Though I am yet to watch the part 2 but this video makes it even more intriguing. Its amazing to see how a lot of the stories written in this era were a disotopian projection of things happening in the real world. 🙏 Thanks for sharing this.
Gorgeous imagery aside, Dune is storytelling at its finest. The world building in the film is another level - it’s participatory - almost tangible, you can feel and sense everything that’s going on - it’s more visual than verbal - that’s where Dune wins for me. Great breakdown!
One of the few films that matches the level of the book. In the hands of a lesser director, a lot of the nuanced detailing of the novel would have been lost. Although BR still tops my list in his filmography. And Arrival, what a masterpiece that was.
Thanks for this! What an absolute piece of beauty this was and so well-detailed, besides the fact that it was so remarkably adapted. Denis Villeneuve, take a bow!
The sequel of Dune nevertheless lagged behind the first movie, which was released in 2021 in it's objective and has explained and convinced the audience with utmost clarity. The audience was perceptibly carried away by the emotional turbulence on seeing the betrayal to the woman whom Paul loved from the bottom of his heart.
Though I am yet to watch the part 2 but this video makes it even more intriguing. Its amazing to see how a lot of the stories written in this era were a disotopian projection of things happening in the real world. 🙏 Thanks for sharing this.
Gorgeous imagery aside, Dune is storytelling at its finest. The world building in the film is another level - it’s participatory - almost tangible, you can feel and sense everything that’s going on - it’s more visual than verbal - that’s where Dune wins for me.
Great breakdown!
One of the few films that matches the level of the book. In the hands of a lesser director, a lot of the nuanced detailing of the novel would have been lost. Although BR still tops my list in his filmography. And Arrival, what a masterpiece that was.
Thanks for this! What an absolute piece of beauty this was and so well-detailed, besides the fact that it was so remarkably adapted. Denis Villeneuve, take a bow!
They need to spin off a Dune series or movie where Dune meets Avatar in Jurassic Park
The sequel of Dune nevertheless lagged behind the first movie, which was released in 2021 in it's objective and has explained and convinced the audience with utmost clarity. The audience was perceptibly carried away by the emotional turbulence on seeing the betrayal to the woman whom Paul loved from the bottom of his heart.
You’re an idiot. Why would you spoil it