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In the galaxy-spanning Galactic Empire of the far future, the Atreides family are ordered by the Emperor to move from their traditional home world of Caladan to Arrakis, also known by the sobriquet 'Dune'. Arrakis is a [[SingleBiomePlanet desert world]] that is the only source of [[FantasticDrug spice]], the single most valuable resource in the galaxy. This transfer is officially a promotion and reward for the exemplary service and loyalty of Duke Leto Atreides, but everybody can see that it is part of some plot by the Harkonnens, the ancestral enemy of the Atreides and the former rulers of Arrakis. With no choice but to [[TrapIsTheOnlyOption walk into the trap in the hope of avoiding its pitfalls]], the Atreides move to Arrakis and try to forge an alliance with the native Fremen and survive the scheming of their enemies.

to:

In the galaxy-spanning Galactic Empire of the far future, the Atreides family are ordered by the Emperor to move from their traditional home world homeworld of Caladan to Arrakis, also known by the sobriquet 'Dune'. Arrakis is a [[SingleBiomePlanet desert world]] that is the only source of [[FantasticDrug spice]], the single most valuable resource in the galaxy. This transfer is officially a promotion and reward for the exemplary service and loyalty of Duke Leto Atreides, but everybody can see that it is part of some plot by the Harkonnens, the ancestral enemy of the Atreides and the former rulers of Arrakis. With no choice but to [[TrapIsTheOnlyOption walk into the trap in the hope of avoiding its pitfalls]], the Atreides move to Arrakis and try to forge an alliance with the native Fremen and survive the scheming of their enemies.



* CreepyUncle: The Baron rapturously watches a naked Feyd-Rautha emerging from a swimming pool, and makes several comments about Feyd and other young men.

to:

* CreepyUncle: The Baron rapturously watches a naked Feyd-Rautha [[SexySurfacingShot emerging from a swimming pool, pool]], and makes several comments about Feyd and other young men.



* HotterAndSexier: Compared to the previous adaptation. Jessica and Leto and later Chani and Paul are shown naked in bed together, while the 1984 film had them clothed in equivalent scenes. Paul sees the Fremen, including Chani, strip off their stillsuits without regard for gender or modesty by offworlders' standards. The sietch's "spice orgy" is depicted as both communal religious ecstasy and a literal orgy. Feyd-Rautha is shown naked from behind and ministered to by topless, near-naked slaves.

to:

* HotterAndSexier: Compared to the previous adaptation. Jessica and Leto and later Chani and Paul are shown naked in bed together, while the 1984 film had them clothed in equivalent scenes. Paul sees the Fremen, including Chani, strip off their stillsuits [[ShamelessFanserviceGirl without regard for gender or modesty by offworlders' standards.standards]]. The sietch's "spice orgy" is depicted as both communal religious ecstasy and a literal orgy. Feyd-Rautha is shown naked from behind and ministered to by topless, near-naked slaves.



--> "By the time the traitor is fully revealed, the fate of Atreides will already be sealed."
--> "So let the emperor mock House Harkonnen, call us swine. Because in the end his throne will be mine."

to:

--> "By -->"By the time the traitor is fully revealed, the fate of Atreides will already be sealed."
-->
"\\
"So let the emperor mock House Harkonnen, call us swine. Because in the end his throne will be mine."



* SkywardScream: Rabban let's out a throat-tearing scream [[spoiler:as he is being hacked to death by the Fremen]].

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* SkywardScream: Rabban let's lets out a throat-tearing scream [[spoiler:as he is being hacked to death by the Fremen]].

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* DeathWail: {{Inverted}} here, where [[spoiler:Rabban]] does this when he realizes that ''he'' is about to become the metaphorical ex-beloved ally.



* EvilGloating: When his Mentat wants to GetItOverWith, the Baron argues that rubbing Duke Leto's face in his own defeat is the entire point!

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* EvilGloating: When his Mentat wants to GetItOverWith, KillHimAlready, the Baron argues that rubbing Duke Leto's face in his own defeat is the entire point!


