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Dune (2021)

Atmos Finally Grows Up

Atmos Finally Grows Up

Atmos Finally Grows Up

The ultimate immersive format no longer relies on filling your room with gimmicky effects just to make its presence known 

by Dennis Burger
April 19, 2022

It never fails. Every time I admit to liking a new Dolby Atmos mix, my fellow home-cinema aficionados refuse to let me live it down. They behave as if I’ve converted to some weird cult, or—more charitably—as if I’ve finally seen the light. You can almost hear them chanting, “One of us! One of us! 

And you could say I brought this on myself, given what a vocal detractor I’ve been of Atmos and other “immersive” audio formats. That I’ve recently had nice things to say about some of these mixes could, I acknowledge, be interpreted as a change of heart. 

It isn’t. I haven’t changed. Nothing about my taste in surround sound mixing has evolved or softened, and if you put any of the abusive, distracting Atmos mixes I’ve griped about over the years in front of me now, I’d gripe just as vociferously. What has changed is that after a decade of trial and error, mixers have finally figured out how to make Atmos work with the films they accompany rather than against them. Of course, I’m not entirely sure you can blame the mixers. After all, those technicians and artists were simply giving early adopters what they demanded. 

We see this sort of thing happen any time a new expansion of sound comes to market. Think back to the awful stereo mix for The Beatles’ Rubber Soul, an album that can only be truly appreciated as a cohesive work in mono. Even a few years later, the stereo mix for Jimi Hendrix’ Are You Experienced was a curiosity at best.

Fast forward to the era of digital surround sound, when DVD arrived on the scene and we were convinced to replace our old surround sound receivers with spiffy new 5.1 models. We all wanted to hear more discrete surround effects and more pronounced deep bass to justify our new purchases. As a result, Hollywood gave us soundtracks like that of The Fifth Element, which made for a great home theater demo but was a major distraction if you wanted to actually enjoy the movie. (Ironically, the 2015 Atmos remix is actually subtler and more immersive—meaning less distracting—than the 5.1 mix included with the original DVD in the late ’90s.) 

It’s no surprise we had to go through the same growing pangs with Atmos. Or perhaps it would be more appropriate to call it an arms race. Those who were first to adopt Atmos at home shelled out a pretty penny to have additional speakers installed in their ceilings, more amps to drive them, and new receivers or preamps to decode and process the soundtracks; and they demanded to be rewarded for their investment with a torrent of sound coming from every which direction. But now that they’ve gotten their cheap fix, the rest of us can finally start to enjoy Atmos mixes that genuinely add something to the experience of watching a film rather than smacking you over the head with a newspaper at every opportunity. 

Take Nightmare Alley. It’s hard to imagine a mix like this one being created—or tolerated—ten years ago at the dawn of Atmos. It’s often—though not always—subtle. There are things going on in the overhead channels almost constantly, but they all work in the service of creating and enhancing the mood of the film and the feel of its environments. It’s the slow roll of thunder overhead and off toward the horizon, as well as the hum of mercury-vapor lamps indoors, that make the film’s locations feel tangible and multi-dimensional. They draw you into the experience rather than pulling you out of it. The soundtrack doesn’t fill your room with sound—it makes your room disappear. You don’t consciously think about where the sound is being placed because it simply feels right.

But I’m not saying Atmos mixes have to be subtle to be effective. The immersive soundtrack for last year’s Dune is incredibly aggressive. It leans on the overhead channels far more than do many of the Atmos mixes from years past that I find overbearing and counterproductive. But re-recording mixers Ron Bartlett and Doug Hemphill knew what they were doing. They didn’t crank up the mix and leave it there. They leaned hardest on the overhead and surround channels at the moments when the film becomes a pure operatic experience of sight and sound, and also when the visuals are simply so compelling no audio gimmick could pull your focus away from the screen. 

