Everything worked out last Saturday and I was able to go see Dune Part 2 in IMAX. By necessity, all I had time for the drive, movie, and drive home, which was just as well. The previous Saturday the weather was gorgeous, and I was afraid that if it was that nice again I’d feel guilty about sitting in a movie theater for three hours. Fortunately(?) it was a really crummy day. While my two hour round trip was gloomy, what I saw on the movie screen was nothing short of stunning.
Sunday morning I weighed myself and saw the lowest number I've seen in years. I think going to Dune left my dehyrated.
As I mentioned in my Wednesday post, I went in looking for three things. I wanted to see if the craftsmanship holds up to Part 1, and overall it does. Yes it's top-heavy, lingering so long in the first two acts as to steal time from the third. I didn't mind the slower place, as I was anticipating an epic battle at the end. Knowing that it's a little less than I'd hoped for may try my patience on future viewings. At the same time, I'm hard pressed to think of anything early on that feels superfluous.
Bring your attention span, if nothing else.
While the previous movie opens with some big, awe inspiring visuals, Part 2 wants to be more intimate. There were too many closeups and two-shots for my liking, when I’d come to IMAX for the size and scale of this world. Eventually, things do get BIG, and the computer generated visuals look very real (a little unnerving when it also looks like alien Nazi propaganda feel reels). And the sound design!
I was shaking in my seat.
The cast has received a lot of attention. Timothée Chalamet does an admirable job of conveying both sides of Paul as he moves from reluctant heir, to freedom fighter, to dark messiah. This is a “Frodo takes the One Ring” story, and you can see when he channels the darkness. I wouldn't follow the skinny, little twerp into battle. But I can see why others would. Most people don’t seem to like Zendaya as Chani, but I think she’s fine for the part. Making her skeptical of Paul may be a problem for the book purists. Her function here, though, is as the POV character for the audience.
Closing the film with her in the final shot is appropriate, because we need to leave feeling what she’s feeling.
Which leads us to another thing I was looking for: the message. As I understand it, Herbert wanted to warn readers against following charismatic leaders. JFK never should have been seen as a savior, and the cult of personality always leads to bad ends. Given that up to that point the science fiction genre was filled with Christ figures like John Carter (notice the initials) it’s easy to see why people have cheered Dune’s Paul, when really he’s a tragic figure.
Herbert didn’t like that readers missed the point of his book. No one will miss the same point in the movie, thanks largely to the changes to Chani’s character.
So how do the Dune films compare to other film epics, and will they endure? No. No, I don’t believe it will. Tolkien famously disliked Dune, for reasons he never cared to share, and thematically the film adaptation is true to the novel. The Lord of the Rings is an heroic epic, while Dune is a classic tragedy. In the former, good overcomes evil. In the latter, evil is shown to be inevitable. Tolkien believed in one true savior. Herbert did not. In our heart of hearts, we long to believe in something grander than ourselves. Even if general audiences don’t think deeply about what they see on the screen, they can feel the difference.
By nature we’re drawn to eucatastrophe, the term Tolkien coined for the moment a hero is permanently and wholly saved from doom.
Dune only offers doom.
That doesn’t mean that the story or the film is to be avoided. We can reasonably consider the points it makes and appreciate the skill with which they’re made. I’ll gladly watch the movies again. But the world looks dark and I’m feeling hopeless, I’ll return to The Lord of the Rings, or Ben-Hur, Braveheart, or The Ten Commandments.
And I know I won’t be alone.