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My opinion is that the thinking machine ban is all about how outsourcing human effort to computers makes us soft and weak. One of the major themes of the series is that hard places make hard men. The Sardaukar are such badasses because they are refined in the crucible of Salusa Secundus; the fremen are even more badass because Arrakis is even worse. So while we here in the modern era have been conditioned to view the threat of AIs as giant thinking brains named after Greek mythological figures stomping around in giant laser mechs and yeeting infants off of roofs, I'm not sure that was as ingrained in the sci fi reading consciousness in the 60s. The idea of a soft and weak Wall-E style civilization, one that is willing to abdicate all the work and striving and self-improvement that humans value to AI or to men who control that AI fits more neatly into Herbert's themes. IMO.
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# ? Apr 18, 2024 21:23 |
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# ? May 28, 2024 16:27 |
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Couldn't be us!
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# ? Apr 18, 2024 21:28 |
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galagazombie posted:There’s countless quotes in the real Dune books that all but state the jihad was an ideological war of man against man rather than the plot of Terminator. Sure the pro machine side undoubtedly used killbots, but it wasn’t a side led by killbots. The killbots are still around, even. One of them almost got Paul.
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# ? Apr 18, 2024 21:31 |
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Schwarzwald posted:The killbots are still around, even. One of them almost got Paul. And they're gonna gain ESP and come back and wipe out all of humanity, unless this talking giant worm's plan works out
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# ? Apr 18, 2024 21:34 |
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hobbesmaster posted:Chapterhouse implied an alarming amount (more than 0) was Frank’s actual intention. Yeah and Brian's claim that his dad would approve of him taking his notes/ideas and adding his own and continuing the story isn't very far-fetched, depending on their relationship.
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# ? Apr 18, 2024 21:41 |
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hobbesmaster posted:Chapterhouse implied an alarming amount (more than 0) was Frank’s actual intention. Maybe, or maybe that was where Frank wanted to go with the universe later on, but it might not have been his original idea. He was a weird old crank by the end of his life so you don't have to care what he says if you don't want to.
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# ? Apr 18, 2024 22:54 |
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Cognac McCarthy posted:Maybe, or maybe that was where Frank wanted to go with the universe later on, but it might not have been his original idea. He was a weird old crank by the end of his life so you don't have to care what he says if you don't want to. It’s concerning that there are not that many less stupid options for scytale’s genetic chekov’s gun. If you have read Frank’s books and not anything about hunters or sandworms read the Wikipedia summaries, they’re hilarious. eg: quote:On the no-ship, rebel Bene Gesserit attempt to murder the Leto II ghola, but are foiled when he transforms into a sandworm. A good bit for a short story on ao3, but come on
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# ? Apr 19, 2024 00:13 |
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A lot of sci-fi authors manage to be surprisingly prescient when they write about technology not in terms of what technology can do, or even what forms it takes, but about people's relationship with technology and how they use it and treat it. Even the thing of exaggerating existing trends to sci-fi extremes has a basis in that, as how often people absolutely do take things as far as the technology they have will allow it. I'm not surprised that the crusade against thinking machines was less about the machines themselves and more the power they lend to those who they're programmed to obey. Heck, a fully sentient machine is something that can be reasoned with, agreements can be made with, which is a rather big theme in the series where moral ambiguity and the commonalities one can have with even their sworn enemies are major things. If anything, the mentions of prescient hunter-seeker drones are all too relevant nowadays in the age of automatic drone warfare used for genocidal brutality.
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# ? Apr 19, 2024 10:49 |
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No Mods No Masters posted:People seem to often criticize shields as a worldbuilding component, but demonstrably in the eyes of denis it's more integral than say the spacing guild. I guess ultimately who's a better judge of dune, posters or denis I believe the Westwood FMV directors!
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# ? Apr 19, 2024 12:05 |
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Shields are part of the settings. Becuse shields force mele combat. And that allow a individual to be good trough training. So you can have elites and a noble caste. This tool has killed more nobles than the guillotine, because the flecchetes can perforate the nobles armor and shields and is easy to use by peasants with no training.
