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    Frank Herbert's Dune (Sci-Fi TV Miniseries) (Special Edition Director's Cut) (3-Disc DVD Set)

    Frank Herbert's Dune (Sci-Fi TV Miniseries) (Special Edition Director's Cut) (3-Disc DVD Set)Director: John Harrison
    Actors: William Hurt, Alec Newman, Giancarlo Giannini, Uwe Ochsenknecht, Saskia Reeves
    Studio: Artisan Home Entertainment
    Category: DVD

    List Price: $14.98
    Buy Used: $4.91
    as of 2/9/2010 02:43 EST details
    You Save: $10.07 (67%)



    New (19) Used (39) from $4.91

    Seller: Chela Books
    Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 556 reviews
    Sales Rank: 3781

    Format: Anamorphic, Box set, Closed-captioned, Color, Director's Cut, Dolby, DTS Surround Sound, DVD, Special Edition, Widescreen, NTSC
    Languages: English (Original Language), English (Unknown)
    Rating: Unrated
    Region: 1
    Aspect Ratio: 1.77:1
    Number Of Discs: 3
    Running Time: 265 Minutes
    Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3
    Dimensions (in): 7.4 x 5.4 x 0.8

    MPN: D18478D
    UPC: 012236125297
    EAN: 0012236125297
    ASIN: B0000639EV

    Theatrical Release Date: December 3, 2000
    Release Date: June 11, 2002
    Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

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    Editorial Reviews:

    Product Description
    Movie DVD

    Amazon.com
    It's a mixed blessing, but Frank Herbert's Dune goes a long way toward satisfying science fiction purists who scoffed at David Lynch's previous attempt to adapt Herbert's epic narrative. Ironically, director John Harrison's 288-minute TV miniseries (broadcast on the Sci-Fi Channel in December 2000) offers its own share of strengths and weaknesses, which, in retrospect, emphasize the quality of Lynch's film while treating Herbert's novel with more comprehensive authority. Debate will continue as to which film is better; Lynch's extensive use of internal monologue now seems like a challenge well met, and Harrison's more conventional approach is better equipped to convey the epic scope of Herbert's interplanetary political intrigue.

    This much is certain: this Dune is a sumptuous treat for the eyes, with sets and costumes that were conceived with no apparent limits of budget or creativity. In terms of architecture alone, this is one of the most impressive films in science fiction history. And although the special effects fall short of feature-film quality, writer-director Harrison (who rose from an extensive background in TV) admirably tames the sprawling narrative that pits the opposing houses of Atreides and Harkonnen in a struggle to control the lucrative market for the spice melange. This is as accurate as any Dune adaptation is likely to get (i.e., there's no need for another attempt), and even then, it can be tricky to keep track of who's doing what to whom. Unfortunately, the film's biggest flaws are the casting of a nearly comatose William Hurt as Duke Leto, and a wooden Alec Newman as the messiah-to-be, Paul Atreides. These are regrettable shortcomings, but this Dune remains altogether respectable. That Frank Herbert would be impressed is perhaps the biggest compliment one can pay. --Jeff Shannon


    Customer Reviews:
    Showing reviews 1-5 of 556
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    5 out of 5 stars A very lyrical telling of part of the saga   December 29, 2009
    Pook La Roux
    I still remember what a letdown the Lynch movie was when I saw it at the theater, and I was a teenage kid with teenage crushes on both Sting and Kyle MacLaughlan. I really didn't like the Lynch movie, it captured none of the magic that I found in the books. The Miniseries brought it all back to me. I agree there are small issues here and there with costuming, and maybe some casting, but it really tells the tale. I appreciate the theatrical lighting (and perhaps I can also therefore forgive the tacky theatrical costuming) If you never had the patience to read the book, this will definitely get you to the heart of a great story. I saw it on cable, bought it as a VHS tape, and then rebought this as the DVD set. So, yes, I really like this.


    2 out of 5 stars 'He's the criss cross casserole!' 'He's the WHAT?'   December 24, 2009
    Jessica Cluess (Los Angeles)
    1 out of 1 found this review helpful

    Let me start off by putting this into perspective: I read the original Frank Herbert novel, and I greatly enjoyed it. I agree that the David Lynch movie was a mess, but it was a thoroughly entertaining mess. When I heard that there was a six hour miniseries out there that paid scrupulous attention to the book, I was excited. I wanted another interpretation of the story, and a big epic miniseries would do the trick.

    I had a few serious, serious problems though. Namely, these: the special effects are straight from the dime store, and the costumes occasionally verge into being outright absurd. Alec Newman created, in my opinion, a thoroughly dislikable and unrelatable Paul Atreides, and to be honest I didn't like too many characters in this version. It was all a bit rushed, and even with knowledge of the book I almost got lost. And the filmmakers chose to enhance the storyline of Irulan in such a way that left me with a bad taste in my mouth at the end.

