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- <text>
- <title>
- (1982) Steven Spielberg
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1982 Highlights
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- May 31, 1982
- CINEMA
- Steve's Summer Magic
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>E.T. and Poltergeist: two from the heart
- </p>
- <p> Once upon a time there was little boy name Steven, who lived in
- a mythical land called Suburbia. His house was just like
- everybody else's house; his family's car and dog and swimming
- pool were just like everybody else's too. But little Steven's
- dreams were different. He dreamed of telling the stories of his
- strange land--wonderful tales of his home and his school, his
- parents and especially his friends--and making them shine like
- new. So every night he would tiptoe outside his ranch-style
- house and make a wish on the brightest star in the suburban sky.
- Over and over he would whisper, "Help me tell the story."
- </p>
- <p> One August night, when the sky seemed clearer and the starlight
- stronger, Steven felt himself drawn to his family's two-car
- garage. There, gleaming in a forgotten corner, was an old piece
- of machinery he had never noticed before: an 8-mm movie camera.
- He picked up the camera, turned around, and what do you think
- he saw? Yes, it was a beautiful rainbow, ribboning the night
- sky: a sign that the little boy had found the key to his
- dreams. And just before the rainbow disappeared--a rainbow no
- one else saw that sweet summer night--Steven aimed the camera
- heavenward and pressed a button. The little boy from suburbia
- had begun to tell his story.
- </p>
- <p> Steven Spielberg did grow up. He became rich and famous as the
- director who enjoyed playing with sharks, spacemen and
- snakes--and turning these fearsome critters into the stuff of
- blockbusters. Jaws, which Spielberg and Producer Richard Zanuck
- had feared might prove to be "a shark with turkey feathers,"
- terrified moviegoers to the tune of $410 million. Close
- Encounters of the Third Kind built a send of biblical awe around
- man's first meeting with beings from outer space and put another
- $250 million into the till. Last year Raiders of the Lost Ark
- sent Saturday-matinee chills down a record-breaking number of
- spines--another $310 million. Spielberg won plaudits as well as
- profits for his masterly film-making technique. Still, critics
- often accused him of creating Pavlovian exercises in zap-me
- thrills--movie machines that destroyed, with systematic
- elegance, the viewer's emotional defenses.
- </p>
- <p> Now it can be told: inside Spielberg, the machine that built
- the machines, was little Steven and his suburban child's pulsing
- heart. Look into the mouth of Jaws, and you will find the infant
- fear of things that go chomp in the night. Search the skies for
- a Close Encounter, and you can chart a child's hope that whoever
- is out there will be just like him: small and smooth and smart
- and cuddly. Track the Lost Ark's Raiders, and you will discover
- the thrill of escape that whets the imagination of every
- fifth-grade Indiana Jones.
- </p>
- <p> All this was prelude. At 34, Spielberg has tapped directly into
- the power source of youthful fantasies and produced two
- remarkable works of popular art. Poltergeist, which he
- supervised from original story to final cut, is a horror movie
- about malevolent spirits that infiltrate the home of an ordinary
- California family. E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial, which he devised
- and directed, tells of a creature from outer space who is
- mistakenly abandoned on earth and befriended by three school-age
- children. "Poltergeist is a scream," Spielberg says. "E.T. is
- a whisper." The first film means to thrill, the second to
- enthrall. Both succeed beyond anyone's expectations, perhaps
- even those of their prodigious creator. They reestablish the
- movie screen as a magic lantern, where science plays tricks on
- the eye as an artist enters the heart and nervous system with
- images that bemuse and beguile.
- </p>
- <p> Spielberg has formidable competition for the attention of
- moviegoers this summer. The producers of Annie have engineered
- a powerful media blitz to herald their lavish if lead-souled
- musical. Tron, a futuristic melodrama set inside a video game,
- hopes to lure the addicts of the arcades back to moviehouses.
- New versions of Rocky, Grease, Star Trek and The Thing will
- tempt old adherents. The Road Warrior and Blade Runner will
- offer up eye-catching punk-rock apocalypses. Robin Williams will
- attempt to enter The World According to Garp. Clint Eastwood and
- Woody Allen have new movies, and Burt Reynolds and Dolly Parton
- will sing and dance their way through The Best Little Whorehouse
- in Texas. Even so, Poltergeists' intelligence in confecting
- disaster, its honest laughs and spine-snapping chills--from
- upended kitchen chairs to ghostly vapors and a gaping, horrid
- hell mouth--should lead it to the head of the class.
