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Alexander

The greatest legend of all was real
2004 | 176m | English

(181437 votes)

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Popularity: 6 (history)

Details

Alexander, the King of Macedonia, leads his legions against the giant Persian Empire. After defeating the Persians, he leads his army across the then known world, venturing farther than any westerner had ever gone, all the way to India.
Release Date: Nov 21, 2004
Director: Oliver Stone
Writer: Laeta Kalogridis, Christopher Kyle, Oliver Stone
Genres: Adventure, Action, Drama, Romance, History, War
Keywords elephant, emperor, royalty, ancient greece, 4th century bc, aristotle, campaign, male homosexuality, epic battle, gay theme, egypt, greece, sword fight, lgbt, action hero, epic, persia, alexander the great, ancient world, historical drama
Production Companies Renn Productions, Warner Bros. Pictures, Intermedia Films, Cecchi Gori Group, Pathé, IMF Internationale Medien und Film 3 & Produktions, Gordian Productions, The Great Filmproductie
Box Office Revenue: $167,298,192
Budget: $155,000,000
Updates Updated: Aug 10, 2025 (Update)
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

Full Credits

Name Character
Colin Farrell Alexander
Angelina Jolie Olympias
Val Kilmer Philip
Jared Leto Hephaistion
Jonathan Rhys Meyers Cassander
Anthony Hopkins Old Ptolemy
Jessie Kamm Young Alexander
Christopher Plummer Aristotle
Connor Paolo Young Alexander
Patrick Carroll Young Hephaistion
Peter Williamson Young Nearchus
Morgan Christopher Ferris Young Cassander
Rob Earley Young Ptolemy
Aleczander Gordon Young Perdiccas
John Kavanagh Parmenion
Gary Stretch Cleitus
Rosario Dawson Roxane
Toby Kebbell Pausanius
Fiona O'Shaughnessy Nurse
Laird Macintosh Greek Officer
Francisco Bosch Bagoas
Neil Jackson Perdiccas
Rory McCann Crateros
Raz Degan Darius III
Joseph Morgan Philotas
David Bedella Scribe
Brian Blessed Wrestling Trainer
Nick Dunning Attalus
Elliot Cowan Ptolemy
Ian Beattie Antigonus
Denis Conway Nearchus
Michael Dixon Campfire Soldier
Tim Pigott-Smith Omen Reader
Erol Sander Persian Prince
Stéphane Ferrara Bactrian Commander
Tadhg Murphy Dying Soldier
Annelise Hesme Stateira
Marie Meyer Eurydice
Mick Lally Horse Seller
Garrett Lombard Leonnatus
Chris Aberdein Polyperchon
Jean Le Duc Fat Eunuch
Mohammed Tsouli Persian Chamberlain
Rab Affleck Attalus' Henchman
Féodor Atkine Roxane's Father
Harry Kent Cup Bearer #1
Sam Green Cup Bearer #2
Bin Bunluerit Indian King
Jaran Ngamdee Indian Prince
Brian McGrath Doctor
Suzanne Bullock Roxane Dancer
Kate Eloise Whitfield Roxane Dancer
Gillian Grueber Roxane Dancer
Michelle Lukes Roxane Dancer
Anjali Mehra Roxane Dancer
Anthony Jean Marie Kurt Bagoas Dancer
Marta Barahona Bagoas Dancer
Monica Zamora Bagoas Dancer
Benny Maslov Bagoas Dancer
Tania Matos Bagoas Dancer
Leighton Morrison Bagoas Dancer
Isaac Mullins Bagoas Dancer
Monica Perego Bagoas Dancer
Matthew Powell Bagoas Dancer
Benjamín Benítez Amato (uncredited)
Anthony James Berowne Greek Courtier (uncredited)
Nicolas D. Blake Palace Page (uncredited)
Max Bollinger Young Greek Official (uncredited)
Jason Croot Peasant (uncredited)
Dale Dye Macedonian Veteran at Hyphasis Speech (uncredited)
Fahar Faizaan Alexander - Voiceover (uncredited)
Charles Haigh Aristander (uncredited)
