So, not about Dune 2, but still an interesting 'what if....'
https://www.joblo.com/dune-val-kilmer-david-lynch-movie/
https://www.joblo.com/dune-val-kilmer-david-lynch-movie/
Umbrella Entertainment is taking advantage of the new movie to release a 160 page book, poster, etc.
https://shop.umbrellaent.com.au/pro...set-rigid-case-book-artcards-poster-2000-2003
I don't disagree with most of what you say here, but I took the "art design" to mean the sets. Some of the sets were amazingly good. And however stupid the Harkonnen and Sardaukar looked, Irulan's gown in her first scene was spot-on perfect as the overly-designed display that she was supposed to portray by her presence in the throne room.I thought that Lynch's Dune looked as bad as its writing deserved. Between the horrific (not in the right way) Harkonnen's, the ridiculous shield effect, the "stillsuits" that introduced stupid nostril tubes so that everybody can have uncovered faces (which is fucking stupid and goes completely against both the book and common sense), and just the general grossness of basically everything, the Lynch Dune movie just looked like garbage to me. Its barely even really a Dune adaptation, its mostly just a bad David Lynch film based loosely off of whatever the 80s version of cliffnotes was for Dune.
The fact that Villeneuve used the Lynch movie as the basis for his adaptation and not the books has been obvious from the first trailer. If you told me that he'd kept the cat milking scene I'd believe you, and I fully expect the "weirding module" to show up, and for Part 2 to end with it raining on Arrakis. The only Lynch thing he changed was the Harkonnen's, and while his are slightly better (no disease pustules or blood obsession), they're still awful, being bald, motor oil bathing creatures, which was definitely not their description in the books.
There was a colouring book, I believe, released to accompany Lynch's Dune. The tinction required to render the Baron's pustules must have been such fun for the kiddies.
Someone has never used an anatomy coloring book.There was a colouring book, I believe, released to accompany Lynch's Dune. The tinction required to render the Baron's pustules must have been such fun for the kiddies.
Yeah, my mom had a Gray's Anatomy coloring book from her Masters work. My sophomore year my teacher used art and coloring to support learning.Nope, we had to freehand draw in biology class and I didn't study the subject beyond the age of sixteen. Colouring in your work was optional - done on your own time.
I've heard of that book - although I'm not squeamish about blood and viscera, I wouldn't choose to spend my time colouring it. I've seen example pictures from the Dune book and it did not seem age appropriate for young children.
I've never really understood the hobby - I'd rather spend the time learning to draw more proficiently if I had the inclination to be artistic. However, it's not for me to dictate how people want to spend their time. I know I've wasted enough of my own on trivial nonsense.
Yes Denis, we know, it's called a "book"https://www.joblo.com/denis-villeneuve-teases-dune-trilogy-says-words-are-on-paper/
Make of that what you will.
This assumes only young children, and not teens or adults who also benefit strongly from use of art.I've heard of that book - although I'm not squeamish about blood and viscera, I wouldn't choose to spend my time colouring it. I've seen example pictures from the Dune book and it did not seem age appropriate for young children.
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