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It must be a less stress inducing experience, doing press when you know the reviews of your film are good. Or better than good in fact. Dune still has to do the numbers at the box office, but director Denis Villeneuve seems to have conjured a film that even fans of the book will love.
https://amplify.nabshow.com/articles/denis-villeneuves-dune-is-a-lot-heres-how-he-did-it/
Villeneuve prepared to take on Frank Herbert’s gargantuan
and seemingly impossible to film mythology of power, ecology and geopolitics by
first making a worthy sequel to Ridley Scott’s Blade Runner.
The massive themes of the book have daunted filmmakers. They
range from the impact of colonialism to planetary ecosystems. Villeneuve – who
studied science at college with an eye to becoming a biologist – was clearly
touched by its environmentalism.
“I discovered the book in my teenage years and I remember
being totally fascinated by what it was saying about nature—the true main
character of Dune,” Villeneuve says in the film’s production notes.
He added, “To me, Dune is a psychological thriller,
an adventure, a war movie, a coming-of-age movie. It’s even a love story.”
Given all that, his masterstroke may have been to cut the
book in two. Rather than trying to cram all the themes, characters and plot
lines into one bum-numbing movie, this is in fact Dune: Part One with a
sequel already far advanced.
Dune, which premiered at Venice to stellar reviews,
cost $165 million and stars Timothée Chalamet, Oscar Isaac, Rebecca Ferguson,
Josh Brolin, Stellan Starsgard, Zendaya and Javier Bardem.
Perhaps the Canadian’s only mis-step has been to call out
Warner Bros for its plan to stream the movie on HBO Max day and date with
theatrical release.
“With this decision AT&T has hijacked one of the most
respectable and important studios in film history,” he wrote in an open letter
published at Variety. “There is absolutely no love for cinema, nor for
the audience here. It is all about the survival of a telecom mammoth, one that
is currently bearing an astronomical debt of more than $150 billion.”
Interviewed recently by the New York Times, he seems
more emollient – but not much.
“It was for my mental sanity [that he wrote the letter] “I
was so angry, bitter and wounded.”
He said he understands the pressures of the pandemic, but
had made Dune as a love letter to the big screen in the mould of Lawrence
of Arabia.
“The decision to stream the film seemed to Villeneuve
symptomatic of threats to the cinematic tradition itself, which he sees as
fulfilling an ancient human need for communal storytelling,” writes interviewer
Helen MacDonald.
Dune is a passion project for the director who has
harbored dreams of adapting it to screen for decades. A huge part of his creative vision was to
film it on location and to give those desert vistas maximum cinematic impact.
The location sequences were shot in Jordan (in the Wadi Rum
desert where David Lean filmed portions of ‘Lawrence’), in the UAE and on huge
sets at Origo Studios in Budapest– the same space which housed Blade Runner
2049.
Like No Time To Die, Dune was shot pre-pandemic and
that’s significant as these epics could be among the last of this scale shot in
traditional fashion on location.
The movie’s cinematographer, Greig Fraser ASC, came to the
project straight after working on the virtual production stage of The
Mandalorian. It would stand to reason that, were Dune shot today,
virtual production would come into play to save the production cost and for
Covid safety.
According to the Times, when Fraser offered the technology
to Villeneuve, the director declined saying he wanted to shoot the movie in
real desert landscape, “for my own mental sanity, to be able to inspire myself
to find that feeling I was looking for of isolation, of introspection.”
However, the DP told me (in an interview published at
IBC.org) that in fact the VP technology at that time (March to July 2019) was not
in fact ready to be used on anything other than the highly bespoke setup at ILM
for Disney. However, he suggested that virtual production could play a role
mixed with location work for the Dune sequel.
Like NTTD, Dune also features sequences shot using
IMAX to enhance the spectacle. Unlike NTTD Dune is shot
digital. Paul Atreidis’ visions, dreams
and the desert sequences are shot on IMAX-certified Alexa LF with the rest shot
in 2:35 format on the Alexa LF with large format Panavision Vista and H-series
lenses.
However, Fraser says he did compromise a bit. “We then did
another technique where we filmed out the digital, meaning once the film was
edited, Fotokem filmed it and then a negative was created. Next, they scanned
that negative back in, so the film, which everybody sees, has been through an
analog process. It’s a technique I’d been playing with for a little while but
hadn’t actually applied to a feature film before.”
Again, as befitting the tactility of the film’s aesthetic,
many of the effects are shot in-camera. This included building a big platform
under the sand in Jordan which were able to be vibrated by ten engines to
simulate the earth-shaking movement of the worms.
Another unique technique was the invention of a sand colored
screen rather than a blue or green screen. VFX Supervisor Paul Lambert (Dneg)
explains, “Because we knew that any background plate or CG environment was
essentially going to be sand colored, the foreground live action would already
be immersed in the same colored environment.
The bonus of this technique was that if you invert the sand color during
the compositing process, you end up with a blue color, which then acts like a
blue screen, allowing you to then do a more traditional matte extraction.
“Obviously, there are some issues with that—skin tone and
similar sand colors will be a little more problematic—but you end up with a far
more natural- looking visual when you are compositing an image that has been
extracted from a color similar to what the final color is going to be. It’s a
straightforward technique but very effective for this movie, which is all about
sand.”
Kudos must also be given to editor Joe Walker ACE who has
cut the director’s last four pictures. Walker and Villeneuve are not just
collaborators but friends: they even shared a Christmas with each other’s
families.
As the pair began work on the sequel Covid-19 necessitated
remote working which Villeneuve found taxing. “It’s not the same,” he told the
NYT. “It’s like playing music. There are so many ideas that Joe and I have, I
don’t know if it’s his idea or my idea — it comes from the addition of us both
being in the room. Which is by far my favorite thing about cinema.”
Again, the most sensible decision Villeneuve and the film’s
producers have taken is to treat the book with respect for its complexity and
not bite off more than they can chew.
“It was by far the biggest movie I’ve ever made, the most challenging,” he says in the film’s official release notes. “Dune is an appetizer for the second part still to come, which is the main meal.”
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