As someone who has read the whole original book series, seen lynch's dune and the syfy dune series, I think this newest film is the closest aesthetically to the books.
@artherladett4423 жыл бұрын
Bingo!
@alexmathayes13 жыл бұрын
I don't like this review, the whole review was not a review of the 2021 Dune but more like a comparison with Lynch's version, 'I liked this in 2021 version but, in the lynch version it was better', I mean review the movie on it's own and if you need to compare it then make a separate video. Geez, each thing she mentioned was followed by 'In Lynhc's version'
@claudegarmon29583 жыл бұрын
and the better for it. herbert does not write simply, nor does he write pedantically, but the images and ideas as they strike you are so clear, the closer you can get to what you think he showed you, the better off you will be, as if filming from an invisible story board.
@thomasgorecki13213 жыл бұрын
Aesthetically???
@Chrisratata Жыл бұрын
@@alexmathayes1but it's a perfectly fair criticism. Granted she admits her bias, but I've read the book and I too feel like the world building in this new version feels so clean that the harsh conditions and dangers of Arrakis weren's as intense as they could've been.
@jerrysstories7113 жыл бұрын
FUN FACT: Throughout the novel, only three minor characters ever refer to Arrakis as Dune aloud, Piter De Vries, Stilgar, and Tuek the smuggler. Paul only ever thinks the name, and Irulan only writes it. No one besides these five ever refers to Arrakis as Dune at all.
@ultrahighgain4123 жыл бұрын
Much of the magic of the novel lies in its digressions into personal monologues, philosophy, psychology, and world building. Difficult to capture these in film without losing cohesion.
@bogroll18813 жыл бұрын
Great point the problem I have with the movie is its dumbed down to a single story thread, Princess Irulan isn't even in it and she is a major character - the book presents multiple pov of the different politic stakeholders which this version seems to oversimplify. Too many times I'm thinking they played it safe whereas Lynch took risks and got some good bits right, this feels a bit bland even though its literally correct for the bits it decides to cover.
@GonzoTehGreat3 жыл бұрын
@@bogroll1881 Lynch's risks including deviating so much from the book that there's no knife fights outside of duels, Bene Gesserit training is turned into a sonic gun and the ending completely misses the point of the original story. Visually, Lynch created a spectacle, and I liked his use of voice over and his decision to stick more closely to the dialogue in the novel, but even he admitted his version was a failure and a mess of an adaptation.
@isaiasovelar44342 жыл бұрын
@@GonzoTehGreat so many David Lynch's Dune apologists here
@Chrisratata Жыл бұрын
@@bogroll1881 I only read the book once but wasnt Princess Irulan's role in the first half of the book pretty much only being limited to her quotes at the start of each scene? I wouldn't consider that to be a pivotal thing to include in Part One other than capturing what she was speaking of in each of those quotes
@squamish42444 ай бұрын
@@isaiasovelar4434 Yeah. I once read that the movie is "the most interesting failure of a movie ever", but it's definitely failure. And holy crap is she brutal on this film. Like, wow, lady. What Villeneuve managed to convey from an incredibly complex book was amazing. But I guess anyone who refers to Hans Zimmer as a 'hack' and criticizing the phenomenal soundtrack is...huh?
@SnkobArts3 жыл бұрын
Hans Zimmer seems to be pretty polarizing people seem to love him or hate him... I couldn't disagree with you more, I love his work, and I wouldn't want any one else composing for this movie.
@rong29123 жыл бұрын
The score in Lynch's version is sublime
@offspringfan12882 жыл бұрын
Very edgy these days to hate something that’s popular. That’s all it is.
@dustinneely Жыл бұрын
Zimmer is terrible. It's not edgy...it's a fact. John Williams, James Horner, Jerry Goldsmith, Vangelis...take your pick. Zimmer sucks.
@thomasley7178 Жыл бұрын
I happen to be ambivalent about him. I love his work in Dark Knight, Dark Knight Rises or Interstellar. I don't like his "classics" like Gladiator or The Rock. Even Inception - which everybody seems to love - is somewhat grating to me. Dune grew on me. At first I found it boring, nowadays I love a lot of it.
@Chrisratata Жыл бұрын
@@offspringfan1288either that or some people just genuinely disagree
@biggaston18203 жыл бұрын
Hans Zimmer doesn't exactly do subtle ambients, but that's kind of the point here: Arrakis is an inhospitable, dazzling nightmare, and the droning score perfectly evokes that kind of oppressive landscape. Zimmer's style may be over-saturated by now, but it's preferable to John Williams swashbuckling violins other desert sci-fi movies go for, where the environment is just a green-screen backdrop.
@Videopakao3 жыл бұрын
Zimmer cheapens the film and sets it firmly in 2010-2020 era.
@adamsirin72493 жыл бұрын
I heard something Zimmer wrote in the Gom Jabbar scene and it was simply awful. Absolutely repulsive.
@passerby61683 жыл бұрын
Dune 1984 had spine-chilling memorable themes like The Prophecy theme (Brian Eno) or Paul meets Chani theme (Toto), both of which were beautiful and otherworldly. Unfortunately the 2021 version left me with nothing, except perhaps the throat singing, which isn't exactly beautiful but does make you think wow that's weird. The rest was too grandiose-striving, try-hard and often didn't fit the scene.
@invanorm3 жыл бұрын
@@passerby6168 I’ve never seen Lynch’s dune but I couldn’t agree more regarding Zimmers score. There were moments that were wonderfully done, but I feel like 70% of the time I was just thinking wow I think I’d prefer no music at all over this relentless, bombastic, jarring noise.
@offshoresphoto3 жыл бұрын
I listened to the audiobook of Dune a few times over the last year. Had a couple of images from Lynch’s adaptation seared onto my mind at a fairly young age. I think Villeneuve’s Dune part 1 is near perfection…exquisite to look at, conveys a good amount of the depth of the novel’s mythology and is delivered almost entirely by people at the top of their fields (production designers, vfx teams, actors, musicians, director). I think it’s a remarkable achievement with only the tiniest/rarest of brief missteps appearing a couple of times I would say. Bravo to all involved.
@sillylittlesheepjax60093 жыл бұрын
it is not perfect, many chars get 0 development makes u care less when they die, the whole plot of traitor dr was cut
@deliaproductions3 жыл бұрын
"I'm certain, that this book which I've never read...is unadaptable into film."
@TheGeorgeD133 жыл бұрын
tbf, everytime a friend explained the book to me, my gut thought always was, "that can't be done as a movie. A tv show, Game of Thrones style, for sure, but not a single movie." Sure enough they made this movie part 1 of potentially 2 movies.
@4_vaccuum_salesman_of_marr9443 жыл бұрын
That's pretty much a common take.
@stuartmorris62993 жыл бұрын
I thought that, why make stuff up if you don't know.
