Dune - Bold, Ambitious And (Mostly) Brilliant

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  • čas přidán 24. 10. 2021
  • Dune is one of the most anticipated movies of the year. Does it live up to the hype? Join me for my (mostly) spoiler free review.
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Komentáře • 10K

  • @TheCriticalDrinker
    @TheCriticalDrinker  Před 2 lety +501

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    • @darkwingduck7247
      @darkwingduck7247 Před 2 lety +2

      czcams.com/video/qobqGuLarNE/video.html..

    • @MK-UltraBreakdown
      @MK-UltraBreakdown Před 2 lety +5

      I read the books years ago ... zero interest in watching this movie though

    • @israelistyping
      @israelistyping Před 2 lety +5

      @@MK-UltraBreakdown you may need to reread dune again then lol the movie is a real solid watch

    • @jmow-t5023
      @jmow-t5023 Před 2 lety +3

      Major plot Hole. Why did the Harkinans burn down their OWN sacred Palm Trees?!

    • @emilywilliams310
      @emilywilliams310 Před 2 lety +3

      Will I have a question would you ever let you'r Ryan Drake series be turned into movies or a TV show .

  • @Monarchyman1
    @Monarchyman1 Před 2 lety +9450

    “TImonthee Chalmet is a bit young”, the character is 15 (and described as small for his age) in the books, so I think he was perfect.

    • @hypocriticalsatire3966
      @hypocriticalsatire3966 Před 2 lety +848

      Not to mention being called borderline scrawny being compared to Feyd before the final fight in the books.

    • @rhino202
      @rhino202 Před 2 lety +691

      I agree. He did an amazing job and looked the part. Small, but well trained to hold his own until he learns the witching ways

    • @chaos.corner
      @chaos.corner Před 2 lety +487

      Yep. Muad'Dib - Little mouse.

    • @bbbf09
      @bbbf09 Před 2 lety +657

      My thoughts exactly. Chalamet is (unbelivably) 25 years old but can carry a look of plausibly being in his teens.
      The 1984 Dune suffered from putting an obviously fully grown man in the role of a boy.

    • @sandman7826
      @sandman7826 Před 2 lety +102

      @@chaos.corner Yeah, that's the one. They didn't use it properly in the movie end scene - I'm sure he gets the nickname after killing Jamis with some kind of jumping move (which was also left out, bemusingly) that the Fremen equate to that of a desert mouse; would have been fitting after they showed a couple of scenes with a mouse as well.

  • @SheldonAdama17
    @SheldonAdama17 Před 2 lety +3058

    “He who controls the Toilet Duck controls the Drinker”

    • @whenpigsfly8178
      @whenpigsfly8178 Před 2 lety +47

      It'll give you Spice Eyes, that's for sure..

    • @Feefa99
      @Feefa99 Před 2 lety +22

      He who controls bottle of whisky controls alcoholism!

    • @KJ-of6lf
      @KJ-of6lf Před 2 lety +72

      He who controls Tatiana controls the drinker!

    • @jimmyb79
      @jimmyb79 Před 2 lety +2

      🤣🤣🤣

    • @remuslazar2033
      @remuslazar2033 Před 2 lety +27

      @@KJ-of6lf Tatiana must flow

  • @69Jackjones69
    @69Jackjones69 Před 6 měsíci +280

    "Most of the characters are walking a path that's already been laid out for them"
    Indeed, Drinker. The nature of precognition and prophecy is one of the major themes of the books.

    • @whogivesacrapaboutastupidc2313
      @whogivesacrapaboutastupidc2313 Před 2 měsíci +6

      Yeah, that really is the point. Drinker was probably too busy playing sports and nailing hot chicks to read this book.

    • @ilqar887
      @ilqar887 Před měsícem

      Is this the point of the book too¿

  • @timothysullivan1669
    @timothysullivan1669 Před rokem +129

    The idea that everything is a foregone conclusion is actually pretty accurate to the books I think. It’s like being inside of Paul’s time prescience where he sees everything as set, and yet it’s not really as determined as it seems. He still has agency, there are unknowns, and he’s determined to prevent the jihad he continually sees with the fanatic legions tearing across the universe under the Artedes banner.

    • @jamalgibson8139
      @jamalgibson8139 Před 10 měsíci +9

      It's also just basic foreshadowing. I think it's pretty hard to come up with surprises when you have such an old franchise that has already had a movie made, and trying to stay faithful to the source.

  • @peterzeller5736
    @peterzeller5736 Před 2 lety +2220

    Despite it being so long, I'd still go for a Lord of the Rings style Extended edition

    • @1327omega
      @1327omega Před 2 lety +129

      A 6 or 7 hour marathon with extended versions for part 1 and 2 would be incredible. Hopefully Dennis can make a messiah film as well to wrap up the story of Paul in a trilogy.

    • @Chris-ci8vs
      @Chris-ci8vs Před 2 lety +12

      Same, I would want it to fix the central problem of it which was fuck all Harkonen and Piter de Vries development.

    • @Scroolewse
      @Scroolewse Před 2 lety +35

      @@Chris-ci8vs I was mostly disappointed by the lack of attention on both Piter and Thufir. Both are majorly important figures in their respective houses but they're depicted like secretaries in the film.

    • @ishitrealbad3039
      @ishitrealbad3039 Před 2 lety +46

      to me the movie was way too short lol, didn't feel long to me at all.

    • @Driblus
      @Driblus Před 2 lety +27

      The movie should have been at least 5 hours. There's so much thats been left out that would make the story even greater. For example, fleshing out Dr. Yueh much more would make the betrayal more impactful. For people who havent read the books he's just some random guy. Sadly, they probably had to cut a lot of stuff, and tighten the story up due to the general peoples lack of attention span and impatience.

  • @liamboyle7749
    @liamboyle7749 Před 2 lety +1212

    I can’t believe I clicked on this video thinking: “I hope he doesn’t put any spoilers in.” I somehow forgot that I’ve read the book before, like three times.

    • @patriciusvunkempen102
      @patriciusvunkempen102 Před 2 lety +12

      same lol

    • @DaneofHalves
      @DaneofHalves Před 2 lety +8

      There is 15 Dune books...

    • @kolbywilliams7234
      @kolbywilliams7234 Před 2 lety +49

      @@DaneofHalves
      Yet none of them are relevant to what we’re talking about, which is Dune, and there is only one book called Dune…

    • @HerculesBallsInc
      @HerculesBallsInc Před 2 lety +4

      Turns out that the movie won't have a lot to do with the book anyway.

    • @Scroolewse
      @Scroolewse Před 2 lety +13

      I still avoided pretty much all the trailers and images of the film before watching despite having read the books several times. The main draw for me was to see how my visualizations of the book would be translated onto the big screen.
      The only thing that didn't match was how I had imagined the Fremen, I read the books around the same time that I started binge watching GoT so for some reason I had pictured the Fremen as the Free men from beyond the Wall. I guess it only makes sense that the Fremen are brown desert people but they were white when I read the book lol

  • @TheTrueMatr1x
    @TheTrueMatr1x Před 2 lety +267

    I liked Momoa's performance and flavour in his role. Both Duncan (him) and Gurney (Josh Brolin) act as alternative father figures to Paul when Duke Leto was busy running the House. Duncan is more of an easy-going cowboy, while Gurney is more intense and stoic, both of them are willing to die for Paul. I think it was well balanced and portrayed the different roles of the father figure well. It worked for me.

    • @dubya85
      @dubya85 Před 2 lety +6

      thufir is another father figure although we don't see much interaction with him and Paul in the movie

    • @batmanova6058
      @batmanova6058 Před 10 měsíci +2

      it was a complete opposite in the book

    • @piotrd.4850
      @piotrd.4850 Před 6 měsíci

      @@dubya85More like beloved uncle.

  • @collinconkwright9262
    @collinconkwright9262 Před 10 měsíci +53

    One of Frank Herbert’s big flaws (I loved the first two Dune books for what they were) is the vacuum. He “white walled” which means you’re reading dialogue and internal monologue with no idea where you are or what the world and scene is supposed to look like. So the director does a great job at bringing these otherwise under-described scenes to the big screen.

    • @Grasslander
      @Grasslander Před 4 měsíci +3

      I read the books, they are extremely wooden, and he couldn't build a large world without treating it like every planet is a small town. This little town does technology, this little town does cloning. In reality planets would be vastly diverse and there would be technology and cloning on thousands of planets, but that was too much for Herbert to handle. (Insert "but the BOOK says" defense from most fanboys.) I also read most of his son's books, or rather, the books written by another guy with the son as co-author simply to have the Herbert name. As someone pointed out, most of the time they feel more like an outline of a story than an actual fleshed-out story. But I did enjoy the question he introduced, whether it was right to make up atrocities or any other means necessary to make the free world keep up the fight against the Machines until they were finally destroyed and no longer a threat. Those who live long after in a sprawling human empire would certainly think so.

    • @4CardsMan
      @4CardsMan Před 2 měsíci +1

      I had to work to get through it. Your criticism is right on.

  • @DunawayCreations
    @DunawayCreations Před 2 lety +898

    "He who can destroy a thing, controls a thing." -Paul Atreides
    I guess the Drinker is in perfect control of his liver?

    • @VengeanceN7
      @VengeanceN7 Před 2 lety +5

      But if you have destroyed the thing do you still control anything? What if you have moved beyond the thing, and are only being held back by it? No I'm just making conversation, have a good evening everybody!

    • @bazilisek502
      @bazilisek502 Před 2 lety +1

      One could say fate of his liver is in his hands

    • @scottmantooth8785
      @scottmantooth8785 Před 2 lety +7

      *the drinkers liver has it's own superpower of near invulnerability to exposure and drenching of recreational ethanol*

    • @JJJackson777
      @JJJackson777 Před 2 lety

      @@bazilisek502 it's fate mate

    • @roadent217
      @roadent217 Před 2 lety +3

      @@scottmantooth8785
      And that's why The Drinker drinks - he can't destroy it, so he can't control it.

  • @thirdofherne9232
    @thirdofherne9232 Před 2 lety +895

    "He's a bit too young..."? He was playing a 15 year old when he was 24, I think he did very well.

    • @fitrianhidayat
      @fitrianhidayat Před 2 lety +44

      yeah.. I think Mary Jane is the weak link in the cast, being surrounded by heavy hitter veteran actors and have to "convey" her act without words is definitely hard job to do, so I wouldn't blame her for it.

    • @patrick7142
      @patrick7142 Před 2 lety +27

      Exactly, he doesn't know what he is saying. He always tries to sound smart with his forced accent. LMAO

    • @ArixTavarus
      @ArixTavarus Před 2 lety +72

      @@patrick7142 uhh, what? You know Drinker actually is Scottish, right?

    • @skinnie2838
      @skinnie2838 Před 2 lety +4

      Bottom line is this movie was poorly written and poorly acted. Go watch the 1984 version if you want to watch Dune

    • @williamdunbar2449
      @williamdunbar2449 Před 2 lety +85

      @@skinnie2838 bruh youre kidding right ? The 84 Dune was a mess. Trying to cram a shit ton of books in a 2 hour movie is not a good idea. It was honestly really shitty.

  • @calebevans3690
    @calebevans3690 Před rokem +523

    I expected it to be mediocre at best, and could not believe how incredible it is when I saw it in theaters. It felt like a shot for shot (almost) adaptation from the book

    • @gyromurphy
      @gyromurphy Před rokem +16

      I saw it at home. With my semi decent 7.1 surround sound it was absolutely magical

    • @germanicelt
      @germanicelt Před rokem +8

      I'm disappointed I didn't make it to the movies to see it. Guess I was just conditioned by the Delta lockdown, and didn't get myself out of it quick enough. I hope they re-screen it at the cinema, just before the next one.

