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IMDbPro

Dune

  • Miniserie de TV
  • 2000
  • Not Rated
  • 4h 25min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
6.9/10
26 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
POPULARIDAD
2,930
3,870
Dune (2000)
special ed. dvd
Reproducir trailer2:07
6 videos
42 fotos
AventuraAventura en el desiertoCiencia FicciónCiencia ficción espacialDramaÉpica de ciencia ficción

Política, traición, lujuria, codicia y la llegada de un Mesías. Basada en la clásica novela de ciencia ficción de Frank Herbert.Política, traición, lujuria, codicia y la llegada de un Mesías. Basada en la clásica novela de ciencia ficción de Frank Herbert.Política, traición, lujuria, codicia y la llegada de un Mesías. Basada en la clásica novela de ciencia ficción de Frank Herbert.

  • Elenco
    • William Hurt
    • Alec Newman
    • Giancarlo Giannini
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    6.9/10
    26 k
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    POPULARIDAD
    2,930
    3,870
    • Elenco
      • William Hurt
      • Alec Newman
      • Giancarlo Giannini
    • 323Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 23Opiniones de los críticos
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
    • Ganó 2 premios Primetime Emmy
      • 9 premios ganados y 9 nominaciones en total

    Episodios3

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    DestacadoLos mejor calificados1 temporada2000

    Videos6

    Frank Herbert's Dune
    Trailer 2:07
    Frank Herbert's Dune
    Frank Herbert's Dune
    Trailer 0:40
    Frank Herbert's Dune
    Frank Herbert's Dune
    Trailer 0:40
    Frank Herbert's Dune
    Frank Herbert's Dune
    Trailer 1:20
    Frank Herbert's Dune
    Frank Herbert's Dune
    Trailer 2:06
    Frank Herbert's Dune
    Dune (International Trailer)
    Trailer 1:53
    Dune (International Trailer)
    Dune
    Trailer 1:18
    Dune

    Fotos41

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    + 35
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    Elenco principal65

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    William Hurt
    William Hurt
    • Duke Leto Atreides
    • 2000
    Alec Newman
    Alec Newman
    • Muad'Dib…
    • 2000
    Giancarlo Giannini
    Giancarlo Giannini
    • Padishah - Emperor Shaddam Corrino IV
    • 2000
    Uwe Ochsenknecht
    Uwe Ochsenknecht
    • Stilgar
    • 2000
    Saskia Reeves
    Saskia Reeves
    • Lady Jessica Atreides
    • 2000
    James Watson
    James Watson
    • Duncan Idaho
    • 2000
    Jan Vlasák
    Jan Vlasák
    • Thufir Hawat
    • 2000
    P.H. Moriarty
    P.H. Moriarty
    • Gurney Halleck
    • 2000
    Robert Russell
    • Dr. Yueh
    • 2000
    Laura Burton
    Laura Burton
    • Alia Atreides
    • 2000
    Ian McNeice
    Ian McNeice
    • Baron Vladimir Harkonnen
    • 2000
    Matt Keeslar
    Matt Keeslar
    • Feyd-Rautha Harkonnen
    • 2000
    László I. Kish
    László I. Kish
    • Glossu Rabban
    • 2000
    Jan Unger
    Jan Unger
    • Piter De Vries
    • 2000
    Julie Cox
    Julie Cox
    • Princess Irulan Corrino
    • 2000
    Miroslav Táborský
    Miroslav Táborský
    • Count Hasimir Fenring
    • 2000
    Barbora Kodetová
    Barbora Kodetová
    • Chani
    • 2000
    Jakob Schwarz
    Jakob Schwarz
    • Otheym
    • 2000
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios323

    6.925.9K
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    Opiniones destacadas

    Kirpianuscus

    faitful, honest, inspired adaptation

    I admitt, for me it is the bbest adaptation of the novels. Without the baroc air, proposing beautiful performances, wise options in technical level, preserving, in faithful manner, the soul of series of Frank Herbert, it is more than impressive but correct in profound sense. Sure, first for actors, second , for the desire to be the fair, honest answer to the viewers expectations.
    hpeg

    Almost there...

    I've read the Dune books about a dozen times and I have also watched the 1984 movie a few times, and, while it had good ideas, it didn't thrill me. So I decided to give this mini series a try.

