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Dune @ 2021/11/14 20:48:49


Post by: trexmeyer


I don't buy the Dune is risky logic. It has massive fanbase that has grown considerably since the disastrous Lynch film. The miniseries on SciFi did pretty well.

Frank Herbert's Dune aired in three parts, starting Sunday, December 3, 2000.[14] The first installment achieved a 4.6 rating with 3 million homes, and the miniseries averaged a 4.4/2.9 million households over all three nights.[14] This doubled all viewership records for Sci Fi, placing Dune among the top ten of basic cable's original miniseries in the five years previous.[14] Two of the three installments also rated among the year's top 10 original cable movies.[14] To date, the 2000 Dune miniseries and its 2003 sequel are two of the three highest-rated programs ever to be broadcast on the Sci Fi Channel.[2][15]


It's made $350m so far, despite streaming on HBO Max for "free" the same day. IMO, the real difficulty with a trilogy would be splitting a single novel into three stories. That would be tricky. LOTR came prepackaged in that format.


Dune @ 2021/11/14 21:10:59


Post by: SamusDrake


trexmeyer wrote:
I don't buy the Dune is risky logic. It has massive fanbase that has grown considerably since the disastrous Lynch film. The miniseries on SciFi did pretty well.

Frank Herbert's Dune aired in three parts, starting Sunday, December 3, 2000.[14] The first installment achieved a 4.6 rating with 3 million homes, and the miniseries averaged a 4.4/2.9 million households over all three nights.[14] This doubled all viewership records for Sci Fi, placing Dune among the top ten of basic cable's original miniseries in the five years previous.[14] Two of the three installments also rated among the year's top 10 original cable movies.[14] To date, the 2000 Dune miniseries and its 2003 sequel are two of the three highest-rated programs ever to be broadcast on the Sci Fi Channel.[2][15]


It's made $350m so far, despite streaming on HBO Max for "free" the same day. IMO, the real difficulty with a trilogy would be splitting a single novel into three stories. That would be tricky. LOTR came prepackaged in that format.


Dune itself comes in three parts - something like "Dune", "The Prophet" and "Maud'Dib". The TV series had the right idea and just followed it...

Part One: The assassination of House Atreides, and the escape into the Desert.
Part Two: The unification of the Fremen and the new reign of Rabban.
Part Three: All eyes look to Arrakis and the battle of Arrakeen.


Dune @ 2021/11/14 21:11:37


Post by: Overread


Lord of the Rings isn't actually written as 3 separate stories though. It was one book. It was only split into three by the publishers after he submitted it.

As a result whilst there are story arcs within each part, there's no sense of pausing and restarting the story like you might get with a Harry Potter novel or such; instead its just one long continuation of the same story.


Dune might well require more independent construction of story elements, but that in part is because its latter half of the story contains a lot of overview moments and short scenes that focus on critical moments in an otherwise long story campaign. It covers 3 years of major warfare and uprising and unrest in a very short span of book space.


But it is still risky. Dune is nothing like as powerful nor popular as say Starwars or Lord of the Rings (even before the films). Yes its a major sci-fi work, but its nothing like as instantly known as the others. Mention Dune to many people and they won't have a clue what you're talking about (before the recent film of course). Mention Starwars or Lord of the Rings and the vast majority of people have at least heard of them if not seen/read (attempted to read) them.


Dune @ 2021/11/15 01:08:00


Post by: CptJake


No one heard of Star Wars before the movie. Many folks heard of Dune before the movie.


Dune @ 2021/11/15 04:56:42


Post by: BobtheInquisitor


Dune and Lord of the Rings were pretty similar in popularity and niche before their movies. Star Wars is on an entirely different level.


Dune @ 2021/11/15 06:28:53


Post by: trexmeyer


SamusDrake wrote:



Dune itself comes in three parts - something like "Dune", "The Prophet" and "Maud'Dib". The TV series had the right idea and just followed it...

Part One: The assassination of House Atreides, and the escape into the Desert.
Part Two: The unification of the Fremen and the new reign of Rabban.
Part Three: All eyes look to Arrakis and the battle of Arrakeen.


Yeah, but part two and three feel much shorter to me than part one. Part One takes up about half the book by itself. It's a pacing issue to me, but I'm sure a team of writers could figure it out.

Maybe end the first film earlier than the current one. Have Paul and Jessica escaping into the dessert be the final scene.


Dune @ 2021/11/15 10:02:08


Post by: Shadow Walker


Separating the movie into 2 parts is a better decision, especially that the 3rd part of the book felt a bit rushed. You would therefore need to either invent some parts or elongate some parts from the book. After disaster that was a Hobbit to me I do not think it would be a good idea. Still I would like to be able to see a full part 1 of the movie first. It is supposed to be like 5h so maybe there are the scenes that most people miss, like a dinner one etc.


Dune @ 2021/11/15 20:02:10


Post by: SamusDrake


 Shadow Walker wrote:
Separating the movie into 2 parts is a better decision, especially that the 3rd part of the book felt a bit rushed. You would therefore need to either invent some parts or elongate some parts from the book. After disaster that was a Hobbit to me I do not think it would be a good idea. Still I would like to be able to see a full part 1 of the movie first. It is supposed to be like 5h so maybe there are the scenes that most people miss, like a dinner one etc.


Well, its at least a better decision over just the 2 hour 1984 movie.


Dune @ 2021/11/15 20:21:42


Post by: The Revenant


I liked it despite the way the ecologist was changed, i thought the death scene was better, more definite and lacked the stupid "I'm sure he can't possibly survive" bit.

The effects were great, and avoided a lot of greenscreening by using massive walls of fabric sand.

The greater emphasis on the value of water, when the guy was watering the trees, was a nice touch. The voice power was much greater in this one, which makes me wonder why people don't use hearing protection.

All in all a vast improvement on the original even tho I was not impressed by the new sandworm, which some people said looked more like a giant butthole and i have to agree.


Dune @ 2021/11/15 21:23:35


Post by: SamusDrake


Yes, I quite liked Dr Kynes' exit this time. That was well played.