There have also been some recent experiments in Atmos that accomplish with sound what The Wizard of Oz did with Technicolor. Last Night in Soho is a perfect example. I can’t imagine that film working nearly as well without the benefit of its inventive 3D sound mix. The very shape of the soundfield is a subtle but unmissable clue about the lead character’s mental state and the delineation between reality and fantasy within the context of the narrative.

Granted, just because we’re getting there doesn’t mean we’re there yet. The recent Apollo 10½: A Space Age Childhood is a sweet and endearing little semi-autobiographical memoir that’s hobbled by an Atmos mix that treats the experience more like a theme-park ride than a work of cinema. Thankfully, such mixes are becoming less common, especially for films of this sort.

All of which is a long and roundabout way of saying that I haven’t come around to Atmos. I haven’t seen any light. I’m not a convert. I’ve long understood the potential of Atmos as a way of further immersing the viewer in the cinematic experience. I’ve simply been disappointed by Hollywood’s insistence upon using it to turn nearly every film into the experiential equivalent of Jaws 3-D. Now that it’s becoming something grownups can actually enjoy, I’m all for it. But make no mistake: I haven’t changed. Atmos has. 

Dennis Burger is an avid Star Wars scholar, Tolkien fanatic, and Corvette enthusiast who somehow also manages to find time for technological passions including high-end audio, home automation, and video gaming. He lives in the armpit of Alabama with his wife Bethany and their four-legged child Bruno, a 75-pound American Staffordshire Terrier who thinks he’s a Pomeranian.

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© 2025 Cineluxe LLC

Oscar Winners 2022

CODA Oscars 2022

reviews | Oscar Winners 2022

Original Screenplay

“Kenneth Branagh has had an up-and-down filmography but this is clearly among his strongest films. He garners fantastic performances from novices and veterans alike, yet centers the movie on the performance of young Jude Hill.”    read more

International Feature

“I wish Drive My Car was an hour shorter, a little less repetitive, a lot less austere, and had more faith in its audience to connect with its themes without belaboring them half to death. Looking back on the experience of the film as a whole, I have to say I appreciate the hell out of it. But I just can’t bring myself to love it.”    read more

Actor

King Richard is entertaining, well-made, and well-acted, and with Rotten Tomatoes critics’ and audience scores of 91 and 98% respectively, it wouldn’t be a surprise to see Will Smith up for his third Best Actor nomination. Other than a few uses of the n-word, it’s definitely family friendly and kept my 15 year old—who has no interest in tennis—engaged. It’s certainly worth giving a watch.”   read more

Documentary Feature

“You owe it to yourself to watch this film at your earliest convenience. I’ve barely nicked the paint on this incredible experience, which centers on a wonderful but forgotten music festival but also touches on everything from the moon landing to the repercussions of the assassinations of MLK and JFK to the power of music and the purpose and nature of art. The fact that it does all of that elegantly and with a cohesive narrative thread is itself something of a minor miracle.”    read more

Some worthy winners, some surprises, but nothing that moved the needle in a big way

by the Cineluxe staff
March 28, 2022

Any time the Academy decides to spread the wealth around, you know you’re into a pretty mediocre year. There were some intriguing films among the winners—debatably, no truly great ones. (Read what you will into the members treating Dune as mainly a technical exercise.) And it was interesting to see the streaming services continuing to claim more ground against the traditional studio system. The most generous view would be to say that the film industry is still regaining its footing as it adjusts to the curves thrown by the pandemic. A guess, somewhat wild, is that, because of all the forms of distribution now in play, we can expect this year to look not all that different from last. 