- </p>
- <p> E.T., though, is in a class all by its beautiful self. Of course
- it should make truckloads of money: its sneak previews have
- been the most rapturously received since Jaws; industry
- marketing experts have predicted it as a summer smash; and one
- professional cynic emerged from a Manhattan screening of the
- film last week and confidently announced: "$350 million." But
- the gleam of moisture in his eye said something else, something
- everyone else will soon be able to discover: that E.T. is a
- miracle movie, and one that confirms Spielberg as a master
- storyteller of his medium.
- </p>
- <p> Not since the glory days of the Walt Disney Productions--40
- years and more ago, when Fantasia and Pinocchio and Dumbo first
- worked their seductive magic on moviegoers of every age--has a
- film so acutely evoked the twin senses of everyday wonder and
- otherworldly awe. With astonishing technical finesse and an
- emotional directness that lifts the heart, E.T. spines its tale
- of a shy, lonely boy in desperate need of a friend--when
- suddenly one falls out of the sky. The movie is a perfectly
- poised mixture of sweet comedy and ten-speed melodrama, of death
- and resurrection, of a friendship so pure and powerful it seems
- like an idealized love. None of this can be the result of
- computerized calculation; instead it stems from a seamless blend
- of writing, direction, casting and celestial good luck. Even its
- creator seems pleased: "I put myself on the line with this
- film, and it wasn't easy. But I'm proud of it. It's been a long
- time since any movie gave me an `up' cry."
- </p>
- <p> With the exception of 1941, a self-destruct farce starring Dan
- Aykroyd and John Belushi, every Spielberg feature has been on
- the mark in jolting the moviegoer with intelligent grins and
- shudders. A prototype of the new "computer generation" of
- children, Spielberg uses the cinema's infernally complex
- machinery to tunnel into the popular psyche. That is why the
- most personal film of his youth, Close Encounters, was among his
- most popular. Poltergeist and especially E.T. should prove even
- more accessible to all kinds of moviegoers--for here the
- characters are richer and more humans, and the encounters are
- with the hearts of darkness and light, in a part of America that
- prides itself on occupying the serene center of the national
- dream.
- </p>
- <p> Together, the two new films compose a marvelously detailed
- diptych of suburban life. It is a life that Spielberg, who grew
- up in a series of bedroom communities, knows from the sheltered
- inside: "I've never been robbed or in a fistfight. I never saw
- a dead body. Until I went to New York City, I'd never eaten real
- Italian food. Walt Disney was my parental conscience. And my
- stepparent was the TV set." Virtually every Spielberg film has
- made room for the camaraderie and antagonisms that percolate
- across the Formica kitchen table. But until now, none of the
- films had been told or seen from the child's point of
- view--where the prefab house seems unique and enveloping, where
- every utilitarian recess holds its own sly secret, where Mom can
- be the Queen Mother or a royal pain, and Dad is Santa Claus or
- the Big Bad Wolf.
- </p>
- <p> At the center of both E.T. and Poltergeist is the suburban
- family, as normal and American as Pop-Tarts. In Poltergeist, Dad
- (Craig T. Nelson), late 30s, sells tract houses, reads
- biographies of Ronald Reagan and furrows his brow to watch his
- hairline recede. Mom (Jobeth Williams), early 30s, keeps house,
- sings TV beer jingles and tucks in her son under a Star Wars
- bedspread. If this seems the derisory stuff of sitcoms, it is
- not. "I never mock suburbia," Spielberg declares. "My life comes
- from there." He likes these people and communicates that
- affection. Faced with balky children or a restless preternatural
- presence, the parents demonstrate their go-with-the-flow
- resilience. And when things get climactically hairy, these
- people can be roused to fear and anger, can summon reserves of
- surprising strength. They are the movies' favorite species:
- ordinary heroes.
- </p>
- <p> Spielberg's heroes, whom he sees as extraordinary, are children.
