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Dune

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posted on 2024-10-31, 22:10 authored by Christian McCreaChristian McCrea
David Lynch’s Dune (1984) is the film that science fiction―and the director’s most ardent fans―can neither forgive nor forget. Frank Herbert’s original 1965 novel built a meticulous universe of dark majesty and justice, as wild-eyed freedom fighters and relentless authoritarians all struggled for control of the desert planet Arrakis and its mystical, life-extending “spice.” After several attempts to produce a film, Italian movie mogul Dino De Laurentiis and his producer daughter Raffaella would enlist David Lynch, whose Eraserhead (1977) and The Elephant Man (1980) had already marked him out as a visionary director. What emerges out of their strange, long process is a deeply unique vision of the distant future; an eclectic bazaar of wood-turned spaceship interiors, spitting tyrants, and dream montages. Lynch’s film was “steeped in an ancient primordial nastiness that has nothing to do with the sci-fi film as we currently know it,” as Village Voice critic J. Hoberman put it―only with time becoming a cult classic. This book is the first long-form critical study of the film; it delves into the relationship with the novel, the rapidly changing context of early 1980s science fiction, and takes a close look at Lynch’s attempt to breathe sincerity and mysticism into a blockbuster movie format that was shifting radically around him.

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Related Materials

  1. 1.
    ISBN - Is published in 9781911325826 (urn:isbn:9781911325826)

Total pages

214

Publisher

Auteur

Place published

United Kingdom

Language

English

Copyright

© Auteur 2019

Former Identifier

2006089047

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2019-07-17

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