Picture, Adapted Screenplay, Supporting Actor

CODA is irreverent without going for cheap shocks, adorable without being cloying, sentimental without being schmaltzy, awkward without being affected, and fits firmly into the tradition of feel-good cinema without being overly manipulative emotionally. My only criticism is that it plays it safe in terms of broader story structure. Let’s call it what it is—the Hero’s Journey. As a result, by the end of the first act you’ll probably have an accurate sense of how it ends.”    read more

Cinematography, Production Design, Original Score, Film Editing, Sound, Visual Effects

“Let’s set aside for a moment the question of whether Denis Villeneuve’s Dune works as a partial adaptation of Frank Herbert’s classic science-fiction novel. A much more relevant question is whether or not it works as cinema on its own terms. And thankfully that ends up being the much easier question to answer. Yes—a thousand times, yes. As if he hadn’t proven it already with films like Arrival, Prisoners, and Blade Runner 2049, Villeneuve demonstrates with Dune that he understands cinema as an art form in a way few other modern directors do.”    read more

Original Song

No Time to Die is a fantastic experience at home, visually and sonically, and with its lengthy run-time, you’re able to pause if need be for a bathroom or snack break to ensure you don’t miss a moment of action”    read more

Supporting Actress

“It isn’t really fair to compare West Side Story to modern Broadway musicals, and the songs here might not be as catchy for some contemporary listeners as what they’d hear in Hamilton, Phantom, Les Miserables, or Jonathan Larson’s pop-rock fueled numbers. But if you typically shy away from musicals, Spielberg’s cinematic touch should be enough to tempt you to give this one a try.”    read more

Costume Design

Cruella is one of the most original live-action films to come out of Disney in recent years, and if it didn’t grab your attention in the theaters or on Disney+, now is the perfect opportunity to enjoy it in highest-resolution at home!”    read more

Animated Feature

“This film offers a wonderful opportunity to round everyone up in your home theater and share an experience. With a message that speaks to the strength of family, gorgeous images that will highlight your video display, and a catchy soundtrack, Encanto offers tantos razones to give it a watch.”    read more

Director

The Power of the Dog is both a period piece and a psychological drama, as well as a finely crafted character study of complex individuals. If you’re a fan of Jane Campion’s work, her return to the big screen is beautiful to look at and an absolutely compelling film.”    read more

© 2023 Cineluxe LLC

Oscar Nominees 2022

Oscar Nominees 2022

reviews | Oscar Nominees 2022

Picture, Director, Original Screenplay, Supporting Actor, Supporting Actress, Sound, Original Song

“Kenneth Branagh has had an up-and-down filmography but this is clearly among his strongest films. He garners fantastic performances from novices and veterans alike, yet centers the movie on the performance of young Jude Hill.”    read more

Picture, Film Editing, Original Score, Original Screenplay

“I’m glad we don’t do star ratings  at Cineluxe because I would be crippled with analysis paralysis in attempting to encapsulate the merits and demerits of Don’t Look Up. It’s simultaneously one of the year’s best films and one of its worst. It’s as fascinating as it is frustrating. It tries to be NetworkDr. Strangelove, and Veep all at the same time, but more often than not, those allusions serve to remind you it’s not as good as the works that inspired it. Seriously, though, watch it for DiCaprio’s and Lawrence’s performances, if nothing else.”    read more

Animated Feature, Original Score, Original Song

“This film offers a wonderful opportunity to round everyone up in your home theater and share an experience. With a message that speaks to the strength of family, gorgeous images that will highlight your video display, and a catchy soundtrack, Encanto offers tantos razones to give it a watch.”    read more

Makeup & Hairstyling

“You can safely avoid House of Gucci unless you simply loathe Lady Gaga, Adam Driver, or Jared Leto and want to see them humiliate themselves. If any other filmmaker turned in a movie this irredeemable, they would spend the rest of their career shooting commercials for local flea-market malls.”    read more

Actress, Supporting Actress, Adapted Screenplay

“Olivia Coleman’s masterful performance as Leda will stay with me for a long time, but much of this film’s impact can also be attributed to the supporting performances and Maggie Gyllenhaal’s talented direction and screenplay. It may be unsettling to watch at times, but The Lost Daughter reminds us of just how complex and fractured family relationships can be and is well worth seeking out.”
read more

