Spectacular tale of war and love
Toronto Star|March 01, 2024
Denis Villeneuve's Dune: Part Two' offers grander sci-fi spectacle and storytelling
PETER HOWELL
Spectacular tale of war and love

"Dune: Part Two" would be just meaningless fireworks if the human component of the story didn't pack the same oomph. Fortunately it does, Peter Howell writes.

There's all-out war but also steadfast love in "Dune: Part Two," Denis Villeneuve's spectacular followup to his 2021 sci-fi epic.

Warriors clash, villains and heroes scheme, believers seek a messiah and two hearts crave connection in the immersive storytelling of the Canadian director and co-writer.

Villeneuve continues to grandly illustrate and expand "Dune" author Frank Herbert's evergreen vision of desert planet Arrakis, a sunscorched place rich in natural treasure the magical spice mélange but bereft of harmony between its Indigenous and colonizer inhabitants.

Connections with our real-world political and environmental concerns hover in the mind constantly, like the film's dragonfly helicopters.

The movie fairly throbs with conflicts and intrigues, all the more so if you see it on an IMAX screen with the deep bass of Hans Zimmer's majestic score rumbling through your body. Greig Fraser's tactile cinematography and Patrice Vermette's Brutalist production design help cement inevitable and favourable comparisons with "The Empire Strikes Back," "The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers," Villeneuve's "Blade Runner 2049" and other sci-fi/fantasy totems.

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