Dune (film)
From Open Encyclopedia
| Dune | |
|---|---|
| Image:Dune Cover front.jpg {{{caption|}}} | |
| Directed by | David Lynch |
| Produced by | Raffaella De Laurentiis |
| Written by | Frank Herbert (novel) David Lynch |
| Starring | Kyle MacLachlan Francesca Annis |
| Music by | |
| Cinematography | {{{cinematography}}} |
| Editing by | {{{editing}}} |
| Distributed by | Universal Pictures |
| Released | December 14, 1984 (premiere) |
| Running time | 137 min. |
| Language | English |
| Budget | $45,000,000 (estimated) |
| Preceded by | {{{preceded_by}}} |
| Followed by | {{{followed_by}}} |
| IMDb profile | |
| {{{footnotes|}}} | |
Dune is a 1984 movie directed by David Lynch and based on the 1964 Frank Herbert novel of the same name. The film starred Kyle MacLachlan as the main character, Paul Atreides, and included an ensemble of well-known American, Latin American and European actors in the supporting roles, including Sting, Jose Ferrer, Virginia Madsen, Linda Hunt, Patrick Stewart, Max von Sydow, and Jürgen Prochnow, among others. This movie was filmed at the Churubusco Studios in Mexico.
Although it became an enormous cult favorite, the film cost $42 million to produce and had a domestic gross of only $27.4 million. It was also criticized by Herbert fans who objected to the director's liberal departure from the novel's storyline.
Contents |
Main cast
(in credited order)
- Francesca Annis .... Lady Jessica
- Leonardo Cimino .... The Baron's Doctor
- Brad Dourif .... Piter De Vries
- José Ferrer .... Padishah Emperor Shaddam IV
- Linda Hunt .... Shadout Mapes
- Freddie Jones .... Thufir Hawat
- Richard Jordan .... Duncan Idaho
- Kyle MacLachlan .... Paul Usul Muad'Dib Atreides
- Virginia Madsen .... Princess Irulan
- Silvana Mangano .... Rev. Mother Ramallo
- Everett McGill .... Stilgar
- Kenneth McMillan .... Baron Vladimir Harkonnen
- Jack Nance .... Captain Iakin Nefud
- Siân Phillips .... Reverand Mother Gaius Helen Mohiam
- Angélica Aragón .... Bene Gesserit Sister
- Jürgen Prochnow .... Duke Leto Atreides
- Paul L. Smith .... The Beast Rabban (as Paul Smith)
- Patrick Stewart .... Gurney Halleck
- Sting .... Feyd-Rautha
- Dean Stockwell .... Dr. Wellington Yueh
- Max von Sydow .... Dr. Kynes
- Alicia Witt .... Alia (as Alicia Roanne Witt)
- Sean Young .... Chani
- Danny Corkill
- Honorato Magaloni .... Otheym (as Honorato Magalone)
- Judd Omen .... Jamis
- Molly Wryn .... Harah
Adaptation
Shot almost entirely in Mexico, the movie is an adaptation of the first part of a series of novels (see Dune (novel)), by Frank Herbert, containing elements from the later parts. The major plot concerned a young man foretold in prophecy as the Kwisatz Haderach who will save a desert planet from the evil House Harkonnen.
David Lynch originally wanted to create a much longer movie; his 135 page screenplay resulted in a 4-5 hour long movie. During post production, though, producer Dino De Laurentiis did not want to risk releasing a 40 million dollar movie that was three hours long, so he had David Lynch cut the film down to 137 minutes.
Frank Herbert saw both versions. He liked the longer one a great deal and disowned the shorter one.
In 1975 Alejandro Jodorowsky tried to film the story as a ten hours feature with collaboration from Orson Welles, Salvador Dalí, Gloria Swanson, H. R. Giger and others. The music would have been done by Pink Floyd, but the project was never finished. Some preparations were later used in the Alien films.
Box office
This film wasn't the blockbuster science fiction film the filmmakers had hoped, grossing only $27.4 million in its domestic run off an estimated $42 million budget. This might have been due to the complexity of the story and its already excessive length.
Departures from the novel
The film makes numerous departures from the novel, including the following.
- In the novel, the "Weirding Way", properly termed "prana-bindu training", is a super-martial art form that allows an adept like Paul Atreides to move with lightning speed. The Lynch movie replaces this with "weirding modules" (essentially, sonic guns) that amplify the user's shouts into a destructive force. This change literalizes a moment in the novel in which Paul says his name has become a death-prayer because the Fremen shout "Muad'dib!" before killing an opponent. In the movie, the Fremen actually destroy their enemies by shouting his name, leading Paul to make the remark "my name has become a killing word".