    The first time I watched it I switched off after hearing Lady Jessica use the Voice for the first time. I disliked the 'spatializer' effects in the movie, and I didn't like them in the series. Months later I decided to give it another try.

    I was quite astonished. The series has lots of very strong points.

    The Fremen sietches have a very arabian feel to them, just the way they were intended in the books. Having lots of foreign actors added to the overall feel of a universe populated by a race that has split out into different planets. Of course, everyone would speak Galach with their own accent.

    The passage to Arrakis is very unique in its approach to the navigators and their skills and I really liked the idea.

    Unfortunately it had a few downright flops.

    Paul should have been replaced. He is too old, he is too plain and he is way too 2 dimensional. The dream sequences are too unconvincing.

    The Voice. It hardly appears in the series, and it's badly done. Trying to copy from the movie as a poor idea. I would have preferred a normal tone of voice, maybe some underlying sound effects and extremely voice trained actors who can snap out harsh commands unexpectedly and at will. The complete denaturalisation the spatializer gives the voice just makes me cringe.

    What spoilt it even more was knowing the movie and then watching the series. You find yourself longing for the original Gurney, Leto, Feyd and Paul. Fortunately, you also adore the new Dr Kynes, Chani and Baron Harkonnen.

    Finally, as was expected in any adaptation of Frank Herbert's novel that is shorter than 12 hours, I found myself explaining parts of what was going on to my friend, who hadn't read the book.

    Overall, it is an excellent series, one to watch and one to buy. It is not perfect, but it is almost there.

    Hints for future producers: Skip the spatializer, exploit the arabian and islamic Fremen theme, less technology, Harkonnens are evil, 6 hours are not enough.
    schogger13

    Guilty Pleasures

    First, a small catalog of guidelines for the 3 main types of viewers, and what they can expect from this mini series.

    Type One: The Dunatics. For them, nothing can match up to the gospel according to Frank Herbert, so, choices are reduced to 2. Either make allowances towards both limitations and possibilities of the TV format to encounter the new and frivolous concept of fun, or refuse to watch this on the premise that any cinematic adaptation short of congeniality amounts to blasphemy by nature.

    Type Two: The Lynch Mob. For them, the 84 adaptation justifies making allowances towards the novel by sheer impact of Lynch's surely unique, but also highly controversial vision - sometimes even questionable, where both Herbert and Lynch share an uncomfortable leaning towards social Darwinism and Riefenstahl-type aesthetics/ideals of 'Uebermensch' and 'Untermensch', sometimes even drifting into fascist cyphers. Noble savages versus the pit full of rotting (and of course 'sexually depraved', by showing the 'classic' negatively coded combination of cruelty and latent/outright homosexuality in men, and deception/treachery and offensive sexuality in women) carcass of the old and degenerated system of the imperial hierarchy. But the belief in 'higher breeding' (birthright of leadership/superiority) transcends both and is never put in question - not even by our 'hero' after the real necessity of a political marriage was gone. Recommendation: Watch Dune 2000. With a certain selective view applied, it'll serve as a welcome spare parts depot for their thesis that the 84 movie casts a shadow which can't be shed by any future attempt. Visually, this new version has enough thinly disguised 'Lynchisms' to justify a gloat session.

    Type Three: The Players. They are the least dogmatic section of viewers, first and foremost on the look-out for 5 hours of 'other-worldly' atmosphere and storytelling beyond the mind-numbing standards of SF TV. Recommendation: Have fun and a few good 'goosebump moments' beyond mere popcorn TV.

    General aspects:

    Looks Let's face it, this one is split. The photography, costumes (matter of taste) and the built sets are excellent but highly individual. One either loves or hates it. On the whole, it looks more like a Visconti epic than Hollywood coded SF. CGI, backdrops, matte paintings and 'outdoor' studio sets, on the other hand, are so unbelievably clumsy and unprofessional that they can easily spoil the whole thing if one isn't capable of blotting them out of one's prime perception. The budget is no excuse. Half a crew from the minimal budget wizards on Farscape would've finished classes above this shambles.