    • @bcc5701
      @bcc5701 Před rokem +2

      How good was the shot where we see the massive ship orbiting. It was like I couldn’t have made it better with my own mind.

    • @henrylopez7721
      @henrylopez7721 Před rokem +2

      Dune 2 coming out baby!

    • @BoraHorzaGobuchul
      @BoraHorzaGobuchul Před 10 měsíci +14

      It is actually quite far from the book in many ways, however, it is still great

  • @JohnSmith-fo5cx
    @JohnSmith-fo5cx Před rokem +74

    personally I loved the pacing. Slow burn movies rock as they give time to take everything in rather than being thrown from one scene to another.

    • @mikey7747
      @mikey7747 Před 9 měsíci +3

      Agreed. I loved how it showed the world's as it had much to reveal, but didn't just explain it all.

  • @robertsneddon731
    @robertsneddon731 Před 2 lety +526

    "There's long reflective scenes where characters ponder their fate and explain their outlook" -- that's Dune in a nutshell.

    • @aaronthompson192
      @aaronthompson192 Před 2 lety +10

      Right but it doesn't make a great film.

    • @MOC21
      @MOC21 Před 2 lety +33

      @@aaronthompson192 I thought it was a great film, of course, I like slow introspective things.

    • @enzi_official
      @enzi_official Před 2 lety +3

      Sadly, the Harkonnen and Sardaukar fall flat here. From the movie they seem like 2 dimensional villains, not sure how the book paints them.

    • @bigben8502
      @bigben8502 Před 2 lety +4

      @@enzi_official Go back to your safe morally gay zone

    • @petriew2018
      @petriew2018 Před 2 lety +25

      @@enzi_official The Sardaukar are one dimensional evil. They are the iron fist of the Emperor, they're a blunt object who have had all emotion and critical thought purged from their minds.

  • @gabevillarrealedits
    @gabevillarrealedits Před 2 lety +2162

    $220 million and climbing, as well as the best opening for a Villeneuve outing. I’m glad people are going to the theater for this one, because it deserves it more than almost anything else put out this year.

    • @SliderFury1
      @SliderFury1 Před 2 lety +51

      Going again on Saturday.

    • @kalimarus
      @kalimarus Před 2 lety +115

      I watched it on HBO Max and immediately bought an IMAX ticket to support it. This one needs to succeed so we ensure part 2 is made.

    • @Holypikemanz
      @Holypikemanz Před 2 lety +17

      this movie was fking terrible, idk what movie you morons watched

    • @pEMDASist
      @pEMDASist Před 2 lety +17

      For sure go to the theatre for this one!

    • @pxrays547
      @pxrays547 Před 2 lety +202

      @@Holypikemanz Very profound and insightful criticism.

  • @Sund4nc3
    @Sund4nc3 Před 2 lety +639

    In today's world of bloated and overly simplified blockbusters, DUNE is a remedy. I just couldn't believe how overly fucking amazing this movie is. My only grief was that it ended, i could have watched it for a few more hours. Also i really hope there will be a longer version coming out at some point, since they kinda skipped the space traveling part. The only glimpse they gave was such a genius idea that i think that was the point when the movie completely absorbed me. I watched it like 6 times since it came out and for me its the biggest thing since Fellowship of the Ring came out.

    • @helvete_ingres4717
      @helvete_ingres4717 Před rokem +5

      > bloated
      > oversimplified
      pick one. In general, things should be as simple as they can be without losing anything essential.

    • @iinsomniaaaaa
      @iinsomniaaaaa Před rokem +35

      @@helvete_ingres4717 Bloat and oversimplification are not exclusive, a movie can be bloated by cramming inconsequential action, dialogue, etc while oversimplifying themes and character development at the same time. Length is no guarantee of depth when it comes to movies.

    • @SwordWieldingDuck
      @SwordWieldingDuck Před rokem +5

      @@iinsomniaaaaa however i noticed that movies that last 3+ hours always are really good.

    • @JOSEPH-vs2gc
      @JOSEPH-vs2gc Před rokem +9

      If you read the book, you'd probably be disappointed by this movie. Its just OK compared to the book. So read the book!

    • @boazburger3846
      @boazburger3846 Před rokem +8

      @@JOSEPH-vs2gc i read the book a few weeks ago, and it was amazing. Still really enjoyed the movie though

  • @airone8893
    @airone8893 Před rokem +113

    Me and my wife went to watch it not really having too much hope for a high budget film, but decided to give it a try. We were enthralled the entire time. When it ended, it felt like time had passed so quickly. We could’ve watched it for double the time and we wouldn’t have felt as though it was even a 2 hour film. The sweeping shots of the landscapes and the beautiful scenery were like something out of fellowship of the ring. After it was over, all I wanted to do was watch the second one right away

  • @ernestop6501
    @ernestop6501 Před 2 lety +729

    As A Scotsman he should have loved the fact that Bagpipes were featured

    • @thathandsomedevil0828
      @thathandsomedevil0828 Před 2 lety +15

      Haha yeah, I was wondering if the Atreidis house descended from the Scots! 😁👍

    • @zimriel
      @zimriel Před 2 lety +25

      @@thathandsomedevil0828 Herbert said they were descendates of Atreus and Agamemnon

    • @scionofdorn9101
      @scionofdorn9101 Před 2 lety +42

      @@thathandsomedevil0828 Technically, they were a house descended from Greece, however there are something like four variants of bagpipe from Greece going back to the 15th century.

    • @skoomamuch356
      @skoomamuch356 Před 2 lety +9

      bagpipes aren't exclusive to scotland

    • @johnthwaites5976
      @johnthwaites5976 Před 2 lety +7

      I think the Romans brought the bagpipes over to Britain they weren't invented by the Scots

  • @matthewschurbert2244
    @matthewschurbert2244 Před 2 lety +2531

    It was so refreshing seeing smart, good hearted characters who act rationally and use their brains in intense situations. Oscar Isaac was without a doubt my favorite part of this movie, the fact he doesn't hesitate for a second to put himself in deaths way to save workers from peril really sold him for me.

    • @natecherek1713
      @natecherek1713 Před 2 lety +66

      Try reading the books: written so long before the woketards wrecked Hollywood

    • @Soridan
      @Soridan Před 2 lety +62

      Definitely worth checking the books, so much context is missing in the movie!

    • @raifthemad
      @raifthemad Před 2 lety +16

      And you don't have to wait years to find out how it all ends :P But then again, that would spoil the movie. It's a dilemma for sure.

    • @matthewschurbert2244
      @matthewschurbert2244 Před 2 lety +29

      I'm not a reader but a buddy of mine has read all of the books multiple times and were watching them together so he filled me in on all the little details and things I didn't grasp first watch. I honestly went into it thinking it'd be more boring starwars and I'm more than happy to admit I'm wrong.

    • @victorwarner2734
      @victorwarner2734 Před 2 lety +9

      And we he bite that poison tooth fucking epic

  • @definitelynotadam
    @definitelynotadam Před 2 lety +30

    0:48 "Liet-Kynes was a tall, thin man with long, sandy hair, a sparse but mussed mustache and beard and under heavy brows, eyes that were fathomless blue-within-blue." - spot on.

    • @Yesica1993
      @Yesica1993 Před 2 měsíci

      I finally saw Part 1 yesterday. I about screamed when I saw that nonsense with Kynes. And they ruined the character's conclusion as well, which was one of my favorite parts of the book!

  • @coryhardwick7308
    @coryhardwick7308 Před 2 lety +36

    I read the first book a few years ago and loved it. After finishing it I immediately went to the bookstore to buy the next couple, where I learned from the cashier that they were going to make a movie. I was simultaneously excited and wary, because it seemed to me that Dune wasn’t going to be very adaptation friendly. The part that worried me most was how introspective Paul is in the book. A lot of the story is communicated from his inner self rather than verbally delivered. I was very happily surprised when I saw it.

    • @dflaming1371
      @dflaming1371 Před rokem +2

      If only Timothy could use facial expressions and not messianic visions to communicate that introspection

  • @SeaCow1g
    @SeaCow1g Před 2 lety +392

    "A self fulfilling prophecy inevitably coming to pass...." Correct me if I'm wrong but wasn't that kind of the point of the Dune novels?

    • @SeoulExploration
      @SeoulExploration Před 2 lety +19

      Exactly. Jessica makes the history changing decision to take advantage of the sisterhood's myths and legends seeded all over the universe. They have been puppeteering the power allocation and struggle from behind the scenes for centuries. All their maneuvers push to gain deep seated control for the sisterhood.

    • @Daolnwood
      @Daolnwood Před 2 lety +50

      I think when you read it, it rather comes across as the reverse: everyone has carefully constructed plans that backfire horribly because of small, unforeseeable acts of will.
      The Bene Gesserit have a plan for the human genome; the emperor has a plan for the imperium; the Duke has a plan for Dune; the Baron has a plan for the fall of Atreides; the Navigators have a plan for keeping their mercantile networks as safe as possible.
      Except Jessica chose to have a son instead of a daughter; the Baron's traitor takes steps to preserve the Duke's house; Paul, lacking time to grow into full control of his prescience, seizes upon the one clear path to survival and coopts the Bene Gesserit failsafe mythos, ultimately sparking interstellar war. Harkonnen falls instead of Atreides; the Emperor becomes a figurehead on his own throne; and the Navigators lose control of their primary resource.
      It feels scripted in the first book because Paul has to play hard into deliberately crafted prophecies using spice-granted foreknowledge, but even in the first book it's pointed out that prescience - prophesy, fate, destiny - is a trap and that walking the certain, foreseeable path is a road to stagnation and disaster

    • @crazysilly2914
      @crazysilly2914 Před 2 lety +3

      @@Daolnwood why do they wear those weird nose-rings..?

    • @jacksobrooks
      @jacksobrooks Před 2 lety +25

      @@crazysilly2914 those are the breathing pieces on the stillsuits. The suits recycle the body's moisture. That includes the moisture lost through breathing, thus the nosepieces.

    • @gandalf8216
      @gandalf8216 Před 2 lety +3

      To humanity, "the golden path" is the same as common sense.

  • @Ramk0sh
    @Ramk0sh Před 2 lety +1433

    Legendary just announced Dune: Part Two is happening, yay!

    • @ashdoglsu
      @ashdoglsu Před 2 lety +15

      Yes they did

    • @BlueHooloovoo
      @BlueHooloovoo Před 2 lety +96

      Thank god, it would be a crime not to finish this story with the amount of effort that has gone into it.

    • @marcane6122
      @marcane6122 Před 2 lety +75

      The Spice Must Flow

    • @malcolm_in_the_middle
      @malcolm_in_the_middle Před 2 lety +34

      @@BlueHooloovoo Well, part 2 won't really get to the end of the story, just the end of the first book. I would like to see a portrayal of the galactic jihad the Fremen go on.

    • @fastsean9
      @fastsean9 Před 2 lety +7

      Fuck yea america

  • @Auzzie015
    @Auzzie015 Před 2 lety +44

    I thought the ending point makes total sense really. In the book this is the half-way point, and after they undergo that ceremony where Paul gains his foresight and Lady Jessica and her unborn daughter undergo that change, there is a time skip forward. Unless I'm remembering that wrong.

    • @elonif4125
      @elonif4125 Před rokem +6

      You’re right, there is a 2 year timeskip. I think the second part should start there with Alia already born so the narrative is more focused.