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# ? Apr 19, 2024 12:51 |
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hobbesmaster posted:Chapterhouse implied an alarming amount (more than 0) was Frank’s actual intention. quote:Willis Mcnelly was a close friend of Frank (he gave the eulogy at the funeral) who wrote the Dune Encyclopedia after his many conversations with Frank about the world of Dune. I wish I could tell you the source for that quote, but I saw it and sent it to myself as a text message (I routinely do this with topics I'm interested in). It was so drat long ago that I seriously can't remember where it came from.
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# ? Apr 19, 2024 23:54 |
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gently caress Brian Herbert and Kevin J Anderson all my homeys hate Brian Herbert and Kevin J Anderson
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# ? Apr 20, 2024 00:01 |
Kopmala posted:I wish I could tell you the source for that quote, but I saw it and sent it to myself as a text message (I routinely do this with topics I'm interested in). It was so drat long ago that I seriously can't remember where it came from. That sounds cooler than the skynet we got.
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# ? Apr 20, 2024 00:37 |
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Kopmala posted:I wish I could tell you the source for that quote, but I saw it and sent it to myself as a text message (I routinely do this with topics I'm interested in). It was so drat long ago that I seriously can't remember where it came from. Well drat
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# ? Apr 20, 2024 01:12 |
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Kopmala posted:I wish I could tell you the source for that quote, but I saw it and sent it to myself as a text message (I routinely do this with topics I'm interested in). It was so drat long ago that I seriously can't remember where it came from. It feels right, but there are a few things I’d point out: Cyborgs are in Chapterhouse Daniel and Marty are in Chapterhouse The Atreides are established in Children of Dune to truly be direct descendants of Atreus via Agamemnon which I believe makes the name about 25000 years old as of the first novel. (That’s a hell of a genetic curse)
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# ? Apr 20, 2024 01:18 |
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Daniel and Marty are fairly explicit in being face dancers. That being said, going back to Dune being a response to Asimov's Foundation, It wouldn't surprise me if Daniel was meant to be a reference to Asimov's character R. Daneel, who also shows up somewhat mysteriously in the last chapter of the Foundation series to hint at further mysteries. Schwarzwald fucked around with this message at 01:40 on Apr 20, 2024 |
# ? Apr 20, 2024 01:36 |
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http://www.sinanvural.com/seksek/inien/tvd/tvd2.htm Here's a neat interview McNelly did of Frank & Beverly Herbert about Dune
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# ? Apr 20, 2024 03:14 |
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ppU2GSrhHk8
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# ? Apr 20, 2024 03:24 |
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I kinda wanna read Dune Messiah cause I wanna know what happens and don't wanna wait three years for the movie to get made. Can I go straight from DUNC 1 and 2 into Messiah or should I read Dune first? Should I just read Dune anyway because it's a seminal work and I enjoyed the movies enough to wanna read the sequel? Am I just answering my own questions here? Does the water of life give people prescience because worms eat a shitton of spice because of their big ol dumb worm mouths so their insides are just, like, pure spice?
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# ? Apr 29, 2024 16:11 |
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The book is so much better than any adaptation. DUNC2 didn’t even mention the spacing guild and that is like… the whole reason for ending of the first book.
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# ? Apr 29, 2024 16:16 |
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You should read Dune
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# ? Apr 29, 2024 16:36 |
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You might as well read the first book if you wanna read Messiah, since there's been just enough changes that the next movie is almost certainly going to be more a sequel to DUNC 1 and 2, not to Dune the book. Besides, the first book is considered by far the best. It's not actually explained at any point I think how spice really works, besides that it's a probably organic compound created by some point of the worm life cycle. Oddly enough seems to be more present in the younger worms, though I think the older ones are just too loving big for anyone to really examine enough to know much about. And the worms themselves don't seem to display any of the traits that spice causes in humans, interestingly; their whole thing is being extremely predictable and simple in behaviour, and probably dumber than a lot of insects. We never really learn much about them, and I think in universe a lot of people just shrug at what their deal is, some vague hints that they might be an engineered species, perhaps designed for terraforming by some ancient forgotten aliens, or maybe even ancient humans in the murky lost history of humanity's pre-Jihad spaceborne existence.