Dune @ 2021/11/16 18:59:24


Post by: the_scotsman


trexmeyer wrote:
 Easy E wrote:
.... and the rebels in Star Wars go through Stormtroopers like a hot light saber through butter even though they should not.

A lot of people have spilled a lot of ink on why. Ultimately, it comes down to "The Protagonists and their Allies Win". Trying to go beyond that is an exercise in futility.


Comparing a work of pulp that began as little more than a homage to science fantasy serials and samurai flicks to what is ostensibly a serious, philosophical piece of literature strikes me as disingenuous.

That's also pretty inaccurate. In A New Hope the Imperials board and wipe out the ship easily. They also blow a planet up. In The Empire Strikes Back they crush the rebel forces on Hoth. The rebels are happy just to escape.

Faceless Rebels don't mow down faceless Imperials. If anything, the reverse is true. The lead protagonists are the ones doing the damage and even then Obi-Wan is killed, Luke loses a duel and his hand, Han Solo is captured, etc.

The Fremen don't take meaningful losses. The Atreides do.


I mean, leaving aside the fact that I'm pretty certain that Dune is literal paid-by-the-word pulp fiction (I certainly read it the first few times in yellowed-paper pulp form) Dune is about as concerned with the versimilitude and realism of its military history as Lord of The Rings is. I.e: Not.

you can , as a fan, either bend yourself backwards in triple dipple squintuple knots like those poor desperate star wars fans have to, DESPERATELY trying to explain every detail of the canon as the 5-d chess writings of a master uber-wizard, or you can accept critical analysis of the flaws of a work and choose to focus instead on the good parts, which almost always were the actual focus of the author in the first place.

George Lucas did almost everything because it looked cool or made him feel like a little kid. Frank Herbert had a specific overarching story he wanted to tell, and anything that needed to happen to get that story told, is how it worked in his story.

If i had to guess, the fremen were mega-ultra-badasses because this story was probably told around when it was really in vogue to heavily lionize the taliban fighters in afghanistan fighting against the soviet union.

Whoops!

Hindsight, eh folks?


Dune @ 2021/11/16 19:13:20


Post by: Mr Morden


Good points well made...


Dune @ 2021/11/16 19:19:06


Post by: Albertorius


 the_scotsman wrote:
If i had to guess, the fremen were mega-ultra-badasses because this story was probably told around when it was really in vogue to heavily lionize the taliban fighters in afghanistan fighting against the soviet union.

Whoops!

Hindsight, eh folks?

If you'd had to guess, take into account that Dune was published 14 years before the USSR invaded Afghanistan.


Dune @ 2021/11/16 19:32:36


Post by: warboss


 Albertorius wrote:
 the_scotsman wrote:
If i had to guess, the fremen were mega-ultra-badasses because this story was probably told around when it was really in vogue to heavily lionize the taliban fighters in afghanistan fighting against the soviet union.

Whoops!

Hindsight, eh folks?

If you'd had to guess, take into account that Dune was published 14 years before the USSR invaded Afghanistan.


That pesky space time continuum always gets in the way unless you're a god-emperor of any variety or timelord.


Dune @ 2021/11/16 19:44:53


Post by: trexmeyer


 the_scotsman wrote:


If i had to guess, the fremen were mega-ultra-badasses because this story was probably told around when it was really in vogue to heavily lionize the taliban fighters in afghanistan fighting against the soviet union.

Whoops!

Hindsight, eh folks?


This is an awe-inspiring combination of confidence and ignorance.

Edit: Googling the date Dune was written is hard.


Dune @ 2021/11/16 23:59:00


Post by: BobtheInquisitor


 Albertorius wrote:
 the_scotsman wrote:
If i had to guess, the fremen were mega-ultra-badasses because this story was probably told around when it was really in vogue to heavily lionize the taliban fighters in afghanistan fighting against the soviet union.

Whoops!

Hindsight, eh folks?

If you'd had to guess, take into account that Dune was published 14 years before the USSR invaded Afghanistan.


I always thought it was roughly based on the rise of the Arabic tribes, united by Mohammed, overrunning the Sassanid Persian empire and expanding from there. They were a vigorous desert people who came together under a new religion and embarked on a jihad, reminiscent of the Arabs under Islam. There’s a bit more worked into Dune to keep it from feeling like Mohammed In Space, but that framework seems evident.

Anyway, Dune and the rest of the series seem to have a motif where societies that stagnate must fall, and more …basic types must overrun them and revitalize humanity.


Dune @ 2021/11/17 12:38:56


Post by: Shadow Walker


 BobtheInquisitor wrote:
 Albertorius wrote:
 the_scotsman wrote:
If i had to guess, the fremen were mega-ultra-badasses because this story was probably told around when it was really in vogue to heavily lionize the taliban fighters in afghanistan fighting against the soviet union.

Whoops!

Hindsight, eh folks?

If you'd had to guess, take into account that Dune was published 14 years before the USSR invaded Afghanistan.


I always thought it was roughly based on the rise of the Arabic tribes, united by Mohammed, overrunning the Sassanid Persian empire and expanding from there. They were a vigorous desert people who came together under a new religion and embarked on a jihad, reminiscent of the Arabs under Islam. There’s a bit more worked into Dune to keep it from feeling like Mohammed In Space, but that framework seems evident.

Dune is more Lawrence of Arabia = man from outside reuniting the tribes to be more effective against their oppressor/s.


Dune @ 2021/11/17 17:35:57


Post by: Esmer


trexmeyer wrote:
SamusDrake wrote:



Dune itself comes in three parts - something like "Dune", "The Prophet" and "Maud'Dib". The TV series had the right idea and just followed it...

Part One: The assassination of House Atreides, and the escape into the Desert.
Part Two: The unification of the Fremen and the new reign of Rabban.
Part Three: All eyes look to Arrakis and the battle of Arrakeen.


Yeah, but part two and three feel much shorter to me than part one. Part One takes up about half the book by itself. It's a pacing issue to me, but I'm sure a team of writers could figure it out.

Maybe end the first film earlier than the current one. Have Paul and Jessica escaping into the dessert be the final scene.


