My first encounter with Dune was staying up all night to record it off Sci-Fi on VHS. I was just a naive teenager, I didn't know what I was in for. By the time Feyd Rautha showed up I was so tired and confused...
It took many years before I read the books but I'm glad I did, and I'm glad we'll actually get to see Paul's story wrapped up for once.
The Sci-fi channel made a Dune miniseries, and then a Dune Messiah + Children of Dune series. They're really good versions of the story. Better than Villeneuve's in my opinion. It doesn't look nearly as good, obviously, but it's well done. Go into it expecting more of a screen play though, not a blockbuster movie. I highly recommend it.
It's not terrible, but some of the changes were so strange... Using their voices and those weird phaser looking things to attack? "My name is a killing word"? The fuck was that shit?
Love the visual effects of the personal shields though lol
Their voices was because the book had a lot of internal dialogue (so the movie mimicked that). The sound shooting thing was because he didn't want kungfu in space, which I would have liked.
The Dune soundtrack was done by the soft rock band Toto, which was something incomprehensibly weird to me at the time, but makes some sense when you realize that one of the band's members was the son of composer John Williams. It's actually good, standard orchestral music with the exception of the guitar power chord moment you linked to, which actually made me laugh out loud when I saw/heard it in the theater for the first time. Personally, I would have preferred this as the soundtrack; it was created by the band Jade Warrior as an attempt to get the gig for Lynch's movie.
The only part of the movie which made me laugh harder than the guitar was Sting's appearance. Just wildly out of place in a movie that was at least a visual masterpiece. And you can't go wrong with Joergen Prochnow.
A true blow for film fans. Lynch was a visionary that really didn't compromise. Pushed the medium forward. A true artist. People often complain about his approach to storytelling in films but after seeing one of his films they are rarely forgotten or thought of as "just another movie".
I want to cry. He is one of my biggest inspirations, I followed so many things he did. Even the every day weather communications he did relentlessly so years. He is a true creative, his primary artistic activity was painting, not cinematic. We lost one of the latest true art figures. Since art is dead, this is too sad for me. He was truly original almost to perfection, and a genius. A lovely personality.
just this past year i watched eraserhead so i could watch elephant man so i could watch twin peaks so i could watch twin peaks fire walk with me so i could watch twin peaks the return. and now he's dead.
damn.
guess i gotta watch blue velvet so i can watch mulholland drive.
You can watch Lost Highway whenever you want to see Bill Pullman play sax and enter the void. Also there is a little obscure thing called Showgirls redux - someone reedited the whole Showgirls movie to soundracks from Lynch's movies, it is incredible:
https://vimeo.com/499554519?share=copy