Picture, Cinematography, Production Design, Costume Design

“Guillermo del Toro had to doff his anti-cynicism hat for this adaptation, and that—far more so than its rejection of the supernatural—is what makes Nightmare Alley feel so different. Del Toro has certainly flirted with cynicism in the past only to ultimately reject it; but to fully commit to this noir adaptation, he had to embrace it. And if there’s anything that keeps the film from knocking it completely out of the park, it’s that he seems uncomfortable doing so. It’s still a very good film, just not a great one.”   
read more

Picture, Director, Adapted Screenplay, Actor, Supporting Actor, Supporting Actress, Cinematography, Production Design, Film Editing, Sound, Original Score

The Power of the Dog is both a period piece and a psychological drama, as well as a finely crafted character study of complex individuals. If you’re a fan of Jane Campion’s work, her return to the big screen is beautiful to look at and an absolutely compelling film.”    read more

Actress

“The music and sound mixing were by far my favorite things about Spencer, which is saying a lot given that I was captivated from beginning to end. It isn’t a great film. Not quite. But it is a very good one, marred only by the occasional slip into melodrama, a few editing flubs, and an ending that’s too much of a tonal shift to swallow. For a movie that’s built on tension, tone, and shockingly tasteful body horror (seriously, who even knew that was possible?) to end with a singalong of Mike + The Mechanics’ “All I Need is a Miracle” over a bite of KFC was just a stretch too far for me. But don’t let that turn you off. Spencer is absolutely worth your time. Maybe rent it instead of buying it sight unseen, though.”    read more

Actor, Cinematography, Production Design

“I often find film adaptations of plays and musicals to be tedious, especially if they’re literal adaptions of the source material as I feel that film requires unique visual elements to engage the viewer. But The Tragedy of Macbeth succeeds in bringing the play to life with a wonderfully surreal vision of medieval Scotland and the treacherous tale of its protagonist.”    read more

Yet another drab year, but you might be able to find a few gems strewn among the rubble

by the Cineluxe staff
updated March 24, 2022

Last year’s Oscar winners were the least interesting bunch in a while, but this year’s stand a good chance of taking it all down yet another notch. Sure, there are some interesting films up for awards, but nothing galvanizing and certainly nothing to change the sense of Hollywood treading water as it tries to figure out what the world wants to watch as everyone stumbles their way out of the far side of the pandemic. Still, there’s a chance we could discover a truly rare jewel as our staff continues to put the movies vying for consideration in 2022 through their paces. Check back as we add more reviews to this page.

Picture, Adapted Screenplay, Supporting Actor

CODA is irreverent without going for cheap shocks, adorable without being cloying, sentimental without being schmaltzy, awkward without being affected, and fits firmly into the tradition of feel-good cinema without being overly manipulative emotionally. My only criticism is that it plays it safe in terms of broader story structure. Let’s call it what it is—the Hero’s Journey. As a result, by the end of the first act you’ll probably have an accurate sense of how it ends.”    read more

Picture, International Feature, Director, Adapted Screenplay

“I wish Drive My Car was an hour shorter, a little less repetitive, a lot less austere, and had more faith in its audience to connect with its themes without belaboring them half to death. Looking back on the experience of the film as a whole, I have to say I appreciate the hell out of it. But I just can’t bring myself to love it.”    read more

International Feature, Documentary Feature, Animated Feature

“This isn’t a passive viewing experience; nor is it entertainment. It’s a shocking look at geopolitical and societal forces of the sort most of us have never been subjected to, filtered through the lens of one man’s memories and experiences, then filtered through yet another lens of two-dimensional artwork.”    read more

Picture, Actor, Supporting Actress, Original Screenplay, Film Editing, Original Song, Sound

King Richard is entertaining, well-made, and well-acted, and with Rotten Tomatoes critics’ and audience scores of 91 and 98% respectively, it wouldn’t be a surprise to see Will Smith up for his third Best Actor nomination. Other than a few uses of the n-word, it’s definitely family friendly and kept my 15 year old—who has no interest in tennis—engaged. It’s certainly worth giving a watch.”   read more