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# ? Apr 29, 2024 16:42 |
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MJeff posted:I kinda wanna read Dune Messiah cause I wanna know what happens and don't wanna wait three years for the movie to get made. Can I go straight from DUNC 1 and 2 into Messiah or should I read Dune first? Should I just read Dune anyway because it's a seminal work and I enjoyed the movies enough to wanna read the sequel? Am I just answering my own questions here? Does the water of life give people prescience because worms eat a shitton of spice because of their big ol dumb worm mouths so their insides are just, like, pure spice? Failed Imagineer posted:You should read Dune There is a lot of backstory (including entire factions) left out. If nothing else, it'll make you appreciate how DV was able to make a coherent movie out of such complex framing. There are likely going to be a lot of changes from Messiah to Dune part 3 because frankly a lot of Messiah isn't very interesting (despite the themes being powerful and unique), but the important beats are sure to make it in. I'd definitely read it before the movie comes out.
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# ? Apr 29, 2024 16:44 |
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Dune honestly ain't that tough of a read despite it's reputation; it's just long and dry. The tricky part is all the fantasy nouns, and if you've made it through the films you already know 90% of them.
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# ? Apr 29, 2024 16:56 |
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I was lucky that they were still showing this on IMAX near me, and I finally had time to see it. Man, that's a movie!
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# ? Apr 29, 2024 17:01 |
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MJeff posted:I kinda wanna read Dune Messiah cause I wanna know what happens and don't wanna wait three years for the movie to get made. Can I go straight from DUNC 1 and 2 into Messiah or should I read Dune first? Should I just read Dune anyway because it's a seminal work and I enjoyed the movies enough to wanna read the sequel? Am I just answering my own questions here? Does the water of life give people prescience because worms eat a shitton of spice because of their big ol dumb worm mouths so their insides are just, like, pure spice? This is the Dunc thread, everyone will tell you to read the book/s. Minority report: there are diminishing returns reading any Dune at all, even within the first book. You read Dune for its excellent world building and neat ideas, which it contains in abundance. The plot is serviceable. The characters and dialogue are a product of their time, is the most charitable way I can describe them.
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# ? Apr 29, 2024 17:04 |
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Schwarzwald posted:Dune honestly ain't that tough of a read despite it's reputation; it's just long and dry.
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# ? Apr 29, 2024 17:05 |
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MJeff posted:I kinda wanna read Dune Messiah cause I wanna know what happens and don't wanna wait three years for the movie to get made. Can I go straight from DUNC 1 and 2 into Messiah or should I read Dune first? Should I just read Dune anyway because it's a seminal work and I enjoyed the movies enough to wanna read the sequel? Am I just answering my own questions here? Does the water of life give people prescience because worms eat a shitton of spice because of their big ol dumb worm mouths so their insides are just, like, pure spice? besides following the main strokes of the plot, villeneuve's film is very different from the first book and (by necessity) leaves out a lot of stuff. you have to get the missing pieces from dune (the book) to understand dune messiah. thread regulars will obviously recommend the book. people will say it's a very different vibe from the film but honestly I think it does an astounding job of mimicking the tone of the film: minimal action, dry with lots of people talking in rooms, drops weird visuals and sci-fi terms on you constantly without handholding you. it owns. but the actual plot as told in the book leans way more in the direction of game of thrones than any of the dune film adaptations, except not as good. e: and yeah you should be going in to the book viewing the characters (as with most 20th century science fiction) as "products of their time"
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# ? Apr 29, 2024 17:26 |
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Also, Dune Messiah sucks poo poo. I understand that Herbert felt he didn't hit the "messiahs are bad" themes hard enough in Dune, but he really should have left it at one-and-done because even the first sequel just reads like bad fanfiction
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# ? Apr 29, 2024 17:34 |
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Dune the novel is many times more complex in its themes and plotting than the films. It should give you a much deeper appreciation of what Herbert was doing with the series and how impressive it is that Villeneuve managed to adapt the work so well despite the many cuts. The negative is that Herbert is not a great writer, Villeneuve made a movie that is in the top ten percent of visuals for the medium, Herbert wrote a book that's prose barely hangs in the genre space it inhabits. There's an almost comical overuse of internal asides and Herbert's desire to make understood his world means there is very tiring exposition around every corner.
