel gondry”

Read pages from Michel Gondry's upcoming comic book

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We kind of thought the next work from prolific music video and film auteur Michel Gondry would be his contribution to the upcoming triptych Tôkyô!, but it looks like he's going to surprise us once again. New York magazine's Vulture blog posted a lengthy excerpt of Gondry's upcoming comic book We Lost the War But Not the Battle that is just as trippy as might be imagined.

The comic tells the story of four friends enlisted to defend France from "beautiful muscular and sexy communist girls."

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Michel Gondry launching a website

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When he's not making features, Michel Gondry keeps busy with little things. A music video here, a rubix cube puzzle there, at the very least he keeps people guessing about his next project.  But it looks like right now that project is designing his new website and, from the look of it so far, he's making it just as idiosyncratic as his movies.

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Tôkyô! teaser, featuring Michel Gondry, hits the web

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The triptych film Tôkyô! may not be premiering anywhere outside of Cannes for a long time, but its publicity has already started up. Check out the teaser trailer below:

Tôkyô! is a triptych film by Michel Gondry, Bong Joon Ho and Leos Carax. Each director contributed a 30-minute film that takes place in Tokyo, making it closer to New York Stories than Paris, je t’aime in format. Strangely enough, none of the writer/directors are Japanese, which should make for some interesting ways of seeing the city.

The teaser doesn't show much of the movie, and in fact it's more of a trailer for the film's behind-the-scenes documentary than anything else.

Related links:
Review: The Science of Sleep
Review: Be Kind, Rewind
News: Dan Clowes writing the Gondrys' animated film

Got news tips for Paste? E-mail news@pastemagazine.com.


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Be Kind Rewind

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Release Date: Feb. 22, 2008
Director: Michel Gondry
Writer: Michel Gondry
Cinematographer: Ellen Kuras
Starring: Jack Black, Mos Def, Danny Glover and Mia Farrow
Studio Information: New Line Cinema, 101 mins.

Although filmmaker Michel Gondry is best known for lush, dreamlike visual effects, he's long indulged a fascination with low-tech effects in his short films, music videos and television commercials. He animated the White Stripes in Lego blocks, and even in his most recent feature film, The Science of Sleep, he accented the melancholy mood with construction paper and cotton balls.. In that light, Be Kind Rewind may be the truest distillation yet of his fascination, because it hangs everything on an ephemeral love of do-it-yourself video making.

The story is beyond ridiculous: Jerry (played by Jack Black at his silliest) lives in a trailer under a power plant. When the plant is struck by lightning he becomes magnetized and thereafter erases videotapes that come near him, which is pretty bad news for the VHS video store where he hangs out. To cover for the disaster of a store full of blank tapes, Jerry and store clerk Mike (Mos Def) hastily recreate popular movies like Ghostbusters with their own ancient video camera. Much to their surprise, the no-budget remakes become neighborhood favorites.

Thanks to a story that may have been put into production before the ink on the napkin was dry, the film seems to be unsalvageable from the get-go. The jokes are slow off the mark, and even Gondry’s usual visual flair is largely missing, appearing only in brief flourishes like in an impressively constructed montage that shows the guys rapidly shooting scene after scene with a band of neighborhood extras.

But with a skill that is difficult to pinpoint, Gondry seems to stumble like a fox from this paper-thin plot into a precious little ode to community that seems both touching and sincere. This is no small feat considering the film bears little resemblance to anything in the real world—no real communities, no real details of filmmaking and no portrayal of some long-lost heyday of amateur video.

If there's a secret to why a wispy film that sounds like such a failure has been able to turn even jaded audiences a little misty, it may be Gondry's desire to bring everyone into the club. The entire cast, which includes Mia Farrow and Danny Glover, seems to be having a heck of a time making a film that's so comfortable with its silliness that it can even pull off a joke about blackface without being offensive. It’s a film that seems unwilling to go an inch out of its meandering way to impress you or make you smile, which may be why it’s such a surprise when it occasionally manages both.

Watch the trailer for Be Kind Rewind:


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Which musical artist should Michel Gondry work with next?

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Michel Gondry's latest film, Be Kind Rewind, hits theaters this Friday. The director also has impressive music-video experience. Which artist would you like to see him work with next? [1035 votes total]
Kanye West (53): 5%
Wilco (211): 20%
M.I.A. (89): 9%
The Arcade Fire (229): 22%
Gnarls Barkley (67): 6%
Radiohead (185): 18%
Erykah Badu (21): 2%
R.E.M. (35): 3%
TV on the Radio (96): 9%
Other (49): 5%
Full Results
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Glossed in Translation: Be Kind Rewind

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“It comes back to what ‘Sweding’ is: even if your resources are really limited, you don’t let your limitations limitate you,” says Michel Gondry in his endearing French-limitated English, expressing both his love of the handmade and the raison d’être for his new comedy, Be Kind Rewind.