Animated Feature

“It’s not that Luca is a bad film. In fact, you could easily say that while Soul was a Pixar title made for adults, Luca sets its sights squarely on a younger audience, with a coming-of-age story about friendship, acceptance, childhood dreams, and overcoming fears that never gets too deep or strays too far away from safety and cuteness that kids will be drawn to. And if Luca came from any other studio (with the exception of Disney Animation, Pixar’s parent company), it would likely be heralded as a triumph. It’s just that Pixar has come to make us expect so much more.”    read more

Sound, Original Song, Visual Effects

No Time to Die is a fantastic experience at home, visually and sonically, and with its lengthy run-time, you’re able to pause if need be for a bathroom or snack break to ensure you don’t miss a moment of action”    read more

Animated Feature

Raya and the Last Dragon looks gorgeous, and the voice acting—especially the always-likable Awkafina, who brings the right level of humor and quirkiness to Sisu—is on point. While the lack of any songs and intense scenes might limit its replay value for younger viewers, its an entertaining film that will appeal to many viewers, as attested to by its very favorable 95% Rotten Tomatoes criticsrating and 85% audience score. I have two daughters—ages 14 and almost five—so for us, a movie night where we can all get together and enjoy a new Disney animated film was an easy yes.”    read more

Documentary Feature

“You owe it to yourself to watch this film at your earliest convenience. I’ve barely nicked the paint on this incredible experience, which centers on a wonderful but forgotten music festival but also touches on everything from the moon landing to the repercussions of the assassinations of MLK and JFK to the power of music and the purpose and nature of art. The fact that it does all of that elegantly and with a cohesive narrative thread is itself something of a minor miracle.”    read more

Picture, Director, Supporting Actress, Cinematography, Production Design, Sound, Costume Design 

“It isn’t really fair to compare West Side Story to modern Broadway musicals, and the songs here might not be as catchy for some contemporary listeners as what they’d hear in Hamilton, Phantom, Les Miserables, or Jonathan Larson’s pop-rock fueled numbers. But if you typically shy away from musicals, Spielberg’s cinematic touch should be enough to tempt you to give this one a try.”    read more

JUMP TO

Costume Design, Makeup & Hairstyling

Cruella is one of the most original live-action films to come out of Disney in recent years, and if it didn’t grab your attention in the theaters or on Disney+, now is the perfect opportunity to enjoy it in highest-resolution at home!”    read more

Picture, Adapted Screenplay, Cinematography, Production Design, Costume Design, Makeup & Hairstyling, Original Score, Film Editing, Sound, Visual Effects

“Let’s set aside for a moment the question of whether Denis Villeneuve’s Dune works as a partial adaptation of Frank Herbert’s classic science-fiction novel. A much more relevant question is whether or not it works as cinema on its own terms. And thankfully that ends up being the much easier question to answer. Yes—a thousand times, yes. As if he hadn’t proven it already with films like Arrival, Prisoners, and Blade Runner 2049, Villeneuve demonstrates with Dune that he understands cinema as an art form in a way few other modern directors do.”    read more

Visual Effects

Free Guy definitely doesn’t take itself too seriously and is just a load of fun to sit back and enjoy. Unless you belong to that sub-section that just hates Ryan Reynolds—and, come on, get over Green Lantern already!—this makes a great night at the movies, with a bunch of little Easter eggs that look great up on a large home-cinema screen and reward repeat viewing. ”    read more   

Picture, Director, Original Screenplay

“Overall, Licorice Pizza is as meandering and unfocused an experience as you might expect but it’s worth the journey if only for Alana Haim’s performance. She is an utterly effortless and hypnotic screen presence—the sort of actor who makes you forget she’s acting at all. I found myself shocked at times that co-stars the likes of Sean Penn and Tom Waits could come close to matching her natural energy.”   read more