The last part of Dune was extremely rushed. I heard it as an audio book a while ago and after listening to hours upon hours of Paul's angsty inner monologue there were like 20-25 minutes left on the track before the final battle beginns. Then it's BOOM atomics, blargh Baron is dead, blargh Feyt dead too Paul marries Irulan end.
It will presumably be much more prolonged in the movie version.
Altough truth be told, I thought that the 2020 movie felt pretty rushed too, when you know the book, probably out of necessity to get the story across in the medium. Four characters in particular, I felt were rather severely under-characterized.

Piter de Vries, who in the book is a talkative Joker-type character who has this typical bad guy who-will-backstab-the-other-first relationship with the Baron, while in the movie his name isn't even mentioned.
The Baron himself, who is much more pompous and aristocratic than the gloomy Apocalypse Now-channeling horror figure in the movie.
Doctor Yueh, who, in the book version, was obviously not so naive as to believe he would somehow get his wife back and make it out of the conspiracy alive but deliberately planned things in such a way to ensure his wife dies (thus being spared more suffering), he dies (as punishment for his betrayal) and the Baron dies.
Thufir Hawat, who in the book is involved in a game of wits against Lady Jessica with both of them wrongly suspecting each other of being the traitor.

And of course the Duke Leto is actually also smarter in the books than in the movies, as he had deduced very early that him being granted lordship over Arrakis was a conspiracy on behalf of the Emperor and the Harkonnens, and even correctly predicted that the anticipated strike would involve Sardaukar posing as Harkonnens (whereas in the movie they're not making any attempt to mask their identity, which kinda dumbs down the politics of the Dune Empire).


Dune @ 2021/11/17 18:46:49


Post by: The Revenant


What's the difference between FTL travel and making a movie of a major sf novel most of the readers wont' attack?

FTL travel may be possible.


Dune @ 2021/11/17 18:46:59


Post by: gorgon


I chewed on the creative decision about Sardaukar operating openly also. I agree that it goes to the politics of the Imperium. The movie makes it seem like the Emperor is all-powerful and can endure no matter what actions he takes against the great Houses. In the books we know that's far from the case.

On the other hand, I also understand the need to simplify things for casual audiences. Villenueve didn't have the funding for Part 2 when he shot Part 1. It had to engage casuals and a lot of the politics had to go or be simplified. A 5-part miniseries would have been a different thing. And I also get that the visual language of having Sardaukar uniformed differently works better than having a bunch of guys in Harkonnen outfit...but some fighting with a different style and efficiency.

So while I like the book's treatment better, I feel like I understand why the movie treatment was what it was. And I think it's really the same kind of thing for most the less developed characters you mention. I wouldn't have invested much in Piter either, given his quick death. And while I would have liked to see Thufir and Jessica at odds, the banquet scene, etc...they weren't essential to moving the story along. You never know about an extended cut, however.

I will say that although Leto doesn't spend a ton of time discussing Arrakis as a trap, he does address it. He tells Paul in the graveyard that they're in great political danger. I also thought his line to Jessica -- "I thought we'd have more time" -- shows that he knew they'd move against him...just not as quickly as it happened. I don't think he's a naive newb for not understanding how difficult the conditions would be on the ground on Arrakis. Isn't that something that's plagued every occupying force since the dawn of time?

It's like with the cost of travel discussion...I think a lot of stuff is actually in there, just done in a shorthand way that the book fans might recognize but doesn't impede the story for casuals.


Dune @ 2021/11/17 19:09:07


Post by: Cronch


A movie is not a book that moves. The thing would be 3hrs long if not more and would bore most viewers to tears if they actually included all the plotting the book did. Just like LotR the movie is not 1:1 reenactment of the book, we were spared Tom Bombadil.


Dune @ 2021/11/17 19:55:51


Post by: the_scotsman


trexmeyer wrote:
 the_scotsman wrote:


If i had to guess, the fremen were mega-ultra-badasses because this story was probably told around when it was really in vogue to heavily lionize the taliban fighters in afghanistan fighting against the soviet union.

Whoops!

Hindsight, eh folks?


This is an awe-inspiring combination of confidence and ignorance.

Edit: Googling the date Dune was written is hard.


Eh, you've got me. Watched too many 80s movies I guess.


Dune @ 2021/11/17 19:58:07


Post by: Esmer


I absolutely understand the necessities of cutting stuff when transitioning a story to another medium. I felt that the story was somewhat rushed, from the perspective of a book reader. A movie goer can enjoy the movie perfectly well without really knowing who Piter or Thufir, or even Mentats in general, are. The 80ies movie decision to include a gigantic infodump in the form of endless inner monologuing was a rather poor one, after all.

(Altough personally I really enjoyed the part in the book where Piter, who was heavily build-up as some sort of important evil vizier type character who at some point would challenge and/or become the main bad guy himself, gets killed completely by chance. Felt refreshingly expectation-averting).

The one element that I think may have come out of left field for a movie only audience, was Doctor Yueh, his reasoning and how crucial his role was in bringing House Atreides down, not helped by how extremely dark-lit the entire betrayal scene plays out. I may be wrong about that though.


Dune @ 2021/11/17 20:03:07


Post by: the_scotsman


 gorgon wrote:


It's like with the cost of travel discussion...I think a lot of stuff is actually in there, just done in a shorthand way that the book fans might recognize but doesn't impede the story for casuals.


Man oh man though, how absolutely awesome would a cut of dune be thats just completely alien. Like an absolute madman would make. All the actors speaking in an entirely or almost entirely unrecognizable language with subtitles, no lines to explain things like visions or things that wouldnt naturally be explained by the cast at all, like 4.5 hours long, everything just utterly alien and unfamiliar.

That's the kind of sci-fi I'd kill to see with any kind of budget behind it.


Dune @ 2021/11/17 20:30:30


Post by: Voss


 Esmer wrote:


The last part of Dune was extremely rushed. I heard it as an audio book a while ago and after listening to hours upon hours of Paul's angsty inner monologue there were like 20-25 minutes left on the track before the final battle beginns. Then it's BOOM atomics, blargh Baron is dead, blargh Feyt dead too Paul marries Irulan end.