- At the emotional center of each new film is a trio of siblings:
- a teenager, a nine- or ten-year-old boy, a fair-haired
- preschool girl. To the awful pull of the forlorn or malevolent
- spirits residing inside the Poltergeist house, each child is
- different attuned. The teen-age girl is too involved with
- growing up to take much notice; the boy, Robbie (Oliver Robins),
- can be reached only on the frequency of fear; but the
- five-year-old, Carol Anne (Heather O'Rourke), is unaware and
- unafraid of the spirits' terrible power--and is theirs for the
- taking. It is she who releases the poltergeists (literally,
- noisy ghosts) from their long bondage between this world and the
- next. Drawn to the blankly fuzzy, humming screen of the
- living-room TV late one night, Carol Anne speaks to them, and
- is heard and seduced and swallowed by them into the restless
- heart of the house. The film's last hour documents a harrowing
- tug of wills between Carol Anne's parents and the spectral army
- surrounding them: between the spirits and two specialists, a
- parapsychologist (Beatrice Straight) and a child-voiced psychic
- (Zelda Rubinstein), who exert their powers to "cleanse" the
- house; and ultimately among the spirits, fighting to release the
- child or forever claim her for their own.
- </p>
- <p> At first and final glance, Poltergeist is simply a riveting
- demonstration of the movies' power to scare the sophistication
- out of any viewer. It creates honest thrills within the confines
- of a P.G. rating and reaches for standard shock effects and the
- forced suspension of disbelieve only at the climax, when we
- realize that the characters are behaving with such obtuseness
- precisely because they are trapped inside a horror movie. On the
- plot level, Poltergeist is a warning against trying to build a
- mobile modern life over the unquiet graves of the past. The
- picture can also be seen as a sly comedy supporting the
- proposition that violence on TV--or, more precisely, in it--can
- have a dire influence on children who watch it. (Spielberg calls
- Poltergeist "my revenge on TV.") Whichever, when the demons
- escape the TV set, careering around the room like puffs from a
- deranged steam engine, the little girl turns to her parents and
- blithely announces: "They're here!" Right inside the mind of
- a sensitive child.
- </p>
- <p> In the Spielberg world, there is a reason for this. Children,
- creatures of innocence and intuition, evolve a fantasy
- life--their real life--that personalizes everything around them.
- Machines become toys, toys are animated into pets, pets turn
- into near-human friends, and all play crucial roles as the
- saints and dragons of a child's deepest dreams. In Poltergeist,
- Carol Anne talks to "the TV people," and they talk back: they
- even play with her, to malefic effect. But Spielberg, as he
- demonstrated in Close Encounters, is no kidnaper. What he takes
- from the audience--in thrills, anxiety, even children--he gives
- back, better than new.
- </p>
- <p> In E.T. he goes a step further: he gives back a new fairy tale
- as good as old. The film opens on a night sky. Disney blue and
- full of twinkling stars. In the clearing of a forest that Bambi
- and Thumper might have been pleased to call home, a spaceship
- sits--not a high-tech marvel of the NASA future but a
- bell-shaped spinster of a ship, with old-fashioned street lamps
- appending and the unmistakable aura of Captain Nemo's Nautilus
- from Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea. A misty crescent
- moon gives glimpses of child-size figures moving about in capes
- and cowls on a field expedition for earth flora. One of these
- figures wanders off and encounters the threatening glare of
- headlights and the honking of car horns. Before the errant
- extra-terrestrial can return to his comrades, the spaceship
- abruptly ascends and little E.T. is left, alone and friendless,
- in an alien climate, where he can never flourish and may not
- survive.
- </p>
- <p> E.T., a gentle space elf who at first glance seems as homely as
- a turtle without its shell yet eventually proves as beautiful
- as an enchanted frog, must find a rescuer. And the rescuer must
- be a child, whose Galahad strength only E.T. and the moviegoer
- can immediately discern. The child is Elliott (Henry Thomas),
- a thin, quiet, wise-faced lad of ten who makes initial contact
- in a time-honored American fashion: by playing catch with a
- softball. With the help of his older brother Michael (Robert
- MacNaughton) and younger sister Gertie (Drew Barrymore), Elliott
- must battle the elements and some prying adults in a children's
- crusade to win E.T. his freedom.
