Or maybe WB may have saved it. Blade Runner 2049 was a great movie but it didn't set any cinemas on fire. Way more people will watch Dune at home than would have in the theater. If it's popular enough it'll get it's sequel(s).
Or maybe WB may have saved it. Blade Runner 2049 was a great movie but it didn't set any cinemas on fire. Way more people will watch Dune at home than would have in the theater. If it's popular enough it'll get it's sequel(s).
Agree. Nobody is going to be rushing to jam into theatres anytime soon, if ever. Who does he think is going to see his film? Tenet-like numbers will kill a franchise, too.Or maybe WB may have saved it. Blade Runner 2049 was a great movie but it didn't set any cinemas on fire. Way more people will watch Dune at home than would have in the theater. If it's popular enough it'll get it's sequel(s).
Agreed. And I'll also add BR 2049 did not need to be three hours long.Though not a bad film, I found it to be decidedly inferior to the 1982 original.
Have you seen Arrival or Blade Runner 2049? Seeing either one of those movies should relieve any concerns you might have about whether or not Denis Villeueve (I think I spelled that right), can pull off a good adaptation of Dune.
Oh no. Villeneuve had written an article for Variety.
He says Dune is the best movie he's ever made.
And that WB may have just killed the franchise.
This article is brutal
https://variety.com/2020/film/news/dune-denis-villeneuve-blasts-warner-bros-1234851270/
I understand where he's coming from and he's right in stating that streaming, especially HBO Max, can't bring in numbers that movie theaters do (hell, after a decade or more of streaming i still can't subscribe to HBO directly here in Germany, even if i wanted to. I'd have to buy a package deal with another provider to be able to see HBO shows).
However this is a very unique situation for everybody and the Dune production just had the misfortune to be caught right in the middle of the chaos. What he's not talking about is that the studios need to survive somehow and are now trying everything to get through the crisis and when it's done they will still need new material to show audiences and Dune will have made the first step.
I'm pretty sure that the studios will take close notice how Dune performs and adjust for the Covid situation, it won't be a billion dollar box office breaker, which it could have been if the movie was great and there was no Covid but i hope the studios realize this and won't shoot down movies and possible new franchises because they didn't make pre-covid bank.
I also don't buy into the myth that movie piracy will doom Dune ( or any other movie). Especially Dune, which is something of a spectacle movie, needs to be seen on the big screen for the experience and many people will still go to the theater before they rewatch it via pirated copy or some shady streaming site.
AT&T has now been paid twice out of that $30.
Can also see a lot of people baulking at that sort of price.
Sure if it's a family movie that everyone will want to sit down then if it's fair but in my household it's just me and the wife and she's got no interest so there's no way in hell I'm gonna pay nearly 3x the price of a cinema ticket.
Shit.
Yeah, I see that as good news, too, if true. I also hope this won't be the only case of WB trying to make amends to people they tried to take advantage of with their decision.
I was really hoping they'd just make some kind of a deal with them that would get everyone enough money, but let them keep it on HBOMax.Oh no. The people who made the movie might actually get paid and then make the second movie they planned instead of the whole franchise being dead on arrival.
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