Animated Feature

“Maybe the best thing I can say about this movie is that it’s legitimate family fare. That’s generally used as a euphemism for children’s entertainment but in this case, the label deserves to be taken at face value. There’s a lot of dessert here to keep the young ones in your family engaged, but there’s also enough meat to appeal to audiences of all ages. It might not be the height of profundity and it’s a little uneven in its execution but the good far outweighs the bad. And that alone elevates The Mitchells vs. the Machines way above the baseline for kid-appropriate movies distributed by Netflix.”    read more

Actress, Original Score

“Hopefully by the time Sony Pictures prepares the film for a proper North American home video release, the issues with the noise and funky textures will have been resolved, because this one is a keeper for me. It’s probably Almodóvar’s best film since 2006’s Volver, and it’s a damn sight better than most of this year’s Best Picture noms.”    read more

Visual Effects

Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings was just OK. It was fun to watch, looked great, the fight scenes were dynamic and visually interesting, and the actors—particularly Leung, who brings some real depth to the villain character—did a fine job, but the story itself felt thin. And it just didn’t feel like a Marvel movie. But with a Rotten Tomatoes score of 92% and an Audience Score of 98%—the highest combined score of any film in the MCU—it seems like I’m in the minority, and maybe my opinion will change on future viewings.”    read more

Actor, Film Editing

“All in all, this is an encouraging directorial debut from Lin-Manuel Miranda and another star turn for Andrew Garfield, making it an easy recommendation the next time you’re wondering what to watch on Netflix.”    read more

Documentary Feature

Writing with Fire isn’t perfect, even ignoring the technical shortcomings. At 96 minutes, it positively whizzes by, and there are several story threads I wish we could have sat with for another 15 or 20 minutes here and there. But I’d far rather spend time with a film that leaves me wanting more than one that overstays its welcome, even when the subject matter is as important as this.”    read more

© 2023 Cineluxe LLC

Review: Dune (2021)

Dune (2021)

review | Dune (2021)

This latest adaptation of the Frank Herbert classic easily eclipses all of the earlier attempts

by Dennis Burger
October 22, 2021

Let’s set aside for a moment the question of whether Denis Villeneuve’s Dune works as a partial adaptation of Frank Herbert’s classic science-fiction novel. With something in the neighborhood of 20 million copies sold, the book is one of the best-selling of its genre. But divide those sales figures by the world population and chances are very good most people who view the film will have never cracked the cover of this gargantuan doorstop of a tome. So a much more relevant question is whether or not Dune works as cinema on its own terms. 

And thankfully that ends up being the much easier question to answer. Yes—a thousand times, yes. As if he hadn’t proven it already with films like Arrival, Prisoners, and Blade Runner 2049, Villeneuve demonstrates with Dune that he understands cinema as an art form in a way few other modern directors do. 

As with most of his work, Villeneuve straddles two worlds with Dune, keeping one foot firmly planted in the traditions of the past and one foot precariously placed in an uncharted future. By that I mean that despite looking very much like a 21st-century film, it doesn’t feel like one. There’s something quite old-fashioned about it, or perhaps “timeless” is the word I’m looking for. The allusions to Lawrence of Arabia are blatant—and fitting, given how much that film influenced Frank Herbert in the writing of Dune. But Villeneuve manages to draw inspiration without aping. He evokes the spirit, scope, and energy of David Lean’s classic without being beholden to its style. The style is entirely Villeneuve’s. 

Well, cinematographer Greig Fraser (Zero Dark Thirty, The Mandalorian) also deserves a lot of credit for the style. While I said that Dune looks like a 21st-century film, that’s not quite accurate. It simply looks like a film that couldn’t have been captured before the modern era of filmmaking. Ultimately, it looks unlike anything I’ve ever seen. And that may have something to do with the unusual postproduction process. The movie was shot on a mix of IMAX film and ArriRaw digital (the latter at 4.5K resolution), but before the footage was finished in a 4K DI, all of the digital imagery was printed to film stock then scanned back to into the computer. 