For the 44-year-old Gondry, whose Science of Sleep (2006) was shot entirely by handheld cameras, his fourth feature rings of unlimited resources from its first shot: a massive Cinemascope pan across the Manhattan skyline, then past a rushing highway, to the underside of an overpass, where Mike (Mos Def) and Jerry (Jack Black) graffiti an ad for the titular video store.

And Sweding, of course, is what ensues when Jerry accidentally magnetizes his body and erases the shop’s stock, forcing the somewhat dim-witted pair to record its own versions atop the blank tapes. “I’m Bill Murray, you’re everybody else,” Mike tells Jerry as they start Ghostbusters. Black and Mos Def pull the plots from their memories and skill up the special effects. Very special effects. It’s an elaborate plot to get to the veteran video director’s usual worlds within worlds.

When these worlds unfold, Mike and Jerry substitute pizzas for splattered blood in Boyz N the Hood and a green garbage bag for Ghostbusters’ slimer. In a brilliant perspective trick, characters dangle from a jungle gym over a floor map of a city grid to recreate a cliff-hanger from Rush Hour 2. Elsewhere, Gondry’s style is channeled into elaborate sight gags, like an intricate Jerry-rigged camouflage designed for the junkyard where he lives. Its locale—post-industrial Passaic, N.J.—is fascinating to Gondry.

“At times, America just seems like a vast suburb,” he admits. “I don’t say that with contempt, because I come from a suburb in France. In suburbs, you really feel the economy boom and contribute to society, and it’s sometimes at the edge of decay, whereas in cities, you have lots more parts that can hold the thing together. When you go into suburbs, you see the more direct effect of society on people.”

The effect in Be Kind is either a mass affliction of the sublingual awkwardness affecting Gael García Bernal’s Stéphane Miroux in Science of Sleep or acute stupidity. Gondry doesn’t explore the former too deeply, preferring jokes about Jerry’s tin-foil helmets to exposition. “It’s a country, not a verb,” one customer says, when the word “Sweded” first emerges from Black’s mouth. It is perhaps the film’s only moment of self-awareness.

“Somebody has to be in charge or have important control from the very beginning to the very end of the film if you want to keep the current going,” says Gondry, who, for the second time in as many features, penned the script himself. One control method Gondry employs is chaos, intentionally throwing an actor’s timing by, say, misplacing a prop.

“I do that because it’s a nice way to lose any type of schtick,” he says. “They must forget the process of acting, which I find so invasive in a lot of movies I watch. Even movies which get great recognition, and the actor gets rewarded, sometimes I feel they are not in the moment, because they are in so much control. Especially in American movies, actors have so much power that sometimes it feels as if they’re controlling the camera.”

Though one might expect Gondry to Swede his own picture into headspun abstractions, Be Kind is almost entirely feel-good. “I wanted it to be a little more classical filmmaking,” Gondry explains about his use of a tripod and semi-traditional narrative, two characteristics missing from his best-known titles. For fans of those movies, the meat of the matter is not Be Kind itself, but the 20-minute Sweded productions at its heart—allegedly coming to the Web by press time.

Gondry—who sometimes seems more comfortable unfolding small ideas in ads and videos—is made for snack culture, committed to experimenting with short subjects in a way few of his peers are. Though the form was exiled from the big screen decades ago, Gondry has found a broad range of outlets. Recently, those have included a clip for long-time collaborator Björk, a YouTube miniature of the director solving a Rubik’s Cube with his feet, and an elaborate $800,000 RAZR2 ad criticized by Motorola execs for being too artsy.

Perhaps another byproduct of being un-limitated, the ad set was an intricate artbox of dream associations, powered by pulleys and sliding panels, and it was—despite being literally commercial—perhaps the purest Gondry yet: a nightclub wall collapsing into a distant grid of shimmering city lights.

“I don’t think it would fit nicely with an advertising block with a Burger King ad,” groused one exec. “It’s far more sophisticated.”

In Los Angeles, back from shooting his part of a triptych about Tokyo in which his main character turns into a chair, Michel Gondry sighs.


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Dan Clowes writing the Gondrys' animated film

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We told you back in October that Michel Gondry was working on an animated feature with his son, but some additional details about the film have started to leak out. Gondry spoke with Slashfilm about the project, saying, "It’s based on [Gondry’s son Paul’s] universe. He’s a sixteen year old. He’s very unique, very funny and very violent in his drawing and his art, showing everything that you could think of that I should have stopped him from coming in contact with, but I failed. He grew up watching Tom & Jerry and Ren and Stimpy, Sponge Bob. If you take all that and mix it with Gangster movies with blood, you get his universe."