Abbie Hirst Octavia (uncredited)
Charlie Hollway Boy (uncredited)
Rowley Irlam Pausanius's Accomplice (uncredited)
David Leon Hermolaous (uncredited)
Evelina Manna Apparition (uncredited)
Desmond O'Neill Acolyte at Sacrifice (uncredited)
Greg Orvis Celtic Diplomat (uncredited)
Panayiota Panteli Indian Servant (uncredited)
Lee Anthony Parnell Warrior (uncredited)
John Reynolds Dexapous (uncredited)
Peter Rnic Greek Nobleman (uncredited)
Oliver Stone Macedonian Soldier at Zeus Statue (uncredited)
Name Job
Vangelis Music Arranger, Original Music Composer
Rodrigo Prieto Director of Photography
Jenny Beavan Costume Design
Laeta Kalogridis Screenplay
Pravesh Sahni Line Producer
Suzanne Smith Crowley Casting
Stéphane Cressend Art Direction
Jan Roelfs Production Design
Tom Still Assistant Art Director
Wylie Stateman Supervising Sound Editor
Jean Goudier Supervising Sound Editor
Sébastien Drouin Visual Effects Supervisor
Stephane Ceretti Visual Effects Supervisor
Gary Powell Stunt Coordinator
George Richmond Camera Operator, Steadicam Operator
Hicham Regragui Transportation Coordinator
Deborah Maxwell Dion Casting Associate
Jean-Paul Mugel Production Sound Mixer
Damien Lazzerini Sound Recordist
Juliette Ménager Local Casting
Dale Dye Second Unit Director
Mohamed Achaour Third Assistant Director
Rowley Irlam Stunt Double
Chas Bain Focus Puller
Sam Barnes Clapper Loader
Olivier Chiavassa Digital Intermediate
Rich Lee Pre-Visualization Supervisor
Michael Stevenson Second Assistant Director
Yvan Lucas Colorist
Jim Erickson Set Decoration
Christopher Kyle Screenplay
Yann Hervé Editor
Thomas J. Nordberg Editor
Gladys Joujou Editor
Alex Márquez Editor
Kerry Barden Casting
Mark Bennett Casting
Billy Hopkins Casting
Lucinda Syson Casting
Desmond Crowe Art Direction
James Lewis Art Direction
Kathleen Lorden Art Direction, Researcher
Kevin Phipps Art Direction
Stuart Rose Art Direction
Rosemary Burrows Costume Supervisor
Ian Whiteford Greensman
Jonathan McKinstry Supervising Art Director
Lotta Wolgers Set Designer
Youssef Abagourram Construction Coordinator
Katie Gabriel Art Department Coordinator
Abdellah Baadil Assistant Art Director
Claudio Campana Assistant Art Director
Frederic Evard Assistant Art Director
Aziz Hamichi Assistant Art Director
Christian Huband Assistant Art Director
Tommy Jolliffe Scenic Artist
Nicky Kaill Scenic Artist
Emma Hanson Sculptor
Colin Jackman Sculptor
Andy Evans Construction Coordinator
Mohamed Rakaa Leadman
André Dias ADR & Dubbing
Chris David Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Alek Goosse Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Bruno Tarrière Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Aurelia Abate Visual Effects Producer
Joyce Menger Visual Effects Producer
Kilou Picard Visual Effects Producer
Andy Stevens Visual Effects Editor
John Scheele Visual Effects Supervisor
Elliott Jobe Visual Effects Supervisor
Rudi Holzapfel Visual Effects Supervisor
Jaap Buitendijk Still Photographer
Ian Foster Camera Operator
John Higgins Gaffer
Will Kaplan Music Editor
Arthur Dunne Transportation Coordinator
Piers Gielgud Choreographer
Julie Brown Script Supervisor
Sean Button Stunts
Jan Archibald Hair Designer
Barbara Taylor Key Hair Stylist
Paula Price Makeup Artist
Deborah Jarvis Makeup Artist
Rebecca Cole Makeup Artist
