AG Monday
Lynch's Dune.

Dune-A-Palooza continues! Big fans of the Dune novel were excited about the pending release of the film adaptation, directed by David Lynch. And then…we saw the movie. Tom attended the premiere. Steven just saw the movie.
We give our unvarnished opinions on the film. We grade David Lynch’s Dune as a motion picture, and then as an adaptation of the novel. Fasten your seatbelts, it’s going to be a bumpy sandworm ride!
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I posted about this movie back when I re-watched a few years back while waiting for the new movie to come on streaming. I may rehash it later as work permits.
Some movies are so bad one has no choice but to mock them. That’s all the entertainment one gets from them.
One thing, though. I first heard of Dune a couple of years before this movie came out. I was assured at the time it was unfilmable, and the sentiment has been repeated countless times since by dozens of others. Having seen two movie adaptations of it, I don’t get what was unfilmable about it.
Not having read the book, and not intending to ever read it, I may be missing something. For all I know, both movies cover about a third of the book and leave the rest out.
Last, obligatory Futurama reference: It’s pronounced DUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUNg. The “g” is almost silent.
This piece, written shortly before the 2021 release of Denis Villeneuve’s excellent adaptation of the novel, highlights why Lynch’s Dune is actually an incredible film that does not deserve the hate it gets.
Before the new version, let’s revisit 1984’s Dune—the greatest movie ever made – Ars Technica https://share.google/04H0eRGlzG42R1KDc
@Mikey: I will give it a look!
@Kathy: Great clip.
@Mikey: Thanks for sharing that. It is an excellent read!
@Steven L. Taylor:
One of the DUUUUUUUNg beetles is voiced by Kyle McLachlan, who played Paul in the Lynch movie. I didn’t watch the whole clip, though, so maybe he doesn’t show up in it.
I’m not going to say that David Lynch’s Dune was good, but I’ve watched it many times while I never got around to watching Denis Villeneuve‘s Dune, Part 2.
I think it’s that Paul Atreides was allowed to have and show emotions in the David Lynch movie. The weren’t always the right emotions, and were almost never in the right amounts, but if you ignore the fact that Kyle McLachlan has the air of a 38 year old playing an 18 year old*, it rings true for the character.
I don’t know what the right emotion should be when your mom’s coworker stops by after dinner to shove your hand in a torture device under threat of death, and neither did Kyle McLachlan or David Lynch, so I think a bit of every emotion known to man plus three new ones was a perfectly reasonable choice.
It’s a messy, messy movie. But very watchable. And not in an ironic way, but just in a “yup, that was released in 1984” way.
*: it’s surprising that he was only in his mid-20s. And, given that Paul is supposed to be the product of generations of breeding to create the fancy special man, that “38 year old playing an 18 year old” works.