Tag Archives: Timothee Chalamet

“DUNE: PART TWO” Review (✫✫✫✫)

SOURCE: Warner Bros.

The dangerous power of belief. 

The greatest drug on Arrakis is not spice, but power. It’s the drug that corrupts the mind and the soul — the drug that turns women into witches and men into monsters. The last line spoken in the first Dune was “This is only the beginning.” When Dune: Part Two lingered on its last haunting shot, all I could think to myself was “This is the end.”

Picking up immediately where Part One left off, Dune: Part Two shows Paul Atreides (Timothee Chalamet) learning the ways of the Fremen, the sand people of Arrakis. He falls in love with a young woman named Chani (Zendaya), and his mother Jessica (Rebecca Ferguson) is now a trusted Reverend Mother to the Fremen. Paul and Jessica have adjusted quickly to their new lives, but Paul still has thoughts of vengeance in the back of his mind for the deaths of his father and House Atreides. 

Meanwhile on Geidi Prime, House Harkonnen is building up its forces to take back spice production on Arrakis. After failing to kill Paul and Lady Jessica, the Baron (Stellan Skarsgard) replaces his nephew Rabban (Dave Bautista) with Feyd-Rautha (Austin Butler), a violent and bloodthirsty psychopath and heir to the Baron’s throne. As both of these factions come head to head, Paul must decide what kind of man he wants to become and the lengths he will go to exact vengeance on the ones who betrayed his family. 

I was very nervous going in to watch Dune: Part Two. Not because I wasn’t confident in writer-director Denis Villeneuve, who has proven himself over and over again with the likes of Prisoners, Sicario, Arrival, Blade Runner 2049, and of course, the first Dune. I was nervous because I understood the huge expectations that weighed down on this film like a sandworm. Not only was Denis Villeneuve expected to make a film just as great as its predecessor, but somehow, he had to build upon the already big ideas he was exploring and make a film that was satisfying for fans new and old alike. Much bigger franchises than Dune have crumbled under the weight of their own expectations, whether you’re talking about Star Wars, Harry Potter, Lord Of The Rings, or the Marvel Cinematic Universe. I was worried Dune was going to fall into the small trap as many others had before it. 

I’m so grateful to tell you that Dune: Part Two is not as great as its predecessor — it’s even better. Like The Dark Knight, Return Of The King, or Empire Strikes Back, Dune: Part Two expands on its universe and builds upon the lore in new and exciting ways that takes it in surprising and unexpected directions. It’s one thing to make an epic sci-fi blockbuster smash hit for moviegoing audiences. It’s another thing entirely to pose it as a moral and philosophical question to the same audience and have it hit just as deeply.

The very first thing that hits you with this movie is its visual prowess. The opening shot is a deeply disturbing image of a pile of corpses set ablaze — the last remains of the fallen House Atreides. At the end of the film, we circle back to that motif with a similar shot, only this time with a different pile of bodies and an even more horrifying context. That’s the skill cinematographer Greg Frasier fully displays here. He isn’t just capturing stunning, spectacular, striking images — he fills them with context that brings weight and meaning to every image. 

There are some scenes that are filled with all of the extravagant imagery you’ve witnessed from the first movie — sand worms traversing through the desert, Sardaukar hovering in the air, Fremen and Harkonnen warring in the sands. And then there are other scenes that are so quiet, somber, and contemplative, yet say eons more than any of the action scenes do. My favorite shot in the whole movie isn’t even a particularly exciting one — it’s the final shot of the film, where we linger on the pained, hurt, and grieved face of an innocent who’s left lost and alone at the end of it all. It’s technically the most normal shot in the movie, yet it says the most because you understand what this character went through and what brought them to this very moment. 

But capturing the setting is one thing — it’s the characters whose actions and words bring life to this story, and the performances in Dune: Part Two are even more outstanding than the first movie, if you can believe it. In her first appearance as Lady Jessica, Rebecca Ferguson was very good as a grieving mother caught up in a conflict she never wanted herself or her family to get involved in. Here, she demonstrates that she will go to any length to protect her son and unborn child — no matter who she has to hurt in the process. While Zendaya had a smaller role in the first movie, here she’s brought front and center as one of the main characters, and she demonstrates the dramatic chops to prove that she can be just as memorable as her leading co-stars despite having less screen time than them. But the most surprising transformation comes from Austin Butler, who is easily the most sinister, the most scathing, and the most monstrous character out of the entire movie. He was nominated for an Oscar just last year for playing Elvis Presley, but I genuinely believe this is the role he should be most known for going forward. He commits to the insanity of this part with such conviction to the point where you don’t even see him as a heartthrob nor as a movie star — you only see him for his evil and bloodlust. 

As phenomenal as this star-studded cast is, none of them compare to the fierceness and ferocity of Timothee Chalamet. At the beginning of the film, Paul is fearful of the Bene Gesserit’s prophecy and resists it like the plague. But by the time we arrive at the third act, Paul has fully embraced his identity as Lisan al Gaib and uses it to strike down his enemies like a crysknife. There is a scene in this movie where he rallies all of Arrakis’ tribes together, and it’s so intense, powerful, and commanding that it made me believe that he just might be the messiah to these people. Whether he actually is remains to be seen, but it almost doesn’t matter whether he is or isn’t. The Fremen believe that he is, and sometimes, belief is all you need to defeat armies, conquer lands, and win wars — or wage them. 

Denis Villeneuve masterfully brings all of these elements together to create a mesmerizing, spellbinding, and horrifying portrait of faith, fascism, and fanaticism that consumes and corrupts everything it touches. I think everybody expected this film to be as explosive, captivating, and visually spectacular as the first film was. What’s more surprising is that Dune: Part Two is deeper, darker, and even more profound and thought-provoking. To me, that’s the bigger accomplishment, because movies only last as long as their runtime — but the conversations they create last far beyond the closing credits. 