Stephanie Hovette Wigmaker
Olivier Pron Animation Supervisor
Mari-An Ceo Assistant Costume Designer
Julien Perez Sound Recordist
Stephen Miles Assistant Costume Designer
Sue Field Script Supervisor
John Marzano Aerial Director of Photography, Helicopter Camera
Wayne Leach Rigging Gaffer
Saida Elidrissi Art Department Assistant
Winston Azzopardi Location Scout
Larry Gooch Painter
Julian Caldow Conceptual Illustrator
Danny Hiele Additional Photography
Berto Additional Camera
Olivier Fortin First Assistant Camera
Zoe Clare Brown Hairstylist
Norman Baillie Prosthetic Makeup Artist
Mustapha Haouas Set Dressing Artist
Warren Lever Carpenter
Nicolas Aithadi CG Supervisor
Carl Isherwood Driver
Cyril Contejean Post Production Supervisor
Wesley Peppiatt Propmaker
Phattana Sansumran Set Production Assistant
Boris Dores Software Engineer
David House Stand In
Mustapha Ismaili Alaoui Transportation Captain
Sarah Bradshaw Unit Production Manager
Paul Hornsby Utility Stunts
Simon Warnock Assistant Director
Kurt Smith Color Timer
Kevin Edland Best Boy Electric
Eugene Grobler Electrician
Paul Kelly Lighting Technician
Kurt P. Galvao Executive In Charge Of Production
Said Andam Location Manager
Sarah Trowse Production Accountant
Mona Benjamin Production Coordinator
Karim Abouobayd Production Manager
Nicolas Bonnell Production Supervisor
Michael Singer Publicist
Samuel Cohen Boom Operator
Julien Bourdeau Assistant Sound Editor
Budd Carr Music Supervisor
Nic Raine Conductor, Orchestrator
Frédéric Attal Sound Editor
Lucie Bories Digital Compositors
Dave Bonneywell Special Effects Supervisor
Pierre Michel-Estival Visual Effects
Laetitia Beaujard Visual Effects Coordinator
Tom Carrick Motion Capture Artist
David Allday Visual Effects Art Director
Nourdine Zaoui Sound
Enfys Dickinson Creative Producer
Jonathan Hook Unit Manager
David Balfour Property Master
Jonathan Taylor Second Unit Director of Photography
Anne Delacour Dialogue Editor
Alain Féat Dialogue Editor
Gréggory Poncelet Sound Recordist
Rebecca Roper Local Casting
Jemma Scott-Knox-Gore Contact Lens Technician
Rachid Aadassi Costume Assistant
Dulcie Scott Costume Coordinator
Anthony Leonardi III Costume Illustrator
Hassan Iken Costumer
Colin Jamison Hairdresser
Lizz Wolf Key Costumer
Yann Mari Faget Second Assistant Director
Iain Lawrence Second Second Assistant Director
Robert Allen Construction Buyer
Matt Lopez-Dias Daily Grip
Heidi Gibb Draughtsman
Gary Dawson Dressing Prop
Martin Asbury Storyboard Artist
Philippe Soeiro Title Designer
Iain Eyre ADR Editor
Peter Gleaves ADR Mixer
Alexander Beddow ADR Recordist
Capucine Courau Assistant Dialogue Editor
Éric Bonnard Foley Mixer
Vincent Cosson Sound Assistant
Ken Yasumoto Sound Effects Designer
Paul Conway Supervising ADR Editor
Katia Boutin Supervising Dialogue Editor
Alistair Anderson Special Effects Technician
Tim Pounds-Cornish Visual Effects Editor
Benjamin Darras Visual Effects Production Assistant
Warwick Drucker Additional Grip
René Adefarasin Assistant Camera
Adrian Borg Ghigo Camera Car
David Churchyard Camera Trainee
Andrew Baggarley Data Wrangler
Tim Dean Libra Head Technician
Louis Elman ADR Voice Casting
Piyanit Amphawat Casting Assistant
Brendan Handscombe Wardrobe Assistant
Mutita Na Songkla Wardrobe Supervisor
Aurélie Bensoussan Assistant Editor
Mike Thomas Editorial Consultant