@cruddddddddddddddd3 жыл бұрын
Right? I suppose I just don’t understand how a book that’s been adapted three times is “unfilmable”. Bc someone said it in a documentary, I guess.
@stuartmorris62993 жыл бұрын
@@cruddddddddddddddd The film adaptation of Naked Lunch was never going to be able to capture the spirit of the book in its entirety, I liked that it knew this and did something different rather than a futile Dune retelling. Which is what I fear the new one will be. Lynch perhaps could be accused of this in his version but I just love to watch The old Dune regardless.
@itsmarvinyo3 жыл бұрын
I noticed the little Eric Cartman pillow chillin in the background lol. Love the reviews!
@kittensmakingcandles3 жыл бұрын
"I've actually never read the book, but I do know a bit about it." Just curious, what is your source for your understanding of the book? Dune as a book and series is written to be disorienting. Including having scattered alternate takeaways (including ones I don't think the author even intended). This can all make for a fairly divergent experience and conception for people following it or its general ip. "I've always seen it as unfilmable" At this point, the public expectations for a Dune film have boiled over the bounds of just its book form. It has an extended jumbledness of quirky tones, tropes, what stories should or should not be told or emphasized, how it should be translated for poltical or cultural censorship or evangelism. Including the convention that it should be unfilmable. I think the actual book is filmable. But the notion of delivering a specific product that somehow will nail each of the divergent (and often mutually exclusive) expected product variations of the populace is pretty silly. That's pretty "Brexit" if you will.
@DepressedHandsomeSpaceCop3 жыл бұрын
Good points. I took note of how the movie has "updated" some of the book's content for our time when Gurney Halleck failed to utter his famous line about moods and their relevance to battle. This omission made me realize that trying to please everybody with this movie is damn near impossible, because the expectations for the movie are so wildly divergent, especially among people who only have second-hand knowledge of the book.
@michaelkennedy82703 жыл бұрын
The best comment I've read in a long while. Unfilmable is the mantra of those who are not touched by the spice.
@jburgs1003 жыл бұрын
@@DepressedHandsomeSpaceCop No he didnt, he talks about mood with paul and when paul has him on the floor again says "i see you found the mood"
@DepressedHandsomeSpaceCop3 жыл бұрын
@@jburgs100 yeah but he doesn't say the cattle and love play thing.
@jburgs1003 жыл бұрын
@@DepressedHandsomeSpaceCop yeah they used the first part of what he says in the book but left out the cattle. Part in the end Mood?" Halleck's voice betrayed his outrage even through the shield's filtering. "What has mood to do with it? You fight when the necessity arises, no matter your mood! Mood's a thing for cattle or making love or playing the baliset. It's not for fighting."
@DepressedHandsomeSpaceCop3 жыл бұрын
I honestly think Dune 2021 is great art just because of the wildly different interpretations and reactions everybody is having to it. Dune struck me as a difficult book to put to film because it's densely weird at both the surface level and in the interior lives of the characters. This is a world that is portrayed as being uncomfortable - you're not supposed to be able to sympathize with brutal space aristocrats who hang out with Jedi eugenics witches. I think Villeneuve's approach is the right one: the world of Dune is hostile, forbidding, oppressive, freighted with mystery and prophecy, and the story is epic in scope, while the characters themselves are strange and unrelatable. Dune 2021 evokes these feelings, and the score does its best to maintain a good level of otherworldly stressfulness, while the movie itself somehow manages to remain a Hollywood spectacle that regular people will go and see. It's a fine line to walk and I think Villeneuve walks it well. EDIT: Writing on your phone in the bathtub is not ideal.
@DenianArcoleo3 жыл бұрын
'I haven't read the book, but have always regarded it as unfilmable'. Okay.
@Thedarkknight2244 Жыл бұрын
Lmao I know what she means but yeah comes across as funny
@yarsivad000.5 Жыл бұрын
Should be I have heard it is un-film able.
@HierophanticRose3 жыл бұрын
Beyond the special effects and CGI, the art design and concept work is phenomenal. I can see the color composition was worked wonderfully in all the shots as well. I would love to know who Denis Villeneuve worked with and buy the artbook when it comes out. I fully agree with you on Hans Zimmer score however, and I know I am in the small minority of people. But, as someone who read the series multiple times, I always imagine the soundtrack in my mind to Dune to be more "tea daze", more psychedelic, more... part of the experience.
@carlosflux813 жыл бұрын
Shadow of the Colossus: I WISH movie CGI could achieve that level of “weightiness” of massive creatures. Such a great mention. Great review, as always.
@dan.j.boydzkreationz3 жыл бұрын
Was an amazing game. I wasn't good enough to play it though, so I just watched a friend play it, lol.
@dylana.90573 жыл бұрын
@@dan.j.boydzkreationz lmfaoooo 😂
@fredkrissman65272 жыл бұрын
How can you say that a book is unfilmable half a breath after admitting you haven't read it?!? That would get you an "F" in my class...
@baraka993 жыл бұрын
Dune is a beautiful interpretation of the novel. The scenes he sacrificed gave room to a deep world full of nuance, detail and intensity. A profound visual and auditory experience on iMax.
@rippspeck3 жыл бұрын
I've been a fan of the Dune series for most of my life and I can whole-heartedly agree. The bits they skipped or merged with others were totally acceptable.
@kurkindal12343 жыл бұрын
They actually filmed those scenes. Hoping they are included with the blueray.
@kebman3 жыл бұрын
Still wish that Arrakeen actually had people living there.
@kurkindal12343 жыл бұрын
@@kebman hopefully we see more when the Harkonnen return to reclaim the planet.
@kebman3 жыл бұрын
@@kurkindal1234 I'm not sure those are the friendly people you'd want to meet around the corner. ;)
@Overonator3 жыл бұрын
I want the director's cut. I want everything that was cut to be put in and make it even more epic with more detail. I personally would have been at a theater 2 more hours, I didn't want it to end.
@skabcat2423 жыл бұрын
This was the one time a movie that was almost 3 hours didn't feel like it. I can't wait for the next one.
@xxczerxx3 жыл бұрын
The music was one of the best bits. I didn't even clock that it was by Zimmer...that really surprised me. It's ominous, imposing and has this almost "monolithic" dread to it.
@stevenk69913 жыл бұрын
In parts it was alright, in parts it was amazing but majority of a time it was out of place, way too loud and overshadowing what was happening on a screen. In the scene after Paul's fight with fremen it was very apparent to me. As scene was filled with people, moving people, there was the sand, the wind, the main character was walking over crunchy rock but all I heard was a score. Score ate away all the space and the feeling of vastness, connectivity between objects on the screen. Not only that but effects repeat. Even the greatest horn sounds while imposing and impressive at first get dull and boring for a 15th time, they appear even in scenes where nothing happens. People slowly walk over sand - horns, people eat - horns, a person has a 1000 yard stare - HORNS, utterly unbearable. I would just cut away half of melodic bits and music from the movie and it would be better overall. However in places it was very much in place and a great fit, sardukar chanting for example was very memorable, bagpipes were nice etc.