  • @jcdisci
    @jcdisci Před 6 měsíci +9

    When I first saw Dune in 1984, I was 27 and a huge lifelong science fiction fan. And while I had read Isaac Asimov and Ray Bradbury and Tolkien my entire life I had not checked out Frank Herberts or Dune. Frankly I was intensely disappointed, finding it confusing. But the special effects intrigued me. The hype surrounding the movie though inspired me to read the book. It was GREAT! Which of course compelled me to rewatch Dune armed with the knowledge of WTF is going on. And this time it blew me away. In particular, the atmosphere of the movie was captivating. I just finished Dune 2021 and can't believe how effectively it has held the original atmosphere! This is a worthy making of the story and I'm eager for Dune 2.

    • @TimTim3000
      @TimTim3000 Před 2 měsíci

      I read the books as a kid in the 70s and thought the first movie was an abomination. The miniseries was good though and so is this movie, though nothing can ever match a child's imagination.

  • @Zahnpuppy
    @Zahnpuppy Před 2 lety +474

    'Everything seems pre determined, and everything seems isolated'
    This is exactly what it is supposed to feel like for Paul.
    he goes to a planet where they have no support,
    everything has already been planned by other people. The point of this story is that he will make friends and take control of his own destiny.

    • @androth1502
      @androth1502 Před 2 lety +37

      he will never be able to take control of his own destiny. that's part of paul's tragedy. he is trapped in some predetermined path and can't escape from it and in the end he... plot spoiler ... gives up and wanders into the desert.

    • @jeremytitus9519
      @jeremytitus9519 Před 2 lety +26

      @@androth1502 Yeah, it’s Paul’s _son_ who ends up playing the Uno Reverse Card on the entire inhabited universe.

    • @TheGoodLuc
      @TheGoodLuc Před 2 lety +4

      Well, no. As I remember, Paul could have prevented Jihad, but he wouldn't avenge his father and family. So he decided to choose that way.

    • @JohnCenaFan6298
      @JohnCenaFan6298 Před 2 lety +7

      I'm on book 5, I quite like Paul's sons Uno reverse style.

    • @vezolf4313
      @vezolf4313 Před 2 lety +14

      @@TheGoodLuc the only moment when Paul could avoid jihad was in water cave with fremens, he see the path clearly, the "only thing" he should do was killing few people: Stilgar, his pregnant mother Jessica and himself. But when he think about that... the moment past and oportunity was lost...

  • @jonathancullis9155
    @jonathancullis9155 Před 2 lety +137

    The Baron's olive oil and balsamic vinegar bath was just perfect.

    • @theeffete3396
      @theeffete3396 Před 2 lety +11

      He's about to toss a salad.

    • @andrewjurkiewicz4393
      @andrewjurkiewicz4393 Před 2 lety +2

      FANCY A PKT OF CRISPS now.

    • @DzinkyDzink
      @DzinkyDzink Před 2 lety +1

      I thought it was coffee oil or something. I'd take a bath in that...

    • @MrHamncheez
      @MrHamncheez Před 2 lety +8

      @@theeffete3396 can you imagine if Denis tried to portray his pedophilia- seeing hollywoods reaction would have been epic. He could have cast Kevin Spacey as the Baron!

    • @86zerueldososo64
      @86zerueldososo64 Před 2 lety +3

      Typical 2021 Hollywood.
      "Hey, we need to portray this character as a depraved, very smart and cunning villain. What do we do?"
      "Well, we might simply adapt the dialogues and the scenes of the book, which do an excellent job of showing..."
      "Fuck that. Have him dress in black and stare around with an evil expression and bathe in mud."
      "Brilliant."
      "Also, he should float around and say My Dune in an ominous tone for no reason."
      "Genius."
      "But that doesn't make any..."
      "You're fired."
      "And Latreena will take your job."

  • @TimParker-Chambers
    @TimParker-Chambers Před 2 lety +161

    "It doesn't really help that the story's delivered as if everything that happens in it's a foregone conclusion..."
    Dude, This is DUNE: Everything that happens in it IS a foregone conclusion. I don't want to insult your intelligence by asking if you've ever heard of at least one of the interations before, because for you to not have done, would be simply astounding. If you're not keen on the pacing, that's cool, everyone has their preference, but again: This is DUNE. It is NOT a fast-paced story. It's a story about prophecy, inevitability, obligations etc, concepts which simply aren't 'fast-paced'.
    I haven't seen it yet, but I loved the novel, previous movie and TV mini-series, so I'm looking forward to to seeing this interpretation and seeing how they do with the source-material.
    Thankyou for giving me reassurance that they haven't completely shit the bed with it.

    • @bBersZ
      @bBersZ Před 2 lety +10

      Probably 90% of the people who saw this movie have no idea it's based on a pop up book. You dunnies™ got to cut the normies some slack. Who tf would know about any of that stuff? Waay to minouche details there brobro

    • @thekinghass
      @thekinghass Před rokem

      Will yeah DUNE is more about characters reacting to things and their thoughts about more than the events itself even the genuine shock moments impact came upon the charters way more than the reader it is about interpolation and the effects this events from the precitcative of the charters it is not suppose to be climates or have any element of mystery for the side of surprising the reader like the example I immediately think about is doctor yuui betrayal the book say in the fucking second chapter about the betrayal and the whole plot to overthrow Leto the first and about the emperor involvement and then it acknowledges that every charter know about the plot than you as reader are actually anticipating the reaction and the thoughts that the character will show after the betrayal it this what is DUNE really charters interacting with the world around them and their thoughts their are not really big conflict or mystery or relationship to solve it just about philosophising about things and situations

    • @platypodesrock9221
      @platypodesrock9221 Před rokem +2

      @@bBersZ dune is the single most famous science fiction. It’s a extremely famous book.

    • @bBersZ
      @bBersZ Před rokem +1

      @@platypodesrock9221 k

    • @roelani
      @roelani Před rokem

      @@bBersZ Bruh everyone knows about the books by now, come on. It's listed on literally every single Sci Fi "Best Of Ever" lists of classic litt.

  • @durchhalter
    @durchhalter Před 2 lety +284

    Awesome summary/review!
    However…
    A) Timothy being too young and feminine? Absolutely not! He‘s spot on with the slender, rather small, 15-year old boy from the books.
    B) Everyone seems to walk a path already laid out for them? Yeah, no sh*t! It‘s a story about prophecies being helped coming to fruition by a sect of master manipulators thinking in centuries, if not millennia.

    • @xaviersavard6343
      @xaviersavard6343 Před 8 měsíci +1

      Well... For the prophecies, I heard that its more of a self fulfilling prophecy than an actual one

    • @travisgray8376
      @travisgray8376 Před 4 měsíci +1

      There is no prophecy. It's all created to manipulate others. Paul just takes advantage and manipulates others to survive.

    • @Grasslander
      @Grasslander Před 4 měsíci +1

      You talk like a fanboy instead of understanding movie review. "But the book says that its prophecy, so there!" Using an in-world explanation as defense is typical of spergs. Critical Drinkers criticism of watching a story with the path already laid out doesn't fall just because "it's in the BOOK!" I don't agree with the Drinker's criticism, I think the movie was entertaining anyway, but you writing "however" and "no sh*t" was absolutely ridiculous.

    • @VVopal
      @VVopal Před 3 měsíci

      ​@Grasslander perhaps but I think a big point is that all the characters know that its coming. Its a prophecy and comes to fruition and all the characters know it will, but despite that they fight as hard as they can. This is almost foreshadowed extremely early on in the movie with "defiance in the eyes, like his fathers". The bene gesserit know that Leto knows, but also knows theres nothing he can do to stop it. Yet he'll fight it nonetheless

  • @dmaxcustom
    @dmaxcustom Před 2 lety +517

    "Looks like the characters are walking a self prophecy..."
    Yes... that's exactly the point of Dune. And the purpose of the whole saga which gets resolved in the books that come after. Which I am sure you know, but if you gonna adapt the books as faithfully as you can, then you have to accept this will be thing. I cannot see this a criticism.

    • @ThePereubu1710
      @ThePereubu1710 Před 2 lety +20

      100% this

    • @joshuagraham2843
      @joshuagraham2843 Před 2 lety +46

      the director understands both movie and books
      non readers and readers
      its genius

    • @lawrencesmeaton6930
      @lawrencesmeaton6930 Před 2 lety +58

      This exactly. Imo, the film adaptations HAVE to get to Dune Messiah at the very least. Stopping at the end of the first book sends the entirely wrong message. This is a story of how people putting their trust behind the wrong leader has immensely dire consequences - this extremely important arc isn't fully realised until the second book and it would be a shame to end it at the end of the first, which has a sort of typical 'heroes journey' climax. A trilogy, two films for Dune and one film for Dune Messiah would be my preferred way to see this series get on the big screen. There's enough of a self contained story there to have a good conclusion to the saga without feeling like you have to make a million films and film all the books.

    • @joshuaclark1696
      @joshuaclark1696 Před 2 lety +21

      They are, but if they were more subtle about it, then the audience could come to realize that as Paul is realizing the inescapability of the path he is on.

    • @ytucharliesierra
      @ytucharliesierra Před 2 lety +6

      Agreed. That's one of the reasons I personally never found Dune particularly interesting though. The whole storyline of the main book, from the transfer of the Atreides to Arrakis untill Paul's victory over the Harkonnen on Arrakis makes for a fairly predictable and simple screenplay, by Dino de Laurentiis or the TV adaptation, or this latter one. It's almost like ticking off the checkboxes from beginning to end. The way I perceive it, all the productions live more off of the production design rather than from the story itself.

  • @maciejwinnicki7007
    @maciejwinnicki7007 Před 2 lety +1222

    "Most the characters seem to be talking a path already laid out before them." This is exactly how the book was written. To me that did build tension, as I knew what will happen, but I was desperate to find out how would it come to this. I think the film is faithful to the book in that respect. It is generally faithful to the source material, which to me is enough to love it. Good review, I missed some of the things mentioned, so I got a bit more insight on the film.

    • @than217
      @than217 Před 2 lety +47

      Kinda what I was thinking while he was talking too. A lot of the books are about visions of the future and people trying to craft the way they want the future to take place based on those visions while taking spice.

    • @adynat0n
      @adynat0n Před 2 lety +58

      I agree. Dune is all about the fight between predestination, either by religious beliefs or social pressures, and the will of the individuals. Everything was supposedly set from the start, and is up to Paul to decide if that should be embraced or rejected. I think that his final decision in the books was the according to his personality.

    • @Landoverse
      @Landoverse Před 2 lety +31

      Indeed, the first part of the story was very much a Shakespearean tragedy - you know from the outset that things are going to hell, and are along for the ride to see how.

    • @timothydavidcurp
      @timothydavidcurp Před 2 lety +6

      Exactly right - what was hard is the degree to which I agree that the pacing was slow - and yet I loved it for creating the sense of an almost haunted reality - and also wanting more from the film in terms of emotional connections between the characters - esp. Jessica and Leto (Paul's relationships with Gurney, Duncan and Leto were all pitch perfect - though seeing just a bit more of how the latter three were tied to one another and their troops/others in House Atreides would have been wonderful)....