- </p>
- <p> To Elliott, E.T. is everything a boy could want: a toy, a pet,
- a jolly Space Invader of a video game--most of all, a friend
- whose feelings become his own. To Gertie, E.T. is a youngest
- sibling's most welcome addition: someone even smaller than she,
- an infant brother she can dress up as a bag lady and even teach
- to speak. E.T. is remarkably adaptable and wonderfully funny in
- his adventure on earth. Left alone in the house, he toddles
- around like a middle-aged ironworker on a weekend without the
- wife, his potbelly peeking out of a plaid bathrobe as he watches
- TV and gets drunk on Coors beer. Later still, he is a holy sage,
- a whiz-kid Yoda, constructing a transmitter out of spare parts
- to signal his spaceship. And he has an extra gift for children.
- If the moment is propitious, and they truly believe, E.T. can
- make them fly away from danger and into the harvest-moon sky.
- </p>
- <p> To tell more of the plot would be to spoil one of the film's
- pleasures, its gratification of the child's delight in
- wondering "What comes next, Daddy?" It is enough to say that
- E.T. stands securely in the company of some classic children's
- stories, from Peter Pan to The Wonderful Wizard of Oz. With the
- crucial help of Screenwriter Melissa Mathison, who was present
- every day on the set. Spielberg has infused comic and dramatic
- tension into a story in which, one comes to realize, there are
- no villains. Everyone is nice, and the conflict comes from a
- taffy pull between good and greater good. That conflict is
- achingly strong, its resolution euphoric.
- </p>
- <p> The working title for E.T. was A Boy's Life. And as surely as
- any work of science fiction can be its author's autobiography,
- the boy here is Steven Spielberg. His parents seeded the mix of
- science and art that would surface in Spielberg's films: his
- father Arnold was a computer engineer, his mother Leah a former
- classical pianist. (They were divorced when Steven was 17.) In
- many ways, he was a typical boy. He loved animals, especially
- cocker spaniels--and parakeets, which he kept in his bedroom,
- flying free. "There would be birds flying around and birdseed
- all over the floor," recalls Leah, now 62 and the owner-operator
- of a kosher delicatessen in West Los Angeles. "I'd just reach
- in to get the dirty clothes."
- </p>
- <p> In a house he had to share with three mischievous younger
- sisters, Steven would take the standard boy's revenge: lock
- them in the closet and then throw in the thing they feared most.
- "He used to scare the hell out of them," Leah says. "When they
- were going to sleep, he would creep under their window and
- whisper, `I'm the moon!'" But the fraternal bogeyman was also
- a small festival of phobias. "My biggest fear was a clown doll,"
- he says. "Also the tree I could see outside my room. Also
- anything that might be under the bed or in the closet. Also
- Dragnet on TV. Also a crack in the bedroom wall--I thought
- ghosts might come from it." For Spielberg, film making has been
- a profitable form of psychotherapy: those boyhood fears form
- the spine of the Poltergeist plot.
- </p>
- <p> He might have hatched that plot in the nursery, for by then
- Steven had discovered his life's passion. Leah recalls, "One day
- Arnold bought a movie camera and started taking pictures of
- Steven. He was still a baby, but he got up and walked straight
- for the camera." At twelve, he got his own movie camera, an
- inexpensive Kodak, and would spend hours alone writing scripts,
- drawing shots on sheets of paper that piled up in his room,
- making movies. He would film head-on crashes of his Lionel
- trains. He would go on camping trips with his family and turn
- his home movies into melodramas. ("I never felt life was good
- enough," he says now, "so I had to embellish it.") At his
- request, Leah boiled cherries jubilee in a pressure cooker until
- it exploded, and Steven filmed the messy crimson walls and
- floor. Once Leah asked him to photograph the family in their
- convertible; Steven took a shot of the hubcap. Leah shakes her
- head: "I should have known that meant something!"
- </p>
- <p> It did indeed. The boy who was last to be chosen for any pickup
- baseball team, who was labeled "the retard" by the boys in his
- phys.-ed. class, who was sickened by having to dissect a frog
- in junior high and ran outside to vomit with the others--"and
- the others were all girls"--found he could win friends and
- influence people with his movies. He enrolled in a Boy Scout
- photography program, where his success made him at 13 one of the
- youngest Eagle Scouts ever. ("If I hadn't been a Scout,"
- Spielberg cheerfully admits today, "I'd probably have ended up
- as an ax murderer or a butcher in a Jewish deli.") One high
- school jock who used to taunt Steven was won over when the young
- director cast him in an 8-mm movie called Battle Squad. At
- Phoenix's Arcadia High School, Spielberg found fellow spirits
- in the theater-art program--"My leper colony. That's when I
- realized there were options besides being a jock or a wimp."
