Why are Denis Villeneuve's Dune movies loved by audience and critics?

When watching movies, I always try to differentiate between my personal enjoyment and the inherent merits of the movies. There are a lot of bad movies, which I totally and thoroughly enjoy watching, and some really great movies, which I don’t enjoy that much, but still can respect/appreciate.

With this prelude, I totally do not get the positive reactions to Denis Villeneuve’s Dune movies. At the time I am writing this question, part two has 94% critique and 95% audience score at Rotten Tomatoes, 9.0 at IMDB.

In my opinion, Dune 1 and Dune 2 have obviously high production values and good special effects. What I do not like is the acting, the pacing, the total flat/simple characters and the whole narration, which is for me a trivial love story between Chani and Paul, plus becoming a leader and get some revenge. I could simply replace the ‘Dune’ theme with a standard war theme and a few tribes, and I would have exactly the same movie. Also the battle scenes at the end of part 2, they are for me totally cookie cutter war movie/battle aesthetics. (Total waste: There are big Sandworms after all, and combat with personal shields etc.).

My question is, especially if you very much enjoyed watching the Dune movies:

  • Why did you personally enjoy the movie?
  • Do you think this movies have some inherent merits?
  • How do you like the acting/plot/pacing?
NigelFrobisher,

It’s a mystery.

JayDee, (edited )

I read Dune years ago now and have only seen part 1. I may misremember the book some and that may be affecting my personal feelings of it but I’ll give my input nonetheless.

Pretty much, I feel Villeneuve and his team have done the most faithful depiction of the first part of the book to date, in terms of matching mood and description of the spaces, as well as the behaviors exhibited by characters. the scenes that really drove this home for me were the hunter seeker in Paul’s chamber and Jessica’s interaction with Shadout Mapes. Unfortunately much of the relevant exposition which explains the details of the situation are missing, since they’re internal monologues of Paul and Jessica.

I can’t blame Chalamet for his acting here. Paul shows Jack shit in the books and you mostly get what he’s thinking and feeling, once again, from his thoughts. In this case, Chalamet is being pretty faithful to Paul’s demeanor in the books - whether he means to or not. I do remember him being alittle more expressive in the second part of the book, so it’ll be interesting for me to see if that comes across in part 2.

Moneo, (edited )

TL;DR: Dune is a novel packed full of culture, intrigue, and philosophy, and Denis tosses basically all of that out the window in favour of style and atmosphere.

As a massive Dune fan who has also only seen part 1, I’m very conflicted. It’s obviously the most faithful adaptation but that’s a pretty low bar to set. There are so many little changes from the novel that it’s hard for me not to feel Denis doesn’t really get Dune. I also have tons of small complaints with the script just in a general sense, weird moments that are distracting and pointless even ignoring their relation to the novel.

My biggest issue with the script is that it feels like Denis is focused on creating this super epic atmosphere. We have many beautiful shots of space ships or terrain accompanied by booming music. It’s cool, but it feels like a massive waste when the movie also has rushed scenes that could have been so easily adapted to film.

For example Stilgar meeting Leto. In the movie, Stilgar walks in, Leto says something along the lines of “I respect you” and Stilgar immediately spits on the ground to indicate his respect for Leto.

In the novel that scene has Duncan explaining how he tried to save a dying fremen but wasn’t able to and that the fremen gave him his crysknife before he died. Stilgar then dramatically interrupts saying something like “Do not unsheath that knife!”. What follows is an interaction between Stilgar and Leto where Leto deftly shows his respect to Fremen and their culture without capitulating or showing weakness. Only then does Stilgar spit on the ground giving us the dramatic scene where Duncan has to quickly intervene to prevent violence.

I don’t think I’m doing a great job of making my case but the difference to me is stark. The book uses this one scene to feed the reader knowledge about Leto, Stilgar, Duncan, and the fremen. But the movie rushes the scene and we learn next to nothing.

I could go on but I’m just ranting at this point. Dune is a novel packed full of culture, intrigue, and philosophy, and Denis tosses basically all of that out the window in favour of style and atmosphere.

dead,

I just wanna say I agree with your critique and I think it’s overrated. I haven’t seen the second one tho

SrTobi,

Wtf you didn’t like the acting?

I would agree the pacing is a little bit too fast at the end of part 2, but especially the first and the beginning of the second are perfectly paced…

The shots are great. And it looks very good. And that’s not only because of the production value… Also the camera and scenery is top notch. Don’t know when I saw such a good looking movie the last time.

The replacement of the dune theme is a dumb argument. You could say that about any movie. And also it’s not true. You get topics about ecology, economics, choice, power structures, religious fanatism in a very interesting way.

Personally I liked the first one better than the second one, mostly because of the pacing issues at the end… I would have been ok with having another hour of runtime :) also some political and economic stuff was cut, which I would have liked to see… Instead they go all in on the fundamentalism… But ok

I’m not a huge fan of the setting btw… I don’t really like this feudal-sci-fi mix, because it leads to ridiculous situations (comes with a spaceship to the planet and is immediately taken hostage by sword fighters?). Still the movie can compensate with all the other stuff it does and make it somewhat believable. Also I can see over some plot holes if the rest is good. I’m not someone who complaines that the eagles could have flown frodo to mount doom either.