    • @Tomani3905
      @Tomani3905 Před 2 lety +23

      Knowing the "destiny" of the characters was integral to Frank Herbert's original novels.
      SPOILER AHEAD!
      ---
      ---
      ---
      In the first book, "Dune", the reader already knew that Paul was going to be killed by Feyd Rautha at the end of the story...it was mentioned frequently throughout the story.
      But Paul Muad'dib defied his own destiny & killed Feyd instead, which served to magnify just how mighty Paul Muad'dib had (supposedly) become once he was "The Kwisatz Haderach".
      It suggests that 'knowing the path that lies ahead' and 'walking the path that lies ahead' are indeed two separate things.
      All the more tragic when, in "Dune Messiah", Paul finally realized that prophesy and pre-destiny wasn't as cut-&-dried as he thought when he did nothing to stop the terrorist's atomic bomb explosion, his subsequent blindness, and the death of Chani while giving birth to their daughter...only to discover that she gave birth to twins instead (something he did not foresee)!

  • @Guigley
    @Guigley Před 7 měsíci +4

    My first viewing of _Dune_ was one of the greatest theater experiences of my life.

  • @bcc5701
    @bcc5701 Před rokem +9

    Grew up on the books and even had the games. The visuals and absolute grandiosity of the images were so good. The noships and emissary transports was incredible. Absolutely loved the way the tech feels old and worn and massive.

  • @RogueFox7050
    @RogueFox7050 Před 2 lety +146

    A movie adaptation that’s actually decent in modern year? A surprise to be sure, but a welcome one.

    • @F--B
      @F--B Před 2 lety +1

      Its villeneuve, expect no less!

  • @SonicSpazz
    @SonicSpazz Před 2 lety +1242

    The movie needed the dinner scene from the book. It breaks down the value of water and the potential for a Harkonnen attack and how Atriedes should handle it. And I would say where they stopped was the best place to stop. It's a character moment for Paul that pushes him in a direction he was almost unwilling to take. Everything from that point is more world building, just from the Fremen side, before culminating in the final conflict.

    • @jamiearmstrong3487
      @jamiearmstrong3487 Před 2 lety +35

      Yes, the trees are a wonderful touch.

    • @970pl
      @970pl Před 2 lety +120

      That, and the 'confrontation' between Thufir and Jessica. They could've cut down most, if not all, of those scenes of Paul daydreaming about Zendaya. oops, I mean Chani.

    • @corvus8638
      @corvus8638 Před 2 lety +31

      Denis conveys the importance of water with the short scene where Paul is talking to the groundskeeper who's watering the palm trees. I'm fine with that scene being cut. I would've preferred not to have all those shots of people just staring off into the distance though

    • @lsq7833
      @lsq7833 Před 2 lety +98

      Apparently it was shot, and is likely to appear in a director's cut that would apparently reach a 4 hour runtime (!)

    • @raquelveloz2481
      @raquelveloz2481 Před 2 lety +80

      I’m hoping they later release an extended cut that includes those scenes. Apparently they also shot gurney playing the Baliset and Denis stated in an interview that it was painful having to cut that scene from the movie

  • @abrazor
    @abrazor Před rokem +7

    I sat on the edge of my seat both times I watched it in the cinema and was acually tearing up at times not because it was sad but because I was overjoyed to see a fairly faithful rendition of one of my favorite books. I even enjoyed the last version, but this one was by far the best.

  • @soldat5160
    @soldat5160 Před 2 lety +64

    This was a good review. I can't say how accurate it was to the book, however, I thought world building with Arrakis and House Atreides being the focus of the first movie was the right movie. I also thought the action scenes were unique and loved how they were portrayed in this film.

    • @etiennedevignolles7538
      @etiennedevignolles7538 Před rokem

      It makes a large number of changes from the book. I thought it was all right but not as good as the 80s film, and nowhere near as good as the mini-series.

    • @isaackirkwood-smith5182
      @isaackirkwood-smith5182 Před rokem +2

      I don’t think it could have gotten any more accurate to the book without suffering. In fact, ome thing that struck me while watching it was just how close it was sticking to the source material. As far as I could tell all of the changes were essentially cosmetic. The shortening of events here, the exclusion of some dialogue there and some rearranging of some tiny parts of the story so that the string of events are understandable to an ignorant audience. All in all the did a very good job of translating the soul and intention of the book onto an entirely different form of storytelling that has different strengths and limitations. Superb actually, especially when you consider the industry standard of book adaptations is to the effect of Netflix’s ‘the Witcher’.

    • @mirkecWii
      @mirkecWii Před rokem

      ​@Etienne de Vignolles you're joking right?

    • @KeytarArgonian
      @KeytarArgonian Před 11 měsíci

      @@etiennedevignolles7538 the only thing I’d change is Kynes’ death. I don’t think it would have been all that much of a stretch to explain how spice is actually created through some form of flashback to a younger Kynes as she dies in the Desert.

  • @kulthuzard
    @kulthuzard Před 2 lety +571

    For me the slower pace added an "immersive" feel to it, and made the overall experience more unique

    • @nikolairose2739
      @nikolairose2739 Před 2 lety +14

      Slower pace made me fall asleep lmao. You remember when Paul talked to the gardener man? Yeah the bright lights kept making me squint which in turn made me sleepy, which in turn made me fall asleep.

    • @stargate525
      @stargate525 Před 2 lety +34

      I had forgotten what it was like to watch a fight scene where you could actually follow the action.

    • @deadlyrobot5179
      @deadlyrobot5179 Před 2 lety +17

      I hate slow born movies and too many dialogs, but holly shit this movie changed my mind.
      When it ended I couldn't believe that I've watched a 2hr movie, somehow it felt like a 75min movie.
      We need a part 2 asap.

    • @dewittbourchier7169
      @dewittbourchier7169 Před 2 lety +11

      @@nikolairose2739 I liked that. It was an actual part where he engages with the people and offers a different interpretation of people looking at the trees as they do in the book. Instead of Dr Yueh and Jessica statically and hyper rationally talking instead an Arakeen native is saying to Paul 'no - I want the trees here, because one day I want my world to be Green.'

    • @kulthuzard
      @kulthuzard Před 2 lety +1

      @@nikolairose2739 hope u slept well, did u enjoy the rest of the movie when u woke up?

  • @chychywoohoo
    @chychywoohoo Před 2 lety +1282

    I'm really confused by the hate the ending got. It sets up part 2 perfectly.

    • @SugerSprinkledFun
      @SugerSprinkledFun Před 2 lety +99

      Agreed. One of the last lines is that Paul has been accepted by the fremen and has become one of them. Perfect way to close out the first movie.

    • @krg021865
      @krg021865 Před 2 lety +5

      @Justin Fanning so is your mother.

    • @dr.wallacebreen3859
      @dr.wallacebreen3859 Před 2 lety

      @Usetube how did you know what he was going to say to you next?

    • @Drewsel
      @Drewsel Před 2 lety +72

      A) the movie didn't explicitly advertise it was a Part 1
      B) normies don't read Dunc
      C) there is no theatrical finale, transition, or set up and the movie abruptly ends
      Most people didn't go in expecting a part 2. Combine that with the awkward ending it's not that surprising people want to be spoonfed.
      I hope that clears up any confusion, please understand.

    • @victorcode2075
      @victorcode2075 Před 2 lety +24

      Agreed. I think my problem with it was just the disappointment that it ended. It makes sense that it is simply the mid point of a longer movie with a second half, I just wanted it right away!

  • @orielle8768
    @orielle8768 Před 2 lety +5

    Can I just say I'm a massive sci-fi fan, but hadn't really explored Dune at all before deciding to go see this film, and you Critical Drinker in 2 minutes explained the basic premise of the Dune series better than the entire 2 and a half hour film did. I consider myself to be someone who prefers high-concept, convoluted stories but I was admittedly a bit lost...thank you for explaining that in such an easily digestible way!

    • @helvete_ingres4717
      @helvete_ingres4717 Před rokem

      @Roberto Vidal Garcia its 'medievalness' is part of what made it stand out among sci-fi, it was an innovative concept to juxtapose high and low tech like that. It is not, as you weirdly suggest, a product of it being written 'many decades ago' (they wrote swords in sci-fi imaginings of the future in the past b/c..swords are from the past? stupid comment) - the high-tech intergalactic empire setting was the norm in sci-fi at the time, Dune was different

    • @helvete_ingres4717
      @helvete_ingres4717 Před rokem

      @Roberto Vidal Garcia why, b/c I said it was stupid? Nah, it was just stupid, I was blunt/direct, not offended. Are you sure it's me who's offended?

  • @DominicZelenak
    @DominicZelenak Před 7 měsíci +7

    This was recently added to Netflix. I'm watching it for the first time and I'm about half way through. I'm struggling to stay awake and follow the plot.

    • @joeorlando94
      @joeorlando94 Před 18 dny +1

      Agreed. I thought it was very slow, boring, way too long, and characters whisper a lot making them hard to understand. I really don’t understand why people liked this movie so much.

  • @alcarnor2506
    @alcarnor2506 Před 2 lety +374

    I think the ending is appropiate. Paul and the House Atreides’ story fade and here comes Muad’Dib. Great movie overall.

    • @Mythonaut
      @Mythonaut Před 2 lety +26

      Also the scene directly after it is feyd rautha’s arena fight, which will be a nice way to start the next movie

    • @bombsawaylemay770
      @bombsawaylemay770 Před 2 lety +2

      Did they ever mention "Muad'Dib" in the movie? If so I missed it.

    • @mammothslayerentertainment8260
      @mammothslayerentertainment8260 Před 2 lety +2

      @@bombsawaylemay770 not that I remember.

    • @kirani111
      @kirani111 Před 2 lety +10

      @@bombsawaylemay770 Muad’Dib is what Paul will come to be known as. All in good time.

    • @alcarnor2506
      @alcarnor2506 Před 2 lety +14

      @@bombsawaylemay770 They do not mention it but you can actually see it on screen. 😂

  • @Paulorrrrrr
    @Paulorrrrrr Před 2 lety +206

    The thing is, Dune is a self-fulfilling prophecy. In the book, the first chapter tells you how the movie will go. It tells you about the fate of the Atreides as well as of Paul's outlook. I've not seen the movie yet but in the book, I definitely enjoyed the much slower first half a lot more than the more dynamic second.

    • @BlueTemplar15
      @BlueTemplar15 Před 2 lety +15

      Well, "slower". In the book, all the plotting and scheming reaches levels higher than, say, Game of Thrones...

    • @jakekgfn
      @jakekgfn Před 2 lety +9

      Yea my hope is that they don't turn the second part into a giant CG spectacle where the focus is the action ala marvel movies,but I think Villanuev won't let that happen

    • @EvGamerBETA
      @EvGamerBETA Před 2 lety +3

      @@BlueTemplar15 yes. In the book it do indeed feel like game of thrones and doesn't feel slow at all

    • @arczero1623
      @arczero1623 Před 2 lety +2

      Yeah when I thought about what I wanted from Villeneuve's Dune, the very first priority was nailing the feeling of terrible purpose, prophecy and the coming jihad. Of a story that tells you what will happen and yet you are transfixed and immersed the whole way through. The book did that unlike any other book I have ever read and I feel like the movie succeeded at that dramatically well for a first half. The only question is how well-understood is it by those who have not read the book before?

    • @arczero1623
      @arczero1623 Před 2 lety +2

      @Zealadinn Yeah I don't remember Chani having that much backstory... I'm fine with her playing a key role in the story moving forward though. But my memory of the books after 2 is quite hazy. If we care about women power (cough cough desert power), the second movie should be Jessica and ALIA's story dammit. Alia is amazing. If anything, the second movie should be like two sixths' Paul's story, one sixth Jessica, Alia and then Chani with and the remaining slice divided among Stilgar, Duncan and Kynes. I always loved the planetary ecology angle.