It isn't rushed. It simply isn't the point. It isn't a war story, its an ecological/prescience/sociological story. The end is an epilogue to set up Messiah, not to be a detailed battle.
Its like reading a Batman comic and expecting an entire arc covering the trial that sends <insert villain here> to Arkham.


Dune @ 2021/11/17 20:31:37


Post by: SamusDrake


 the_scotsman wrote:


Eh, you've got me. Watched too many 80s movies I guess.


Its perfectly understandable. Many of us would also rather watch Rambo III than read Dune.


Dune @ 2021/11/17 21:15:20


Post by: AndrewGPaul


edit should've read the whole thread before replying.


Dune @ 2021/11/17 21:47:17


Post by: gorgon


 the_scotsman wrote:
 gorgon wrote:


It's like with the cost of travel discussion...I think a lot of stuff is actually in there, just done in a shorthand way that the book fans might recognize but doesn't impede the story for casuals.


Man oh man though, how absolutely awesome would a cut of dune be thats just completely alien. Like an absolute madman would make. All the actors speaking in an entirely or almost entirely unrecognizable language with subtitles, no lines to explain things like visions or things that wouldnt naturally be explained by the cast at all, like 4.5 hours long, everything just utterly alien and unfamiliar.

That's the kind of sci-fi I'd kill to see with any kind of budget behind it.


It's kinda funny that you say that when previous directors to engage with the materials include Lynch and Jodorowsky.

Obviously Lynch tried to make the franchise film that the studio wanted and he's not built for. Left completely to his own devices it probably would have been trippy as heck. Jodorowsky's attempt also...maybe even moreso...although that one always seemed to me like it would have been a colossal mess no matter how much self-promotion the director is still doing to this day.



Dune @ 2021/11/20 03:14:30


Post by: TangoTwoBravo


Saw the movie on the big screen and I was very happy I did so. I think it takes a restrained madness to attempt to direct a movie like Dune. Villeneuve pulled it off. The massive scenes with a fantastic score built the worlds without being too indulgent. He was right to not try to eat the whole elephant in one bite. Having said that, he could have gone for a shorter first movie. The pace didn't drag, but it could have moved a long a little more. Still, I only checked my watch once and that was at the 2 hour mark. The battle scenes were 40K AF. I messed up and the theatre I went to did not have IMAX - I might go a second time to see it in that format which says a lot given ticket prices these days.

As a seven year old kid I was intrigued by my dad's Dune books on the shelf and tried to read them after watching Star Wars. Failed predictably. Watched the 80s movie as a teenager and thought - this is cool but...weird? What's with these heart plug things? Oh - David Lynch. One great thing for me about the 80s Dune was the supporting cast. Filling the shoes of Patrick Stewart (carrying a pug into battle no less - what an ace), Jurgen Prochnow and Max von Sydow was going to be a tall order in 2021. Then read Dune and enjoyed it. Read Dune again during my first tour to Afghanistan up in Kabul (2003). Fancifully wondered if I was an Atreides trooper trying to work with the Fremen, but by 2006 in the south I was feeling a bit like another Sardaukar.





Dune @ 2021/12/07 20:09:32


Post by: Frazzled


Finally watched it. I thought what the film focused on was really well done.
It didn't focus on the politics and intrigue very much like the mini series, instead focusing more on the personal journey of Paul. For that slice of the book I thought everything was well done.

*I missed anything with the Emperor but really liked the homeworld scenes of the Sardaukar.
*I thought the fighting scenes were really well done. The one scene before Idaho's last stand where there's a momentary glimpse f the Fremen fighting two Sardauker really caught a glimpse to me of how good the Fremen really are, and their fluid fighting style.
*Oh man the Ornithopters were a perfect blend of vehicle and dragonfly!
*I thought the shields were finally done well, with a fair bit of actual shield fighting. The shields on vehicles and flyers were a nice touch.
*Inversely I missed the Baroquelike brilliant colors of the miniseries.
*The absolute scale of the images were again brilliantly done. Its a true director hallmark.

Characters:
*Mamoa being Mamoa worked quite well for Idaho. Quite a bit more focus on him than I remember.
*Brolin always rubs me the wrong way until he starts his lines and then he's good. I thought he was tight for the role.
*Good portrayal of the Duke I thought, much more energetic and human than previous version.
*Paul's mother. Oh my, she stole the show in every scene she was in. Why have I not seen more from this excellent actress?!?
*Paul. He played Henry again, this time with stillsuit except plate armor. Good acting but his acting personality is wooded. I don't see how anyone would follow him.
*Stilgar. I couldn't tell that was Bardem which was good. He played the role well, an almost arrogant predator when not among his people, but a human leader with his tribe. I miss the Sci Fi Stilgar, but its justa different version.
*Chani. I've seen Zendaya display powerful acting in Malcolm and Marie. She did not have much to do here, but she worked well in the role.

Overall I enjoyed it thoroughly, and look forward to the sequel conclusion.


Dune @ 2021/12/14 04:12:31


Post by: sebster


So when Leto is showing the state of the harvesting operations and the missing silos, did anyone else think 'you must build additional silos'? Just me?

Anyhow, I thought it was great. Amazing how a book written so heavily around thoughts and plotting stands or falls on its visuals, but it does. Dune is a staggeringly beautiful movie, all the more so because it was showing the beauty of a harsh, unforgiving climate. I don't think you could do a better job of distilling the book down to something that's even remotely workable on screen than they did with Dune. Even then, just because there's so much complexity packed in you really just need to go with it, and the beauty of the film really goes a long way to helping people do that.

My wife said she liked it but she found it a bit hard to follow as some dialogue was hard to hear. I thought she had a fair point but honestly I'm not sure it would have helped, I don't think its possible to follow along with every detail unless you were already familiar with the book, or watched the film multiple times. A person can't learn Atreides is being invited to Arrakis to maintain the spice harvest but its a trap, then learn about a whole second story about the Bene Gesserit's plans to create a Kwizats Haderach, then 100 minutes later understand why Dr Yeuh had deduced, possibly mistakenly, that House Artreides was doomed and he might as well use it to extract his revenge on the Baron.