    Script This is far better than most give it credit. It has flaws, but they derive mostly from particular expectations of the Dunatics or the Lynch Mob. They tried to loose a bit of the extremely sterile and formalized dialogue from the books and the 84 movie - sometimes going overboard by making them talk too '90's casual' - but on the whole achieving a good compromise between Herbert's and Lynch's extremely artificial diction and something that could be recognized as 'normal' talk in such a highly ritualized environment. On the whole, they stayed closer to the book than the Lynch version, but messed up on a few small but sometimes vital details without an apparent reason. That's of no consequence for those who haven't read the original, but a pity, nonetheless in some cases, especially the lame portrayal of the Fremen. (significance of water in all its aspects)

    Acting A mixed bag, here, but mainly due to the 90's approach to characterization/diction rather than bad acting. That sometimes backfires heavily, especially in the case of the lead. The whole concept - no matter how 'updated' it's supposed to be - hinges on a rather simple but nonetheless vital construct of a messiah. So, first requirement is to emanate something 'beyond' a mere character. Messiahs are NEVER characters. They are cyphers to carry and focus ideals no mortal could match up to. Herbert's Paul has at least to function/convince as a kind of Jesus with a pump action to inspire massive battles for the greater good. In that, Alec Newman fails almost completely. Half of that is down to a simple lack of presence, and the other half to Harrison's direction. Granted, Newman portrays a more 'real' person than McLachlan's aseptic and super moralistic uber-noble, but that is the last thing required for such a role. The actor who played Gurney, though, was a total wash-out and shouldn't even be mentioned in the same breath with Stewart's interpretation. But there, the pit is already reached. Most other performances range from adequate to good (in the case of non English speaking actors sometimes hampered by the sheer inability to give life to the words beyond mere translation..., with one notable and no less than exquisite exeption)

    The acting highlight is set by Ian McNeice's Baron. This is the real gem of the whole piece - and most likely to be hated by both Dunatics and the Lynch Mob. He gives an outrageous Baron! Pure ham, brilliantly constructed to bypass the extremely limited and one-dimensional boundaries of that character set by Herbert & Lynch, like acid, skilfully sprinkled over the plump exterior to outline the hidden and multi-layered menace and the REAL danger. For the first time, one can really see the magnitude and cunning of the Baron's long-term agenda. At the same time McNeice splashes the character's homosexuality at the screen like a paint bomb, thereby totally disconnecting it from his evilness. This Baron is an evil man who merely HAPPENS to be a homosexual. Here, his sexuality is his only Achilles heel - his 'weak' spot amongst ppl who use exactly that to bring him down. An absolutely brilliant acting twist to de-cloak the nature of the co-existing true evil in the same person. And McNeice's Baron doesn't only say he's intelligent and downright exceptional in his scheming skills. He proves it more than once against a whole menagerie of 'allies' constantly underestimating him.
    cajunboy

    It was great to see a six hour treatment but...

    I know that everyone has problems with David Lynch's 1984 version of Dune, but after seeing the television version that adds some scenes, it's grown on me. I never understood why until I saw the new SciFi Channel miniseries. It was the acting. They had little to work with, but they were fascinating. The new miniseries gives the book a much more proper story treatment, but the acting falls short. My best example is the Paul-Feyd contrast. Although, Kyle McLachlan seemed too old to me, he and Sting made excellent opposites in the Lynch version. The two actors cast in the miniseries looked so much alike and were both so wooden to me that it took me half the movie to be able to easily tell when Feyd appeared. As has been mentioned in other comments, the rest of the cast is good, but the 1984 version just had such a great cast that the acting is tough to beat.

    I wish that the 1984 cast had the miniseries treatment to work with and it would have been grand. Perhaps after several viewings the acting in the miniseries will grow on me. All in all, it's nice to see more of the book's depth filmed.
    7cchase

    If only movies had spliceable DNA as well as frames...

    I was wondering if I needed to wait until viewing the entire mini-series version of Frank Herbert's seminal science fiction classic, but now having seen Part One, I know that won't be necessary.

    How I wish there were some way to extract the charisma of the movie's cast, and somehow meld it with the production values and plotline of the new version. That way, fans of this sprawling allegorical tale could have the best of both worlds. Not that there aren't admirable things about both versions.

    Where the magnificent photography of the late, great Freddie Francis served well David Lynch's more ethereal tendencies in the 1984 version, Vittorio Storaro's cleaner, clearer images for Harrison's miniseries could very well be a metaphorical reflection of the ever-expanding vision of its hero, young Paul Atreides (nee Paul Mu'ad D'ib.) The production design of both films is lavish, but where Lynch's film gave locations and accoutrements a more lived-in look, the mini's similar designs, though equally accurate by the novel's standards, reflect that antiseptic cleanliness that we are learning to recognize more and more with the advent of digital technology and its application to cinematic visual techniques.

