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Dune Details

2000 Certificate 12
  • Rated:
  • 60
  • from 4878 members

A more thorough and straightforward adaptation of Frank Herbert's beloved sci-fi novel than the 1984 David Lynch version, this six-hour Sci Fi Channel miniseries, written and directed by John Harrison, follows the Atreides family's adventures on the desert planet Arrakis. Far into the future, various factions fight for the .. Read more

Starring William Hurt, Julie Cox, Alec Newman, Ian McNeice
Director John Harrison
Genres Sci-Fi/Fantasy

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Dune

A more thorough and straightforward adaptation of Frank Herbert's beloved sci-fi novel than the 1984 David Lynch version, this six-hour Sci Fi Channel miniseries, written and directed by John Harrison, follows the Atreides family's adventures on the desert planet Arrakis. Far into the future, various factions fight for the valuable melange spice that exists exclusively on Arrakis and is protected by fierce, gigantic sandworms. While the indigenous, blue-eyed Arrakisians wait for their Messiah to free them from the corrupt Harkonnens, the family Atreides endures infighting and political intrigue. This sprawling and reverent production features a cast that includes William Hurt, Giancarlo Giannini, Alec Newman, Julie Cox, and Matt Keeslar.

Starring William Hurt, Julie Cox, Alec Newman, Ian McNeice, Matt Keeslar, Saskia Reeves, Giancarlo Giannini, Robert Russell
Director John Harrison
Studio 20TH CENTURY FOX HOME ENTERTAINMENT
Run time DVD: 4 hrs 48 mins
Certificate Certificate 12
Genres Sci-Fi/Fantasy
Language DVD: English
Hearing-impaired English
Released DVD: 26 Nov 2001
Production year: 2000
Format DVD

Dune (3 discs) (2000)

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  • Critics' reviews of Dune

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  • "...This incredibly ambitious [and] successful adaptation gives Herbert's work the kind of luxury only a six-hour miniseries can provide....Harrison does a fine job of keeping this often densely plotted and deeply philosophical story moving..." -- 3 out of 4 stars

    • USA Today
  • Most helpful member's review of Dune

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  • 26 out of 28 people found this review helpful

    Rated - 5 stars

    A true screen adaptation of the Dune epic

    Other reviewers have concentrated on criticising below par acting and special effects however I think they have missed the point. The story is the star in this and it is wonderful to have a screen adaptation that truly brings the epic of Dune to life, unlike David Lynch's movie which instead of trying to tell the story produced a disjointed freak of a movie that only Lynch himself could understand or explain. Limited by budget constraints the effects are not great but they're not terrible either and with some exceptions the performances were creditable. Despite the fact that this is a made-for-TV mini-series the amount of production talent on this is tremendous proving the pull that Dune has. Split into three episodes each reflecting a section of the book it tells the story exactly how I imagine Herbert would have wanted. John Harrison's script actually does what people previously thought impossible; deal with the sheer scale and complexity of the plot in a way that is understandable and even manages to relationalise some aspects of the novel that were convoluted. In the novel the Adreides Mentat, Thufir Hawat, is captured by the Harkonnen and plays no real further part in the story other than drop dead at the end. Harrison sees this superfluous thread of the story and erases it; something with Lynch spent precious minutes on in his version with no payback whilst missing out on many other important aspects. I have nothing but admiration for what has been achieved in this adaptation and any Dune fan will love this. If you're not into the Dune novels and thought it too cultish then watching this will change your mind.

      • Gareth from Stockport
  • Most recent members' review of Dune

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  • 4 out of 6 people found this review helpful

    Rated - 1 star

    Dull ?

    .....as dish water. Not a patch on the film

      • Mick Smith from Harrogate
  • News and features

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    Dune

    Hellraising the children

    • 07 Sep 2004

    The writer of Hellraiser - and veteran of more than 20 horror movies - is moving to children's cinema. While Clive Barker is set for another Hollywood adaptation of his latest literary work, he is apparently poised to turn his back on the style that has brought with it such commercial success. The man behind the Candyman and Hellraiser series has reportedly sold the rights to his Abarat novels to kiddies favourite Disney for a healthy $8 million fee. The Abarat tells the story of heroine Candy... Read more

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Rating breakdown

4,878 Member ratings
  • 100
500
  • 90
414
  • 80
805
  • 70
781
  • 60
921
  • 50
547
  • 40
331
  • 30
240
  • 20
208
  • 10
131

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    • Dune
      A more thorough and straightforward adaptation of Frank Herbert's beloved sci-fi novel than the 1984 David Lynch version, this six-hour Sci Fi Channel miniseries, written and directed by John Harrison, follows the Atreides family's adventures on the desert planet Arrakis. Far into the future, ...