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  1. ADMIN MOD. The Dune '21 soundtrack has an homage to the '84 version! Dune (1984) For those of you who are able to listen to the '21 soundtrack, put on the track "Stillsuits". In the second half the main theme from the soundtrack by Toto is clearly stated. The first time i noticed this gave me goosebumps and put a smile on my face.

    • 10 The Unforgettable Soundtrack by Toto
    • 9 It Told A (Mostly) Complete Story in One Sitting
    • 8 Its Pacing Is More Accessible Than The 2021 Version
    • 7 Its Art Design Was More Alien & Bizarre
    • 6 Its Characters Were More Iconic & Memorable
    • 5 Its Characters Felt More Human & Realized
    • 4 The Fremen Were Actually A Part of The Plot
    • 3 The Harkonnens' Presence Was Better Felt in 1984
    • 2 Paul Atreides Had More Agency
    • 1 It Wasn't Afraid to Get Surreal & Weird

    One of the first Dune's weirdest creative decisionswas getting rock band Toto to score it. Even if they did create the legendary song "Africa," they're the last band anyone would associate with the deserts of Arrakis. Nowhere is this more evident in the closing cast montage, which had the ballad "Take My Hand" playing over it. But as jarring as the...

    One of the best and worst things about Lynch's Dune is how it condensed the generations-spanning book into one movie. While this led to character arcs getting abruptly cut (such as Duncan Idaho's) and years' worth of story being rushed through, Lynch's Dune is still a mostly coherent movie with a clear beginning, middle, and resolution. In contrast...

    Since it was directed by Villeneuve of Incendies fame, the first chapter of his two-part Dune is unsurprisingly deliberate and slow in its pacing. That said, it's slow even by his standards. Clocking in at two hours and thirty five minutes, Villeneuve's Dune took its time setting up what's essentially the prologue to Paul's forthcoming saga. Contra...

    If there's one thing Lynch's Dune can't be faulted for, it's the production design. This was seen in distinctly Lynchian creative choices like the Eraserhead-esque Guild Navigator, its look at the Atreides' heightened opulence, and the disgusting Harkonnens. That said, it's hard not see Villeneuve's desaturated Dune as a direct rebuttal to Lynch's ...

    More than anything, Dune is a deconstruction of the messianic hero's journey, and its characters are proof of this. If anyone adapted them as faithfully as possible, they'd feel flat because they're more deconstructions of literary archetypes than fleshed-out people. Both Dunes faced this challenge, but Lynch's take won out— even if it was somewhat...

    Both Dunes— neither of which are especially faithful to the books, to be fair—boasted powerhouse casts, but Lynch did a better job at maximizing his stars. Not only were characters like Feyd-Rautha or the Lady Jessica more memorable thanks to the aforementioned exaggerations, but they were allowed to cross paths, making their final reunions and cla...

    The bitter irony of the Dune movies is that even if they're set on the Fremens' colonized home planet, the race is treated as little more than a plot device. This is a problem that afflicted both movies, but Lynch's Fremen had it better than Villeneuve's thanks to the simple fact that Lynch completed their story instead of leaving it hanging. In a ...

    Despite their limited screen time and only confronting Paul near the end, the Harkonnens are Dune's most well-known antagonists. Before that point, the Baron Harkonnen and his nephews schemed with the emperor while ruling over House Atreides' ruins. Both movies' Harkonnens did the same things, but their Lynchian incarnations made the better impress...

    A major drawback of Villeneuve's Dune getting split into two was that Paul's central arc of coming to terms with his supposed godhood was left hanging at the end of Part One. Because of this, Paul's identity crisis and confusion took up an entire movie, leaving him with little to no agency and motive as he's dragged from one predestined scenario to...

    What makes Dune iconic, revered, and intimidating all at once isn't its dense history and text, but its esoteric side. The Spice alone is the perfect summation of this since it's both fuel and the hallucinogenic bridge between the physical mind and the cosmos. It's no wonder its adaptations attracted surrealists like Lynch and Alejandro Jodorowsky....

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  2. Oct 13, 2023 · Released in 1984 by Polydor, the Dune soundtrack album was, according to the band, not a bestseller. The label reissued the soundtrack on CD in 1997 with previously unreleased cues.

  3. What the 1984 version does best is capture just how thrillingly bizarre Dune can be. The vision sequences are like psychedelic visuals from a prog rock video. The dialogue can be otherworldly. The voiceover gives the sense that everybody's saying one thing and doing another. The music is part 80's television intro and part ethereal, third-eye ...

  4. Oct 23, 2021 · Spoiler alert! The following contains light spoilers for the new "Dune" so beware if you want to go in cold. At the risk of angering the sisterhood of the Bene Gesserit and at least two or three ...

    • 3 min
    • Brian Truitt
  5. Feb 16, 2024 · Summary. Dune 1984 vs. 2021: Different depictions of Baron Harkonnen and Emperor - 2021 version focuses on subtlety and intelligence, while 1984 version is more grotesque and includes more exposition. Different designs of sandworms - 1984 version has flower-like mouths, while 2021 version has round tunnels with sharp teeth.

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  7. Mar 3, 2024 · Kyle MacLachlan as Paul Atreides, and Everett McGill as Stilgar, in DUNE (1984) “A person needs new experiences. They jar something deep inside, allowing him to grow. Without change, something sleeps inside us, and seldom awakens. The sleeper must awaken.”. It was a valiant attempt. That’s the phrase that kept running through my mind over ...