Suzanne Gilbert Post Production Coordinator
Rebecca Gatrell Music Coordinator
Sana El Kilali Accountant
Gill Raddings Animal Coordinator
Smart Sumalee Animal Wrangler
Aziz Bousfiha Assistant Accountant
Phyl Allarie Assistant Production Coordinator
Majid Aoulad Abdellah Assistant Unit Manager
Kat Szuminska Compositing Supervisor
Catherine Charlton Dialogue Coach
Paul Holley Generator Operator
Michael Elson Head of Production
Arnaud Pecqueur Matte Painter
Marc Wolff Pilot
Hassan Aridal Production Assistant
Dan Maag Production Executive
Matthew Lee Production Runner
Helen Chapman Set Runner
Richard Hooper Supervising Armorer
Anabelle Boudineau Animation
Jean Hemez Animation
Tatiana Makogon Animation
Ekkarat Rodthong Animation
Jean-Claude Deguara Animation
Matthew Rappaport Compositor
Daniel Szeto Compositor
Ron Frankel Pre-Visualization Supervisor
Emmanuelle Carlier Visual Effects Coordinator
Séverine De Wever Visual Effects Coordinator
Sarah Moreau Visual Effects Coordinator
Ian Murray Visual Effects Coordinator
Andy Taylor Visual Effects Coordinator
Georgia Scheele Visual Effects Coordinator
Karine Binaux Visual Effects Coordinator
Caroline Rivière Visual Effects Coordinator
Gregory Tournier Visual Effects Coordinator
Stefan Lange VFX Director of Photography
Charlie England Assistant Camera
Max Glickman Assistant Camera
Chaz Lyon Assistant Camera
Dean Morris Assistant Camera
Adam Lee Electrician
Driss Marzak Electrician
David Sinfield Electrician
John Gamble First Assistant Camera
Ben Wilson First Assistant Camera
Jonathan 'Chunky' Richmond First Assistant Camera
Charlie Woodburn First Assistant Camera
Sean Connor Focus Puller
Steve Costello Gaffer
Chesda 'Pop' Smithsuth Gaffer
Moulay Mustapha El Idrissi Grip
Rachid Mssiaidi Grip
Sam Phillips Grip
Garth Sewell Grip
Gary Smith Grip
Kamaleddine Talmi Grip
Paul Tsan Grip
Malcolm Huse Key Grip
W.C. 'Chunky' Huse Key Grip
Mustapha Steila Special Effects Supervisor
Trevor Wood Special Effects Supervisor
Rangsun Rangsimaporn Special Effects Supervisor
Dave Bonneywell Special Effects Supervisor
François Lepeuple Foley Artist
Adil Abdelwahab Assistant Location Manager
Sarah Shepherd Textile Artist
Tarik Bounaaj Stand In
Rob Bliss Concept Artist
Jeremy Woodhead Makeup Designer
Tim Wooster Camera Operator
Oliver Stone Screenplay, Director
Chaiyan Chunsuttiwat Art Direction
Danielle Costa Visual Effects Coordinator
Levan Doran Stunts
Stuart Thorp Stunts
Mark Southworth Stunts
Peter Field Camera Operator
Name Title
Santa Pestonji Producer
Jon Kilik Producer
Iain Smith Producer
Pierre Grunstein Executive Producer
Paul Rassam Executive Producer
Fernando Sulichin Co-Executive Producer
Moritz Borman Producer
Tabrez Noorani Producer
Matthias Deyle Executive Producer
Aslan Nadery Executive Producer
Volker Schauz Executive Producer
Hans de Weers Co-Producer
Léonard Glowinski Associate Producer
Gianni Nunnari Co-Executive Producer
Robert S. Wilson Associate Producer
Michael Maker Associate Producer
Oliver Stone Producer
Thomas Schühly Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 43 66 24
2024 5 42 72 28
2024 6 45 60 30
2024 7 55 94 34
2024 8 39 62 23
2024 9 38 55 26
2024 10 32 60 19
2024 11 32 58 18
2024 12 33 64 23
2025 1 38 77 25
2025 2 24 40 4
2025 3 10 29 2
2025 4 5 7 3
2025 5 5 6 5
2025 6 5 6 3
2025 7 5 6 4
2025 8 5 8 4
2025 9 7 10 5

