Yeah, that's kind of along my same thinking. Makes sense.
Duncan Idaho said:
A few gripes.
1) I didn't feel like they made it clear enough that Jessica was his concubine. I know he said "I should have married you" but I felt like that was too late.
Does that really have any impact on the story, though?How would that have affected the movie in any significant way?
2)also didn't like the line about "I hardly know, its only been a few weeks. As a BG she would know the second she was pregnant because she would have allowed the pregnancy to occur.
It's just a quick, organic, shorthand way of reminding the audience that Paul is special.
3)the worm rider wasn't at the same level as everything else.
Things I loved.
1)Casting was absolutely perfect. No one was off. I mean it was perfect.
2)world building was absolutely perfect. The 'thopters amazing. The sheilds, the architecture, everything.
3)the Sardaukar were better than the book.
Other thoughts
1)the reverend mother's in the rain reminded me too much of those inflatable T-Rex costumes.
2)wanted more of the down time at Arrakeen
3)not sure how I felt about the Tleilaxu spider thing.
Watch Villeneuve's first "mainstream" movie, Enemy. Dude has a thing for big spiders.
Red Five said:
I originally was planning to just watch it at home, but decided to do it up right and saw it on IMAX. Incredible audio/visual experience I thought. I don't know that, having seen it in that format, I can imagine streaming this movie. That was an amazing experience.
I agree with a lot of the points people have made, but the main thing for me is that I desperately did not want this movie to end. I could have sat through another 3 hours of this easily.
Max Power said:
Watched tonight and it was great, does not disappoint. I couldn't believe the movie was 2.5 hours, it flew by. There are some divergences but it's way more faithful to the book than Lynch's.
I'd say casting was close to perfect. I was suspect of Chalamet, but I thought he did a great job. Momoa was straight up awesome as Duncan Idaho. Rebecca Ferguson is in the argument for most beautiful woman on the planet, I lose focus when she's on screen. Sarsgaard is a presence as the baron, totally takes over any scene he's in.
They nailed the aesthetics. Visually stunning, sound, and score all work together. The only reason it's not up with Blade Runner 2049 and Mad Max Fury Road is that it's too dark, at least it was in my theater. Perhaps others had a different experience but it was too dim IMO, wish it was brighter and clearer.
SOmeone mentioned it in this thread, or the other, but this is the first long movie since Lord of the Rings where I was completely ready for another couple hours.Red Five said:
I originally was planning to just watch it at home, but decided to do it up right and saw it on IMAX. Incredible audio/visual experience I thought. I don't know that, having seen it in that format, I can imagine streaming this movie. That was an amazing experience.
I agree with a lot of the points people have made, but the main thing for me is that I desperately did not want this movie to end. I could have sat through another 3 hours of this easily.
GiveEmHellBill said:
My only nitpick of the movie as a non-book reader (and I still loved the movie):
I don't think there was proper motivations given as to why the Emperor wanted to risk the disruption in spice production just to wipe out House Atreides. And just who the Emperor was and why he needed to do this in such back channels was pretty vague for me.
I'd at least like to see what this Supreme Leader looks like.....
HalifaxAg said:
I do wish they had developed the Mentats better; the exchanges between Piter & Baron in the book were some of my favorite parts.
no juice of saffoon!
birdman said:
I've read the books several times. Movie is close enough to make fan boys happy. Movie abandons the last half of the book. I guess it will be part of Dune 2. I was worried they were going to try and wrap up everything in a rushed final 15 minutes.
I didn't realize it. I basically went in cold on purpose.wangus12 said:birdman said:
I've read the books several times. Movie is close enough to make fan boys happy. Movie abandons the last half of the book. I guess it will be part of Dune 2. I was worried they were going to try and wrap up everything in a rushed final 15 minutes.
This was always planned as part 1 of a 2 films covering the 1st book.
AliasMan02 said:
Something I figured wouldn't be in the movie, which it wasn't, is the dinner party in Arakeen. It's maybe my favorite scene in the book. The movie was already risking being too talky for general audiences so I get why they didn't include it, but I would love to see that cast go at it in the supercharged political battle. The politics in Dune makes Game of Thrones look like Mister Rogers and it's a shame this format doesn't really allow for that. Dune would be an incredible HBO series.
Agreed. The original movie was cliched, showing a burning hand image as to what Paul was experiencing. In this far superior scene, they leave it up to the viewer to determine exactly what Paul is going through.Quote:
the box scene was amazing. It really showed TC's talent.
I actually thought she was good in the role.Claude! said:
Just watched it on HBO Max and it was greatness. The whole thing was visually a treat, from the thopters to the great interpretation of shield technology (the blue/red glow let you follow exactly what was happening, but didn't seem to cheesy or video game-y). It may have just been my imagination, but I also liked how the design of the Guild heighliners that took them to Arrakis presaged the imagery of the sandworms. I don't think they really nailed the blue-in-blue eyes effect; it should've been darker, but I expect that (kind of like them not always wearing their masks in the desert) was a stylistic choice to allow the audience to better see the characters' features. I also thought I caught a couple of instances where some of the Fremen characters didn't have that effect, but that could've been my imagination.
The action scenes were great - they moved quickly, but you could (thanks in part to the shield design) tell what was happening. Even in the non-shield fights, they didn't fall victim to shaky cam-itis. The Jamis fight specifically was great. Told a great story within the fight, and not choreographed so much they looked like they were dancing.
The casting was almost uniformly perfect across the board. Chalamet was a great Paul, and Oscar Isaacs did an excellent job as Leto. If I had to nitpick, it's that they didn't give David Dastmalchian enough to do as Piter de Vries; the Piter in the Lynch film was able to get across better how twisted the character actually is. I did really like how they visualized Mentat calculations with the eyes rolling back, and they nailed the look of Thufir Hawat. Javier Bardem didn't have a lot of scenes as Stilgar, but he made the most of them (though his voice oddly reminded me of Peter Stormare, almost to the point of distraction).
The only casting choice that didn't really work for me was Sharon Duncan-Brewster as Liet Kynes. I didn't mind the gender or race swap, which doesn't really change the character, but, much more than any of the other speaking characters, she seemed like she was reading lines rather than playing a character.