The most interesting news, though, is that Dan Clowes, author of the comics Ghostworld and David Boring, is writing the feature. Clowes had been meaning to work with Gondry on a different feature, Masters of Time and Space, since 2004. While nothing much else seems to have developed on that picture, Gondry did say this new feature is "about a dictator who runs a crazy world where hair is the source of energy. The people there are forced to create art, and if the art is too good they are executed. So the dictator there doesn’t want anyone to be better than him so he kills the inmates who make good art. They try to make rubbish art but sometimes the worse it is for them, the better it is for the dictator."

Sounds about as weird as his Return of the Ice Kings, which means you should get excited. Hopefully this film ends up actually getting made and not just lost in the conceptual phase like Tie and Space.

Related links:
Paste: Michel Gondry's Science of Sleep
Trailer for Gondry's upcoming Be Kind, Rewind
Director File's fansite, for the latest news on Gondry's works

Got news tips for Paste? Email news@pastemagazine.com.


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Michel Gondry brings about Return of the Ice Kings

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photo by Autumn de Wilde

Although his latest film hasn't been released yet and he already has several projects in the works, Michel Gondry told the MTV Movies Blog that he's currently writing The Return of the Ice Kings. Gondry's still at work on the screenplay, but the name alone sounds fascinating, and the content, well:

"I’m writing a story about kids who invent a water that makes you hear music when you drink it," Gondry said. "It’s going to be a scientific story, but completely unrealistic." Sounds more whimsical than scientific, but Gondry would probably be the expert on these matters, as he spent last year as MIT's artist in residence and has come up with some fantastic technologies before (IE: bullet time).

It'll probably be a while before Gondry gets around to the film, but Be Kind Rewind will be out on Feb. 22. Meanwhile, another dose of Gondry is on the way via his triptych short for the film Tôkyô!, currently in post-production and probably heading to festivals later this year.

Related links:
Paste: Michel Gondry's Science of Sleep
Trailer for Gondry's upcoming Be Kind, Rewind
Director File's fansite, for the latest news on Gondry's works

Got news tips for Paste? Email news@pastemagazine.com.


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Behind the scenes of Michel Gondry's new Björk video

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Michel Gondry, one of the patron saints of music videos and director of The Science of Sleep and Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, is working on an upcoming video for Björk's "Declare Independence." The Playlist recently posted a making-of video and we found it so neat we'd like to share it below:

Gondry's next film, Be Kind Rewind, will premier at next year's Sundance film festival outside of competition.

Related links:
Paste: Björk's Drawing Restraint 9
Paste: Science of Sleep
Paste: Sundance 2008 competition films

Got news tips for Paste? Email news@pastemagazine.com.


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Michel Gondry working on animated feature with son

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Michel Gondry, one of the lights of the music video world but probably best-known for his feature Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, looks to be moving into unfamiliar territory. Well, kind of. He told the MTV Movies Blog, "I am working on an animated film with my son. It's going to be quite amazing."

Stop-motion has long been a tool used by Gondry, but this will be the first time he's done an entire film that way. For those who're less familiar with his most-recent film, The Science of Sleep, you might remember his stop-motion work on the White Stripes' "Fell in Love with a Girl." "We’re translating our relationship into a futuristic story with a dictator and a rebel. He’s the dictator in the story [and] it will be based on [his] art," Gondry said.

The only downside of this is that it means that Gondry's long delayed project with Dan Clowes, Masters of Time and Space, is at the very least more delayed and possibly dead as a result. Stop motion is a pretty time-consuming venture, with Nick Park's films (Wallace and Gromit) taking about five years a piece. It's also hard not to wonder if Gondry's rivalry with his friend and collaborator Spike Jonze has caused any of this, since Jonze has been at work on an adaptation of the children's book Where the Wild Things Are for years now which is set for release late summer 2008.

Related links:
Paste: Michel Gondry's Science of Sleep
Trailer for Gondry's upcoming Be Kind, Rewind
Director File's fansite, for the latest news on Gondry's works

Got news tips for Paste? Email news@pastemagazine.com.


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No need to Be Kind, Rewind this trailer

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The theatrical trailer for Be Kind, Rewind is out! Watch it below:

The film is by Michel Gondry, best known for directing Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, the criminally underrated The Science of Sleep, numerous music videos and for being one half of what I like to call Team Awesome (oh Spike Jonze, how I miss you...). Yes, I seriously call them that, so what? It stars Jack Black and Mos Def as two video store clerks who accidentally erase their store's collection and decide to recreate its tapes on their own, taking Gondry's lo-fi approach to mise-en-scene to its logical extreme.