That gives the imagery a unique character, to say the least. It doesn’t look entirely analog but neither does it look wholly digital. It’s the best of both methods—which, again, reinforces the notion of Dune as the perfect marriage of tried-and-true past and untested, experimental future. 

That captivating aesthetic, combined with the sheer scale of the film and its reliance on capturing as much as possible in camera (to the point that, in promotional interviews, actor Timothée Chalamet claims to recall only seeing a green screen twice during production) adds up to a film that demands to be seen at scale, on the best screen you can reasonably access. In my case, that meant watching HBO Max’s stream in my own home cinema system since the nearest commercial cinema that can legitimately claim to deliver a better audiovisual experience is a three-hour drive away in Alpharetta, GA. 

Thankfully, shockingly, the HBO Max presentation is the very definition of reference-quality. I started my stream the minute the film was available, which struck me as a foolhardy choice the instant I hit Play, given how many millions of other people must have been sitting with their fingers on their remotes, waiting for it to be unlocked. But I never experienced any glitches due to server overload and I never spotted anything in the image that could be construed as an artifact of the high-efficiency encoding of the film.

Far from it. I would go so far as to say I’ve never experienced imagery this captivating, engaging, or dynamic in my media room. Part of that is due to the sumptuous detail, the gorgeous textures, the unparalleled set design, costumes, etc. But a lot of it has to be chalked up to the fact that Dune represents the most effective application of high dynamic range grading I’ve seen to date. 

HBO Max’s Dolby Vision presentation pushed my display to extremes I didn’t know it was capable of, extremes I can’t imagine being bested by anything other than perhaps a perfectly calibrated IMAX Laser setup—and I have my doubts about even that. Simply put, if displays had rights, Dune would be a violation of the Geneva Conventions. 

But none of its visual extremes—scenes bathed in near-infinite shadows followed quickly by such dazzling brightness that your pupils will constrict to pinpoints—feels gratuitous. All are absolutely in service of the story and the environments in which it unfolds. 

Equally compelling is the Dolby Atmos soundtrack, which is likewise so dynamic that I pity the unfortunate souls who attempt to experience it through a soundbar or basic home theater speaker setup. If you’re an Atmos junkie who keeps a mental running tally of how frequently your surround and overhead speakers—and subwoofers—are pushed to their limits, you’re going to be in absolute aural heaven here. 

As I’ve stated many times within the pages of Cineluxe, I’m not one of those people. I find most Atmos sound mixes masochistic and overbearing, not to mention distracting. But for Dune, this approach simply works. That may be because the imagery is so captivating that no amount of offscreen audio could pull my attention away from the screen, but I also think it’s due to thoughtful mixing and a deep understanding of the relationship between picture and sound. Whatever the reason, it all simply works, and there’s not much else to say about the sound.

Well, there is one more thing, although I do run the risk of angering some readers here, especially fans of composer Hans Zimmer. I’ve rarely if ever understood the appeal of most of Zimmer’s work. I often find his compositions fatiguing, uninteresting, and so utterly and needlessly aggressive that I need to wipe the testosterone residue from my speakers after watching a film he’s scored. And make no mistake here: his score for Dune is bombastic at times, what with its heavy reliance on percussion and synths. 

But this is unquestionably his best score since 1994’s The Lion King, and it succeeds for most of the same reasons. Zimmer understood the assignment here, and his music works in conjunction with the visuals and the narrative in such a way that they’re inseparable. I’ve had the score on repeat throughout the writing of this review, simply because I cannot shake it. It haunts me. Its leitmotifs—both melodic and percussion—resonate with me in a way that few Zimmer scores ever have. And most tellingly, as I’m listening to it, I can close my eyes and see the accompanying moments from the film. And this is a film I’ve only seen once, mind you. That’s the mark of a great score. 

Put it all together, and I have next to nothing critical to say about Dune as a work of cinema in and of itself. There are a few edits in the first act that feel a bit choppy. By that I mean that even if you’re completely unfamiliar with the story you’ll no doubt sense that much of what was excised from the assembly cut to get the film down to a tight 2 hours and 38 minutes was removed from the first third. 