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# ? Apr 29, 2024 17:40 |
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kalel posted:e: and yeah you should be going in to the book viewing the characters (as with most 20th century science fiction) as "products of their time" Dune (the first book) is actually extremely progressive for 1965. Somehow it goes downhill from there. I haven’t read into biographies and such for Frank Herbert but I read someone claiming that Herbert’s wife did a lot of editing and suddenly heretics and especially Chapterhouse snap into focus…
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# ? Apr 29, 2024 20:12 |
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I read (in the intro to the newest printing of the first book, maybe?) that later sequels were written to help Frank pay off the back taxes that the IRS were hounding him about. I haven't read past God Emperor but it included an excerpt from Chapterhouse or Heretics where a Frank stand-in character rants about liberals and bureaucrats, which is extremely
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# ? Apr 29, 2024 20:37 |
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Dune >>> Children of Dune = God Emperor of Dune* > Dune Messiah >>> Heretics of Dune > Chapterhouse: Dune 1,3,4,2,5,6 *It's weird tho
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# ? Apr 29, 2024 20:41 |
jeeves posted:The book is so much better than any adaptation. I need to go back and watch both movies together but having watched DUN2 a couple times now, and acknowledging that Denis is clearly telling a slightly different story, the omission of Spacing Guild seems like a huge whiff. Maybe including them felt like one faction too many, or there's enough of an implication that controlling the spice means controlling space travel for it not to be an issue. IDK, maybe they'll stick the landing in DUN3 but feels like a pretty big hurdle to clear.
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# ? Apr 29, 2024 21:59 |
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Cognac McCarthy posted:I read (in the intro to the newest printing of the first book, maybe?) that later sequels were written to help Frank pay off the back taxes that the IRS were hounding him about. I haven't read past God Emperor but it included an excerpt from Chapterhouse or Heretics where a Frank stand-in character rants about liberals and bureaucrats, which is extremely I think the passage you're referring to is one of the chapter opening epigraphs, and while Frank Herbert was totally a lolbertarian weirdo, I wouldn't take anything said in those as an expression of Frank's own true beliefs. The epigraphs are nearly always some individual character's secondary perspective on the novels' events.
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# ? Apr 29, 2024 22:44 |
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Yeah, Dune is politically weird mostly on purpose and in-character, since the characters are actually talking about and doing politics with some self-awareness of their actions. Boy, the world was a difference place before the End of History. And the dialogue is quotable/memeable as gently caress. Pretty sure they were going for an epic historical quality over naturalism for the most part. (Count Fenring aside, lol)
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# ? Apr 29, 2024 23:00 |
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PeterWeller posted:I think the passage you're referring to is one of the chapter opening epigraphs, and while Frank Herbert was totally a lolbertarian weirdo, I wouldn't take anything said in those as an expression of Frank's own true beliefs. The epigraphs are nearly always some individual character's secondary perspective on the novels' events. It’s mentioned a few times iirc. The simple reading is that it’s one of the lessons that Leto II “ingrained” in humanity to force the scattering. It is also really funny with the context of Frank’s IRS problems.
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# ? Apr 29, 2024 23:01 |
Question about differences between the books and the movies: Is the movie version of Chani not the daughter of Liet-Kynes? I can see why they would leave it out, to emphasize Chani being a "real Fremen" and bolster her disdain of offworlders, but on the other hand that connection is pretty important to the whole "vision of a green Arrakis" thing.
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# ? Apr 29, 2024 23:07 |
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It's never mentioned in the films so it's hard to say
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# ? Apr 29, 2024 23:10 |
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# ? May 28, 2024 16:27 |
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Mat Cauthon posted:Question about differences between the books and the movies: Is the movie version of Chani not the daughter of Liet-Kynes? I can see why they would leave it out, to emphasize Chani being a "real Fremen" and bolster her disdain of offworlders, but on the other hand that connection is pretty important to the whole "vision of a green Arrakis" thing. It’s not necessarily inconsistent with Liet-Kynes being her mom, she just didn’t follow in her footsteps like book Chani (kinda) did.
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# ? Apr 29, 2024 23:16 |