The Response to Dune: Part 2 Is Less About the Movie and More About Current Hollywood’s Problems

Warning: This article contains full spoilers for Dune: Part 2.

Science-fiction nerds and IMAX enthusiasts rejoice, because Denis Villeneuveā€™s Dune: Part 2 (review) has already made big waves on its opening weekend, securing a CinemaScore grade of A, a 93% fresh rating on Rotten Tomatoes, and pulling in a global total of $178.5 million ā€“ a massive jump over its predecessorā€™s opening weekend gross. In fact, thatā€™s nearly half of what the first film made in its entire run. With numbers like these and excellent reviews, it looks like Warner Bros. has a breakout sequel on its hands, and the chances of a third film happening in Villeneuveā€™s proposed trilogy ā€“ adapting the second book in Frank Herbertā€™s seminal sci-fi series, Dune Messiah ā€“ appear to be brighter than ever.

But amidst all the accolades, thereā€™s a gnawing sense that whatever flaws Dune: Part 2 may possess, theyā€™re being completely ignored in favor of many film fans already proclaiming it as one of the greatest science-fiction movies of all time, and potentially as a savior of cinema. Setting aside the irony of the movie receiving this kind of unquestioned adulation when itā€™s about a genetically engineered and ultimately false prophet who uses a peopleā€™s faith in him to wage a holy war on the rest of the universe, I canā€™t help but feel that the extreme response to Dune is only partly because of the film itself and the people who made it.

At a moment where hostility from filmgoers towards the deluge of corporate, micromanaged tentpoles is at an all-time high, Duneā€™s arrival as a massive-scale blockbuster project with a genuine directorial vision must have felt like the second coming. How did this happen? Letā€™s take a look.

We Used to Be a Real CountryIt may be hard to remember sometimes, but there was a world before cinematic universes, legacy sequels and live-action remakes were all the rage. Studio blockbusters have been an important part of the movie business for several decades, but the 21st century trends popularized by the Marvel Cinematic Universe, the Star Wars sequel trilogy, and Disneyā€™s insistence on remaking most of their animated classics in live-action really only cemented their dominance of the movie business over the past 10 years and change. During this period, thereā€™s been an increasing sense that many of our biggest movies are no longer under the jurisdiction of their directors, instead being mostly the creation of cadres of studio executives trying to brute force focus-tested, franchise-friendly blockbusters to the top of the box office charts.

Now, this is admittedly an oversimplification that isnā€™t entirely fair to the many hard-working creatives doing their best in such a taxing industry. Studio interference has existed as long as thereā€™s been movie studios, and thereā€™s nothing wrong with being a director for hire. But the general feeling that the last 10-to-15 years of big-budget filmmaking has pushed further and further into the realm of regurgitated IPs and anonymous direction didnā€™t come out of a vacuum. Even looking back as recently as the 2000s, blockbusters often had a genuine directorial sensibility that is nowhere near as prevalent in contemporary film. Consider Peter Jacksonā€™s Lord of the Rings, Sam Raimiā€™s Spider-Man, Gore Verbinskiā€™s Pirates of the Caribbean, the Wachowskisā€™ Matrix sequels, and even George Lucasā€™ Star Wars prequel trilogy. However you feel about the final products, these were all massive studio productions that are as sincere and idiosyncratic as the directors who helmed them.

Dune 2 arrived at precisely the right moment to signal that blockbusters that feel specific and authored still have a chance to flourish in the theatrical space.

Between IPs becoming more important than artists, the COVID-19 pandemic imperiling the theatrical experience, and rising anxiety among creatives about the role generative AI will play in the future of Hollywood, the people who love movies and the people who make them have been in desperate need of a win. The Barbenheimer phenomenon was a shot in the arm for theaters and filmgoers, but there was also a worry that the (at the time) ongoing WGA and SAG-AFTRA strikes would stifle any momentum the surprise double feature brought to the business. As we slowly head back to normal in 2024, the health of studio filmmaking as once impervious franchises like the MCU and Star Wars suffer serious declines was a major question hanging over the air, and Dune: Part 2 arrived at precisely the right moment to signal to a worried moviegoing public that big-scale blockbusters that feel specific and authored still have a chance to flourish in the theatrical space.

Thatā€™s a good thing, but has it also squashed out any acknowledgment of what doesnā€™t work about the movie from the conversation? Unfortunately, it seems so.

Dune: How the Movies Have Depicted the Iconic Stillsuit CostumeDissenters of DuneI was one of the few people who didnā€™t connect with the first part of Villeneuveā€™s magnum opus, largely down to that film not having much of anything happen in it. As beautiful as the production design, costumes and cinematography were, the actual plot conveyed felt roughly like the first act of Paulā€™s journey. So much of the runtime acted as setup for the sequel to come instead of clarifying any meaning that installment had as an individual film. This is why Dune 2 is an improvement, feeling far more focused and eventful because Denis actually adapts the rest of the book and brings this part of the journey to its natural conclusion. However, many of the creative choices beyond mere structure that plagued the first film carry forward into its sequel, leaving a gorgeous adaptation that is massive in scope but lacking in emotional depth.