There’s also the fact that, while the bulk of the performances are truly world-class, Dave Bautista feels out of place here. I’m a fan of Bautista’s, but his portrayal of Rabban Harkonnen—the nephew of the baron who previously ruled the desert planet that gives Dune its name—feels one-note and over-the-top, at least when compared with the nuanced performances turned in by literally everyone else. Other than those quibbles, Dune is a monumental work of art in its own right.

But what about its effectiveness as an adaptation of the supposedly unfilmable novel? Well, it’s not perfect in that respect but it’s infinitely better than I could ever hoped for. Villeneuve—unlike David Lynch and John Harrison (who directed the 2000 mini-series)—has boiled the narrative down to its essence rather than haphazardly and erratically chopping the story into bit-sized pieces. He was able to distill that essence because he understands that essence. 

Dune works as a novel because of its complexity. In writing the book, Herbert explored the many ways in which ecology influences and drives every aspect of the human experience, from the personal to the familial to the societal, political, and religious institutions that shape our lives. It’s also a novel that takes place largely between the ears of its characters, something no film could successfully replicate (although, bless his heart, David Lynch tried and failed spectacularly to do so). 

With his film adaptation of the first two-thirds or thereabouts of the novel, Villeneuve had no choice but to tidy up some of its tangled narrative threads, and he made the wise choice to focus on the personal and familial above all else. The Dune geek in me laments the de-emphasis on the ecological and environmental. But the cinephile in me can’t imagine how he could have possibly explored that aspect of the novel entirely without turning his film into a never-ending barrage of exposition dumps. 

Then again, there’s a lot about this adaptation I never could have imagined before seeing it. There are aspects of the novel I never expected to see translated to the screen, much less this effectively or artfully. 

And the fact that Villeneuve managed to capture so much of the book’s essential fiber without creating a big pile of confusion for the uninitiated is a bit of a miracle. After the credits rolled, my wife—who has never read the novel and before now had no interest in doing so—turned to me and said, “I expected to be lost, but I never was. There’s so much more I want to know, so many questions I want answered. But in the moment, watching the film, I didn’t feel like I was missing anything. Well, except for the fact that I feel like there’s a reason why Duke Leto never married Lady Jessica and I wish the film had explored that.”

And in that respect, she’s absolutely correct. Armed with my deep knowledge of the book, I also feel like there are a couple other things the film could have conveyed better, such as the ritualistic obsession with moisture inherent to the culture of the Fremen—the nomadic natives of the planet Arrakis, aka “Dune.” But when I quizzed my wife about it, her response was, “No, I definitely picked up on that.” So, perhaps I’m wrong. 

At any rate, now that I’ve experienced the first part of Villeneuve’s intended two-part adaptation, I still have no clue how he’s going to successfully translate the rest of the book to the screen. The rest of the story takes a turn for the weird, to put it lightly. But even if Dune: Part Two ends up being a major flop (assuming it even gets made, although that seems likely), that won’t diminish my appreciation of this first part. 

The narrative may not be complete. As Zendaya’s character Chani cheekily teases just before the credits roll, “This is only the beginning.” But Dune nonetheless manages to feel like a complete story, with an ending that is both emotionally and thematically satisfying, while also pointing toward a much bigger and tantalizing future. 

Dennis Burger is an avid Star Wars scholar, Tolkien fanatic, and Corvette enthusiast who somehow also manages to find time for technological passions including high-end audio, home automation, and video gaming. He lives in the armpit of Alabama with his wife Bethany and their four-legged child Bruno, a 75-pound American Staffordshire Terrier who thinks he’s a Pomeranian.

PICTURE | The HBO Max presentation is the very definition of reference-quality, with the most effective application of high dynamic range grading to date.

SOUND | The Dolby Atmos soundtrack is so dynamic that you can only pity the unfortunate souls who attempt to experience it through a soundbar or basic home theater speaker setup.

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