Which is why it mattered so much that it was such a beautiful film. Helped people go along with it, accept there's bits of subtle plotting they probably don't understand, and just get caught up in the wonder and emotions of the story.

trexmeyer wrote:
The Fremen don't take meaningful losses. The Atreides do.


Maybe. We don't really the conclusions of any fighting involving the Fremen, only implications. In their one fight against the Sardukar, the Fremen are shown ambushing the Sardukar, the outcome of the battle isn't shown, and then the next time anyone from that fight is shown, we see Sardukar and no Fremen.

The problem with the Sardukar being shown as relatively weak comes from how Duncan hacks through so many of them, and doing it with ease. That wasn't great, but really that thing, main characters killing loads of extras with ease, is so common in so many movies these days I'm just resigned to it.


Automatically Appended Next Post:
 the_scotsman wrote:
If i had to guess, the fremen were mega-ultra-badasses because this story was probably told around when it was really in vogue to heavily lionize the taliban fighters in afghanistan fighting against the soviet union.

Whoops!

Hindsight, eh folks?


Your guess is a bit off. The Fremen are based on the Bedouin. Who inhabit Saudi Arabia, the UAE etc, a desert land where oil is discovered, making a backwater suddenly become the geopolitical focus of all of civilisation. In this case the inspiration came pretty directly from Lawrence of Arabia, released in 1962, with Dune published in 1965. It's likely the idea for the blue eyes came from Olivier's blue eyes in the movie, as well.

So yeah, the Fremen aren't fierce fighters just to make the story work, but because like Lawrence of Arabia the story is very much about harnessing a fierce warrior culture to suit your political ends. This concept is explored further with the insane violence of the Jihad the Fremen embark on after victory on Arrakis.

There's also an idea explored in the book that the best soldiers come from being raised in the harshest conditions. Before the Fremen the Sardaukar were the best soldiers, and that was because like the Fremen, they were raised in brutal living conditions under extreme discipline.

That's the thing about Dune, like most good books. Things don't exist just to make the story work. They exist because they are ideas and setting elements that the authors believes or thinks are interesting, and the story is then written to factor them in as causes and complications within the plot. Its stuff like that which really made the setting work for me, that feeling that there is a world beyond whatever is needed to make the plot happen.


Automatically Appended Next Post:
 BobtheInquisitor wrote:
I always thought it was roughly based on the rise of the Arabic tribes, united by Mohammed, overrunning the Sassanid Persian empire and expanding from there. They were a vigorous desert people who came together under a new religion and embarked on a jihad, reminiscent of the Arabs under Islam. There’s a bit more worked into Dune to keep it from feeling like Mohammed In Space, but that framework seems evident.

Anyway, Dune and the rest of the series seem to have a motif where societies that stagnate must fall, and more …basic types must overrun them and revitalize humanity.


There are definitely elements in there. The Arabic tribes defeating the elite Byzantine troops was definitely an inspiration. But I think Herbert drew inspiration from multiple points in history from the middle east. Its really hard to look past the role ME oil played in 1960s politics, and the role spice plays in Dune.


Automatically Appended Next Post:
 Esmer wrote:
Doctor Yueh, who, in the book version, was obviously not so naive as to believe he would somehow get his wife back and make it out of the conspiracy alive but deliberately planned things in such a way to ensure his wife dies (thus being spared more suffering), he dies (as punishment for his betrayal) and the Baron dies.
Thufir Hawat, who in the book is involved in a game of wits against Lady Jessica with both of them wrongly suspecting each other of being the traitor.

And of course the Duke Leto is actually also smarter in the books than in the movies, as he had deduced very early that him being granted lordship over Arrakis was a conspiracy on behalf of the Emperor and the Harkonnens, and even correctly predicted that the anticipated strike would involve Sardaukar posing as Harkonnens (whereas in the movie they're not making any attempt to mask their identity, which kinda dumbs down the politics of the Dune Empire).


Yeah, this is the kind of stuff where a film has to make tough choices, and I think in most cases the new film did a great job with its choices, with a couple of exceptions. They cut down a lot of Leto's plotting, which really just came down to time, but did give enough there for him to show he knew all along it was coming and had plans to defeat the trap ("desert power", "I just thought I'd have more time" etc). So that one is fine, I think.

The Sarduakar wearing their full regalia is also fine, because film is a visual medium, and you need to show the Sardaukar as different. Having them shown as Harkonnen and having people observe they are fighting like Sardaukar just doesn't work in film. So they instead had the line there's no satellites on Arrakis and the Atreides will die in darkness as a handwave. This is okay.

Thufir and the Lady Jessica's subplot was a shame to cut. I think this really came down to time limits, but even just a brief scene or two showing deception within the leadership of House Atreides would have done wonders to show how difficult Leto's position was. How the politics of the galaxy mean you can't even be in complete control of your own house, and it also would have brought the idea of treachery to the audience mind, so when the betrayal did come it wasn't out of the blue.

And yeah, I think they missed a trick with Doctor Yueh. His reasoning behind his betrayal was so well thought through by Herbert, and was so well done because it didn't just make internal sense to Yeuh, it touched on the greater political situation and how that situation is perceived within the galaxy. His betrayal was based on the assumption that Leto was doomed anyway, so he might as well accept that use it to exact his revenge on the Baron. But if he had known Leto's plan with the fremen, would he have done differently? Would it have mattered? All that is missed in the film and it was a shame. Maybe cut the pictures of the bull and they could have found some time for that.

Small complaints, though, I think


Automatically Appended Next Post:
 gorgon wrote:
I chewed on the creative decision about Sardaukar operating openly also. I agree that it goes to the politics of the Imperium. The movie makes it seem like the Emperor is all-powerful and can endure no matter what actions he takes against the great Houses. In the books we know that's far from the case.