When we first meet Paul in Dune: Part One, we see a bright-eyed and curious royal heir who’s eager to learn more about the tribes and cultures beyond his own. But after losing his father, his family, his home, and his life, he turns into something lethal — something more violent than the Harkonnens and more cruel than the Bene Gesserit. But the scariest part isn’t seeing the millions believing in Paul and rallying behind his crusade. The scariest part is that you want to believe him too. 

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“DUNE” Review (✫✫✫✫)

SOURCE: Warner Bros. Pictures

Fear is the mind-killer.

There are a few movies that come once in a generation where they don’t feel just like cinema, but rather as raw, immersive experiences that feel equally epic in their scope of storytelling as they do in their visceral visual presentation. Star Wars in the 1980s is one such example. Jurassic Park in the 90s is another. Lord Of The Rings in the 2000s. The Avengers movies in the 2010s. Now here comes the newest science-fiction epic in Dune, and if it isn’t destined to become the next decade-defining blockbuster, it definitely feels like it should be.

Based on Frank Herbert’s classic science-fiction saga, Dune takes place in the far distant future where different houses fight for control over different planets in the galaxy. One of the most sought-after planets is the desert world of Arrakis, which carries an element known as spice that allows for interstellar travel, making it the most valuable asset in the universe. The House of Atreides is gifted the planet of Arrakis to harvest the spice for the good of all the houses, but in the process, they get caught up in a violent conflict between the Fremen, the native dwellers of Arrakis, and the Harkonnen, a vicious race of savages that seek the power of the spice only for themselves. Now trapped on the world of Arrakis, Paul Atreides (Timothee Chalamet) needs to find a way to adapt to the harsh environment surrounding him and harness the desert power of Arrakis.

When I heard that Denis Villeneuve was remaking Frank Herbert’s classic tale of “Dune,” I nearly fell out of my seat. For those of you that are unaware of it, “Dune” has been hailed as one of the most important science-fiction novels of all time, right alongside the likes of “Anthem”, “Ender’s Game,” and “1984.” To see a large-scale adaptation of one of the most essential books ever written would have any reader giggling in their seats, where I admittedly found myself not too long ago.

Yet despite Denis’s cinematic prowess, I found myself a little hesitant to accept a live-action “Dune” remake. For one thing, “Dune” had been visually adapted twice before, once in David Lynch’s 1984 film and once in Frank Herbert’s TV show in 2000. Neither one really reached the fascination or intrigue that the book inspired and were really kind of silly and gimmicky in retrospect, although I do find their amateurish quality slightly endearing. For another thing, “Dune” had been largely considered an unadaptable story, with its dense lore amounting to a massive 412 pages.

Granted, it wasn’t the first book to be considered “unadaptable.” Yann Martel’s “Life Of Pi” was largely considered unadaptable, as was Alan Moore’s “Watchmen.” Yet, both were made into magnificent movies by Ang Lee and Zack Snyder. Still, that doesn’t mean that it’s a sure thing. Indeed, it means that whoever does end up tackling the project has a massive, massive challenge ahead of them, one that may mean breaking up the book’s plot into multiple movies.

Thank God that Denis Villeneuve was a brave and competent enough filmmaker to take it on, because he fulfills every bit of the book’s lofty expectations and then some. The first thing you notice with Dune is how immersive it is: visually striking, audibly haunting, and emotionally stirring. The very first line of dialogue you hear in the movie isn’t even human: it’s Harkonnen, and its rich, deep voice eerily echoes the words “Dreams are messages from the deep.”

Immediately after that, we’re swept into an engrossing display of Arrakis: its beauty, its danger, its dry, devastating heat, the invaluable spice, and the people willing to fight and kill and die over it. What follows from there is an engrossing and absorbing experience that completely and fully immerses you in its characters, lore, and setting in a rare display of intrigue, excitement, and fascination.

I’m not just talking about merely watching the movie play out on screen. Sure, you see the vast landscape, the colossal spaceships, the endless void of space and its planets, the massive explosions that blow up on battlefields and mining sites. But the film is so much more than merely seeing the images on screen: you experience them. You feel the sun rays beating down on you, the dryness in the air as the desert sands of Arakkis parch your mouth, the wind from the space thrusters blowing against you, and the heat from explosions radiating off of your body as the shockwave blows you off of your feet.

See, in a rare marriage of visual and audio mastery, Dune drops you in the middle of Arakkis and forces you to feel the loneliness and isolation of its characters. Movies have a bad habit of superficially showing you what characters are going through instead of engrossing you in the moment of what they’re experiencing. Dune places you right alongside House Atreides and forces you to try and survive the dangers of the desert alongside them. Not since Avatar has a movie immersed you so vividly into its lore and setting.

The production of the film is a technical marvel, from Greg Fraser’s vast and expansive cinematography to Joe Walker’s expert editing to the eerie and striking visuals to the mesmerizing score by Hans Zimmer. Even the all-star cast is masterful in their roles, with Timothee Chalamet shining the most as a fallen prince torn between two different destinies.

Dune is a rare example of a perfect picture. Yes, a perfect picture. I literally would not change a single thing about it. Some viewers may not appreciate Denis Villeneuve’s trademark slow-burn style of storytelling, but that’s because of their personal preferences as movie watchers, not Denis’ craft or ability as a filmmaker. To think that years ago, we questioned how he would handle his first science-fiction picture with Arrival, then how he would revive Ridley Scott’s long-cherished franchise with Blade Runner 2049. Now he has made Dune, and its legacy will surpass both of those pictures. I can’t wait for the sequel.

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