Dune: Part Two Is a Glorious Sci-Fi Spectacle
The sequel is about ecology, politics, economics, imperialism, and much more. But mostly it's about worms.

As I watched the gigantic, awesome, triumphant, overwhelming, punishingly large and loud Dune: Part Two in IMAX earlier this week, I couldn't help but think of an old meme.
Sometime before the 2021 release of Dune: Part One, a clever anonymous poster mocked up a "know your candidates" page featuring Joe Biden and Bernie Sanders. Only the "issue" they were discussing wasn't health care or foreign policy. It was, "What is Dune about?"
In the meme, Sanders' answer was typically long-winded and discursive: "Well, it's hard to say Dune is about any one thing, because Dune is rich with themes. The first book, for example, is about ecology, and the hero's journey, and as a criticism of the Foundation series' take on declining empires, among other things. The second book subverts the hero's journey told in the first book, and the later books follow in…" and then the fake Sanders answer trails off the page.
The meme version of Biden simply responds: "Dune is about worms."
The magic of director Denis Villeneuve's two-part adaptation of Frank Herbert's 1965 sci-fi novel is that it captures both of the fake candidate answers from the meme. It's an intricate desert epic about ecological balance, the harshness of nature, the economics of resource extraction, imperialism, tribal politics, corporate intrigue, groovy psychedelic drugs, culture clash, and Golden Age science fiction missing the point, among other things.

But it's also about, you know, worms.
Specifically: very, very big worms.
Even more than the first film, which covered a little more than half of Herbert's novel, Dune: Part Two is a showcase for cinematic grandiosity, for movies as conveyors of sheer, terrifying enormity. The movie is the tale of young Paul Atreides, a young duke whose family was killed by their rivals the Harkonnens after a distant emperor granted the Atreides charge of the planet Arrakis.
Arrakis isn't just any planet: It's the home to spice, a psychedelic drug that also happens to power interstellar travel, which is made by the planet's native giant sandworms. Imagine if oil was also LSD, and it was produced by roving, murderous whales who lived deep in the desert sands.
The first installment was the story of Atreides' journey to Dune and the defeat of his family. The second is the story of his triumphant revenge, as he unites the local people, the Fremen, in defiance of the Harkonnen overlords.
Herbert's novel is replete with descriptions of corporate structures and what amount to company strategy discussions about economic fundamentals and resource extraction metrics, all mixed with complex political machinations and semi-inscrutable hallucinogenic dream logic featuring religious prophecies and drug-addled visions, plus a lot of asides about the elegant sustainable eco-technology of life on a barren sand planet. At times, reading Dune resembles reading minutes from a corporate board meeting while tripping balls with green-tech climate activists in the desert.
Anyway, you can probably see what meme-Bernie was talking about.
The movie, however, captures all of this clunky complexity quite well, capturing desert life among the Fremen and gesturing at their political structures and religious beliefs without subjecting viewers to drawn-out exposition. Villeneuve and co-screenwriter Jon Spaihts understand that a thoughtfully imagined fictional world doesn't need to constantly stop to explain itself; it can just go about its business.
But then, in the midst of all this, there are the worms. In contrast to Dune: Part One, which closed with a hint of the possibility, this time Paul Atreides gets to ride them. And it is awesome.
In Dune: Part Two, Villeneuve delivers a handful of truly gargantuan set pieces featuring Arrakis' skyscraper-sized sandworms as they plow through the desert of the film's alien planet. Along with his work on the first-contact film Arrival, they mark Villeneuve as Hollywood's most successful purveyor of colossal mystery.
As with that movie's obelisk and its tentacled alien inhabitants, there's something truly alien about the sandworms of Arrakis, and also a sense of scale and vastness that few other filmmakers convey. Watching a sandworm plunge through desert valleys, blasting tidal waves of sand in its wake, on an oversized IMAX screen in kneecap-rattling surround sound is the sort of audiovisual experience that big-budget, big-screen movies were made for. Dune: Part Two is a glorious, overwhelming sensory smorgasbord.
In recent years, far too many blockbusters have served up weightless, ugly, computer-generated, mediocre-at-best set pieces. Villeneuve's Dune films are reminders of what real cinematic spectacle looks like. They are movies about worms—really big worms. Hell yeah, they are.
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It has significantly less Patrick Stewart than the original, which I find annoying.
More Stewart, more pugs.
Yeah, but does part 2 out-DEI part 1?
Have you not seen how white the Harkonnen/Imperial Colonizer bad guys are? Austen Butler in character makes Sting look positively swarthy.
At least this is a review. Well done, suderman.
I tried to read this review in toto but the last part trailed off the page ...
Definitely not waiting for this to stream on Max.
Bootleg it like a true libertarian.
This one's worth seeing on the big screen.
Never read the books.
Didn't care for the David Lynch version.
Liked the first Denis Villeneuve movie.
Looking forward to the second Denis Villeneuve movie.
Read plot summaries for the later books.