I agreed with your post overall, but just had to argue with this one bit. The movie directly addresses the Emperor's use of the Sardaukar, saying there are no satellites over Dune so the attack won't be seen, and after the attack Paul and Jessica's initial plan was to escape the planet and testify that the Emperor directly aided one Great House against another. It wasn't just subtext or implied like some other elements from the book were, it was straight up text.


Automatically Appended Next Post:
Voss wrote:
It isn't rushed. It simply isn't the point. It isn't a war story, its an ecological/prescience/sociological story. The end is an epilogue to set up Messiah, not to be a detailed battle.


Nah. You don't create an intergalactic feudal empire, have your core plot driven by the political machinations of those feudal factions, invent an entirely alien form of war driven by new technologies, then have the political balance of those factions massively changed twice, each time by war... and then declare your book isn't actually about war so we're not going to worry about those elements. War is a central element of Dune.

The fact Herbert didn't write the final battle in as much detail as other elements doesn't change that. It just means Dune, like countless highly ambitious great novels, still does contain some missteps.


Dune @ 2021/12/14 14:25:00


Post by: Voss


Nah. You don't create an intergalactic feudal empire, have your core plot driven by the political machinations of those feudal factions, invent an entirely alien form of war driven by new technologies, then have the political balance of those factions massively changed twice, each time by war... and then declare your book isn't actually about war so we're not going to worry about those elements. War is a central element of Dune.

Politics is a central element, war is background or just left to the time skips. It isn't just the final battle, he barely wrote _any_ battles, or any of the supporting elements for war.

The 'alien form of war' is... sword fighting. The lasguns are barely used for fear of shield interactions creating almost-nuclear explosions

The political balance is changed first by pure politics (the emperor swapped which House was in charge of Arrakis) and then by politics, betrayal and an ambush, not warfare.

Then the second half of the book is entirely off screen guerilla operations followed by nukes and an off screen attack. The following books follow the same pattern- almost all fighting is off screen, aside from a few duels. Large engagements, logistics, troop movements, that's all elsewhere. Fighting is mostly small bands or personal duels, what's on screen is politics, which is where the feudal empire and factions come in.


Dune @ 2021/12/15 07:28:35


Post by: sebster


Voss wrote:
Politics is a central element, war is background or just left to the time skips. It isn't just the final battle, he barely wrote _any_ battles, or any of the supporting elements for war.


I think you're confused by what I'm saying. I am not saying that that war took up a large chunk of the literal text of the story. I am saying it is important to the story, war, its ramifications and what drives it outcomes are explored heavily.

I'll put it this way - the book spends a lot of time telling us Fremen are great fighters. This is important to how the plot plays out, and the reason why they are great soldiers is explored through the books considerations of environment and culture. But the book spends little time showing us the Fremen as great fighters. Which is a flaw in the book. Nothing that diminish all the book's exceptional qualities, but still something we can talk about.

The 'alien form of war' is... sword fighting. The lasguns are barely used for fear of shield interactions creating almost-nuclear explosions


Making personal shields a part of your story, then making up ways to bypass those shields and the fighting techniques that evolve from that isn't just 'there is sword fighting'.

The political balance is changed first by pure politics (the emperor swapped which House was in charge of Arrakis) and then by politics, betrayal and an ambush, not warfare.


What? Before they moved to Arrakis and once on Arrakis they were among the most powerful of the Great Houses. What changed that was the attack by the Baron. Which was, you know, a battle. The second major shift came with Paul's Fremen new army taking Arrakeen. Which they did by having a battle.

Arguing those two moments weren't battles but were betrayals, ambushes or whatever is just not sensible. The Sardaukar were sent to aid the Baron's attack... because they were elite soldiers and elite soldiers are very helpful when you're going to attack someone and have a battle. The Fremen were noted as great fighters, which was very important because they then went about fighting a war to defeat the occupiers of their planet.


Dune @ 2021/12/15 10:52:14


Post by: Aash


The way I see it, warfare and battles etc are important to the story Herbert tells, but critically they aren’t the story he is telling. Not giving much detail on warfare and fighting techniques isn’t a flaw but a deliberate narrative choice that I think strengthens the story he is telling.

In the same way a heist/robbery is important to the story being told in Reservoir Dogs, but the robbery isn’t the story and we know it happened but don’t get details or any focus on it.


Dune @ 2021/12/15 14:10:58


Post by: gorgon


If he had poured more effort into the combat descriptions, just imagine what the WELL ACKCHYUALLY crowd would have done with it.


Dune @ 2021/12/15 15:57:34


Post by: Voss


Aash wrote:
The way I see it, warfare and battles etc are important to the story Herbert tells, but critically they aren’t the story he is telling. Not giving much detail on warfare and fighting techniques isn’t a flaw but a deliberate narrative choice that I think strengthens the story he is telling.

In the same way a heist/robbery is important to the story being told in Reservoir Dogs, but the robbery isn’t the story and we know it happened but don’t get details or any focus on it.


Exactly this. Things couldn't played out without the battles happening, but they aren't a part of the story in any meaningful sense and neither are the details.

The Fremen as an army (the Great Jihad) is _entirely_ skipped over between books. Coping with winning matters, seeing how they won does not.


Dune @ 2021/12/16 02:06:41


Post by: sebster


Aash wrote:
The way I see it, warfare and battles etc are important to the story Herbert tells, but critically they aren’t the story he is telling.


Sure, but here's the thing - if you were taking a course on writing fiction and the lecturer told you that your story should tell the story of things that are important to your story, you'd think that was such an obvious truism you'd wonder why you were spending time and money listening to him. Yet here we are, with people actually arguing that not telling the story of the things that are important to the story is a narrative choice.

It isn't. It's a mistake to leave something which is important to the story off the page. Dune is still a fantastic book, of course, but just because something is great and we really like it doesn't mean we have to pretend the fault isn't there.

Voss wrote:
Exactly this. Things couldn't played out without the battles happening, but they aren't a part of the story in any meaningful sense and neither are the details.


The fact the Fremen are great fighters is actually really important, both to the plot and to the themes of the book. Having people say 'Fremen are good fighters' a bunch of times is telling, detailing some of the battles would have been showing, and show don't tell is one of the few rules of writing that everyone agrees on.