  • @artcrimeshappen
    @artcrimeshappen Před 2 lety +13

    Appreciate your channel and reviews CD - I will say I was confused with Zendaya in this and the overall hype, then I watched Euphoria over the last week. Personally, she’s amazing in it and makes me curious to see how she’ll play Chani. Then again, i haven’t watched a spider man since the second original.

  • @VegarotFusion
    @VegarotFusion Před 2 lety +5

    I'm glad this turned out good. My love for Dune began when I was 10 with the PC game Dune II. After that I wanted more. Which lead to me reading the book and eventually owning the 1984 movie. But I'll admit it was the RTS games that I loved the most.

  • @evoldriver
    @evoldriver Před 2 lety +512

    For a film that introduces us to a "new" world, with a lot of intricate details, it actually helps that it follows a slower pace, letting the viewer enjoy each beautiful scene and also let the mind process what's on the screen without rushing. It allows for the tension and build up to be more organic, rather than spurred on by spazzy editing adapted for people with short attention spans (which is most people these days). I found it almost soothing to let the movie slowly unfold its intriguing story and present us with stunning visuals and wonderful soundtrack along the way.

    • @evoldriver
      @evoldriver Před 2 lety +2

      @@waggyn Really? I've never read the books, but considering that they're considered sci-fi classics, would you recommend them? It's not easy to make proper book-to-movie adaptations in general, but it would be interesting to know if reading the books would allow the viewer of the film to gain a better understanding or appreciation of what's on the screen.

    • @Zsuluap
      @Zsuluap Před 2 lety +2

      yeah its nice that they introduce is slow in this universe. I would love to see this more than 2 films. but well made and true to the story. skip the cgi :D

    • @FormerPessitheRobberfan
      @FormerPessitheRobberfan Před 2 lety

      @@Zsuluap your english needs serious work.

    • @BWMagus
      @BWMagus Před 2 lety +2

      It does help, but everyone has different tastes. Lingering 20-30 second shots on landscapes help people really soak in the environment and absorb the previous scene, but some people only need like 10 seconds. Doesn't seem like a big difference, but repeat it over and over again and there's 20 minutes of dead air. It's hard to call. It's sort of like when some folks take sitcoms and removes the laugh track, and there's just awkward down time ever few lines, but you realize it's there because (in theory) the audience is laughing and soaking in the humor or situation. If it was just go-go-go, people would start missing lines and maybe even plot points.

    • @kingarthur8616
      @kingarthur8616 Před 2 lety +3

      honestly i thought it didn't go slow enough. There was so much worldbuilding to cover the first film could've been six hours long and i wouldn't have minded

  • @aguyfromnothere
    @aguyfromnothere Před 2 lety +312

    The endpoint was exactly where I hoped it would be…Pauls transition from Atredies to Fremen with his first life taken. I thought it was perfect.

    • @MirecU
      @MirecU Před 2 lety +24

      Yes, I agree... the moment where he decides he is going down the path chosen for him and not run away (as his mother wanted him to)...

    • @RichSmithson
      @RichSmithson Před 2 lety +18

      I honestly dont understand the anger for how it ended.

    • @Zerinth
      @Zerinth Před 2 lety +14

      I agree here too. I thought it was perfectly timed. You have end of his life as Paul Atreides and the beginning of his life as one of the fremen as Paul Muad'Dib. As the Harkonnen think Paul and his mother are dead so when they hear about a Maud'Dib leading the fremen they have no idea its an Atreides. Minor spoiler bit for the next film :)

    • @franka6515
      @franka6515 Před 2 lety +6

      Agree! Including Chani's "this is only the beginning" as a solid hand-off to the next chapter of the story. ...maybe too much drinking?

    • @ErictheHalf_bee
      @ErictheHalf_bee Před 2 lety +9

      I thought it had a 'Frodo and Sam depart the Fellowship for their path through the Emyn Muil' feel to it. It hit the right tone for me.

  • @chrismaser82
    @chrismaser82 Před 9 měsíci +2

    This is your best review, encapsulating my feelings exactly. I just watched this movie for the first time and knew what I saw was very, very good. A few days later, after seeing the trailers for the second one I like it a lot more. You nailed it.

  • @stephenbaluran3298
    @stephenbaluran3298 Před 7 měsíci +3

    To be fair, the novel itself was also a slow burner. This was a heck of a prologue. I hope they land the ending.

  • @youtubeisasshoe69
    @youtubeisasshoe69 Před 2 lety +465

    I ended up loving every minute of it. Had no idea over 2 hours had passed and then felt shocked when it ended. I would easily sit through a 5 hour session of this from start to finish. Please finish it.

  • @ileutur6863
    @ileutur6863 Před 2 lety +365

    I usually despise book adaptations, but when I read Dune a few years ago, this movie was what played in my head, down to the way the characters and technology look. People complain about the minor pacing changes and missing elements, but what's preserved is the VIBE and core themes of the story. This is the first piece of Dune media that doesn't feel like a high school Shakespeare play, with the ridiculous hightened speech and art-deco everything.

    • @adamsirin7249
      @adamsirin7249 Před 2 lety +19

      Um..... no. It really doesn't capture the vibe of the books.
      Chalamet has not recreated Paul. He just hasn't. The Baron's character isn't a stoic expressionless turd.
      The Fremen didn't have an American accent AND they themselves despise Arrakis as its their prison planet. They aren't fighting for their homeland. They're fighting for vengeance.
      And Leto doesn't 'slowly realise' that he's set up to fail. He walks into Arrakis knowing full well why he's sent there, but never expected Yueh to do what he did.

    • @Rapunzel879
      @Rapunzel879 Před 2 lety +4

      I found the first 40 minutes brilliant. It was all downhill from there sadly. The Drinker voiced my criticisms almost perfectly, especially the part where it all just feels like a forgone conclusion, especially when every fucking character seem to mutter some enigmatic crap when they meet Paul. It really robs the movie of tension.

    • @mkultra2456
      @mkultra2456 Před 2 lety +4

      @@adamsirin7249 Yueh's betrayal was not telegraphed well, not fleshed out. But I love the knife fighting in this movie.

    • @mkultra2456
      @mkultra2456 Před 2 lety +17

      @@Rapunzel879 "every fucking character seem to mutter some enigmatic crap when they meet Paul." To be fair that happened in the book too, although it was mostly internal dialogue.

    • @adamsirin7249
      @adamsirin7249 Před 2 lety +4

      @@mkultra2456 And Paul isn't even a mentat in this?! What on earth.

  • @isaackoenen6217
    @isaackoenen6217 Před 6 měsíci +3

    The run time didn't bother me in the least. I actually wished it was longer.

  • @danstrikker6465
    @danstrikker6465 Před 11 měsíci +5

    I went in knowing absolutely nothing about dude and enjoyed the hell out of it

  • @craigwisnom
    @craigwisnom Před 2 lety +218

    Enjoyed the review. But one of the reasons I enjoyed the unconventional ending was it was such a contrast from the last 20 years of cookie cutter action movies where every MCU movie needed to end with a battle scene that had to have more and more explosions and over the top action

    • @vezax8505
      @vezax8505 Před 2 lety +4

      Any random MCU movie (no matter how garbage it is) is done with +- the same budget but will always get more than any masterpiece of sci-fi.
      People is retarded enough to believe a 3 hour movie is slow and worse than a 1h 20m random shit with explosions and no real story being told.
      I still can't believe Venom: Let there be Carnage (which, as far as I see it, was pretty bad) got more in the box office than Dune.

    • @stviz87
      @stviz87 Před 2 lety +2

      I remember the first wonder woman movie, it started with beautiful landscapes and devolved to the last fight being just a brown background for 20 minutes, same with Black panther, the last scene looked like a PS3 rendered background

    • @calvinholt5630
      @calvinholt5630 Před 2 lety +8

      I think the ending here is perfect. It’s Paul embracing his role as Duke, the path that was chosen for him by his father. I mean, the book ends with a duel, so even that’s kind of foreshadowed here.

  • @kv_8
    @kv_8 Před 2 lety +334

    Honestly, we could've had less Chani visions and incl. crucial scenes:
    1. Yeuh's betrayal felt like it came out of nowhere tbh, they should've shown the Harkonnen meeting discussing the betrayal and Yeuh's conversation with Jessica about his wife.
    2. The dinner party where you see more of the politicking before the Harkonnen attack
    3. Not as important but damn, they downplayed Raban by only showing him execute 2 Atreides soldiers. Thought we would witness more cruelty from the most feared Harkonnen warrior.

    • @dewittbourchier7169
      @dewittbourchier7169 Před 2 lety +20

      I think they could have changed things for the better by adding two minutes, showing them arriving at Sietch Tabr and instead of Chani saying 'this is just the beginning' her smiling at Paul and saying 'I was wrong about you, welcome home.' And that right there would be a self-contained story.

    • @bombsawaylemay770
      @bombsawaylemay770 Před 2 lety +20

      They also skipped on Paul using the name "Muad'Dib" at the end.

    • @titianmom
      @titianmom Před 2 lety +8

      Agree. More back story on the houses and the party where they all were plotting, etc.

    • @randomdude189
      @randomdude189 Před 2 lety +2

      It just doesn’t look interesting at all

    • @svartmetall
      @svartmetall Před 2 lety +11

      @@bombsawaylemay770 They haven't yet gotten to Sietch Tabr, and Paul don't choose the name until then.

  • @alphabetaxenonzzzcat
    @alphabetaxenonzzzcat Před rokem +22

    It was a solid adaptation. The problem is that the source material is very tricky to translate to the screen. This was a decent attempt(and certainly probably the closest to capture the spirit of the book), although given the director's previous films(Arrival and Bladerunner 2049) - I was expecting a bit more from it. Still, compared to other modern films it's head and shoulders above them.

  • @tfunkhou88
    @tfunkhou88 Před 2 lety +5

    Just watched it. One of the few movies I was actually bummed when it ended.
    Have never read the book or even really knew much about it

  • @RecklessInternetting
    @RecklessInternetting Před 2 lety +306

    Dune is a dense book with lots of internal monologue so adapting Dune will always be hard.
    I'm glad to hear it's getting good reviews. I always maintained a single movie isn't going to work for Dune so I think the split works well.

    • @yes_head
      @yes_head Před 2 lety +4

      Yeah, I can totally see how fleshing out some of the world building would have made the entire universe come more to life, but given how DV makes movies we probably would be dealing with 3 movies instead of 2 (how did the studio not already think of this?)

    • @creed22solar123
      @creed22solar123 Před 2 lety +8

      @@yes_head I wish they spent more time on building up the characters and their relationships, this way the betrayal and death of the father don't have as much gravity. It should have been three movies at the minimum but they had to make sure the first one will be a success.

    • @razorsfury6519
      @razorsfury6519 Před 2 lety +9

      I would have liked it if it was narrated by Princess Irulan, instead of Chani and the only inner monologue we got would be from Paul Atreides. I think they are going to make Chani more important then she really was. We'll probably never know that Paul never marries Chani, marrying the emperor's daughter instead but we'll see. I think there were a lot of really unnecessary changes.

    • @sharpfang
      @sharpfang Před 2 lety +1

      I'm still afraid though it will all end at pt.2 - Dune has the most "cinematic action" from all the books. Messiah and Children would possibly fit in though they may have problems breaking even at the box office. God Emperor would definitely better fit a TV show format though.

    • @bartomiej9807
      @bartomiej9807 Před 2 lety +1

      @@razorsfury6519 I had similar impression. In my case it was that way because Virginia's dialogue had so much more climate..

  • @grumpybear1081
    @grumpybear1081 Před 2 lety +848

    I was carefully optimistic and Dune did not disappoint. Hope this turns into a trilogy.

