David Lynch's Dune: What Went Wrong? By Joshua Moss Special to SPACE.com posted: 11:52 am ET 05 December 2000
POINTS ON DUNE:
With all this hype surrounding
the new Dune miniseries, one has to wonder what was wrong with the
original?
If David Lynch’s 1984 summer
blockbuster had worked, there wouldn’t be a need to do it "again," right?
Certainly no one’s remaking 2001 as aTV
miniseries.
So with 16 years of hindsight,
it’s time to take a look back at the epic that started it all.
Future shock
The year was 1984. Rubik's
Cube and parachute pants. Michael Jackson and George Orwell. Tron.
The Source Material Endures
The cast and creators of the SCI FI Channel's television version of Dune maintain that their adaptation does it right.
When the long-awaited adaptation
of Frank Herbert’s legendary book finally made it to the screen in December
of that year (on the same day as Starman), things looked promising.
After all, the movie featured talented thespians like Max Von Sydow and
Jorgen Prochnow. Young wunderkind David Lynch was at the helm, hot off
Best Picture and Best Director nominations for 1981’s The Elephant Man.
There was even the lead singer of the hottest rock group in the world --
Sting.
What could go wrong?
And then the warning signs
went off. Theaters decided to pass out pamphlets before each screening,
explaining the characters and the story -- making Dune one of the
few movies where the audience needed Cliff’s Notes.
Critics were harsh, panning
the film as too long and too moody. Dune had the worst of both worlds,
offending moviegoers by being too faithful to the book and offending fans
of the book by not being faithful enough.
It was a tough middle ground
to find, but unfortunately it didn’t look like Lynch and Co. were able
to find it. Meanwhile, the movie wasn’t a bomb, but its high costs ensured
that it never made money.
David Lynch goes Hollywood
It had been clear since the
mid-1970s when the first
attempt to make a Dune film collapsed under the weight of "artistic
differences," that this wasn't going to be a walk in the desert. For one
thing, Frank Herbert’s world required an intensely grandiose creative vision,
one not easily captured on film.
However, Lynch was a huge
Dune fan, even turning down George Lucas’ offer to direct Return
Of the Jedi to take on the Herbert project when Dino de Laurentiis
decided to revive it. (Of course, that could have been on account of the
Ewoks.)
The money was there. The
talent was there. Things looked promising.
Lynch and de Laurentiis spent
close to three years in Mexico bringing Dune to the screen, launching
one of the most lavish productions Hollywood had seen since Liz Taylor’s
Cleopatra.
Under Lynch's regime, Dune’s
elaborate sets and costumes took months to make and hundreds of workers
to build, eventually filling numerous soundstages in Mexico City
Casting first-timer Kyle
MacLachlan as Paul Atreides, a role sought after by every young male star
in Hollywood, Lynch made it clear he wanted to make a movie, not a star
vehicle -- good news for the fans.
Even though filming was rushed
to complete a required release date, Dune lagged for months as Lynch
struggled with the final edit. However, contrary to popular opinion, the
released version is in fact the "official" David Lynch cut. The director
has repeatedly denied persistent rumors of a longer cut and the version
released is apparently actually the movie he set out to make.
~
Dune buggy
So where’s the beef?
Well when it comes down to
it, Dune has a fundamental problem. It just shouldn’t be a movie.
The enduring qualities of
the Herbert novel are the way it expresses the internalized thought processes
of its characters. This just doesn’t lend itself to the emphasis on setting,
technology and other external realities a good science fiction flick needs.
Lynch made a noble attempt,
layering regular dialogue with a bizarre style of thought-process voiceover.
A good idea, but ultimately more confusing than illuminating.
In addition, needing to make
the movie "accessible" to large audiences, much of the novel’s exploration
of the Fremen, especially how they metaphorically come to represent Arabs
(and their spice, oil), is lost. Lynch also largely ignored the drug addiction
subtext of the spice trade, perhaps viewing it as too dark for big budget
sci-fi -- or for his own vision.
But the fundamental problem
is simple. Herbert’s novel was about political and governmental conflict,
about the epic movement of history, and David Lynch ultimately had to make
an action film.
That's enough of a contradiction
to kill a dozen movie projects. Known more for small character pieces and
style rather than substance, Lynch seemed lost with the epic scale he faced
with Dune. That, combined with the complex task of adapting the
moodiness of the Herbert novel, spelled disaster.
Added gadgets
When the film came out, fans
of the novel were not happy.
"Weirding Modules," essentially
sonic laser guns, were added to increase the "gee-whiz" special effects
quotient. Comic book store owners around the world are still recovering
from this insult.
The early '80s Tron-like
effects of the "Weirding Shield" looked dated then and absolutely awful
today. They’re hardly used except as a prop to impress the audience, and
just seem silly.
The Stillsuits, used for
survival on the harsh landscape of Arrakis and a great idea in a novel,
come off looking like a more primitive version of the rubber Batman suit.
They make the acting look even more stilted, and don’t impress as a particularly
creative design.
This was a movie and so it
needed the "bang" for the buck, but considering the cult-like zeal of fans
of the novel, these additions were bound to bring a backlash. And they
did.
Dune: the cast
Kyle MacLachlan and Sean
Young are no Luke and Leia, but the rest of the performers do their best.
Patrick Stewart (pre-Star
Trek) andDean Stockwell (pre-Quantum Leap) lend some
subtlety in small roles, while Max Von Sydow, Jose Ferrer and the pumped
up, greasy Sting round out a generally solid supporting cast.
Seven-year-old Alicia Witt,
playing Paul's creepy younger sister, makes her film debut.
Unfortunately, MacLachlan's
stilted delivery, a hammy performance by Kenneth McMillan as the Baron
and a dated soundtrack by '80s "Supergroup" Toto raise the "ouch" factor
exponentially.
Generally, characters never
seem fully fleshed out, and no good acting can cover up some truly awful
lapses in dialogue.
Dated Dune
Sixteen years have not been
kind to this film.
Many of the sets have an
uninteresting if elaborate Victorian look, making this a sort of Great
Expectations with giant worms. Big budget, certainly, but given the
novel's universal scope, ultimately disappointing.
The desert scenes fare better.
They have a grandiose beauty that still holds up, as do the sandworms,
designed by Carlo Rambaldi (who also worked on Alien).
But after a five-minute lecture
from Princess Irulan (Virginia Madsen, who is barely seen again as the
film progresses) on the names and chief exports of several planets, the
movie starts off confusingly and never fully recovers.
Epic failure
Ultimately the deck was stacked
too greatly against Dune. Facing his first giant production, Lynch
was unable to adapt the complexities of the novel without offending the
easily confused moviegoer. He was not only playing against his strengths,
he was between a rock and a hard place. And there was no getting out.
[uplink]
Dune was an epic that
tried. It has its heart in the right place. It has grand scale sci-fi aspirations.
Heck, it even has giant sand worms. But ultimately the muddled story and
schizophrenic need to live up to both the novel and the mass audience prevented
Dune from being all that it could have.
Although Frank Herbert was
officially pleased with the film -- he referred to his relationship with
Lynch as "synergy" -- rumors persist that the author was still disappointed
in the project. Perhaps he came to realize that sometimes even the best
sci-fi novels should remain in that form.
Meanwhile, the Dune
series of books remain best sellers and a sci-fi staple to the present
day, despite the movie's box-office failure. Read the book. Skip the movie.