Trending Position


Year Month High Avg
2025 8 409 787
Year Month High Avg
2025 7 213 691
Year Month High Avg
2025 6 128 348
Year Month High Avg
2025 5 773 889
Year Month High Avg
2025 4 356 642
Year Month High Avg
2025 3 804 907
Year Month High Avg
2025 2 709 832
Year Month High Avg
2025 1 947 971
Year Month High Avg
2024 12 825 883
Year Month High Avg
2024 11 927 927
Year Month High Avg
2024 10 920 922

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Reviews

Dark Jedi
2.0

My wife picked this one up together with the weekly TV magazine. Luckily we didn't pay full price. I hoped for a film about one of the greatest warlord of all time but what I got was something about a crying homosexual wimp. ...

May 16, 2024
John Chard
7.0

Alexander Revisited: The Final Cut. Alexander is directed by Oliver Stone and Stone co-writes the screenplay with Christopher Kyle and Laeta Kalogridis. It stars Colin Farrell, Val Kilmer, Angelina Jolie, Jared Leto, Anthony Hopkins, Rosario Dawson, Jonathan Rhys Meyers and Christopher Plummer. M ... usic is by Vangelis and cinematography by Rodrigo Prieto. Alexander is an historical epic based on the life of Alexander the Great. Off the bat I have to say that this "Final Cut" version of the film is the only one I have seen. Upon its initial home format release - the first theatrical version - I lasted an hour and 15 minutes before growing restless and sought enjoyment elsewhere. Consequently as a massive fan of historical epics through the years, it has been a constant nagging itch for me to see Alexander in its entirety. So with Oliver Stone tinkering away with versions - convinced he has made a worthwhile epic - I finally delved in. The Final Cut, as far as I'm aware, is a vast improvement on that savagely received theatrical release, well that is said by those who tried again instead of calling quits at the first production. Straight away I could see the difference, where once was a plodding first hour, now sits a vibrancy, with Stone seemingly saying that he can do great action and drama, just please hang around during all the historical chatter, sexual connotation, family strife and conquering machinations, and I will enthral you as a whole. By his own admission, Stone reveals he took on a most complex historical character and in his eyes has made a film to befit such complexity. We get a splintered narrative, as we kick off with the crux of Alexander the Great, the leader, while Alexander's childhood and family forming is interspersed at various junctures. The battles are high in intensity and blood letting - exhilarating at times - but more crucially they let us engage with the tactical "ahead of their time" manoeuvres of Alexander the Great. This version mostly flows alright, and I got to feel how Alexander's mind was working in the process, even if come pics closure I didn't fully know the man. Epically cast of course, some of them work, others not so much. Farrell's looked odd, in the way that Pitt's was in Troy (released this same year as Alexander), but apart from the accent issue he grows into the role and is fiercely committed. Jolie is just wrong for the role of domineering Olympias, worse still the scenes she does with Farrell are damp and threaten to derail the drama already built up. This latter point is more annoying given a great thread involving Dawson as Alexander's wife Roxanne is built up superbly, only to not be pulled until some drama very late in the play. The rest of the cast come through as ok for period flavours (expected for Hopkins, Plummer and Meyers, interesting as regards Leto). This is not the life ambition masterpiece Stone wanted to make, even if he proclaims on the extras that he's happy and content with The Final Cut version. This cut still shows some cracks, but these are not seismic enough to hurt the film. For there's a lot of grandeur, blood stirring and thought gone into the production, and there's a lot to be said for that in this day and age of soulless cash making filmic exercises. Honourable failure then? Yes for sure, but a better film in this form than some may have thought possible back in 2004. 7/10