@solodolotrevino3 жыл бұрын
@@KZbinHallMonitor I love that shit. The Fremen are based on middle eastern/Bedouin cultures and the language they speak is a futuristic form of Arabic originating from Earth. When you’re reading Dune you can almost imagine the classic “desert woman wailing” trope. It’s going to become a memorable part of the series.
@invanorm3 жыл бұрын
@@stevenk6991 100% with you on the score eating up the space. It felt suffocating. If the bombastic score did weigh so heavy I feel the world would have really been able to come alive and breathe through layers of subtle environmental sounds. With visuals that incredible there was really no need to lay the score on so thick.
@squishybuspr3 жыл бұрын
This is one of the best, most honest reviews of DUNE I have seen thus far. You state at the beginning of the video that you have never read the books and that you have a soft spot for Lynch’s adaptation. With all that considered, your personal criticisms of the film feel totally valid as you understandably have little to no investment in the DUNE cinematic universe outside of being a fan fan of Dennis Villenueve’s Bladerunner 2049. I have read the books and I can’t overstate just how perfect of a film this is and just how faithful it is to the first book. I really respect it when someone has legitimate concerns about a piece of media and is upfront about their relationship with the piece in question before they get into their criticisms. It is alarming how many “serious” film critics I’ve seen on Yt in the past week bash this movie for being “incomplete” as if they didn’t notice the “Part 1” in the opening credits. Moreover, most of the critics I have seen review content from claim to have read the books when it is so blatantly obvious that they have not. Almost as if they’re so desperate to seem intellectual or en-vogue so they get invited to the next party with the “cool kids.” Thank you for an honest movie review in a sea of dishonest critics who think that the Star Wars sequels we’re “bold and thought provoking.”
@Chrisratata Жыл бұрын
I loved the movie but someone feeling that a part one feels incomplete can still be a valid criticism even with complete knowledge of the cutoff being intentional. At the end of the day, a movie has to stand on its own and some people felt that that wasn't acheived. You don't have to agree with them, just pointing out that it being intentional is irrelevent to their feeling Even she states it here
@pttthhh3 жыл бұрын
For the ending, I feel like they did exactly what she's asking for.. bringing it together and preparing us for the next movie.
@solodolotrevino3 жыл бұрын
Yep. The whole movie builds up to finding the Fremen and Chani. Paul finds some resolution on the path he’s taking/visions he’s had and is ready for his next narrative arc. It’s as good a stopping point you can find for the story
@russellb55733 жыл бұрын
I thought the ending was fine. The tale continues
@vincentdesjardins1354 Жыл бұрын
SPOILERS * SPOILERS * SPOILERS I agree with you all, that was an excellent stoping point. As @solodolotrevino said eloquently Paul first arc ends when he start to accept, if not yet fully embrace, his destiny. "When you take a life you take your own." Killing Jamis is a turning point. "Paul Atreides must die for Kwisatz Haderach to rise." Metaphorically young priviledged Duc's son Paul Atreides dies so adult fremen warrior Paul Muad'Dib can begin his journey to become the Kwisatz Haderach. @russellb5573 Yes, the last line of the movie says it all : - Chani "This is only the begining." - cut to black - Can't wait for part 2 !
@KamradO3 жыл бұрын
Dune the book has the spirit of Lawrence of Arabia, and I think Villeneuve succeeded in bringing it to the screen.
@u235u235u2353 жыл бұрын
unoriginal and recycled comment. why did you bother?
@benjaminknol59902 жыл бұрын
It was loveingly filmed in some of the shooting locations as LoA.
@THEPETERC12 жыл бұрын
Exteriors sterile. Interiors not-lived-in. Characters bloodless. A film that takes itself too seriously. The ?deliberate opposite of Lynch.
@JohnDoe-tm9wz3 жыл бұрын
I feel this movie is the anti-Hobbitt, the essence of "Dune" was respected and explored to the fullest in the time available and it clearly setups a sequel to finish the story of the first book. "The Hobbit" was a mess in every way stretched the story to the fullest in n a trilogy just to make money, full of terrible CGI corny jokes and no real heart.
@cruddddddddddddddd3 жыл бұрын
Well put
@andrewsmith87153 жыл бұрын
I agree
@treytilley3333 жыл бұрын
Idk how you go from LOTR to thisssss…. Was it PJ’s fault?
@mhawang82043 жыл бұрын
@@treytilley333 Lindsay Ellis did a 3-part duology on the making of The Hobbit, which was nominated for a Hugo Award. I recommend giving that a watch. PJ was never meant to make The Hobbit. kzbin.info/www/bejne/q4W1hoRjh7CZi9U
@barrymiller33853 жыл бұрын
I've read (and loved) the whole Dune series. And read the first book several times. Like LotR it is always going to be very difficult to film because of the sheer density of plotting and world building. I do believe the director GETS the book and manages to retain and portray this in the film. Obviously a lot has to be left out - some of which would have better explained the motivations and actions of certain characters better. I also really enjoyed the Lynch version - but totally understand why so many cinema goers (and reviewers) were confused by it! I will need to see part 2 to really form an opinion but I think this is a promising effort. And totally worth seeing on a big screen just for the cinematography.
@joeodonnell51253 жыл бұрын
Feel this director in his past few films seems to be developing a habit of merely flirting with many ideas and concepts without committing to them.
@JHTVideos3 жыл бұрын
I spent the last half of the movie wishing to hear Brian Eno"s Prophecy Theme.
@infinityryvus Жыл бұрын
The dialogue was cludged, and the acting over-the-top. I had high hopes, and they fell through. The spectacle and dazzle will keep many people hypnotized, but the book got lost in that. Chalamet isn't good enough yet to do what needs to be done with Paul, nor was he given the direction to succeed there. He's super pretty and his hair looks amazing with sand in it, he's just not capable of the gravitas that is required of the person playing a character that was genetically sculpted to be the penultimate man.
@patrickfischer76983 жыл бұрын
I still enjoy Toto's Big Battle from Lynch's version to this day. Have it on my ringtone.
@deepfocuslens3 жыл бұрын
Toto is the shit.
@twt0003 жыл бұрын
Don't forget "Prophecy Theme" was composed for the 1984 movie by Brian Eno.
@brotherjohnnyxXxX3 жыл бұрын
@@deepfocuslens why are you censoring me?