    • @samjohnstonemusic6328
      @samjohnstonemusic6328 Před 2 lety +38

      I believe it’s just meant to be 2 films

    • @debzykvids
      @debzykvids Před 2 lety +75

      @@samjohnstonemusic6328 For the first book yes, but Villeneuve has quoted in recent interviews of considering doing Messiah as a final third part.

    • @boratb258
      @boratb258 Před 2 lety +37

      To add someone posted that the studio cut 40 min from the movie, hopefully we get a directors cut.

    • @hungarianbeast
      @hungarianbeast Před 2 lety +34

      Once every 10 years, hollywood acutally manages to make a good movie (for me atleast, the last I really enjoyed was Mad Max: Fury Road). I hope this will have a directors cut, couse I need me some additonal Thufir, Piter, Dr Yueh scenes!

    • @grumpybear1081
      @grumpybear1081 Před 2 lety +22

      @@samjohnstonemusic6328 In this era of shitty Wokewood films, I'll take it.

  • @russoft
    @russoft Před 6 měsíci +3

    I came back to this review after finally watching Dune on Netflix. Maybe it's the nostalgia generated from my childhood gaming in Dune 2000, but this was the first movie in a very long time that I felt chills up my spine as I watched it. I came away with it yearning for more. It's been a long time since I've been so thoroughly entertained.

  • @raymartinez3826
    @raymartinez3826 Před 2 lety +8

    This movie was so good, far better than I would have thought possible and the design is Amazing

  • @Age_of_Apocalypse
    @Age_of_Apocalypse Před 2 lety +312

    'In a market dominated by brain dead action franchises...' Truer words have never been spoken! 🙏
    That said, the movie was really, really good! Do we want part 2, Hell Yeah! 🤞🤞

    • @skoomamuch356
      @skoomamuch356 Před 2 lety +1

      bring on the spice orgies

    • @FindecanorNotGmail
      @FindecanorNotGmail Před 2 lety +6

      @El Bearsidente ​I disagree. The miniseries was longer, with more content ... but the dialogue has been more adapted, and many things have been lost and the acting is laughably bad at times. The Gom Jabbar scene is ridiculous for instance.

    • @randomdude189
      @randomdude189 Před 2 lety

      Too bad they cast the same people in those movies so the point is moot

    • @gobbiprimus8167
      @gobbiprimus8167 Před 2 lety +5

      I disagree partially, a movie doesn't fail just because it's a bad adaptation. One of the best examples would be Lord of the rings. They are fantastic films, but they aren't exactly perfect adaptations.

    • @Gauravkoolwal
      @Gauravkoolwal Před 2 lety +1

      Absolutely, more than brain dead I would say

  • @cubeflinger
    @cubeflinger Před 2 lety +146

    I watched this and felt like I'd finally seen a proper film for the first time in longer than I care to remember. The main actor was superb.

    • @ngojems
      @ngojems Před 2 lety +9

      my thoughts exactly , about time I saw a movie that actually felt like a movie experience

    • @Foundprodigal
      @Foundprodigal Před 2 lety +3

      No kidding. I'd forgotten what it's like to see a movie that left you feeling shaken. I think the last time I felt like I have with Dune was the first time I watched Jurassic Park as a kid, or maybe Fellowship of the Ring.

  • @toptiergaming6900
    @toptiergaming6900 Před 2 lety +9

    The story was confusing (but I think they intend to make a trilogy so that should work). I also loved the idea of the settings. I also love the most of the characters

  • @user-ks5cg5cd7m
    @user-ks5cg5cd7m Před rokem +4

    Last weekend, I watched this for the second time. I liked it better than I did the first time. The dialogue, word choice was way too dumbed down, though. I definitely want this released again prior to part 2. Cinematography was terrific!

  • @theamazingdagger5584
    @theamazingdagger5584 Před 2 lety +373

    I’ll be honest I thought Timothee was just gonna be this generations Orlando Bloom, and I was pleasantly surprised how well he played Paul. Best performance goes to Oscar Isaac by a mile but Mr Chamolet did just fine.

    • @adrianseanheidmann4559
      @adrianseanheidmann4559 Před 2 lety +31

      Whaaaat, really, Orland Bloom?! Haven't you see The King? Outstanding performance from Timothee. That dude has sooo many more layers to his acting.

    • @pippi2285
      @pippi2285 Před 2 lety +2

      What’s wrong with Orlando Bloom?

    • @adrianseanheidmann4559
      @adrianseanheidmann4559 Před 2 lety

      @@pippi2285 Shitty actor.

    • @bubblewrapstargirl
      @bubblewrapstargirl Před 2 lety +21

      Timothee has already proved his talents time and again in indie films, this is a super weird comment. The range he's displayed at this age alone - he's played a lonely bisexual 80s teen in a complicated relationship with an older man in CMBYN, erratic and emotional drug addict in Beautiful Boy, heartbroken layabout drowning his sorrows in Little Women, conflicted ex soldier turned pacifist forced to return to war as an untested leader in The King - these are not 'heart-throb hottie phoning it in' type roles. Timothee Chalamet gives compelling, convincing and emotionally wrenching performances in everything I've seen him in, even if the film itself wasn't that great.

    • @dominiqueodom3099
      @dominiqueodom3099 Před 2 lety +1

      @@bubblewrapstargirl my first film with Timothe was Dune,but I actually liked his role in "Don't Look Up" so I agree that he does have versatility.

  • @lukewaterbury9285
    @lukewaterbury9285 Před 2 lety +611

    When you’re as excited for the Drinker Review as you are for the actual film.

    • @darkwingduck7247
      @darkwingduck7247 Před 2 lety +1

      @Rapunzel ♪ selena gomez a foot model? :D

    • @cathakjordi
      @cathakjordi Před 2 lety

      The one I am waiting is for the Foundation series. I am sure the bile and the blood will pour from the screen and I look forward soooo much for it... :D

    • @916hayabusa
      @916hayabusa Před 2 lety +2

      I was looking forward to the movie, saw it and was very disappointed but I’m never disappointed by the drinkers material.

    • @lukewaterbury9285
      @lukewaterbury9285 Před 2 lety +8

      That being said, I saw Dune two days ago and I thought it was brilliant.
      Hans Zimmer: BWWWWAAAAAAAAUMMMMMMUUMMMMAHHHHHHHHHHHHHZZZZUUHHHMMM

    • @RafitoOoO
      @RafitoOoO Před 2 lety +3

      yeah, because I let the Drinker watch it first to see if it's full of "THE MESSAGE" before I use my money to find it for myself lmao.

  • @srichael2713
    @srichael2713 Před rokem +3

    Props to DV for keeping as much canon as he can while making changes without greatly altering the setting.
    So far the biggest change is Dr. Kynes and DV only did it to give the character more prominence.
    And some like me don't mind that change because the story wasn't poop.
    Certain adaptations should take a note of it...

  • @hiddengemsliteraryemporium

    This was very much Star Wars from the Sith and Empire's perspective. The politics are the same, the worlds are the same, the rebels are the same, the force is the voice, and the protagonist is a block of cement raised by a coven. In the end, he clearly didn't have to kill his ritual opponent, which would have been a true act of leadership, yet like the block of cement he was, he took a life who could have been useful to the overall mission , while fortifying his relationship with the aboriginals. A tale of conquest, betrayal, and Star Wars without the Jedi. We almost forgot we watched the movie, lol. You've reminded us we need to review it. Great job though, as always, CD!

  • @clipsolo
    @clipsolo Před 2 lety +195

    Hot damn, if they made this good ”prologue” and manage to nail the part 2, we might have truly a meaningful duet of movies. Dune just might have a worthy movie adaptation here!

  • @randaranatunga7259
    @randaranatunga7259 Před 2 lety +383

    “In a market fill by brain dead action franchises and endless bland, predictable comic book films”
    Damn, as harsh as that was I don’t think anyone really could’ve said it better

    • @thekiller7994
      @thekiller7994 Před 2 lety +20

      @built different can you like stop spamming?

    • @notyournormalguy_45
      @notyournormalguy_45 Před 2 lety +7

      Pretty much sums of MSheU

    • @Killerduck0213
      @Killerduck0213 Před 2 lety +14

      @@thekiller7994 The spambots are getting worse everyday I swear. Almost every video I click on from any channel has at least a hundred spam replies in the comments. I keep reporting them when I see them but nothing seems to happen ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

    • @austin12923
      @austin12923 Před 2 lety +3

      It was an absolute breath of fresh air.

    • @worndown8280
      @worndown8280 Před 2 lety +2

      The trailers before the movie were all utter trash. The one exception was Spiderman and only because of Doc Oct. Hollywood is a talentless wasteland.

  • @stephengoodman2424
    @stephengoodman2424 Před rokem +1

    Thank you for your write-up of this. I saw "Part 1" ("Part ONE??") the other night and only a few critiques:
    1 - Somewhere around 30 minutes before the end, I noticed a pacing change, as if knowing a Part 2 was inevitable, so the foot goes down on the brakes, and we're expected to watch the Paul and Chani Show.
    2 - I didn't feel much emotion from Paul or Chani.
    3 - The soundtrack is so ambient you want to ignore it. I compose ambient and even I thought the music should be more situational, and less fading into the background. I had the image come to me of Brian Eno shaking his head.
    That being said I want to see part 2, while having reservations about how much they might ruin it.

  • @Anarchy303
    @Anarchy303 Před 2 lety +5

    Just watched this movie. It seriously did not feel like 2.5 hours. I was really into it and didn't want it to end

  • @Legiion513
    @Legiion513 Před 2 lety +341

    Despite Dune's runtime being 2 and a half hours, I still could have sat in this movie for another hour and not gotten bored.

    • @Powermad-bu4em
      @Powermad-bu4em Před 2 lety +33

      I wish it had been another hour. They glossed over some stuff I wish had been explored a bit deeper. There was just a basic mention of the Spacing Guild and space travel. It really needed to be talked about more to show just how important spice is to humanity.

    • @boratb258
      @boratb258 Před 2 lety +18

      @@Powermad-bu4em Someone posted that the studio cut 40 min from the film, i hope we get a directors cut.

    • @kronozord8346
      @kronozord8346 Před 2 lety +12

      @@boratb258 The ahould have cut the amount of times we see zendayas face and the knife and used theat time to explain things deeper.

    • @teddyharvester
      @teddyharvester Před 2 lety +6

      I kinda wanna be a few years into the future where I try to make time for the unavoidable 5+ hour behemoth that will be both parts back to back. I kinda want them to then make a cut that skips the credits and just makes it one big movie.
      Damn, I hope they adapt later books, because shit gets weird and I wanna see a fully realized God Emperor human-worm hybrid.

    • @zonzillamagnus5902
      @zonzillamagnus5902 Před 2 lety +1

      I wish the ended it on a high like the first movie

  • @jarvy251
    @jarvy251 Před 2 lety +273

    The book has an iconic "dinner party scene" where the Atreides invite the movers and shakers of Arrakis to their palace to get a sense of where everyone stands. It also gives you a glimpse into how the common people of Arrakis live.
    I've heard they've cut this from the movie, which blows my mind, as I always saw it as a key portion of the book.

    • @voidsff
      @voidsff Před 2 lety +20

      Social justice warrior politics got it cut, THAT scene in the dinner would have made the masses furious

    • @MysterousBear
      @MysterousBear Před 2 lety +35

      @@voidsff wobble your head, what on earth in that scene runs against 'social justice warrior politics'? It's about the dire imbalance between the rich and the poor, and the Atreides deftly family navigating the powers that be in their new homeworld, if anything it's exactly the sort of scene that would appease a social justice narrative

    • @voidsff
      @voidsff Před 2 lety +24

      @@MysterousBear The part where paul stands on the dinner table and starts declaring his hate for space n words (his words)

    • @scratchy996
      @scratchy996 Před 2 lety +14

      That piece of shit Justice League gets a 4 hours cut, maybe this movie will get an extended cut too.