I really don’t know what you have against the acting, though… They have to transport some ridiculous stuff and they do a great job.

Have no particular opinion on the characters… I would have liked to see some more screen time from some of them… But I guess that comes down to the additional hour, I would have loved. Think they were what they needed to be. Nothing more nothing less.

wolf,

Yes, sorry about the acting, but IMHO Chalamet’s acting is quite wooden.

I totally agree that the movie looks very good, that’s part of the high production values I mentioned.

Concerning the characters, we seem also to be in agreement: I would have loved to see more of the non Femen factions, their motivations and pressures.

Anyway, thank you very much for your input, as mentioned somewhere else, I’ll have to watch the first Dune again, perhaps I’ll find a liking for it in the second try.

SrTobi,

Except that I thought it was an amazing movie :)

spittingimage,
@spittingimage@lemmy.world avatar

I think it’s because he knows how to put his own spin on a story while respecting previous works in that space.

jordanlund,
@jordanlund@lemmy.world avatar

The tropes it’s drawing on are universal:

…wikipedia.org/…/The_Hero_with_a_Thousand_Faces

vermyndax, (edited )

Anyone that thinks Paul is a hero is completely missing the point. Paul is not a hero, and as a matter of fact, pretty much turns out to be the universe’s most terrible villain. He, along with Jessica and the Bene Gesserit, turn out to be responsible for more than 61 billion deaths.

Dune is a story that warns against trusting charismatic heroes, along with warnings against mixing politics with religion. The only hero in this story would be Chani, and I felt that the movie’s portrayal of Chani was dead on perfection and actually an improvement on the book.

Dune seems like a tropish story of “The Chosen One,” but in fact it’s a story about warning us against these figures.

EDIT: Paul is the most terrible villain until his son, that is.

SchmidtGenetics,

Dune is a very hard book to put onto screen since there’s not a lot of action and a lot of extremely important details built into the narrative.

They aren’t the greatest since they need to try and remain faithful to the political and religious story arcs while keeping it interesting with the little lore there is so far.

kaffiene,

I think the biggest issue with the current films is excluding the internal monologues. There’s so much going on that gets lost. That said, I like them

reddig33, (edited )

I loved the original book. I just think it’s unfilmable. A lot of it is about getting inside peoples heads to hear their thoughts and machinations.

I found the art direction, costuming, and casting of Lynch’s movies brilliant. Even the soundtrack was a nice surprise.

But the new movies seem very sterile, slow, and dull. I’ve also never understood people’s fascination with Chalmet. I find his performances to be just fair.

The movies have made money, so they are talking about making more of them from the second and third books. I think this is a mistake because the story in the sequels really goes off the rails. I do look forward to laughing at Chalmet playing Mr. Worm Dude.

I think the Bene Gesserit tv show they’re making sounds like a far better plan. The “fill in the blanks” backstories in the Dune universe are interesting, and leave more room for original storytelling.

Talaraine,
Talaraine avatar

Yeah I loved the effects and the cinematography, I mean that's what makes new movies fantastic... it's a showcase of how real we can get things to look.

But the books were filled from cover to cover with worldbuilding that's a whole lot more than vistas. There's reasons and motivations that lead you to where the story begins and a failure to grasp at least some of those (Butlerian Jihad, Bene Gesserit, Guild Navigators and ofc the SPICE) leaves you with what @reddig33 said.

But the new movies seem very sterile, slow, and dull.

They are rote action movies that fail to evoke any real emotion, and that's a shame.

Kbin_space_program,

An Andor-esque prequel with the Fremen fighting under the Harkonnen rule prior to the events of the movie.

QuestioningEspecialy,
QuestioningEspecialy avatar

I’ve also never understood people’s fascination with Chalmet

twinks

wolf,

I loved the original book. I just think it’s unfilmable. A lot of it is about getting inside peoples heads to hear their thoughts and machinations.

I found the art direction, costuming, and casting of Lynch’s movies brilliant. Even the soundtrack was a nice surprise.

This!

I really enjoyed the first 3 Dune books for the peoples heads. For me, Dune loses its direction a little bit later, in the following books.

I also totally enjoyed Lynch’s movie, quite bold and an experience.

Yeah, seeing Mr. God Worm Dude will have me rushing to the cinema! :-)

nick, (edited )

He said hes only making book 2, so there won’t be a dune 4.

Also Paul’s son becomes worm man, I can’t imagine who they pick to be an even lesser chalamet. Not that I didn’t like him in the role, he’s just… a cute little twink who leads a galaxy spanning jihad!

WarmSoda,

The “cookie cutter” parts of dune are only that because everyone has copied dune since the books came out.

That’s like saying Houdinis’ tricks were cookie cutter traps.

wolf,

I fear the Greeks around two thousands years back already had the cookies which inspired Frank Herbert. ;-)

WarmSoda,

Ha, true true. Like music, how you put the notes together is what matters. Dune put them together in an inspiring way.

wolf,

Just for clarification, so you enjoy Villeneuve’s Dune movies?