@brotherjohnnyxXxX3 жыл бұрын
Hans Zimmer's score was not traditional, it was influenced by Drone music, drone-based music, or simply drone. A minimalist genre "which fits with Denis Villeneuve's minimalist style", that emphasizes the use of sustained sounds, notes, or tone clusters - called drones. It is typically characterized by lengthy audio programs with relatively slight harmonic variations throughout each piece. It was a mystical and almost biblical score. Simply brilliant!
@Relugus3 жыл бұрын
Villeneuve Dune is better than Lynch Dune...except for soundtrack. Toto's score oozes epic scale, Zimmer's is sound and fury signifying nothing.
@xx1simon1xx3 жыл бұрын
you managed to not talk about what actually happens in the movie at all. that says alot. i felt like none of the characters interested me more than looking at sand. when they hurt, I didn't care. i guess its because none of them feel like real people at all. i loved watching the movie, and I will again tomorrow, but the plot is impressively dull and lacks any real emotion.
@HBG3133 жыл бұрын
She likes blade2049 dont be surprised
@AndréVilaFranca3 жыл бұрын
I think it is very much filmable but not in film format. This is a 6 book series with a continuous story, it deserves a long tv series. With this being said I still can't wait to watch it on Monday.
@247tubefan3 жыл бұрын
It's not a true dune movie if no one charges into battle armed only with a Pug.
@4_vaccuum_salesman_of_marr9443 жыл бұрын
They replaced the pug with a cat in this one. Didn't have the same effect.
@richardsantanna53983 жыл бұрын
@@4_vaccuum_salesman_of_marr944 What a shame. Pugs are cuter.
@kevinhaynes90913 жыл бұрын
"I've never actually read the book, ... and I've always seen it as unfilmable..." Classic...
@dmf24753 жыл бұрын
My twleve year old daughter had never even heard of Dune 48 hours ago and walked into the room while I was halfway through the movie and she was transfixed by both the visuals and the story and demanded to watch the whole movie which she loved and is now in love with the Dune universe. As a lifelong fan of the book I'd say they got it just right.
@UrbanRats3 жыл бұрын
I saw this back in September, and thought it was kind of a mess. It's visually very striking (though not as beautiful as BR2047, which was all-round great) but beyond that i found very little to chew on. Flat, mostly uninteresting characters, dull political intrigue, and a whole lot of what feels like filler, for something that still needs to be cut off short when the credits roll. The movie is filled up with lore dumps, and still manages to miss (or barely touch on) some very crucial lore points, which ends up confusing someone that hasn't read the book. Maybe having fewer shots of spaceships taking off and landing, and cutting out a couple of Zendaya-looking-in-camera daydreams, would've allowed them to flesh out these characters and families more. I still have hopes for a part 2, which should cover more interesting aspects of the story.
@worlddd77773 жыл бұрын
It needed at least 30 more minutes, or to be made into expensive tv show
@UrbanRats3 жыл бұрын
@@worlddd7777 A high budget tv series would've made the most sense. Most of the scenes are characters talking in an interior or desert shots, you don't need an obscene budget for that.
@Midge_Manycoats3 жыл бұрын
Saw it in IMAX and was just absolutely blown away. The music from Zimmer is actually great and normally I don't care for Zimmer since his work on Inception ruined soundtracks for many years. The story is stripped back but still grandiose in scale and the performances are fantastic. Eagerly awaiting part 2.
@Snuckster23 жыл бұрын
No The ”music” doesn't exist It's just a bunch of sounds that drown out everything else
@Midge_Manycoats3 жыл бұрын
@@Snuckster2 I respectfully disagree. I encourage you to listen to the soundtrack on its own on Spotify. It utilizes a wide variety of instruments and chants to compliment the movie. I never found it overbearing like Zimmer usually does.
@Snuckster23 жыл бұрын
@@Midge_Manycoats I did The extra music whatever tf it's called is better and more daring but isn't exactly memorable
@Asian_Movie_Enthusiast3 жыл бұрын
Does Hans Zimmer score every movie nowadays? It's utterly ridiculous.
@McLarenMercedes3 жыл бұрын
Sadly yes. Can't think of a more generic movie score composer.
@anthonymartensen31643 жыл бұрын
@@McLarenMercedes have you seen the film? The musical soundscape is awesome.
@patrickfischer76983 жыл бұрын
Terrence Malick's The Thin Red Line, Christopher Nolan's Interstellar, Crimson Tide along with a few other of his soundtracks actually worked beautifully despite of its overbearing loudness.
@4_vaccuum_salesman_of_marr9443 жыл бұрын
@@patrickfischer7698 True. One can't say enough about the Thin Red Line soundtrack.
@McLarenMercedes3 жыл бұрын
@@anthonymartensen3164 I have seen the film and the score was the only part I found "passable". The rest was amazing. I will say this though: If I don't remember a score from a film then it's usually a sign it doesn't stand on its own. There are good scores from bad films I remember and that's because the film itself doesn't sway me to either praise or bash the music composed for the film. When it comes to Zimmer then his scores could be used interchangeably with virtually all films he made music for. That's because it follows a rigid formula and never deviates much from it. A couple of years back I was at a "recognize the movie score" party in my university. We were sorted depending on which semester we were in. Let's just say that our semester group won easily and yours truly recognized the scores the second they played. Far from all of them were the most commonly recognized themes. What I'm trying to say is that my music memory is rather good, but virtually none of Zimmer's scores sticks with me. I'd say that's because it lacks any distinctive or interesting features. You pretty much get the same thing every time which some people might find amazing but I don't. I suppose they either haven't heard much else or just are instantly conditioned to like a score if they like the film itself. This is why they instantly fail the "Name-a-film-you-didn't-like-but-loved-the-score-for" test. The taste in music is highly subjective I will admit and people are free to enjoy whatever they want. I suppose there is some skill involved in making "accessible music" and that should be respected. Dune 2021 lacks a distinctive theme. Pity.
@johantoong43573 жыл бұрын
"I've actually never read the book, but I do know a bit about it." Well I've neither read the book nor seen the movie, but I'm going to comment here anyway.
@nexusxmoon3 жыл бұрын
I did not read your epic comment but I will comment.
@wishcraft4u23 жыл бұрын
That's not really what she said, she said she knows a little about the history of trying to make it into a movie.
@johantoong43573 жыл бұрын
@@wishcraft4u2 that was literally what she said, verbatim. At 0:13. Hence the quotation marks I put around it. Googly eyes much?
@theodolre2 жыл бұрын
This critic has never read the book, but then shares her opinion on how the book can't be made into movie, what? This critic, and I'll use that term lightly, is a poser. She's completely off on the handful of reviews I watched. I know reviews are objective, but come on! Really?