May 16, 2024
Wuchak
6.0

_**Alexander’s conquests from Greece through Persia into northwestern India**_ After being tutored by Aristotle (Christopher Plumber), Alexander (Colin Farrell) takes over the Macedonian throne in 336 BC at the age of 20 after his father is assassinated (Val Kilmer). Over the next 13 years he, am ... azingly, conquers the Persian Empire and heads into India before finally turning back. Anthony Hopkins narrates as Ptolemy in his old age while Angelina Jolie plays Alexander’s snake-loving mother. Rosario Dawson plays his wife acquired in Bactria (in what is today part of Afghanistan). Oliver Stone’s “Alexander” (2004) was a challenging undertaking and has many attributes despite not being as compelling as the contemporaneous “Troy.” It’s a colorful, entertaining epic with a great cast, awesome battle scenes, exotic locations/sets and a fine score by Vangelis. Naturally the storyline is not as one-dimensional as “Troy” seeing as how it involves a movable empire traveling across western Asia. Historically-minded critics complain about the sequence where Alexander's fatigued soldiers request not to push further into India in favor of returning to Macedonia to see their families again. Alexander denies their request and does something that paints him as an unreasonable tyrant. In real life Alexander pondered their demands for a few days before agreeing to turn back and didn't execute anyone, which showed what a compassionate, merciful leader he was. However, this dubious sequence was simply Stone’s amalgamation of several mutinies during his conquests, which was placed at that particular point in the story for dramatic reasons. Besides, the movie certainly illustrates how Alexander brought the light of civilization to his foreign subjects and was accepting of their cultures, wanting to unify the many tribes under one banner, so to speak. The scenes with Val Kilmer as Alexander’s father are entertaining while the ones with Angelina Jolie get boring after the first two or three. We get it: she loves snakes, hates her husband and thinks Zeus was Alexander’s father. Half of the sequences with Jolie could’ve been cut with no harm done, which would’ve helped momentum. I didn’t have an issue with Alexander’s relationship with his childhood friend, Hephaistion (Jared Leto), since it’s clearly depicted as platonic in the sense of David and Jonathan in the Bible (see 2 Samuel 1:26). In the film the two are depicted as having a loving friendship wherein they occasionally hug and that’s it. I occasionally hug my best friend too, but I only sleep with my hot wife. As far as Alexander being bisexual, there’s zero historical proof of this. Yes, the kiss between Alexander and Bagoas (Francisco Bosch) was mentioned by Plutarch who lived in the Roman Empire 200 years later but, assuming it happened, it doesn't mean much. Some cultures in history kissed on the mouth when greeting, like Russians; it’s a social tradition and has nothing to do with sexual desire. To put it in perspective, imagine a filmmaker saying Trump was gay 2327 years in the future even though he had numerous women, marriages and children in his life. It's slanderous and can be attributed to Stone's catering to Liberal propaganda as opposed to historical reality. In short, he played the homosexual card to be ‘hip’ and give his movie Lefty ‘edge,’ but it backfired because it bombed at the box office. Still, the scene in question is brief and all it suggests is that Alexander experimented with homosexuality once after partying which, let’s face it, is something Greeks are known for (although Alexander would argue that he’s technically Macedonian, lol). If you can ignore that glaring flaw, there’s a lot to appreciate in “Alexander” since Stone is unquestionably a top-of-the-line filmmaker. And the flick certainly inspires viewers to look up the real history. The film was shot at Pinewood Studios & Shepperton Studios, both just west of London, as well as Morocco and Thailand (it’s pretty easy to figure out which scenes were done where). There are no less than four cuts of the film available: The theatrical cut runs 2 hr 55 min (175 min); the 2005 Director’s Cut runs 2 hr 47 min (167 min); the so-called Final Cut from 2007 runs 3 hr 34 min (214 min); and the 2013 Ultimate Cut runs 3 hr 27 min (207 min). GRADE: B-

Aug 09, 2021
Geronimo1967
6.0

Opinion on this film seems to have been hijacked somewhat by the definition and appropriateness of the relationship between Alexander (Farrell) and Hephaestion (Leto). It seems daft to try to apply 21st century social morals onto a society in which same sex relationships were simply unremarkable. Wh ... ether or not it was about sex, or love, or both isn't really that important - I think Oliver Stone was trying to involve us in a much more complex story of human nature. It may also be more of an Anglo-Saxon thing - men on Continental Europe from Scandinavia to the Mediterranean (and their N. American descendants) have a completely different, relaxed, view towards tactility amongst men. What this discussion does do successfully, however, is distract us from a pretty lacklustre effort at an epic. The film has grandeur and style but really does lack substance. It has all the grit of a beauty pageant. The script is wordy and weak, and characterisations way too shallow given we have effectively a blank canvas from which to work and an almost unlimited timeframe in which to tell the story. Inevitably, it does draw comparisons with Richard Burton and Frederic March's version from 1956 but not favourably; the all star cast here just doesn't really gel in the same way and the CGI isn't anywhere near as convincing as the real photography of the earlier iteration. Overall, a very well resourced missed opportunity to tell the tale of one of history's most enigmatic characters.

Jan 07, 2023