    • @FlyingTigress
      @FlyingTigress Před 2 lety +10

      Extended version/Director's cut. Just sayin.

  • @xitaris5981
    @xitaris5981 Před rokem +7

    You're right about the pacing. There were so many scene's that were exaggerated slowmo and had already made their point but still dragged on 2 - 3 times as long as necessary. It was to the point where I would get bored waiting for a 20th slow mo scene to end.

  • @caraziegel7652
    @caraziegel7652 Před 4 měsíci +1

    The shots of the first planet focuses a lot on how much water there is . . . which was super meaningful for anyone who'd read the books - i read them 40 years ago and remember that much

  • @gardener68
    @gardener68 Před 2 lety +256

    Paul Atreides was 15 years old at the start of the novel, so casting someone who could pass for a teenager was great choice. Nothing against the performances of either Kyle MacLachlan or Alec Newman, but both men looked like they were much older than the character they were supposed to portray. Timothee Chalamet was probably one of the best casting choices that could be made. He looks the right age both in his face and his slight build, but he has enough gravitas to feel like a kid who's been trained since birth to eventually rule a planet.

    • @BlueTemplar15
      @BlueTemplar15 Před 2 lety +4

      I wonder what they will do for the 3rd movie (Messiah) though ? Not sure that he'll be able to age enough ? (Virtual) makeup ? But will he be able to pull it off as an actor ?

    • @fakecubed
      @fakecubed Před 2 lety +5

      I think Alec Newman did alright, and he could pass as much older in Children of Dune. Hopefully Chalamet can pull it off if they do a Part Three.

    • @comradeshadovshki
      @comradeshadovshki Před 2 lety +15

      "Looks like you put on some muscle."
      "I did?"
      .
      .
      .
      "No"

    • @ronron86
      @ronron86 Před 2 lety +8

      Chalamet was perfect casting, but his performance was dull, morose and melodramatic.

    • @conor3361
      @conor3361 Před 2 lety +4

      @@ronron86 Agreed, liked him better in 'The King' but I wanted more emotion in this. I didnt feel his pain from the gom jabbar or his trauma from his first kill

  • @mwsjohn
    @mwsjohn Před 2 lety +99

    The ending completes the first arc of Paul's journey, from a protected kid with weird dreams, to a potential messiah with the burden of avenging his family, becoming a surrogate leader to a mysterious people, and knowledge that his dreams can foreshadow the real possible future. He needed to revolve his dreams from the beginning, to get to the new future at the end, and that is what he did.

    • @greygorygaming
      @greygorygaming Před 2 lety +1

      He's been a potential messiah since very early on. I never got the feeling he was avenging his family but moreso trying to embrace his destiny and become someone greater. And again, we don't see anything of him being a surrogate leader, just a promise for the next film. So a lot of these things don't make for a satisfying ending considering they're only set-ups and turning points. Not actual pay-offs.

    • @mkultra2456
      @mkultra2456 Před 2 lety

      *avenging

    • @mwsjohn
      @mwsjohn Před 2 lety

      @@mkultra2456 😁

    • @Johann_Gambolputty_of_Ulm
      @Johann_Gambolputty_of_Ulm Před 2 lety +1

      I agree. There is some growth over those two hours. He passes from a "boy" to a "man" - by killing the first person and by daring to oppose his mother. And he embraces his potential, moving from a young scion of a destroyed house (who would run across the space and try conventional means of reclaiming his legacy, like petitioning Landsraad) to a potential messiah-figure, operating on a more guerilla + mystical terms; still however overcoming his concerns from early movie and embracing Leto's heritage (i.e. trying to win Fremens' support). Sure, it is by far not a satisfying ending, but I think it was the best moment to stop the narrative, without advancing it too far and leaving insufficient material for the second part (assuming they want to conclude it at the same place the original book did).

  • @DreadWaaaghGaming
    @DreadWaaaghGaming Před 2 lety +1

    As a fan I'm so glad they didn't do what so many other studios would have done. They didn't ruin it. They instead gave it a fresh and updated finish. Looking forward to part 2

  • @austenpowers
    @austenpowers Před rokem +1

    Great review. One of my favourite books. Difficult in the extreme to get right on screen.

  • @Matteo_the_Plague_Doctor
    @Matteo_the_Plague_Doctor Před 2 lety +565

    I actually really liked where Dune ended. The whole thing felt like a fever dream and the fact it just kinda stops puts it in a place where you definitely want more and are excited to get it. I think that's a smart thing to do when you need to foment enthusiasm for a second part that hasn't been greenlit.
    I wouldn't mind seeing another video where you do more spoiler content and more comparisons to the book.

    • @dylvon0
      @dylvon0 Před 2 lety

      Where they were taking their time on a lot of things I think I should have showed more up into the attack and during the attack they should have spent longer showing fights and whatnot it should have ended it right there that I think would have been a good cliffhanger I do agree that where it ended was kind of a little weird but like the Drinker says it's still one of the best movies you got in a few years

    • @boyden1987
      @boyden1987 Před 2 lety

      Second part has been greenlit!

    • @VespoLiveGaming
      @VespoLiveGaming Před 2 lety +8

      It's a tough call, if you're going to split the novel, this is one of the few places where you can, only problem is that the reason it's a good place to split the story isn't apparent until you get closer to the end.

    • @Scroolewse
      @Scroolewse Před 2 lety +1

      I of course agree that it was an appropriate place to do the split but I think it is a little dangerous to leave people so thirsty for more for so long. Part 2 is expected around 2023 (and we can certainly expect a delay or two), I'm not sure I have much faith in general audiences to care for that long.

    • @MasterGhostf
      @MasterGhostf Před 2 lety +4

      @@VespoLiveGaming Personally, I would of tried the idea of adding a dream to paul to end it. The dream would be a scene of the upcoming jihad.

  • @hmsljj
    @hmsljj Před 2 lety +421

    They actually seem to be putting art over ideology for this film. Refreshing.

    • @MATCHLESS93
      @MATCHLESS93 Před 2 lety +31

      They made a film instead of a booklet.

    • @johnbaxter3676
      @johnbaxter3676 Před 2 lety +3

      Oh, come on--don't bring politics into the discussion.

    • @Thomas-fz9xw
      @Thomas-fz9xw Před 2 lety +19

      Which is ironic, given that the book was an allegory for actual politics. Still, refreshing indeed.

    • @PibrochPonder
      @PibrochPonder Před 2 lety +19

      @@johnbaxter3676 that is the exact point most film goers make to the movie makers

    • @johnbaxter3676
      @johnbaxter3676 Před 2 lety +4

      @@PibrochPonder Have you seen the majority of films released in, say, the last five years? There are hundreds, so you're talking about a relative handful. For every movie with obvious PC casting or story elements, there are dozens that are just movies without any ideological significance.

  • @larrytate28
    @larrytate28 Před 2 lety +2

    Spot on criticism of Zendaya. Hard to understand the hype since she can't act, and yes, agree that seeing her for only a few minutes in this film was a relief. It's like watching someone who thinks frowning is bringing serious emotional heft to a scene.

  • @bplayerr1
    @bplayerr1 Před 7 měsíci +1

    Villenueve 💯 achieved his vision of "art in every shot"

  • @warci
    @warci Před 2 lety +65

    The fact that everyone's destiny seems predetermined is kind of what the whole dune saga is about. You need to get all the way to 'god emperor' though to learn this, but I think it's a good idea to already start to drop some hints in the beginning of the story.

    • @BlueTemplar15
      @BlueTemplar15 Před 2 lety +1

      Isn't it pretty clear by the end of Messiah ?
      (Rereading them, and I'm not even sure that I managed to get up to God Emperor the only previous time...)

    • @randomdude4136
      @randomdude4136 Před 2 lety +6

      @@BlueTemplar15 Yeah by the time Paul takes control of the fremen it's pretty clear that the ability to see the future is a curse to be unable to break your destiny. Then the books leading up to god emperor explore the idea of Fate and how different people who know what is to come but cannot alter it react in the face of fate.

    • @chatteyj
      @chatteyj Před 2 lety +1

      I've only read the first book, is it worth reading any more?

    • @MrJessig120
      @MrJessig120 Před 2 lety +3

      @@chatteyj absolutely book 4 God Emporer of Dune is my favorite book, it really made me think. it really ties it all together as it concludes the first 3 books and sets up the next 2.

    • @BlueTemplar15
      @BlueTemplar15 Před 2 lety +1

      @@chatteyj After the incredible success of the first book (the first sci-fi bestseller !), the 2nd one was kind of critically panned, because they didn't like how Herbert basically took down his Hero archetype built up in the first book.
      Despite knowing it in advance (and having already read it before), I still stopped after the movie - 1rst book - 2nd book, all in a few days. I'll probably still try to pick up the 3rd one in the next weeks.

  • @joeallen7981
    @joeallen7981 Před 2 lety +65

    One of the themes in Dune (the books anyway) is inescapable destiny. Having the fall of a house telegraphed and the players resigned to their fate is part of that. While I agree it does mute any attempt to build tension but it sets (or should set) the stage for much greater tension when Paul and other characters defy their fate.

    • @Matt-sf9ky
      @Matt-sf9ky Před 2 lety +3

      Yep, the knowing creates a growing sense of dread as the trap tightens. That's largely missing from the movie. In the book they know exactly what is coming to include the sardakur wearing fake uniforms. Little sense of that desperation or how the Duke was already starting to abandon his virtues to win

    • @BlueHooloovoo
      @BlueHooloovoo Před 2 lety

      And the theme that the coming of a massiah is not always a good thing.

    • @declanashmore
      @declanashmore Před 2 lety

      What I loved from the original book - and which I sorely missed in this movie so much I've been pissing and moaning about it for over a month now - is the storyline of Yueh. We knew from the start he was the traitor. We knew the inescapable destinies of everyone already. It makes the characters tragic, and Yueh being called "Traitor" by a Sardaukar soldier was gutting in the book. I wished Villeneuve had given that a bit of time.
      The book is full of destinies, big and small, like that.

  • @BBBrasil
    @BBBrasil Před 2 lety +50

    What I like in the book is the richness of the relationships.
    The true reason the emperor saw the Atreides as a menace. The plan inside a plan inside a plan of hiding the identity of Sardaukar. The enormous value of the Spice and how the many parties involved labour so hard to control it in a society already deep into drugs consumption. The reason Jessica should have gotten a girl and not a boy and why Leto never married her... They really could have told the story should they replaced the long boring shots for, well, story.

    • @shakira4223
      @shakira4223 Před rokem

      what's the plan behind hiding the Sardaukars' identity? I don't think it was told in the movie, maybe the books?

    • @dflaming1371
      @dflaming1371 Před rokem +1

      I agree. Its popular because its different, not good. I felt like once the big baddie was shown (hell if I remember anything ditzy space name) that I knew the whole movie 1 conflict. The good guys were set up, baddies are coming back for power and to get these guys out of the way for good, the expressionless Timothy is the messiah because, because teen girls think he's hot and prophecy, how original, and he has to find the desert people, because they'll win an intergalactic battle with machetes I guess. At the end of the movie, nothing outside of that was introduced. If part 2 is more. Complex than that it'll feel like a whole different story. Idgaf what Timothy goes through, he literally has nothing to lose except his mom, who is equally expressionless as everyone in this movie likes the "faraway angst" look. I agree with Drinker that this all feels like it's happening in a vacuum, there's no citizens, no third and fourth party politics, barely any politics except "get spice for power and cloak and dagger bs from all sides" run of the mill spew, and i guess people thing gray and beige is "spectacular visuals". The people are played as chess pawns to go here and there to unlock the next segment of the story, which is essentially a very long walk, and if I had to see one more fucking fluttery vision of Zendaya I was going to commit suicide. One was enough.

