Alluveal
Regular
Yeah, they're going for it again.
LINK HERE
Umm, first thoughts are, wtf? Dune in movie format? Don't know how that's possible to do it well. I mean, we got the Lynch (cough: Alan Smithee) version that was a disaster of the highest calibur in my opinion. I mean, I watched it, sure, but ick. I enjoyed the miniseries (and all its glorious set-making) the best. It just felt better to me.
I can't imagine what they'll do to this book with the big Hollywood Suckheimers that want to make bucks on toys and keep people in the theater no less than 1 hour and 59 minutes.
Yes, I'll see it. I gotta see who gets the parts, but I'm really dubious about this.
Thoughts?
LINK HERE
Peter Berg is attached to direct a bigscreen adaptation of Frank Herbert's classic sci-fi novel "Dune" for Paramount Pictures.
Kevin Misher, who spent the past year obtaining the book rights from the Herbert estate, will produce via his Par-based shingle.
Herbert's 1965 novel is a sweeping, futuristic tale set on the remote desert planet Arrakis, which produces the interstellar empire's sole source of the spice Melange -- used for distant space travel. An empirewide power struggle ensues over the control of the spice. Berg would be the latest helmer to take a crack at the property, which spawned a 1984 David Lynch film as well as a 2000 Sci Fi Channel miniseries starring William Hurt.
New Amsterdam's Richard Rubenstein, who produced Sci Fi's "Dune" and sequel "Children of Dune," is also producing alongside Sarah Aubrey of Film 44, Berg's production banner. John Harrison and Mike Messina exec produce.
The project is out to writers, with the producers looking for a faithful adaptation of the Hugo- and Nebula Award-winning book. The filmmakers consider its theme of finite ecological resources particularly timely.
Paramount envisions the project as a tentpole film.
Berg and Misher enjoy strong ties dating back to Misher's executive days at Universal Pictures. Misher also produced Berg's second directorial outing, "The Rundown."
Umm, first thoughts are, wtf? Dune in movie format? Don't know how that's possible to do it well. I mean, we got the Lynch (cough: Alan Smithee) version that was a disaster of the highest calibur in my opinion. I mean, I watched it, sure, but ick. I enjoyed the miniseries (and all its glorious set-making) the best. It just felt better to me.
I can't imagine what they'll do to this book with the big Hollywood Suckheimers that want to make bucks on toys and keep people in the theater no less than 1 hour and 59 minutes.
Yes, I'll see it. I gotta see who gets the parts, but I'm really dubious about this.
Thoughts?