    First, the effects. I don't quite know how to be diplomatic about this, so here goes: it looks like something a fourteen year old whiz kid geek put together with no budget and his father's computer. The sand dunes of Arrakis look like a video game, as do the giant sandworms. These are supposed to be terrifying, wondrous monsters, and that's not how they come across. At best, they look like a Super Mario Bros monster, at worst they look like a scabby...well...part of the male anatomy. With teeth. Seriously, I just about lost it. Must be seen to be believed. Not sure I recommend you do that. Also, the matte painting backgrounds of the desert...look like matte painting backgrounds of the desert. If you wanted a planet entirely made up of matte painting backgrounds of the desert, this would be the place for you.

    Costumes are generally okay, really, just a few awkward pieces. I'm sure Irulan's butterfly dress looked great on paper. In reality, however, it's a different story. The Fremen still suits, I have to say, look MUCH MUCH better in this version than they did in the David Lynch one. These look like direct fashion descendents of the Arabs, a good choice. Lynch's looked like a puffy body suit with a Groucho Marx mustache as a breathing tube.

    As for acting, I was pretty sure William Hurt was just going to phone it in for a paycheck, so I was pleasantly surprised when he made an effort. He didn't go all `I am acting' here either, and that's a good choice. His Leto was relatable, noble and interesting. I also have to say that the actress who played Jessica was TERRIFIC. She was both poised and restrained and emotional and vulnerable. Then again, I'm pretty sure that Jessica is the most overall interesting character in the Dune story.

    Unfortunately, we have to get to their progeny now, and he's the weakest link. I'm not sure what else Newman's done. He's an attractive man, and I got the feeling while watching him that he's a good actor in other things. I'm really not sure why this character failed on so many levels. I've come to the conclusion that the writers, the director and the actor must all accept some share of blame. In other words, no one person screwed this all up. It was a team effort.

    Now don't get me wrong, I appreciate the fact that they tried to make Paul a little more, well, human at the start of things. Okay, if by `human' we mean whiny little brat who has a chip on his shoulder about EVERYTHING, then yes, he is human. The whining seriously got on my nerves after a while. This guy pouted at EVERYBODY and everything. Also, I think they aged the character up for this show, so I wanted to tell him to move out of his parents' house and get a job or something. You know something's not right when Paul Atreides, in line to the Duchy of wherever they are, eventual master of the universe, super being sounds like some spoiled brat who doesn't get to hang out with his buds on ski trip. "I don't wanna go to Arrakis! I wanna go to Europe with Hank and Todd! My life is soooo hard!"

    Look, I'm not kidding, it really feels like that.

    You'd think that when they get to Dune and everything explodes and he has to realize his destiny it'd get better. Sadly, no. He does a one eighty and becomes a cold, cold, merciless messiah of coldness and no mercy (and the occasional whine.) Apart from his freaky powers of everything, it's hard to imagine people wanting to follow this guy, since he's kind of a jerk. You have not seen anyone quite this devoid of charisma. When he turns to his mother and basically scolds her for standing up for the BILLIONS that will die in his quest to install Fremen everything all over the universe, you wish she'd slap his face and send him to bed without supper. He is that bratty.

    Note: I hadn't quite realized until I saw this that Paul would lead a campaign that would quash all rebellion everywhere and make everyone slaves to his will and his nationalized religion and his culture. It kind of ends up feeling, with this actor at least, like it should be titled Hitler in Space.

    Second note: the whine really came back in that scene with his mother. "Moooom. I wanna do genocide. You can't stop me. I do what I waaaaaant." God, I hated Newman so much in this role.

    Also, I'm not quite sure why they needed him to be this much of a jerk. As most people know SMALL SPOILER NOW he has a son with his Fremen girlfriend, and the kid gets killed. So he sees this in prophetic visions, and when the girl wakes up he greets her with sitting on the mat staring into space like a freak and intoning solemnly `our son is dead' or something to that effect. Later, when the poor woman shows GENUINE EMOTION, WHY IS THAT SO HARD TO COME BY HERE about the poor dead kid, he basically gives her a hug and goes `There, there, we'll get you another one." THANKS, HONEY. THANKS SO MUCH. Between the brattiness and the `we'll get you one with spots next time' reaction he has to his child's death, if I were Chani, I'd do something that I'm not quite sure I can print here. Let's just say it rhymes with Reeve his Glass.

    I found myself missing Kyle MacLachlan. True, like Newman he was bland (I think that comes with the Paul Atreides territory, though. It's one of those `I eat breakfast, I get a new power, everything I do is right' kind of roles.) However, he was also likable, sympathetic, caring and had a kind of regal bearing that worked. Newman is, like I said, that rich kid that you never liked in school because he had new trainers and would INSIST on telling you about them.

    Moving on, I had small issues with how fast things moved. Like Kwisatz Haderach, or however you spell it. It came and went so fast that it was like `He's a criss cross quichera, he's a bushy casserole, he's a bird, he's a plane,' `He's a WHAT?' `Look, moving on.'

    Last thing: the Irulan subplot. If you've read the books, you know that Irulan is the princess Paul has to marry to solidify his claim to the throne. She pops in at the tail end of Dune to have this happen, and then schemes through the second book until she has a change of heart. She's SUPPOSED to start off as unlikable, spoiled, selfish and haughty with no real love for Paul until the very end. That way, you feel for Chani the Fremen concubine, and you're happy Paul stays with her. In the book, I was definitely more a Chani person.