- </p>
- <p> After a couple of years at California State University at Long
- Beach, he slick-talked his way into an interview with Sid
- Sheinberg, then president of Universal television, and on the
- strength of his short film Amblin', became the youngest director
- ever signed to a long-term Hollywood studio contract. At 21,
- he was putting Joan Crawford through the paces of a Night
- Gallery tale. He directed eleven episodes of various Universal
- series: a The Name of the Game here, a Columbo or The
- Psychiatrist there, displaying his tyro talent, learning the
- business. "TV taught me to think on my feet," he says. "You have
- six days to shoot 50 pages of script. TV is a well-oiled
- machine. Either you roll with it or it rolls over you." He
- rolled, all right: within three years he had directed his first
- TV movie, Duel, about an evil driverless truck bent on crushing
- a mild motorist on the endless blacktop the Southwest. Shot in
- twelve days for $300,000, Duel went on to earn Universal $9
- million when it was released to theaters in Europe.
- </p>
- <p> Now the big leagues were calling. After his debut feature film
- The Sugarland Express, an eccentric car-chase comedy starring
- Goldie Hawn, Spielberg found himself off the coast of Martha's
- Vineyard directing a huge case and crew--and one wayward
- mechanical shark--in Jaws. A 55-day shooting schedule ballooned
- to 155 days; the $4 million budget soared to $8 million. Studio
- executives were threatening to close down the film and put
- "Bruce," the shark, on exhibit as part of the Universal City
- tour. The crew was wavering daily between seasickness and shell
- shock. "It was almost Mutiny on the Bounty," Spielberg recalls,
- gleefully mixing his analogies, "with me tied to Moby Dick."
- But audiences responded to the film with the same question that
- Steven's mentor. Sid Sheinberg, asked when he first saw it:
- "Isn't there any more?" For Universal there was: Jaws set a new
- record for film grosses. And Close Encounters solidified
- Spielberg's reputation for touching minds and pocketbooks with
- equal acuity.
- </p>
- <p> It was too much, too fast, too easy. Few worried when Spielberg
- spent double his Jaws budget and then overextended himself by
- $6.2 million on Close Encounters; after all, everybody got rich
- anyway. With 1941 there was no such reprieve. Though the film
- eventually broke even--and though, frame for frame, it was every
- bit as adroitly assembled as his hits had been--1941 tarnished
- the boy wonder's luster. "Until then I thought I was immune to
- failure," he says. "But I couldn't come down from the power high
- of making big films on large canvases. I threw everything in,
- and it killed the soup, 1941 was my encounter with economic
- reality."
- </p>
- <p> Fortunately for Spielberg, he soon had a closer, more crucial
- encounter, when George Lucas, whom Spielberg had known since
- 1967, asked him to direct the first film in a new adventure
- series called Raiders of the Lost Ark. With the Star Wars films,
- Lucas had demonstrated that energy, invention and an appealing
- ingenuity could somehow balance themselves on Hollywood's bottom
- line. "George knows how to put the most on the screen for the
- cheapest price," Spielberg says. He did more than anyone to help
- me make a movie on budget. While we were preparing Raiders he
- would tell me, `You've got a $50 million imagination with a $10
- million thought behind it.'" Together, the two young tycoons
- built plenty of twists into their roller coaster of a plot,
- brought Raiders in under its $20 million budget and made it one
- of the top four money-earning films in the U.S. The other three:
- Star Wars, The Empire Strikes Back, Jaws.