WarmSoda,

I do. I haven’t seen the second yet though. But I imagine I’ll enjoy it more than the first just because I remember that section of the story less. Part One is tough since it’s the part that everyone knows more and has been repeated more often in culture. Also, it just kinda… ends.

SkyNTP,

Lord of the rings comes out

“Oh look, another movie about elves and dwarves.”

WarmSoda,

Lol exactly

Kbin_space_program,

You say that, but I had a friend dislike the first movie "because you can't end a movie like that, it didn't solve anything".

She was then politely informed it was a very famous trilogy of books and that there are two other movies.

topherclay,
MentalEdge, (edited )
@MentalEdge@sopuli.xyz avatar

No, I’m in the exact same boat.

It’s an absolutely stellar production of a completely mid story set in an amazing world, which is ignored in favor of the blandest character-drama-chosen-one-lovers-of-destiny drivel.

I can’t stand it. I went back to Trigun for my desert sci-fi fix.

Some people are able to enjoy just the cinematography and world building, with the story and characters serving as mere excuses to explore those other things. And they are done exceptionally well here, which I think is impressing a lot of people.

And a lot of people really never think past surface level aspects when it comes to writing. Anyone can tell when the acting or CG is bad, but a lot of people can only tell that the writing is bad, when it goes from good to bad within the same production (Game of Thrones). If it’s bad from the start, most people don’t care. If something is cool, loud, pretty, dramatic, or shiny enough, it is able to entertain.

And I’m not even saying that’s wrong. Different things are important to different people, both creators and readers/watchers etc.

We all have that one thing we enjoy for all the wrong reasons. In the same way some things can be widely popular, and still not hit home for some of us for all the wrong reasons.

wolf,

Thank you very much for your reply and the ‘Trigun’ tip!

I was not too impressed by the cinematography, the pictures are nice, but nothing compared to the like of ‘Drive’ (… and Drive has basically no story, but I will enjoy it from time for time for its beautiful cinematography and soundtrack), ‘Pan’s labyrinth’ or the first season of True Detective.

Very much agree with all you write, though.

MentalEdge, (edited )
@MentalEdge@sopuli.xyz avatar

It’s funny because it’s very clear that Trigun takes extremely direct inspiration from Dune (sandworms and all), but it has a much more human lead, while still set in a world with complex and big things going on.

One big difference is that in Trigun, space travel is basically a dead technology. Though it was once commonplace.

Stampede is a prequel, and supposedly Studio Orange will make more, so you can start there if you like, instead of the much older stuff.

And for anyone reading, I should probably mention it’s a manga/anime.

wolf,

Thanks, Trigun is airing on Netflix right now, looking forward to watch it!

LemmySoloHer,
@LemmySoloHer@lemmy.world avatar

Just a clarification, Trigun Stampede is not a prequel but is an alternate universe re-imagining of the original.

When the producers approached the creator about doing something very different from the source material, the creator mentioned that the first anime adaptation was “really excellent”, and that “anything beyond the original anime is more of a bonus time, so you could pretty much do whatever you want to with it.” They liked the idea of how, for example, there are different versions of Spider-Man in the Spider-Verse (so that the 90s Spider-Man show, Ultimate Spider-Man, etc., would all be very different from each other). This is them doing that for Vash and company.

It’s very different in a lot of ways, you can think of it as an alternate universe from the original. I would strongly recommend first time viewers watch the original anime in its entirety first and then check out Stampede if they’re itching for more of that world in a very different flavor.

Reverendender,

Your description of the issues sounds just like the book. Which I also hated.

wolf,

It is a long time ago, when I read the books, and I liked, that they where very political and changed the narrator often (if I remember correctly). To say, I kept them in good memory w/o the urge of reading them ever again. ;-)

SzethFriendOfNimi, (edited )

The books are full of intrigue, subtle plots and other plots.

It’s a book that when read a second time you come away with an entirely new experience armed with the knowledge (and familiarity) of the first read.

Dune 1 (haven’t seen part 2 yet) just captures the feel of all the forces, pressures and consequences of the book.

It goes for a “show don’t tell” kind of storytelling that really works to get a feel for it.

Not that the works merit direct comparison since they’re so different it harkens to the Lord of the Ring trilogy where you don’t get a lot of the details of the book but you get the heart of the story, world, lore and relationships of the people.

Paul is reserved, intrigued by Chani and his visions.

Jessica acts out of love over duty

The Duke brings his family to a place of what he expects to be dangerous but is also powerful and the political maneuver putting them there was airtight. Hence his duty to go, his worry for the family, the importance of being there.

All the players, all the parties, all the pressures are there. The only ones not focused on, at least in the first, is the guild which fits what was shown so far anyway.

wolf,

Thank you very much for your perspective, I’ll watch the first part again and see if I can discover this ‘reading’ of it!

QuarterSwede,
@QuarterSwede@lemmy.world avatar

It’s beloved because it actually does the book justice. Exactly.

skatrek47,

Hear hear, I also agree even as a die-hard sci-fi fan! I never understood why it was so popular…

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