    Here's the thing: they created a subplot for Irulan that portrayed her as clever, feeling, brave, a dutiful young woman trapped and used as a pawn, and in love with Paul. I thought the actress who played her was wonderful, and I'm glad Irulan had something to do here. But if you see her as all these excellent things, when she SPOILER ALERT BUT IF YOU'RE READING THIS I ASSUME YOU KNOW WHAT'S COMING marries Paul and he turns his back on her and goes to Chani all `ilu bb' you...sort of...feel horrible for her. In the book, when Chani stands there all sad and thinks Paul will leave her for gorgeous princess woman, he affirms his love and you are happy for her. Here, when you see what a good person Irulan is and he still treats her like crap, news flash, you don't like Chani so much anymore. So the thing basically ends with Paul and Chani prancing off together and leaving Irulan in the dust to be treated like crap by everybody, and instead of feeling like `oh I am so happy for Paul and Chani, their love will endure', I was more like `well, you can both go f--- yourselves, how about that?' And that's NOT how I want to feel after SIX HOURS of miniseries.

    Okay, bottom line is despite all my moaning this has some okay things. It's faithful to the book if that's your bag, a few of the actors turn in really good performances, some of the sets and costumes are nice to look at. But I just hated Newman as Paul, everything felt rushed, and I really, really, really did not like how they handled the Irulan character. But that's my opinion. If none of these things bother you, I'm sure you'll enjoy it.



    3 out of 5 stars not that bad, but still...   October 28, 2009
    Hood
    1 out of 1 found this review helpful

    The biggest complaint I have is that this version gives you no sense of place. Nothing tells you what Arrakis really feels like - how beautiful and horrifying it is, and what it means to be stuck in a place that lets only the fittest survive. The Fremen? Well, they look like just another tv-series-medieval-village-folk (ok, their eyes glow at night. Not that it makes sense...) instead of the tough, lean, skinny desert fanatics they're supposed to be. They're just not that serious (and overacting certainly doesn't help). That's the number one reason for me to still prefer the Lynch version. Unfortunately, there's more: both set design and CGI ranges from nice (Arrakeen, the Guild fleet) to mediocre (the desert storm looked really bad). And while this version sticks closely to the novel, some bad choices were made in showing the world at work (again, the filmmakers didn't "get" the concept of the Voice, and made the actors speak through a tube or something).
    This said, there are things in John Harrison's Dune, that work. I actually liked most of the performances - including William Hurt (portraying a noble man dead tired from digging himself out of a hole), and even Alec Newman (annoying at first, inhuman at the end, just how it should be). And kudos to Karel Dobry (Kynes - this is a Fremen if I ever saw one), P.H.Moriarty (Halleck), and Saskia Reeves (Jessica - very effective as the "moral center" of the story).
    Much has been said about the costume designs for the "nobles". Sure, they do look weird, but come on. They are supposed to look decadent and, above all, RICH. And they do.
    As for filming it all in a studio - it surely adds to the problem I started the review with, but then again Vittorio Storaro made the most of it - as can be expected from an artist of this caliber. A well-deserved Emmy.
    Final thought: Dune is obviously a tough one to film. This version, while more understandable than the Lynch one, presents it's own set of problems. I hope someone tries filming it again - and if You, the future director, are reading this - please, don't treat it like fantasy. It may have strange visions, and giant bugs, but it's Science Fiction.



    5 out of 5 stars Genius! Lucky you, if you've not seen this & the other series to follow.   October 22, 2009
    Obscured By Clouds (Portland, OR)
    0 out of 1 found this review helpful

    Uh! What an amazing lost weekend you have ahead for yourself now! Stock up, invite your friends, get some great bold Italian Red Wines to sip, chocolate, maybe some cognac too, bring all necessary additional accoutrement so may you fold space in luxury. You are the Kwisatz Haderach, at least for the weekend, or as long as your girlfriend lets you. Welcome to the future! So long and thanks for all the fish!

    Children of Dune is even better of course! Can't wait for more!

    The thoroughness of the countless hours you can spend watching these two very lengthy renditions made for television are amazing. It took me all weekend to watch. This breaks all the molds for made for television. William Bloody Hurt is even in it as Duke Leto for gods' sakes!

    I beheld this sand worm length rendition in marathon fashion without stopping -- after a while I saw tracers and had that space cadet glow with a little help from my friends, I am the Walrus, coo coo ca choocoo!

    No really. It is superb if you love Herbert's work. If you don't like it, who cares. Don't bother to tell me as your limitations will go unheeded. All that holds meaning is what is what is meaningful. Keep your meaninglessness to yourself and free your mind.

    Have a great time, let go a little...[...]



    3 out of 5 stars Dune   September 30, 2009
    Kenn Ash
    Both the TV and the Video tape of this movie had closed-caption, but NOT the DVD! Very dissapointed about this, being hard of hearing.

    Showing reviews 1-5 of 556
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