@inthought023 жыл бұрын
Way too many people are judging you for not reading the book but reviewing the film as part of an unadaptable source material and its getting weird. First off, not everyone can or should have to immediately read the book before or after watching the movie. The book itself is pretty steep in world building and because of this it's actually true that it's unadaptable. You can adapt certain parts of it in film but you would also have to alter or leave out other parts of it in order to work. Hence why I agree that a miniseries would've been the proper solution for an adaptation for this book, especially given how there is so much exposition around the story and how the characters have even gotten to this point in the first place. But I will give credit to the director for shooting it the way it did, and not overdoing it on the narration as a way to explain things. I actually don't mind Lynch's Dune, I feel like for all the issues he had with the production and the studio, he really tried to adapt a big book with a lot of exposition into a 2-hour movie, and it might not have been successful, but he genuinely tried and wanted to achieve it.
@bunkerbill2 жыл бұрын
Hanz Zimmer was well used very well for The Thin Red Line. I haven't seen a score used that well for a long time.
@jtatsiue3 жыл бұрын
Her take is that Dune is “clunky” and “weighted down with exposition”, what?! Does she prefer the silent film era? Dune’s part 1 of a grandiose literary tome, given the scope of the universe, the script is downright terse but it whets the appetite, and audiences new to the franchise will rush out and buy Herbert’s novels hungry for a deeper dive. It’s as if she’s straining to find fault with the film, as if her take’s objectively true. My take on her take is that she should read the first novel and watch Quinn’s Ideas’ KZbin channel.
@justinlevy2743 жыл бұрын
A lot of the fans of the book complained that the movie didn't explain the world enough through exposition. I thought he only added exposition when absolutely necessary and did a great job of showing and not telling.
@LAZISH3 жыл бұрын
I listened to your review of the Enter the Void and just said wow!!! Love your reviews, regardless having different opinion on 2021 Dune!!!!!!
@tinishamccroskey77523 жыл бұрын
I really enjoyed the movie. The houses felt right the Harkonens felt truly scary. The exposition was done well and I loved the ships. I also think the visions with multiple time lines was excellent. There is almost nothing I didn't like but I have to agree the score really bothered me. I think if it was used less and kicked in at a couple of key moments rather than continuously going it would have been more impactful. After this I feel like the Lynch version was a complete mess. However Lynch has amazing and out there character design and fun element that take advantage of the fact it is a scifi epic. I'm definitely excited for the next movie.
@solomonsomers70333 жыл бұрын
Yup this is pretty much how I feel. The score is not very good. Knock-off tribal music and big rumbly parts that are supposed to feel "epic" but just seems a bit overblown and takes me out of the movie. Otherwise really cool movie though
@ruly81533 жыл бұрын
Am I the only one who thinks that timothee Chalamet is very overrated???
@rong29123 жыл бұрын
No, because he is.
@theebonymaw3 жыл бұрын
@@JJJoeJoe it's the jawline.
@4_vaccuum_salesman_of_marr9443 жыл бұрын
@@theebonymaw He has no chin.
@HBICTiff3 жыл бұрын
He is but this might be his best film yet (in my opinion)
@alexanderg12973 жыл бұрын
You should definitely give the first book a chance. It’s a classic for a reason
@offspringfan12882 жыл бұрын
Yeah it’s easy for her to sit there and say that it’s an “unfilmable” book yet she’s never read it 😂
@Half-light2 жыл бұрын
@@offspringfan1288 As someone who read all Frank Herbert's dune books she is actually pretty correct, yes it can potray the world and backdrop to an aesthetic extent, but potraying the complexity of the story of Dunan idaho or the entirety of the God emperor is impossible. Even in the first book they failed to capture the intricacy or scheming that happened in the book, which made u care less for the characters, especially Jessica, Duke Leto or the relationships between the harkonens. A few scenes like the party between houses could tie this problem in a game of thrones sort of fashion but I feel they stripped the characters from the books to their base qualities. Still a great film but there isn't too much you can do to do Frank Herberts Dune justice.
@ericmarois69603 жыл бұрын
"I've actually never read the book" you say. Well, I'm sorry to say it shows in your critic with which I disagree even though I liked the Lynch adaptation of the same work. This sticks for more closely to the source material and is a whole lot more faithful to it. I did read the books all the way to Chapterhouse Dune and am so happy Frank Herbert's work finally has a valid big screen adaptation, You should watch some interviews Denis Villeneuve did about some choices he made adapting the book to the big screen and maybe the book itself, it just might change your mind on some of the stuff you said here.
@ajaxslamgoody97363 жыл бұрын
Dune is drab and watching paint dry would be more interesting....extremely overrated. But I tried to read the book and had to re-read sentences and paragraphs over and over. I'll stick to Robert A Heinlein's books, George R R Martin, the Polish Author for the Witcher, Asimov's works and HP Lovecraft's works. Maybe the Movie will change my opinion. I think the video game trilogy of Mass Effect would be an awesome space Opera movie. I just hope it isn't WOKE. PS, I'd like a movie based on Necroscope.
@TheSunStudio13 жыл бұрын
@@ajaxslamgoody9736 JRR Tolkien also.
@timuhlis3 жыл бұрын
I'm sorry but I have to respectively disagree with your stance on Hans Zimmer's score. Dune is an EXTREMELY complex story built by layering extremely complex character developments and themes on top of each other (you should know this better than anyone considering you never read the books). Not only does Hans Zimmer ensure everything you hear sounds like it was created on a distant planet, regardless of when it took place, he's purposely avoiding creating big,melody-heavy character motifs and anthems. By doing this, he is able to layer individual "sounds" for each character and their respective tone (Paul and his terrible purpose, Jessica and the Bene Gesserit, the vulnerability of the House of Atreides, the Fremen, the Harkonnens, etc.). Any other composer would have tried to create a popularized 'Dune Theme Song' and melody-driven sounds for the rest, which would inevitably clash with each other in a detrimental way. He actually put his ego aside and essentially just created a masterclass in story-driven sound design more than this movie really even has a "score" to it.
@soulpath13 жыл бұрын
I agree. It fit the film very well.
@hoibsh213 жыл бұрын
Director: This movie already weighs a lot, Hans. Hans: That's okay, I think I'll add 10,000 pounds more to it.
@JasonUmbrellabird3 жыл бұрын
I've never read the book, but I've always seen it as unfilmable... How did you work that out?
@KlausGehrmann3 жыл бұрын
Just watched it and I too was impressed by the CGI and the visual impact. I think this movie is so successful because it appeals to fascists, environmentalists and sci-fi fans alike, and lovers of emotional drama which is of course a prerequisite for success. People will queue up to watch part 2 if only to see how Paul and Chani are going to hit it off. The booming score of Hans Zimmer got on my nerves, too, but go see it anyway just for the visuals.
@bk-terminator36173 жыл бұрын
How you can even hang this in the same space as Lynch’s film is beyond me. This film was a true art house masterpiece. Cmon
@ajhill66553 жыл бұрын
Agree! I would not be able to see the David Lynch movie again after watching this epic release.