    • @mirceapintelie361
      @mirceapintelie361 Před rokem

      @@shakira4223 In the books it is also insinuated that the Spacing Guild,which can also sense the future like Paul,predicted that a danger will come from within the Atreides House.There wasnt a single factor in the demise of the Atreides House but a convergence of different interests

    • @brandonkelbe
      @brandonkelbe Před 9 měsíci

      @@mirceapintelie361It was not good. Even the old movie translated ideas from the book a lot better. 2 hours of my life wasted, I did not like it at all.

  • @YoungPiK1
    @YoungPiK1 Před 2 lety +3

    I think you're on to something. That movie bored me to tears, but it was because I didn't give a shit about anyone cuz I didn't know them, I see the prophecy stuff in hindsight, but world building in this case wouldn't have been some minor thing in this case, especially for anyone not familiar with the source material. You just explained to me that that was the whole point of the movie and a setup for sequels. They really needed to spend way more of the movie showing me why any of this shit matters. Instead ALL of the backstory and world building assumed I knew things about this world and these characters that I absolutely did not. The epic music and whatnot just raised the overall tone so there were no stakes. I couldn't even recognize any of the turning points because I had no idea where any of this was going and then it just sprung a thing where the main character dude did some shit that sounded like the dream he just had and the movie was over...
    This movie was yes, beautiful and u could tell they put a lot into it. But is an entirely different experience for a newcomer and not a great one...

  • @mr_0n10n5
    @mr_0n10n5 Před 2 lety +171

    Skarsgard is, to me, the standout in this movie. His portrayal of the Baron was masterclass.

    • @casshern9454
      @casshern9454 Před 2 lety +28

      And his first appearence in the film where his bald head shows up reminds me of Apocalypse Now when Marlon Brando as Kurtz first showed up.

    • @james3876
      @james3876 Před 2 lety +8

      Agreed, Jessica was also very well played

    • @nothajzl
      @nothajzl Před 2 lety +14

      "But Arrakis is Arrakis. And the desert takes the weak. My desert. My Arrakis. My Dune."
      damn chills

    • @mr_0n10n5
      @mr_0n10n5 Před 2 lety +1

      @@nothajzl absolutely epic

    • @arsxxmoriendi
      @arsxxmoriendi Před 2 lety +9

      @@casshern9454 If I'm not mistaken, Skarsgard specifically requested they shoot the scene/reveal of the Baron as an homage to Apocalypse now.

  • @johnnyvo9313
    @johnnyvo9313 Před 2 lety +231

    I haven't been to the theater in years, however I made an exception for Dune and it was worth every minute!

    • @CoolName5383
      @CoolName5383 Před rokem +5

      Saw it for the first time at home, and at the end I realized I had made the mistake of not seeing it on the big screen first.

    • @frankphillips7436
      @frankphillips7436 Před rokem +2

      @@CoolName5383 Be grateful you saw it at home. I saw it on an airplane. With only the exception of a cellphone, this was the exact opposite of IMAX.

    • @rollinrat4850
      @rollinrat4850 Před rokem +1

      Same here. That was the first movie I saw following the plandemic. In the past 5 years, I've been to the theatre maybe 3 times. There's very rarely anything worth paying for or even spending my time to watch. 'Modern entertainment' mostly sucks as far as I'm concerned. Its almost all targeted at the lowest common denominator.
      I love the Dune books. I've read them several times. I was cautiously optimistic about this movie. The '80s movie and series were both big flops in my opinion. Unless you'd read the books previous, you'd be incredibly confused by the older movies.
      I knew it would be incredibly challenging to accurately portray the incredible complexity portrayed in the book. But they've done a great job so far. My only complaint was that it should have been an hour or two longer, BUT I'm certainly looking forward to the 2nd half.

    • @carynfisher9463
      @carynfisher9463 Před rokem +2

      I watched the premier on HBO Max, but then decided to go see it in the theater to do what little I could do to ensure a sequel.

  • @fluphybunny930
    @fluphybunny930 Před rokem +4

    Watched this again recently.
    Absolutely enthralling film.
    How they brought this to the big screen so well still amaze me.
    At the same time Disney just f***** up Peter Pan.

  • @michaelgriger586
    @michaelgriger586 Před 2 lety +11

    I agree with you Drinker!! I felt like there was so much build up towards the end, then just boom, basically nothin...then when the credits started, I was like, "That was it??" But I guess you never know what they're setting up for in the sequel!

  • @kieranmcccccc995
    @kieranmcccccc995 Před 2 lety +311

    The only minor problem I had with dune was the 12 age rating. There’s a quote at the beginning of the movie about how “these people are brutal”, I love the world building and everything, and I’m not asking for excessive gore, but dune was bold and grand, and I feel like having a higher age rating would have immersed me more into it, as sometimes I was kind of thrown off by the lack of any blood in some more adult moments of the movie. Other than that I enjoyed it a lot and can’t wait for a sequel

    • @Cecilia-ky3uw
      @Cecilia-ky3uw Před 2 lety +16

      We dont need the age ratings tbh people are viewing the movies underage anyways

    • @zinjanthropus322
      @zinjanthropus322 Před 2 lety +43

      They probably went for a wider audience to make more money.

    • @davidturner6280
      @davidturner6280 Před 2 lety +53

      I actually like the lack of brutality, I want more intelligent movies who are for everybody. I want more Lord of the Rings or Jurassic Park or Iron Giant.

    • @dewittbourchier7169
      @dewittbourchier7169 Před 2 lety +25

      Lol - I think the Sardaukar battle prep soon is more than gory enough. They did them up as these casually brutal Nordic Beserker Samurai - which is awesome.

    • @o27001
      @o27001 Před 2 lety +30

      If Dune went rated R it would've been a guaranteed box office bomb like Blade Runner 2049 was.

  • @Baudolino05
    @Baudolino05 Před 2 lety +345

    Having read the book multiple times, I can tell you that there is no other possibile end point for Dune part I. You either stop where Villeneuve stopped or finish the whole book in a single movie.

    • @avenderiel
      @avenderiel Před 2 lety +27

      No, perfect ending would be with the sayyadina ritual. 15-20 min longer movie. End with crazy visions of the Jihad, visions of the past from Jessicas and Alias perspective as they are effected by the water of life. A great chance to end with a great mind fuck that hasn´t been seen since 2001. The ending we got literally ran out into the sand.

    • @VideoMask93
      @VideoMask93 Před 2 lety +12

      @@avenderiel I think at Jamis’s funeral would’ve been the best point.

    • @pac1fic055
      @pac1fic055 Před 2 lety +17

      A single, glorious 8 hr movie.

    • @willardfasto4494
      @willardfasto4494 Před 2 lety +12

      lol no and Ive read the books like 80 times, they would have been better served stopping at Idaho's last scene or at the first confrontation as they escaped with the sand worm.
      They left so much out that was important or better and had scenes that did nothing to convey any story or narrative

    • @DG-gx4sg
      @DG-gx4sg Před 2 lety +19

      @@avenderiel Nope. Part 1 ended exactly where it needed to. It makes sense on a narrative level. Paul escaping the attack with his mother and fulfilling his late father's goal of forming an alliance with the Fremen, so it goes back to what his dad said at the beginning "Desert Power". Leave it there so audiences can look forward and be hopeful for Paul to become the "hero" or "savior" in Part 2. And then Part 2 can start with the Water of Life, the disturbing visions and all the weird shit, it will completely change what the audience thought was going to happen. It'll be a good shock for them

  • @lukenukem1164
    @lukenukem1164 Před 2 lety +2

    Watched it yesterday whilst isolating with covid....I'll be watching it again today, loved it!

  • @nobodynemoq
    @nobodynemoq Před 2 lety

    Hey, I might have mentioned it, but your "go away now" became much softer than it was when I started watching your reviews... You should keep the best standards! Apart from that, I agree in 100% with you about the Dune. Entertaining like hell! I'm gonna see it again :)

  • @TIEpilot918
    @TIEpilot918 Před 2 lety +513

    The movie is amazing aesthetically. My main criticism is that it's a movie and not a 10 part series. It would give so much more breathing room for the events to play out in a more natural and understandable way, and it would especially do justice for the sheer amount of characterization that had to be left out. I think it would abate Drinker's criticism of how everyone's path seems to be laid out already

    • @BWMagus
      @BWMagus Před 2 lety +46

      In this era, it definitely does seem "Netflix series" worthy (or better than that, actually). However, and maybe I'm talking out my ass, but I'm pretty sure you can get a bigger budget for a movie or two than for a series, and while Dune might be about the story, it's just hard to imagine it being loved without the visuals.

    • @TY-km8hj
      @TY-km8hj Před 2 lety +8

      @@BWMagus yhh ur right tbh. When I finished the film I could tell that there was so much left out cos it just couldn't be fit into the film. Problem is ur trading off some vital components. Go with the film and a lot of things will need to be taken out and u gotta tell the story in a timely yet effective manner. With a show u got lots of time to address the story but a show could never have the budget of dune and I honestly don't think it could work with such a smaller budget. Even then for a show the budget would be massive which in turn could end up meaning the show is gonna be shorter length anyway to make up for it

    • @philipeick-vocalmusic
      @philipeick-vocalmusic Před 2 lety +3

      A 10 part series in this quality inside of this universe would be amazing

    • @ciarangale4738
      @ciarangale4738 Před rokem

      @@TY-km8hj I think with Dune, its a case of they have to make a movie that follows the plot of the book accurately and enjoyably. They cant just put the book into a movie

    • @frankphillips7436
      @frankphillips7436 Před rokem

      To recreate the source material would require the time very few viewers would invest. That said, I agree with you in principle though.

  • @alexblades5218
    @alexblades5218 Před 2 lety +142

    I'm ok with the young looking lead- dude was 15 at the start of the book and 17 by its end.
    I'd always admired the 80s movie for managing to convey the first book in 1 movie, and portray the often grotesque deaths that awaited many characters.

    • @jaymakak
      @jaymakak Před 2 lety +1

      Javier Bardem as Stilgar was laughable. A cartel hitman with a dutch boy is one thing, but Stilgar sounding like a Fremen conquistador is hard to justify.

    • @Perroden
      @Perroden Před 2 lety +2

      We're that movie failed tho is unless you have read the book you would not know what's going on. They leave out a lot of necessary information. I haven't read it but I did thoroughly enjoy watching the 80s movie with my mother filling in the blanks for me.

    • @Perroden
      @Perroden Před 2 lety +3

      And the music was kick ass

    • @Grubiantoll
      @Grubiantoll Před 2 lety +3

      @@Perroden I havnt read the books, I have heard soem general things about the dune world. I wouldn't say that i needed any extra information, the general plot was quite clear by the end and the couple of people that went in blind also had no problems with understanding whats going on and why. One of em got sold hard on the books.

    • @1183newman
      @1183newman Před 2 lety +1

      @@jaymakak stilgar in this dune was 100x better than in the lynch movie or the mini series.

  • @gyromurphy
    @gyromurphy Před rokem

    Watching this in surround sound was incredible. I mean...the sound design and music in this movie is absolutely magical