Saturday 27 November 2021

Dune

 


The thought of the story of Dune conjures up images of sandy expanses and people looking wistfully across (see the poster above). That's my favourite aspect of Sci-fi, the sense of enormity and awe, and this film version has plenty of it. It is extremely stately and slow, as it must be, even to the point of crawling along at some points (slow-mo of spaceship coming out of water). I said some of the same things about Denis Villneuve's last film too: https://hamfilmreviews.blogspot.com/2017/10/blade-runner-2049.html.

The central relationship between Paul Atreides and his mother is really good, and I like that she is strict with him in a sort of your-fate-is-too-important-to-mess-around Sarah Connor way. 

I could definitely take a few more hours of this and hope the next part gets made. Though if I was watching it again at home I'd certainly have plenty of snacks. 



No Time to Die

 


Anna and I saw this at a little cinema in Malton. I thought there'd be lots of trailers so we were late. The initial sequences were good, and the story flowed nicely. There were a few highlights and a mostly enjoyably story, though (as ever) the baddy was evil without reason, and it did feel like they wrote the ending and worked backwards.

But actually I agree with everything in this review: https://www.techradar.com/news/why-the-no-time-to-die-ending-doesnt-really-work so will say no more.