@Slabagool2 жыл бұрын
Im kinda worried about whether they can pull off the second part because a lot of the challenges I can think of happen in part 2
@frauke98093 жыл бұрын
To defend some of your points about the „distance, the sterility, the cleanness“ of the movie (although I can absolutely see it and agree), the book itself, in its writing style and world building is also very very sterile and absent to the reader almost. At least that’s how I read the book.
@solodolotrevino3 жыл бұрын
Denis himself said he is adapting Dune the way he saw it at 13 years old. Many people agree with the vision he’s brought to life and other people see the books differently. But he’s staying faithful to the world he believes Herbert was trying to paint for the reader.
@theolamp53123 жыл бұрын
I'm looking forward to seeing this. My reason, Denis Villeneuve. Ever since I saw Arriva, I was sold on him.
@silas14142 жыл бұрын
Fascinating how different peoples experiences are. I adored the score. The music was by far its greatest feature to me, and am sad to report I found the movie a bit dull overall.
@ryanjohnjohn30152 жыл бұрын
ahhh im a novice in films, does anyone know the name of who the original director was going to be? i tried spelling how it sounded lol but to no avail
@Mimi-fo7kp9 ай бұрын
excellent review. The movie could have been much better. I agree that the Lynch version is much more interesting and has a character compared to sterlie Villenueve version.
@Marxengelsleninstalinmao Жыл бұрын
I watched Lynch's version of Dune just after seeing Villeneuve's and I broadly agree with your analysis here. Villeneuve's has to be commended in terms of cinematic spectacle, the sound design alone is fantastic and makes going to a movie theatre to see it worthwhile. What I found though is that whilst Villeneuve's world building is very impressive the film fell into the same problems as Bladerunner 2049 in that it felt to clean and too sterile. The characters also did not make anything like the same impact as they did in the Lynch version, Kyle Maclachlans version of Paul makes far fmore of lasting impression than Chalamet most importantly. That's partly a problem with the actor in that Chalamet is just too weak a performer to carry such a heavy role and partly a problem with the direction. Overall Villeneuve's Dune is to be applauded for being such a great cinematic film but due to its characters not making a lasting impression is still inferior to the Lynch version.
@Elricsedric10 ай бұрын
For me as someone who didn't read the books. Personally I enjoyed it alot as a movie. But seeing your points I kinda agree, I didn't get a sense of the characters and didn't care about any of them. I liked it as a big interesting movie, but I didn't feel like it's the gigantic universe that'll fall in love with it's characters and long stories. So u guys might be right.
@shadowseer073 жыл бұрын
I sincerely like Dune 1984, maybe because it’s visually so strange and different.🤷🏽♀️ My only issue with Dune 2021 is that the pacing is rather plodding, the things that are focused on aren’t as interesting as they are in the book, and it ultimately feels rather hollow. I didn’t feel anything for any of these characters except perhaps the Fremen. Visually it’s gorgeous, but it felt so emotionally empty. I agree about the worms. They looked amazing, but they didn’t feel as tangible as say, the dinosaurs in Jurassic Park?
@SliderFury13 жыл бұрын
Oh, an actual good, critical review that highlights the movies strong and weak points instead of just spooging all over it because it's a "cinematic masterpiece", or trying to get clicks claiming that it's straight up bad. Neither is true. It's a really good movie, just about excellent, that's a bit to sterile for its own good and yet is sensually spectacular. Needs Part 2 to work.
@eetuhalonen99022 жыл бұрын
It´s just difference of opinion. Like some people hate the Zimmer score and some people love it. Good, honest reviewer can consider it a masterpiece. Someone having a different opinion from yours doesn´t make them dishonest.
@schlobooodly68363 жыл бұрын
What is your favourite zimmer score and do you like it?
@pedrorocha97223 жыл бұрын
funny, I completely forgot the music.... and started to forget the film altogether, I'll have to see it again. I'm not a fan of BR 2049. It was an impossible act to follow 2019. I really like Arrival, even after multiple viewings and the script quirks....and it has a great soundtrack. As for creating a world,, could it be that The Chronicles of Riddick was more successful than this one?
@Anatolij863 жыл бұрын
Well spotted. Borrows heavily from Chronicles of Riddick, as well as from Blade Runner (most indoors sets are less impressive versions of the Weyland Corp. HQ), Arrival, and of course Star Wars.
@sethhale2353 жыл бұрын
As a fan of the book I honestly thought it needed more exposition. I know film is a visual medium but certain aspects of this, unless you've read the book or have watched the extended version of Lynch's, I don't know how you'd understand what's going on. I still really loved it.
@PsychoticSmith2 жыл бұрын
Easily my favorite film of 2021. Absolutely loved it and cannot wait for Part 2. I’m confident that Denis can bring it home. I’m also happy that they’re not trying to milk the product by trying to turn it into 3 movies.
@RCXDinferno2 жыл бұрын
Could not disagree with you more about the film and Hans zimmer. Seems like you just hate them because they’re popular
@Jsart873 жыл бұрын
Love the cartman pillow. I usually hate all special fx.. but this was great! This is what I was hoping Star Wars would take a tone on.
@tommy11383 жыл бұрын
I've now seen THREE (1984, SyFy miniseries and 2021) versions of Dune and I agree, I think ultimately it's an not a story that can be properly made into a movie. The 2021 version is much more accessible to the general public than the David Lynch version, but I find the two films very similar overall. The new version was beautiful to watch, and the scope was amazing, but it needed to be much longer as the first movie in the series.
@Celestialrob3 жыл бұрын
I’ve seen the Jodorowsky and Lynch. Like you I’ve not read the book. How can you know it’s unfilmable if you’ve not read the book? Curious to see this, thx.
@marcito99283 жыл бұрын
I'm still trying to figure it out if I liked this movie. It had lots of cool moments, but I still can't be ok with the fact that they removed Dr Yueh betrayal plot and the tension that it creates inside the atreides. Also, Piter de Vries could be so much explored, when he dies in the movie, you don't even cares. Not even talking about the dinner scene that was taken out. Really wish for an extended version to fill this gaps
@LxLore-j5b3 жыл бұрын
So I re-washed the 1984 version and could not find spots ur talking about...
@healingmomentum3 жыл бұрын
I’m fascinated how you approached this review. I thought this movie succeeded where blade runner 2049 failed. I get all your saying about missing grit and clunkiness. And the fondness for the lynch version. I am a devoted student of jodorowsky in film and in healing and could only imagine what his version would have been like. But I thought this version really worked. It was amazing to me, stunning really. And I found it clean, well paced, satisfying and real. And I say this surprising myself that I liked it so much. 2049 for me was unrelatable. This movie felt almost transcendent. Nearly mystical. And so well acted. Thank you for reading and for your terrific reviews.
