Dune appears to be a book tailor-made for teenage boys. The main character is a lonely prince who discovers he has superhuman abilities. His parents move him to a far-off land for their own political reasons, while he mopes about, dreaming of an exotic girl who is fascinated by him. "Tell me of your homeworld, Usul..." Soon enough the political
(
Read more... )
If you ever watched drone footage of the Ukraine war, that's what this movie looks like. Bleak, barren and impersonal. You can't tell who anybody is because they're miles away and all dressed exactly the same and then they die. Might be a good statement on modern warfare but not the best way to present a space opera. Especially not with Foundation right there, doing the same thing so much better.
Anyway, i had watched the first miniseries before, but it was only this time round that Irulan really stood out to me, maybe because i am older now and looking for something different from my entertainment. However i had never seen Children of Dune before this weekend, and i definitely concur, the way they treated Irulan was fantastic there. Emphasizing her connection with the kids despite her circumstance brought depth to her character and gave her an arc that made sense.
I'm so glad that miniseries got made. It's janky and low budget, but it keeps a lot of the colorful weirdness of Lynch's Dune while fixing up some character and pacing problems from both the movie and the books. Great stuff.
The article about Lynch's Dune sequel is actually what sent me down this Dune tangent of the past couple weeks! I rewatched everything after reading it. Man, can you imagine how crazy his Leto II would have been? As long as he kept a mainstream producer to reel him in just enough to not turn it into full-ass body horror, i think it could have created some truly memorable images.
Reply
You can really see it once they mention it. Using the same backdrop for different scenes, huge lighting changes for mood. Funky one-camera blocking. I love it when the lack of budget is used to create a style. It's how we got the primarily black Batman The Animated Series.
I hate that war correspondence and live-as-it-happened battle reporting has really changed up how it's portrayed in movies. While I loved the early seasons of the Galactica reboot - the "shaky cam" used in nearly every cgi shot, and more than a few live action shots, felt cliched the moment they started doing it.
But that might just be me. I get upset when I see lens-flare in sci-fi because THE CAMERA ISN'T SUPPOSED TO BE THERE!!!! :D
Reply
Leave a comment