- </p>
- <p> The problem, as Spielberg sees it, is the ambition for
- megabucks: "Everybody is aiming for the rightfield stands." But
- hatching a blockbuster may be the only way for a film maker to
- outsmart the deal makers running the big studios. Spielberg and
- Director Brian De Palma (Carrie, Dressed to Kill) recently
- haggled with two major studios over the rights to Michael
- Crichton's bestselling novel Congo. "A deal is a work of science
- fiction," Spielberg says. "I wasted three months learning how
- not to make one. Eventually, Brian and I walked away. The whole
- `movie game' is just one more useless experience." He wishes
- the studios would put some of their profits into development of
- new talent: "It each studio would take $1 million profit per
- big movie and invest it in film schools and writing programs,
- we'd have the industry that David O. Selznick and Irving
- Thalberg created." The director has given $500,000 to the
- U.S.C. film program. "We must become like Walter Huston in
- Treasure of Sierra Madre--we must put the mountain back."
- </p>
- <p> Like Lucas, Spielberg has earned the right to create and shape
- his own film projects, whether or not he is the nominal director.
- He had planned only to produce Poltergeist, but soon found
- himself rewriting the script (from his original story) and, word
- had it, taking over from Director Robe Hooper, who had surged
- to midnight-movie prominence seven years earlier with The Texas
- Chain Saw Massacre, a relentless exercise in terror set, like
- Poltergeist, in a darkened house. He might have had a chance if
- he had banned Spielberg from the set. But Spielberg had chosen
- the cast and locations and "story-boarded" the film--devised
- sketches that approximated virtually every scene the director
- would shoot. "My taking over had less to do with Tobe's
- competence," Spielberg says, "and more with the fact that I'm
- bullish about my ideas."
- </p>
- <p> With Elliott and his little friend E.T., though, all was smooth
- sailing--a dream of a set for a dream movie. The mechanical
- creature performed beautifully as a machine and as an actor. And
- Spielberg found the children easy to work with, explaining the
- story in terms of fairy tales and board games. For the main
- roles he had interview more than 300 children. "Many of them
- were remarkable," he says, "but they weren't real. They thought
- before they felt. Then, just a few weeks before we were to start
- shooting, Henry Thomas walked in. He gave a dreadful reading.
- I could see he was petrified. But when I asked him to improvise
- a scene with our casting director, he transformed immediately
- into Elliott. He can act and react. He's gifted and malleable.
- He gave an incredibly controlled performance." Mature and
- childlike by turns, utterly unaffected yet supremely resourceful
- as an actor. Thomas is largely responsible for making scenes
- between a boy and a pile of steel and foam rubber glisten with
- feeling.
- </p>
- <p> Spielberg hopes that with E.T. and Poltergeist he will be taken
- seriously as a director of actors. He has every reason to be.
- In both pictures, the children are natural and winning. As the
- mother in Poltergeist, Jobeth Williams, who Spielberg predicts
- could some day be on a par with Jill Clayburgh, creates a
- surprisingly rounded character. She gives the movie audience an
- electrifying shiver the moment her character feels Carol Anne's
- spirit moving through her body. In E.T., Dee Wallace has some
- quietly affecting scenes as Elliott's mother, who cannot quite
- hide from her children the ache of loneliness at her husband's
- desertion. In Spielberg's previous features, only one actor
- (Melinda Dillon, in Close Encounters) was nominated for an
- Academy Award. That figure should change next year, and
- Spielberg should emerge from under his portable cloud of Mr.
- Special Effects.
- </p>
- <p> In fact, only one of his future projects--the sequel to
- Raiders--will rely heavily on effects. He is developing a
- musical with Composer-Arranger Quincy Jones, and wants to
- remake the 1943 fantasy film A Guy Named Joe (a scene from it
- appears in Poltergeist). He is shepherding a number of
- film-school graduates through their first commercial movies. And
- fermenting in the back of his busy brain is a plot line for E.T.
- II. If he realizes half of the projects he has planned, he could
- be busy for the next 50 years. And when will he stop making
- films? Says Steven the Indefatigable: "When I'm Henry Fonda's
- age." Even then, one suspects, Spielberg--the Ahab of Jaws, the
- star child of Close Encounters, the Adventureland warrior of
- Raiders, the scheming spirit behind Poltergeist, the bright
- little boy of E.T.--will still be infusing familiar stories with
- his craft and his cagey innocence. For moviegoers, that may be
- as close as they can get to an old-fashioned "happily ever
- after."
- </p>
- <p>-- By Richard Corliss. Reported by Martha Smilgis/Los Angeles
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-