@solodolotrevino3 жыл бұрын
2049 was relatable for me character wise in that it posed the question of what exactly makes us human and what it means to be “alive”. I felt for Gosling’s character’s struggle with identity. You find humanity in this replicant who desires more meaning to its existence. Paul in Dune is seen as a Messianic figure, has premonitions and is in line to inherit a throne. Apart from the relevant environmental and political themes, the story (so far onscreen) isn’t as blatantly relatable as 2049 and neither are the characters. I still love Dune for different reasons.
@healingmomentum3 жыл бұрын
@@solodolotrevino you make sense. My experience was different. I felt very close to the characters in dune. And felt the actors hearts. I didn’t quite have that in 2049.
@healingmomentum3 жыл бұрын
@@solodolotrevino I get all of that. And I wanted to feel that. I sensed it intellectually but my soul just couldn’t buy in cinematically. I’m actually feeling redeemed that I found that with dune because I saw how talented villeneuve is and I just thought 2049 (for me) was so loyal to blade runner but it left me empty. Dune repaired that. But I totally get where you are coming from and I’m glad you got that from 2049.
@trollking2023 жыл бұрын
how many people did they pitch to space?
@miguel1675893 жыл бұрын
is it dense though? I mean the novels are big in scope but... not dense imo
@melange783 жыл бұрын
You should put a gentle compressor on your voice because the dynamics from the microphone jumps at me when I listen to this video. I can't have a normal volume, I have to change it as you speak,
@TheMigalito3 жыл бұрын
Haha " gladiator wants their music score back " 😆
@JasonFanny3 жыл бұрын
Well, Hans Zimmer did the soundtrack for that too lol
@egoborder320311 ай бұрын
this is a great film for people who refuse to read the book, otherwise it's a pretty poor adaptation
@cameronb4213 жыл бұрын
What composers do you prefer over Zimmer?
@azmodanpc3 жыл бұрын
Agreed on the "weightlessness" of cgi effects. Blade Runner 2049, for me, worked great because Denis did many of the spinner shots in camera with miniatures. Here, many scenes where too cgi centric and some of the ships resembled too much star wars special effects (the prequels and the new movies): too floaty and crisp, a problem that plagued the SyFi miniseries so much.
@jlworrad3 жыл бұрын
If we can ever get the Lynch cut of his film instead of the producer's we may be delighted and surprised. I keep hoping...
@Peter-K3 жыл бұрын
Having not read the book, and being a fan of the Lynch version, I think only gives you a reference between the two, and not the source material. Lynch made his version into what I can now safely safe as 'bizarro' Dune, not unexpected considering the way Lynch approached film making. Denis was not only more faithful to the source, he relied on subtly conveying the message, the exposition you noted in this one pales in comparison to the voice over heavy Lynch approach. The scene when they try and assassinate Paul is the perfect example, in the original Paul's voice explained everything he was thinking, in this one, all you see is how he handles it and it comes off much more dramatically. You really ought to read the book, or listen to it on audible, now that you have seen the movie, it will be much easier to follow.
@Exeler-genannt-Vogelsang3 жыл бұрын
The 1984 Lynch movie was my introduction into the Dune Universe at the age of 13 and as such it will always have a special place close to my heart. Reading Frank Herberts novels as a teenager afterwards was a mindbending/-building/-evaluating experience. If i had children, i would only force two things upon them: to watch the original Rocky Horror Picture Show and this Dune adaptation, in the hopes it would inspire them to read my "carefully hidden and too mature for children" copies of the Novels. I can not fathom a way a movie could ever tell this timeless story in its entirety, with all its themes within themes. Denis Villeneuve did an awsome job at giving a new generation a gateway into this Universe AND making an epic movie at the same time. maybe now is the time you should read the books. it would be interresting to see if it would lead you to reevaluating .... things. i would definatly watch a video from you about that. ;)
@h.ar.29373 жыл бұрын
I actually prefer the cinematography of BR 2049, I mean come on its Deakins lol. But the soundtrack was just horrible for me. It was the same two tracks over and over again (drums and the woman screaming with a coarse voice). That woman's voice kept popping up all the time kind of reminded me of Zack Snyder's Justice League with Wonder Woman
@mem1701movies3 жыл бұрын
I listened to public radio today with my mom and they played this soundtrack and she hated it.
@raibug31803 жыл бұрын
It almost added a parody feel to some scenes
@wishcraft4u23 жыл бұрын
I saw it tonight and I did enjoy some parts and aspects of it, but the more it sinks in the less I like it somehow. I liked the first parts, especially up to right after they arrive on Arakkis. I do like the alienating sense of scope that Devilleneuve gives to the whole experience, it really evokes the feeling of this strange epoch where material conditions and iron laws of power are dictated by this ethereal substance the spice: the feeling is perfectly captured by the sense of vertigo evoked by the literal, physical dimensions and scope of the space travel scenes. However, ironically, to me the experience fell flat when the movie got into the human side of the story, and the scenes where the main characters actually have spiritual/psychedelic experiences and relate them to each other. I feel like the movie just cannot escape these contemporary commonplaces of tone, sadly making things feel quite cliché. It's like movie makers nowadays, in terms of mannerisms, behavior, attitudes... need to portray characters in a very narrowly contemporary way in order for them to feel "genuine" or "casual", and as if in turn that is the only way in which they can be made to feel "sincerely human". It's "MacTone" and "Macdialogue". Characters are either overly pathetic when the script calls for "drama" leading to "anakin skywalker syndrome", or when the tension is to be broken, they must behave in this hyper-contemporary idea of "what casual people behave like", which to me feels like this very narrow postmodern idea that people are only being "sincere" when they are "casual" in an almost vulgar and cynical sense. It just doesn't feel honest as a depiction of nobles and their retinues that genuinely have strong life or death convictions about matters of religion, honor, politics, etc... and know they are surviving by staking their lives on them. For example, in the book and in the Lynch version, during the sword training scene, Gurney says something like "moods are a thing for cattle and loveplay", which you just know is not in this version because "it would be too cringe", well I'm sorry, people in other cultures and in other times and especially in very different social organizations than we are familiar with, behave in ways very different from us that feel "cringe" to us. Not everything has to be broken down into exactly the types and levels of irony and cynicism we would feel comfortable with in our daily lives. To compensate for this, the dramatic moments where Paul has these revelations and has to share them with his mother, for instance, feel artificially pumped up, almost hysterical. And this is where, indeed, the "Gladiator music" thing plays a heavy handed role. I'm sorry but that makes things just feel very forced. I'll take Pat Steward shouting "moods are a thing for cattle and loveplay!" and weird Lynchian psychedelic sequences over this rather sterile attempt, which I'm convinced genuinely tried, but in the end, as Jodorowsky predicted, indeed came out feeling quite predictable more than anything. A missed chance, perhaps, because this movie hits the mark on so many other levels. But here again Im afraid I have to side with Jodorowsky and assume that the big studio system is making that less and less probable as time goes by.