I, for one, have been waiting nearly two years to see how Gondry would direct Robocop if given a budget of what he could find around the house one afternoon. Based on the trailer, it looks well worth the wait (December 21).

Related links:
Paste feature on Gondry and his most recent movie, The Science of Sleep
Paste Arthouse Powerhouse list, featuring Gondry at #2
Director File's obsessive fansite, for the latest news on Gondry's works

Got news tips for Paste? Email news@pastemagazine.com.


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From MTV To Movies: Michel Gondry's Evolution

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Above: Gondry's The Science of Sleep tells the story of a man whose waking and dreaming lives collide.

Since the 1993 release of his video for Björk's "Human Behavior," Michel Gondry's name has become synonymous with his unique-bordering-on-bizarre directorial style. For his latest project, The Science of Sleep, Gondry has tried his hand at writing as well as directing. The film, which centers around a man whose dreams encroach on his reality, premiered in theaters last Friday.

For those interested in seeing the evolution of Gondry's style, salon.com has compiled a sampling of some of his commercials, short films and music videos. To view the collection, which includes the videos for "Human Behavior" and the White Stripes' "Fell in Love with a Girl," among others, click here. The site also features an article about the movie and an interview with Gondry.

For more information about the movie, read the article that ran in issue 23 of Paste here or visit wip.warnerbros.com.


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Michel Gondry's Science of Sleep

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photo by Ji Shin, photo illustration by Jos Reyes

You have the most fascinating dreams. Unique, vibrant and random, they clearly reveal your artfulness and intelligence—that is, until you try to tell someone about them. Somehow when you get to that part about the bear and your 6th-grade math teacher on the roller coaster, your listener doesn’t find it half as profound as you’re sure it must be.

“To translate a dream in a really striking way, you don’t give a strict interpretation,” explains Michel Gondry, the director known best for Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, his Oscar-winning collaboration with screenwriter Charlie Kaufman. “You want to keep some of that abstraction and you want to convey the emotional effect. If you just recount all the details, it’s boring and it just interests you.”

But if there’s anyone whose dreams would be endlessly fascinating in the retelling it would probably be Gondry, who not only visually conjured Kaufman’s heady, sumptuous exploration of love, loss and memory in Eternal Sunshine, but created groundbreaking music videos like Björk’s “Human Behaviour,” the Foo Fighters’ “Everlong” and The White Stripes as LEGOs in “Fell in Love With a Girl.” He’s also the first director to use “morphing” in a music video, and he’s the technical innovator behind filmmaking landmarks like the method of shooting several still cameras in an array to create the illusion of someone hanging frozen in air, as seen in Björk’s “Army of Me” video. (Later this technique was used to stunning effect in The Matrix.)

In The Science of Sleep, the first feature he both wrote and directed, Gondry applies this visionary invention to his longtime fascination with dreams, using plenty of his own subconscious adventures in the process. The story follows the days and (more often) nights of Stéphane Miroux (Gael García Bernal), a twentysomething artist who moves to his mother’s native France after his father’s death in Mexico. When he starts work at a dreary job and meets an intriguing neighbor coincidentally named Stéphanie (Charlotte Gainsbourg), his dreams begin wreaking havoc on his waking life, and the line between what’s real and what’s a blip in his nocturnal synapses starts to blur just as much for the audience as it does for Stéphane.

To say the dreamscapes here are fantastical is an understatement; Stéphane’s sleeping world involves, for starters: a talk-show set (for “Stéphane TV”) made of cardboard and egg cartons, machines that take insect form, cities paved with LPs, and a rock band consisting of his coworkers dressed in cat costumes. It’s up to us to guess which of these Gondry dreamed up while sleeping, and which he invented on the page.

“I’ve always been interested in the dream process,” he says, explaining that, even as a child, he tried to make real-world connections with people while in a lucid-dream state—for example, saying something to a family member in a dream and hoping they’d repeat it to him when they were both fully awake. “That was the starting point for the story, connecting [with people] in dreams, but not being able to connect in real life.”

Gondry decided to take that need for connection (referred to, by Stéphane, as “Parallel Synchronized Randomness”) and add the possibly budding romance between Stéphane and Stéphanie, both creative but introverted people who have problems enough communicating without Stephane’s increasingly shaky hold on reality. To make things worse, Spanish-speaking Stéphane’s lack of skill in French forces the two to have limited, often bizarre conversations in English—a screenplay quirk Gondry fully intended. “You use a different part of your brain,” when you have to speak with someone in your non-native language, he says. “It can give you some freedom to interact with people and … you might feel less self-conscious about what you’re saying.” On the other hand, he adds, it can also lead to awkward misunderstandings and the feeling—that Stéphane has—of being an outsider.