Dune @ 2021/12/16 08:37:14


Post by: Aash


 sebster wrote:
Aash wrote:
The way I see it, warfare and battles etc are important to the story Herbert tells, but critically they aren’t the story he is telling.


Sure, but here's the thing - if you were taking a course on writing fiction and the lecturer told you that your story should tell the story of things that are important to your story, you'd think that was such an obvious truism you'd wonder why you were spending time and money listening to him. Yet here we are, with people actually arguing that not telling the story of the things that are important to the story is a narrative choice.

It isn't. It's a mistake to leave something which is important to the story off the page. Dune is still a fantastic book, of course, but just because something is great and we really like it doesn't mean we have to pretend the fault isn't there.

Voss wrote:
Exactly this. Things couldn't played out without the battles happening, but they aren't a part of the story in any meaningful sense and neither are the details.


The fact the Fremen are great fighters is actually really important, both to the plot and to the themes of the book. Having people say 'Fremen are good fighters' a bunch of times is telling, detailing some of the battles would have been showing, and show don't tell is one of the few rules of writing that everyone agrees on.


I don’t dispute “show, don’t tell” as a useful tool in telling stories, and agree that Dune has its faults. Enough so that we don’t need to make up additional ones where they don’t exist. You don’t like a particular aspect of the story, that doesn’t make it “bad writing”. And not focussing on something important to the story is true of every story, otherwise we’d get bogged down in the detail and never tell the story at hand. Various forms of shorthand exist to do just that, signalling to an audience without having to waste word count/screen time on superfluous details.

Again the heist in Reservoir Dogs is a great example of not showing an important detail adjacent to the story at hand.


Dune @ 2021/12/17 02:22:03


Post by: sebster


Aash wrote:

I don’t dispute “show, don’t tell” as a useful tool in telling stories, and agree that Dune has its faults. Enough so that we don’t need to make up additional ones where they don’t exist. You don’t like a particular aspect of the story, that doesn’t make it “bad writing”. And not focussing on something important to the story is true of every story, otherwise we’d get bogged down in the detail and never tell the story at hand. Various forms of shorthand exist to do just that, signalling to an audience without having to waste word count/screen time on superfluous details.


To make your argument, you've started using "important" and "superfluous detail" interchangeably. But the point is if something is important, it isn't a superfluous detail.


Again the heist in Reservoir Dogs is a great example of not showing an important detail adjacent to the story at hand.


The whole idea in Reservoir Dogs is characters descriptions give their POV of the heist & escape. What happened in the heist is a direct focus of the text, it just uses a different technique to add character viewpoint error.


Dune @ 2021/12/17 10:54:06


Post by: Aash


 sebster wrote:
Aash wrote:

I don’t dispute “show, don’t tell” as a useful tool in telling stories, and agree that Dune has its faults. Enough so that we don’t need to make up additional ones where they don’t exist. You don’t like a particular aspect of the story, that doesn’t make it “bad writing”. And not focussing on something important to the story is true of every story, otherwise we’d get bogged down in the detail and never tell the story at hand. Various forms of shorthand exist to do just that, signalling to an audience without having to waste word count/screen time on superfluous details.


To make your argument, you've started using "important" and "superfluous detail" interchangeably. But the point is if something is important, it isn't a superfluous detail.


Again the heist in Reservoir Dogs is a great example of not showing an important detail adjacent to the story at hand.


The whole idea in Reservoir Dogs is characters descriptions give their POV of the heist & escape. What happened in the heist is a direct focus of the text, it just uses a different technique to add character viewpoint error.


The fact that something is important doesn’t mean we need to know the details, sometimes the broad strokes are sufficient as it is important to know that an event happened but the nitty gritty isn’t relevant.

As for reservoir dogs, the details of the heist isn’t a direct focus, the aftermath of the heist is the focus.

It seems we’re going to have to agree to disagree here though since I don’t see either of us convincing each other.


Dune @ 2021/12/17 17:36:36


Post by: BobtheInquisitor


The more (military) fighting we see in Dune, the more issues we need to ignore to suspend disbelief. Frank Herbert’s combat is like Isaac Asimov’s sex scenes: unconvincing and really best left to your imagination.


Dune @ 2021/12/20 20:08:42


Post by: Easy E


 sebster wrote:
So when Leto is showing the state of the harvesting operations and the missing silos, did anyone else think 'you must build additional silos'? Just me?



No, it was not just you. The look of the new Carry-all's/Harvesters also disappointed me a bit.

When I picked up the RPG hardcover book, I was saddened to see they did not have any sly references to House Ordos.


Dune @ 2021/12/21 02:28:32


Post by: chromedog


House Ordos was something made up out of whole cloth for the computer games.
It's not something from the original books.


Dune @ 2021/12/21 16:07:06


Post by: Easy E


 chromedog wrote:
House Ordos was something made up out of whole cloth for the computer games.
It's not something from the original books.


Yes..... and?


Dune @ 2022/01/01 01:09:01


Post by: Mad Doc Grotsnik


Verrrrrrrrrryyyy late to this party.

Whilst I’m a fan of the original film, I’ve never read the book, or indeed the other books in the series.

Rented it off Amazon Prime, and I’m thoroughly enjoying it.

Plot wise there’s far more detail than the Lynch take. That is the joy of the modern age where you can more or less guarantee a sequel unless your box office is disastrous.

Yet. It doesn’t feel overly long. And I’ve noticed more than a few nods to the original, but done in a respectful way.

It’s an absolutely beautiful movie. Whilst it takes its time, it doesn’t outstay any scene’s particular welcome.

My sole criticism is the Baron Harkonnen feeling overly restrained. I prefer the boisterous nutter from the Lynch film.


Dune @ 2022/01/07 04:59:58


Post by: sebster


 chromedog wrote:
House Ordos was something made up out of whole cloth for the computer games.
It's not something from the original books.