@RandomHajile-j7z3 жыл бұрын
Check out John Harrison's Dune miniseries, preferably it's Director's Cut. While you have to overlook some budgetary limitations, it's my favorite filmed Dune and it's sequel miniseries, Children of Dune, is even better.
@EddieRay7243 жыл бұрын
There's a director's cut? Cool! I'll have to find it.
@amugsgame99363 жыл бұрын
Firstly, credit where credit is due.... the film looks gorgeous! It is visually very striking no doubt! However, that is where my praise ends! These pseudo-art house action movies are starting to get really annoying! Present themselves as having something deep and meaningful to say but are ultimately as reliant on cliched action set pieces or battle scenes (all be it with cooler visual effects in 'Dune's case) as your average Michael bay film! And I fully accept that set pieces in this film are in a different league visually than your average Michael Bay film! I am just saying that the film is just as dependent on set pieces and for this reason the characterization tends to be just as surface level in films like these. And also because of there being so many action sequences , there isn't enough time to explore the characters , themes and ideas in a meaningful and coherent way. The ideas and themes just get spewed onto the screen in the form of clumsy exposition and 'cheap deepities' (very much like Nolan's work). I normally love deepfocuslens's reviews but this one (very much like the movie itself) only scratches the surface. She basically just kept comparing it to Lynch's film and mentioned how beautiful the film is visually and how much she hated the music! Very little exploration of the actual story telling here, the themes and philosophical insights (or lack thereof) and the actual characters! I also hated the music in this movie but I think there is a reason that this sort of movie specifically NEEDS a Zimmer score! I believe that movies like this need to have overbearing, hyper dramatic music booming out the whole movie long in order to hypnotize viewers into believing that they are watching something deep and substantial and to distract them from how hollow and philosophically bankrupt the movie actually is! Zimmer's music turns the audience into zombie's basically! I actually may end up eating humble pie and changing my opinion on this and even though I seem very critical, I am actually open to changing my mind on this. I guess I would ask fans a few questions that are bugging me about this film : 1) What themes do you think this film explores in an insightful way? Colonialization is bad?? 2) Were there any characters in this film that weren't one-dimensional? 3) Could any of ye hear a single word Rebecca Ferguson said??
@dylana.90573 жыл бұрын
The movie talks about colonisation but by following the colonizer. And it sets out to subvert the white Savior trope . But because it's a part 1 and the story isn't over , the story firstly needs to make the audience believe Paul is a hero before subverting such expectation. It's also a movie about a boy struggling to find purpose in this world , a boy who feels tremendous amount of pressure and who sometimes can't handle it anymore ( the tent scene ) . It's also a story of a mother and her sins befalling on her son and how she copes and is many times powerless against that. To me it's an existential story about a son and mom . I found it quite successful at that. And I found it super immersive and fun
@MrMusicbyMartin2 жыл бұрын
Jodorowsky’s Dune seeded Star Wars and Alien, was intended to be 12 hours long with Salvador Dali, Orson Welles, Pink Floyd writing the soundtrack and if had been anything like The Holy Mountain it would have been truly great. Mica Levy would have scored it well, it should have sounded creepy, alien and unsettling.
@nicolasmedina73213 жыл бұрын
mentioning Shadow of the colossus and the Zimmer slander, love this channel as always
@alfonsorodriguez64373 жыл бұрын
Any thoughts on the 2000 Dune miniseries filmed in the Czech Republic? It follows the first three books almost to the letter and it is more heavy on acting than special effects.
@N_Loco_Parenthesis10 ай бұрын
How can you have "seen it as unfilmable" if you never read the book?
@Trazynn3 жыл бұрын
The absence of the dinner scene was felt and it could have used a few quick shots of what was going on below the roofs of Arakeen, just show some ordinary people instead of just servants and worshippers.
@ParanoidFactoid3 жыл бұрын
You really should have read the book first. Especially since you made a point of not having read the book while calling it unfilmable. The main reason why is because it's a vast amount of backstory and world building exposition with very little in scene plot and character development. In that sense, it's a lot like Asimov's Foundation series. Dune's a fun read, so I'm not taking a big dump on it. But paring it down to the bones of Paul's story ignores everything interesting about the book. And that's why it's unfilmable. It's like trying to shoot a JD Salinger novel, which is all introspection. What are you going to put on screen?
@riffraffrichard7 ай бұрын
I thought it was sleep inducing. The acting was so bland. It was also too much talking heads. It didn’t work for me at all. Aesthetically it was great but it didn’t work as a movie
@Brandon-yg7mw3 жыл бұрын
I liked what you said about Zimmers score..so true
@ScholarVisual3 жыл бұрын
It seems like the ZImmer score is a hate it or love it situation. It doesn't appear to be any in between. Ive seen people say its one was one of the most revolutionary scores and sound design in cinematic history. And I've also seen other people say it was TERRIBLE. If felt it was amazing personally.
@andremeyer12862 жыл бұрын
Hi. Great channel keep it up... I totally agree with you regarding the visceral experience we don't get from modern CGI effects, also the score wasn't great and finally my biggest issue the Pacing was annoying and because of my love for action I was disappointed in the battle fight scenes. You however have made me interested in seeing the cult 80's version even more Thanks
@carlosdumbratzen63323 жыл бұрын
This is the first review, that truly encapsulates my feeling of the movie Dune. I cant say I hated it and it definitely was the best movie I watched in the cinema this year and I can appreciate the direction this adaptation is going for, but it does not pay justice to the book and the topic Dune. As you said, it is just a bit too weightless, to sterile, too clean and the plot and dialogue a bit too stripped down. Also I really dislike the costume design here. There was so much that could have been done with the colours of the uniforms and colour in general, that was lost in showing how sandy this place is. The point about Hans Zimmer I agree with fully.
@Misericorde93 жыл бұрын
Perhaps the best that can be done in a translation of Dune to film is to just make it look good.
@wolfstar6753 жыл бұрын
I loved this movie quite a lot. I actually really appreciated that Denis decided to slash the film into two parts (despite the risk that I could not be made) because it could've become a disaster if he tried to put it all in the same movie. To be honest a complete perfect adaptation would have to be an 8 hour movie to be honest. Just one disagreement I liked the score.
@magister3433 жыл бұрын
One six hour movie would have been fine, provided it had an intermission.
@jameshilden85923 жыл бұрын
I love it when people who haven't read something make comments based on the book they haven't read. Yes, that is sarcasm, and no, it is not gatekeeping.