As incredible as Villeneuveā€™s Arrakis is as a technical achievement, itā€™s also as bereft of life as the desert of the filmā€™s title. Because almost every scene has been designed to be an epic moment, there is little to no sense of what normalcy is for any of the people or cultures represented. What status quo for the Fremen is Paul Atreides disrupting by accepting his place as the Lisan al Gaib? What is the functional difference between House Atreides and House Harkonnen when they both share the same brutalist architecture and technology? How exactly do the Bene Gesserit operate and what makes Lady Jessica different enough from the others that sheā€™s seen as a traitor to her own people when sheā€™s acting exactly the same way as them? These and many other dramatic questions are unanswered by the film, and saying thereā€™s clarification in the novel only further illustrates one of the major sticking points.

Even though the two movies put together total around five hours of screen time, they alternately ignore or refuse to explain many of the thornier and more esoteric aspects of the Dune mythology. Fellow IGN contributor Siddhant Adlakha has delved into the ways Dune: Part 2 scrubbed much of the intentional Islamic influence from Herbertā€™s text, such as never calling Paulā€™s war a ā€œjihad,ā€ and replacing the Arabic words used by the Fremen in the novel with a new fictional language. This is exactly the sort of cultural specificity that could help the Fremen resonate as a society worth investing in, but itā€™s been all but excised in the film. If you wanted to know more about what it means for Anya Taylor-Joyā€™s character Alia to be ā€œpre-bornā€ or how that works, why the weirding way and its associated Prana-bindu training were barely touched on, what an ā€œAbominationā€ even is, or more details about the political factions or religious themes that make up the very foundation of the Dune universe, these movies canā€™t really help you.

Thatā€™s not even getting into the fuzzy character work, which struggles to make Paulā€™s internal journey track in any meaningful way. Although the movie makes the (correct) choice to be upfront about how Paul leading the Fremen on a galactic conquest is a tragic development and most definitely not about their liberation, him spending so much time not even being tempted by his dark destiny before the Water of Life scene makes his transformation ring insincere. Paul going from ā€œI must do everything in my power to avoid my visionsā€ to ā€œI will bathe the universe in the blood of my enemiesā€ in only a few minutes of screen time is a mind-boggling decision that saps a lot of the drama from what is the pivotal character turn of the entire story. Add in a romance that doesnā€™t convince and villains that the movie doesnā€™t even try to elevate above their flat depictions in the text (Austin Butlerā€™s Feyd-Rauthaā€™s two traits are ā€œhas knivesā€ and ā€œlooks madā€), and you have a Dune movie that adapts Herbertā€™s book to mixed results.

But does that really matter when itā€™s accomplished a different mission: giving us more hope for the future of movies?

This Is How Itā€™s Supposed to BeWhatever issues I or anyone else may have with how Villeneuve executed his Dune films (and I still like Part 2 even with its faults), what is abundantly clear is that Duneā€™s strengths and weaknesses are largely on the directorā€™s shoulders, not the studioā€™s. Although producers and collaborators undoubtedly had input on the finished product, the films as they exist feel akin to the previously mentioned blockbusters of the early 2000s, ones that breathe and bleed with the quirks and hangups of their directors. At no point during either film did I feel like I was watching anything less than Denis Villeneuveā€™s Dune, and that is precisely the paradigm on which movies of all shapes and sizes should be based. Filmmaking is an art form, and what makes art valuable is that it reflects the artists who make it.

At no point did I feel like I was watching anything less than Denis Villeneuveā€™s Dune, and that is precisely the paradigm on which movies should be based.

In a world where not everyone in the movie business seems to share that sentiment, perhaps itā€™s okay that Dune provides an imperfect rebuttal to the corporate mindset thatā€™s been strangling Hollywood for far too long. In the past few years, weā€™ve seen audiences embrace big-budget films that actually feel directed, like Joseph Kosinskiā€™s Top Gun: Maverick, James Cameronā€™s Avatar: The Way of Water, Greta Gerwigā€™s Barbie, and Christopher Nolanā€™s Oppenheimer. If Denis Villeneuveā€™s Dune continues this trend, perhaps the powers that be will finally start to clue in that they should abandon their attempts at cookie-cutter tentpoles and let visionary artists back at the steering wheel. After all, itā€™s far more rewarding to evaluate a movie based on the merits of a directorā€™s creative choices than on the unfortunate fact of them having no creativity whatsoever.

Carlos Morales writes novels, articles and Mass Effect essays. You can follow his fixations on Twitter.

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