Not quite. It was in the Dune Encyclopedia, which predated the Westwood game by around a decade. I don't know a lot, but I know the history around the Encyclopedia is a bit of mess. At the time it was endorsed by Herbert and he wrote the forward, and anything in it that wasn't in the books was meant to come from Herbert's notes. Was that true, and did it include Ordos, or were they just something that was made up by one of the encyclopedia's writers? I don't know, I don't know if anyone knows.

Anyhow, Ordos and a bunch of stuff in the encyclopedia didn't appear in the subsequent novels, and were later declared non-canon when they contradicted stuff in Brian Herbert's books. The encyclopedia got declared non-canon and its just the same old drama about canon that every popular setting has. I don't know, I liked Ordos in the game and don't like the Brian Herbert books, but that doesn't really mean anything to anyone else


Dune @ 2022/01/07 17:30:39


Post by: Frazzled


 Mad Doc Grotsnik wrote:
Verrrrrrrrrryyyy late to this party.

Whilst I’m a fan of the original film, I’ve never read the book, or indeed the other books in the series.

Rented it off Amazon Prime, and I’m thoroughly enjoying it.

Plot wise there’s far more detail than the Lynch take. That is the joy of the modern age where you can more or less guarantee a sequel unless your box office is disastrous.

Yet. It doesn’t feel overly long. And I’ve noticed more than a few nods to the original, but done in a respectful way.

It’s an absolutely beautiful movie. Whilst it takes its time, it doesn’t outstay any scene’s particular welcome.

My sole criticism is the Baron Harkonnen feeling overly restrained. I prefer the boisterous nutter from the Lynch film.


You really really need to watch the sci fi miniseries. The recent film just focuses on Paul's journey and leaves out the politics which are frankly integral to the story and make Dune great. The sci fi mini series captures that, as much as a lower budget version can.
Plus the Baron in that is absolutely badass.
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0142032/



Dune @ 2022/01/07 18:09:57


Post by: BobtheInquisitor


I always feel bad when people recommend the Sci Fi miniseries because I know I’ve seen it—my wife (then girlfriend) and I rented it and watched it with her roommates at the time—and I don’t remember anything about it at all. It left no impression on me.


Dune @ 2022/01/09 15:22:37


Post by: Mad Doc Grotsnik


I did try watching the mini series, but found it convoluted, being solely used to the Lynch movie.

Perhaps these two (in theory) movies will prove the bridge?


Dune @ 2022/01/07 19:13:35


Post by: Tannhauser42


See, I love the Dune miniseries. I've probably watched it at least 50 times as it's one of the things I liked to pop into my computer's Blu-ray drive while working on models over the years.


Dune @ 2022/01/10 04:13:43


Post by: sebster


I did watch (most of) the miniseries, and honestly the biggest impact on me was in realising how much production matters in storytelling. The miniseries is very faithful to the book and covers all the key plot and character elements, but it mostly just looks like small sound stages filled with people dressed in the civilian clothes from early Next Gen Star Trek. I mean, I know that is fine for a lot of people, because lots of people really liked that mini-series, but for me to evoke a world there's gotta be something in the imagery, in the music, in the performances that make me buy in to that world.


Dune @ 2022/01/10 04:21:23


Post by: Voss


 BobtheInquisitor wrote:
I always feel bad when people recommend the Sci Fi miniseries because I know I’ve seen it—my wife (then girlfriend) and I rented it and watched it with her roommates at the time—and I don’t remember anything about it at all. It left no impression on me.


Same. (And for sebster's Next Gen Star Trek clothes comment).
I know it existed, and I was watching the Sci-Fi channel regularly at the time, but... yeah.
I put it in the same bin as the Sci-Fi Jurassic Park knock-offs with Lorenzo Lamas.


Dune @ 2022/01/10 12:48:22


Post by: Mr Morden


 Frazzled wrote:
 Mad Doc Grotsnik wrote:
Verrrrrrrrrryyyy late to this party.

Whilst I’m a fan of the original film, I’ve never read the book, or indeed the other books in the series.

Rented it off Amazon Prime, and I’m thoroughly enjoying it.

Plot wise there’s far more detail than the Lynch take. That is the joy of the modern age where you can more or less guarantee a sequel unless your box office is disastrous.

Yet. It doesn’t feel overly long. And I’ve noticed more than a few nods to the original, but done in a respectful way.

It’s an absolutely beautiful movie. Whilst it takes its time, it doesn’t outstay any scene’s particular welcome.

My sole criticism is the Baron Harkonnen feeling overly restrained. I prefer the boisterous nutter from the Lynch film.


You really really need to watch the sci fi miniseries. The recent film just focuses on Paul's journey and leaves out the politics which are frankly integral to the story and make Dune great. The sci fi mini series captures that, as much as a lower budget version can.
Plus the Baron in that is absolutely badass.
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0142032/


Is that the one with Princess Irulan being much more involved - sad that Virgina Maddeson was not in the film more as her


Dune @ 2022/01/10 14:52:57


Post by: gorgon


 Frazzled wrote:
 Mad Doc Grotsnik wrote:
Verrrrrrrrrryyyy late to this party.

Whilst I’m a fan of the original film, I’ve never read the book, or indeed the other books in the series.

Rented it off Amazon Prime, and I’m thoroughly enjoying it.

Plot wise there’s far more detail than the Lynch take. That is the joy of the modern age where you can more or less guarantee a sequel unless your box office is disastrous.

Yet. It doesn’t feel overly long. And I’ve noticed more than a few nods to the original, but done in a respectful way.

It’s an absolutely beautiful movie. Whilst it takes its time, it doesn’t outstay any scene’s particular welcome.

My sole criticism is the Baron Harkonnen feeling overly restrained. I prefer the boisterous nutter from the Lynch film.


You really really need to watch the sci fi miniseries. The recent film just focuses on Paul's journey and leaves out the politics which are frankly integral to the story and make Dune great. The sci fi mini series captures that, as much as a lower budget version can.
Plus the Baron in that is absolutely badass.
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0142032/



Honestly, just add the banquet scene to the movie and it'd be enough, politics-wise. I'm hoping it ends up on an extended cut at some point. It *may* have been filmed.