Not looking forward to those movies. 😛
Herbert seemed to have something of the same thing that crippled George R.R. Martin, in that he started a series with a really good concept, got so involved in the world-building that it overwhelmed the arc of his stories, and couldn’t quite get a handle on the narrative to finish things off properly (Martin's going to die before Song of Ice and Fire is finished, too).
If HBO and the Comicon industry had been around in the 1970s to turn Dune into a TV series, Herbert probably wouldn’t have gotten past “God Emperor of Dune” the same way Martin stopped on “Dance with Dragons.” He’d have been too occupied getting his butt kissed at Comicons like Martin did in the 2000s-2010s.
Tolkein created a whole imaginary world himself, but at least he finished Lord of the Rings and kept The Hobbit digestible. That’s why he remains the GOAT of the sci-fi/fantasy genre.
"Martin’s going to die before Song of Ice and Fire is finished, too"
He's still teasing his fans though.
Winds of Winter Release Date Hopes Soar After George R R Martin Shares Latest News
I agree with some of the criticisms of HBO's ending. A more satisfying wrap-up seems possible. But I won't even consider reading WoW if it's not the final book and there could be another decade-plus wait.
LOL, Martin’s been blue-balling GoT fans for a decade now, he ain’t finishing shit. Especially because "A Dream of Spring" was supposed to be the final book; WoW is the penultimate volume.
You left out the Silmarillion on purpose?
Never saw the point of making this.
It's a slightly tweaked version of the Lynch film.
And a lot of the tweaks are for the worse.
This feels like an inverse of "If Powerpoint had been invented before overhead projectors and transparencies we'd have hailed the latter as a triumph of modern technology." situation.
I've always thought that pretty much anybody from George Lucas or Steven Spielberg to Matt Stone and Trey Parker could've done a better interpretation of Dune.
Dune is really about the dangers of religious fanaticism. Paul knows he is leading a horde of murderous fanatics and constantly worries about unleashing them against the galaxy
My favorite Frank Herbert quote:
“All governments suffer a recurring problem: Power attracts pathological personalities. It is not that power corrupts but that it is magnetic to the corruptible.”
>The sequel is about ecology, politics, economics, imperialism,
There being an empire in a story =/= the story being about imperialism. Dune actually says nothing about imperialism - it just is, as part of the background of the setting.
There's also very little about ecology in the movie adaptation. Honestly, there's very little about ecology (except focused around how to think about a planet's ecology you're going to attempt to terraform) in the novels.
Fuck, there's hardly any economics in there either.
At the end of the day, the story is a political one with a heaping dose of mysticism layered on top of it and nothing else.
>It's an intricate desert epic about ecological balance,
This is a hilarious take.
The Imperium is strip mining the planet.
The Fremen are in the process of destroying the local ecology in order to substitute one more suitable for human life. The closest they get to 'balance' is acknowledging that there still needs to be deep desert left to preserve some worms for the Spice. That's it. They are otherwise going to turn the place in to a garden - even if it means killing every native species.
They don't view nature as a 'balance' - they see it *as a machine*. They're going to rebuild that machine.
Incunabulum: There’s no imperialism, ecology, or economics.
Also Incunabulum: There’s no ecological balance, there’s an agricultural economic conflict between the Empire that wants to effectively denude the planet of bio-economic resources and the natives outside The Empire who want to enrich the planet with the resources they place far greater value on while nearly wiping out the native biosphere that The Empire values.
Are these anything like the meal worms I sometimes get in my pantry?
But bigger.
"Dune: Part 2" has spectacular cinematic eye candy. Don't expect any political message, anything that threatens authoritarianism.
That isn't allowed anymore. All the entertainment that contains it is "discontinued", e.g., "Andor". I love the beginning in which 2 cops get killed in self-defense by Andor and even their boss thinks they deserved it, but a pathological "next in charge" gets command in his absence and pursues the victim to re-victimize. Season 2 was 80% finished when Disney canceled it. Two of my favorite TV series, "The Company You Keep" and "Alaska Today" were exposing the corrupt law enforcement agencies and got canceled. That was too much. I was moving to another country when I realized...We gotta stop this.
You’re heavily mistaken. Woke ideology is authoritarian by nature, and plenty of companies promote them. It has also led to enormous riots in 2020.
Perhaps the cops weren’t such bad people after all.
The casting was a little off. I was okay with Jason Momoa but Florence Pugh and Christopher Walken??? Come on man!
It was pretty mediocre although it was somewhat better than the previous movie. The casting is still horrible especially the "lead" actor and actress.
Well, I saw the movie. It was good enough, but some gripes. First, there is a lot of shouting. Paul definitely has anger issues. Second, how did the Fremen get those Merrells? Where do they get clothes from? Where was the Baron? He was the best part of the first movie, and they left most of his story out. Sigh. The worms at the end were pretty cool, though.
Oh geez, hide the women and children and head for the hills. The novel was corny bombast (all that interior monologue and fake Arabic), the 1984 movie was prime cheesy grandiosity, badly done Steampunk, and stilted acting (cha-a-a-aksa!). Didn’t see the 2021 movie, but really, who needs to? And now … worms? Here’s a hint — Tremors has already been done.