So, I watched the new Dune movie yesterday, and my mind is conflicted, stirred, perplexed and bewildered, so in order to sort myself out, I decided to write this review. As a film nut I'm going to compare Dune (2021) by Dennis Villeneuve to Dune (1984) by David Lynch ( and definitly not the Alan Smithee version ), and skip the Dune miniseries as I only watched it bitsy and half-heartedly way too long ago to matter now. There will be tons of spoilers, opinions and other dangers ahead. Now, other people have delved into the usual stuff about visuals ( they are lovely ), special effects ( they are great ), cinematography ( it is awesome ), sound ( it is fantastic ) and so forth, but I wanted to focus less on that and more on the story, the point of the book, the characters themselves, and dig into the nitty gritty of how these films cater to a serious Dune nerd like myself. Storytelling Now, the story of the book and how it is told has often been described as un-filmable, especially
Just when you thought it couldn't get worse, it got better. A jumbled collection of pontified scribbles of philosophical and technological nature in the pen of some insignificant guy who cares too much about everything.