Gondry, a Frenchman, has experienced this in the U.S., adding a personal touch to the story. But there’s actually little in the film that doesn’t seem personal. Among much else, Stéphane’s apartment is in a building in Paris where Gondry once lived, and the office where Stéphane works is a piece-by-piece reconstruction—down to the wall hangings and typesetting equipment—of an office Gondry worked in more than 20 years ago. These details provided a sense of familiarity for the director as he took on the challenge of both writing and directing a film, something that was frightening, “especially after having directed scripts by Charlie Kaufman,” he says. “It was very scary, but … I guess I’m going to be scared no matter what, so I might as well be scared doing something I haven’t done before.”

Still, he’s thankful to have worked with the “brilliant and original” Kaufman and says it’s helped his own writing. “I cannot compare,” he laughs, “but I try my best.” It turns out Gondry greatly enjoyed being forced to clearly express himself and to “learn to communicate emotions” to the point that his dreams—quite literally—could become reality. At one point after a party during the film’s shooting, he went back to get a bag from the reinvented office set of the place he once worked, and felt amazed by the point he’d reached in his career. “I sat for awhile and looked around, and I thought it was crazy that I had the opportunity to do this—to take a memory and have a crew of people re-create it. I’m quite lucky to have that.”

Surely people who loved Gondry’s work on Eternal Sunshine—not to mention Dave Chapelle’s Block Party or the 2001 film also written by Kaufman, Human Nature—will be thrilled with his first foray into screenwriting. They’ll also get to see film techniques Gondry says he’s been “cooking” in his head for years, like the blast of “spin art” that starts the film, the illusion of flying created by Bernal swimming through a tank of water with projected animation, or Stéphane’s fantastic invention for Stéphanie, the One-Second Time-Travel Machine. And this is just the beginning: this fall, Gondry will start shooting another film he penned (named, as of press time, Be Kind, Rewind), and he has plans for many more projects, including music videos—something he still likes to do.

For the most part, though, writing films hasn’t changed Gondry’s directing style. He still likes to keep it “loose,” leaving room for “some happy accident,” and he still often lets actors make their own decisions. He says that in a restaurant recently, a waiter asked him if he wanted the food he’d just ordered for a first or second course. “I couldn’t make up my mind,” says Gondry, “so I said something and [the waiter] didn’t really hear me, but he left, and I said to the person with me, ‘That’s how I direct people.’ I knew he didn’t understand what I said, but he made his own decision based on that misunderstanding, and I think that’s as good as any decision I could make.” Often if Gondry gives an actor direction, and the actor asks, “Okay, so should I do this?” and it’s the opposite of what was requested, he still says yes. “It’s not really important,” he says. “It’s just a question of moving forward and conveying the right energy.”

He was very happy with the interpretations his Science of Sleep actors achieved. Bernal, not really known for his comic roles, manages to coax big laughs while also being disarmingly sensitive; Alain Chabat, a popular comedian in France, provides comic relief as Stéphane’s raunchy coworker, Guy; and Gainsbourg—a highly respected French actress who has yet to gain a major following in the U.S.—fully “embodies” Stéphanie, Gondry says, bringing the sweet-yet-strong character beautifully to life.

Though Sleep and Eternal Sunshine are multilayered, Gondry says he doesn’t want to make confusing films (he says he can’t stand overly plotted thrillers), he just wants to make films he’d enjoy watching and create stories people can connect with. He says people probably connected to Sunshine because there was something to it (perhaps in the way its lead—Jim Carrey as Joel—appeared weak and rejected) that resonated with them. This is why he loves Charlie Chaplin films; though some people find them “too sentimental,” Gondry says they touch us because they show that even our heroes can be vulnerable. “I feel like [in films] we need to talk about the little shames we have. Then people can relate and say, ‘Oh, maybe I’m not the only one to be … rejected, to not be strong.’”

At the same time, Gondry says, the best films don’t explain everything to the audience. “I like movies that don’t give away all their keys, because I like to look for them,” he says. Like dreams, perhaps they should be a little abstract, a little more open to interpretation. And, like a dream described to someone else, a film’s strength is all in the way the story is told. “It’s all about figuring out how you’re going to make the story happen,” he says. “It’s [finding] the invisible thing that you have to put in while you are telling your story that will make it special.”


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