    With a few exceptions, the casting and therefore the subsequent performances are just as clean and clear-cut, dispensing with some of the character's humanity in exchange for the original's hystrionics of its more memorable characters.

    Where Kenneth McMillan's unredeemably repulsive yet completely unforgettable Baron Harkonnen was the apex of pustulant, corpulent evil, Ian McNeice's version comes off as daintily perturbed, as if the most upsetting event in his worldview is not being served tea on time. William Hurt and Saskia Reeves capture the confident, manor-bred mantles of Duke Leto and the Lady Jessica accurately enough, but gone are the sorrowful grace of Jurgen Prochnow and the stunning Francesca Annis, whose relationship seemed tinged with the inescapable taint of a prophecy waiting to be fulfilled, and the damned, doomed parts they both played in its unfolding.

    The rest of the cast, though gamely essaying their roles to the best of their ability, could hardly hope to match the powerhouse ensemble assembled by Italian mega-mogul Dino de Laurentis. For years, David Lynch was wrongfully assigned the blame for butchering his own film, when buffs everywhere know that he suffered through the ham-handed, studio-supervised editing of what should've been a landmark of science-fiction filmmaking, similar to what Terry Gilliam would endure at the same studio with BRAZIL.

    Further insult was added to the injury when a four-hour cut was assembled by Universal for the TV version, which Lynch promptly removed his name from, (hence the traditional "Smithee" credit for direction, and the writing by "Judas Booth.")

    While it is a splendid example of how CGI and other visual technological developments are making it possible for filmmakers to maintain accuracy and a truth to tell those stories it would've been impossible to film over a decade ago, (and for about half the cost), I for one do miss the star power and (at least) some of the remarkable acting in the Lynch version. I suspect where more money was spent on securing stars in '84 than for the sets and costume designs, the exact opposite is true for the new miniseries.

    New and old fans of the tale should view and enjoy the latest version for the visuals, then go back and review the movie for the Lynchian touch, which in some odd but affecting ways came closer to Herbert's underlying messages of mysticism, miracles and seizing one's destiny than the Harrison version. In any case, you can come away with some elements of the best of both DUNE worlds.

    Argumento

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    • Trivia
      The Mahdi statue at Sietch Tabr was inspired by the Buddha statues in Bamian, Afghanistan, which were later destroyed by the Taliban.
    • Errores
      The computer generated "'thopters" have fans on the back wings to make them fly. The actual close-up models are missing these fans.
    • Citas

      Jessica: You see her standing there, so haughty, so confident. Let us hope she finds solace in her writing and her books. She'll have little else. She may have my son's name, but it is we, the ones who carry the name concubine, that history will call wives.

    • Versiones alternativas
      There exist four versions of this mini series:
      • the original version presented to the Sci-Fi channel which runs ca. 280 minutes and was deemed unsuitable by Network execs/censors. This version was used everywhere else.
      • the American TV version (ca. 265 min., see below)
      • the UK version (see below)
      • the Director's edition which adds ca. 6 minutes to the original version (ca. 286 min., see below)
    • Conexiones
      Featured in Troldspejlet: Episode #25.11 (2001)

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    Preguntas Frecuentes21

    • How many seasons does Dune have?Con tecnología de Alexa
    • What is Dune about?
    • What are the differences between the TV Version and the Director's Cut?

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 3 de diciembre de 2000 (Estados Unidos)
    • Países de origen
      • Estados Unidos
      • Canadá
      • Alemania
      • República Checa
    • Sitios oficiales
      • SCIFI.COM
      • scifi.com
    • Idiomas
      • Inglés
      • Italiano
    • También se conoce como
      • Frank Herbert's Dune
    • Locaciones de filmación
      • Cinecittà Studios, Cinecittà, Roma, Lacio, Italia(Studio)
    • Productoras
      • New Amsterdam Entertainment
      • Victor Television Productions Inc.
      • Betafilm
    • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Tiempo de ejecución
      • 4h 25min(265 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Mezcla de sonido
      • Dolby Digital

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