- The character of Feyd-Rautha Harkonnen is diminished so that he contributes less to the story, even in the climactic scene. In the novel, Paul and Feyd get into a dramatic knife-fight. In the movie, there is little fighting in the climax and Feyd is overcome extremely quickly.
- The movie ends with Paul commanding rain to fall on Arrakis. In the novel, this is accomplished through years of terraforming, and it does not rain for decades after Paul ascends the throne. This is because there is nothing mystical about Paul's powers; he is the product of genetic breeding and training, and could not possibly command the sky to rain on Dune.
- In the novel, the final line, spoken by Jessica to Chani, is "Those of us who bear the name of concubine, history will remember as wives" (in reference to Paul's marriage to and refusal of Irulan). In the movie, the final line (spoken by Alia) is "He is the Kwisatz Haderach!" (despite the fact that, in the book, Paul states that ultimately he is not the Kwisatz Haderach, but something wholly unexpected because he was born a generation earlier than planned).
Cult success and revisions
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Despite the original complaints by some disgruntled Herbert fans, the movie has become an enormous cult favorite of which at least three different versions have been released:
- The original theatrical version (137 minutes)--This version is the only director-approved and authorized version. It has been widely found on videocassette and DVD.
- The Alan Smithee Version (approx. 190 minutes)--The less-seen 3 hour "Alan Smithee" version is a cult classic on its own. Prepared originally for syndicated television (and later seen on basic cable networks), it has just been released into some markets (including Canada and Europe) on DVD. The missing footage includes a painted montage at the prologue, and some scenes added back into the mix, including the "little-maker" essence-of-spice scene. The TV version was edited almost haphazardly (for example, certain shots were repeated throughout the film to give the impression that footage had been added). Lynch objected to these edits and had his name removed from the credits of the TV print (his name remains on the theatrical print as it is the only version authorized by the director). Evidence for further scenes missing from this edition can still be found: Thufir Hawat is visible at the back during the throneroom finale, but later he is gone. One booklet even contains a photo of his final moments with Paul, even though the scene itself was never integrated into any version of the movie. This scene is shown in the the "Deleted Dune" featurette found in the special features of the 2006 Extended Edition DVD Release.
- The Channel 2 Version (approx. 180 minutes)--KTVU, a San Francisco, CA Fox affiliate, pieced together a hybrid edit of the two previous versions for broadcast in the San Francisco Bay Area in 1992. It is essentially the TV version with all the violence of the theatrical version reincorporated into the film proper.
An Extended Edition was released by Universal Home Entertainment in the U.S. on DVD on January 31, 2006. It contains both Lynch's 137-minute theatrical cut and a 177-minute edit of the Alan Smithee TV version (the latter being presented for the first time in its original Todd-AO aspect ratio). It also features a documentary on the design and special effects, and a separate supplementary section of outtakes and scenes not included in any previous version of the film, including an alternate ending.
Also, a DVD Extended Edition version was released in Europe in November, 2005. It includes, amongst other extras, an extended version of the film, credited to Alan Smithee, which is 177 minutes long. The booklet explains this version was created for an American TV channel, and is probably the aforementioned Channel 2 Version. Neither the video nor the audio is remastered, exhibiting a poor TV-like quality. Despite the fact that the cover states that it is a mono soundtrack, it is, in fact, in stereo.
The British Observer newspaper gave away free copies of the Dune DVD on January 22nd, 2006. It contains no special features.
Influence
The film inspired a praised series of video games, by Cryo Interactive and Westwood games, including Dune 2000 and Emperor: Battle for Dune, which featured live actors (including John Rhys-Davies as the Atreides mentat, and in its sequel, Michael Dorn as Atreides Duke Achillus), in cut-scenes. The ground-breaking games were obviously inspired by, and are faithful to, the Lynch movie. It was also recently remade as a three part miniseries for the Sci-Fi Channel and later released on video/DVD.
See also: Category:Dune
Other Topics
List of fiction inspired by Dune
External links
- Dune at All Movie Guide
- {{{2|{{{title|Dune (film)}}}}}} at The Internet Movie Database
- Dune DVD Review at Digital Monkey Boxde:Der Wüstenplanet (Film)
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