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* KillHimAlready: Piter tries to get the Baron to kill Leto as soon as he is in their custody, but the Baron instead [[EvilGloating rants that this is pointless if Leto doesn't realize the full scope of the Harkonnen victory]].


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* MilkingTheGiantCow: Baron Harkonnen makes the arms-raised hand gesture several times when in the midst of a grand speech.


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* SkywardScream: Rabban let's out a throat-tearing scream [[spoiler:as he is being hacked to death by the Fremen]].

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* AdaptationalCurves: Barbora Kodetova plays Chani, and is much more voluptuous than the character described as slender and devoid of body fat in the books.

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* AdaptationalCurves: Barbora Kodetova plays Chani, and The Fremen are noted as being thin/tight-skinned in the novel due to the harsh conditions of living on Arrakis, particularly the ever-scarce water. In this adaptation, Chani in particular is much more voluptuous than the character described as slender and devoid of body fat in the books.



* AgeLift: In the novel, Paul is introduced as 15 years old and ages approximately three years over the course of the story. This is increased to 18 in the adaptation, [[DawsonCasting to be closer to Alec Newman's 26 at the time of filming]].



* BlasphemousBoast: When the Baron survives Leto's attempt to poison him, he crows that this is proof that god has favored him over the Atreides.



* DeadlyEuphemism:
** The Fremen frequently talk about the water within a human body, since water is so scarce that they reclaim it even from dead bodies. The phrase "take their water" and variants therefore means to kill somebody.
** The Baron has to walk a very careful tightrope when it comes to having the Atreides killed, since he has to be able to honestly say that he didn't ''order'' their deaths in the event that he is ever questioned by a truthsayer. He has to give a series of oblique orders to his personnel so that they get the obvious instruction, but he doesn't actually ''say'' it.



* FantasticDrug: Spice, the most valuable resource in the universe. Its benefits are numerous and depend on the style of use and quantity, including granting perfect health (And an extended lifespan), euphoria, and even ''precognition''. The precognition is what makes space travel possible, as the Spacing Guild uses it to navigate the ships.

to:

* ExactWords: The Baron needs to be able to honestly say that he did not order the death of Paul and Jessica, and that he doesn't know what ultimately happened to them. So, [[LeftForDead he has his people strand them in the desert instead]].
* FantasticDrug: Spice, the most valuable resource in the universe. Its benefits are numerous and depend on the style of use and quantity, numerous, including granting perfect health (And an extended lifespan), euphoria, and even ''precognition''. The precognition is what makes space travel possible, as the Spacing Guild uses it to navigate the ships.


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* LeftForDead: Paul and Jessica are stranded in the desert by the Harkonnens to die [[ExactWords because the Baron needs to be able to honestly say that he did not order their deaths]].


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* NoOneCouldSurviveThat: Paul and Jessica fly into a sandstorm when escaping the Harkonnen forces, and their pursuit breaks off and reports them as dead because everybody knows it is impossible to survive an Arrakis sandstorm. Needless to say, they survive.


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* TakingYouWithMe: Dr. Yueh gives Duke Leto a poison capsule hidden inside a false tooth so that he can at least take Baron Harkonnen with him when he dies. [[SubvertedTrope Unfortunately the Baron survives]].
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* AdaptationInducedPlotHole: The novel goes into extensive worldbuilding to justify the presence of knife fighting as the primary means of combat throughout the galaxy. Personal DeflectorShields are ubiquitous enough to render projectile guns useless, and have the side-effect of generating explosions equivalent to a nuclear weapon if they are shot using a lasgun. This means that knives are the only practical weapon in all but the most unique of circumstances, which is how the knife-wielding Fremen are able to overwhelm the Harkonnen and Sardaukar. The miniseries, however, simply gives the Harkonnen and Sardaukar soldiers guns and has the Fremen knife-fight them anyway.

to:

* AdaptationInducedPlotHole: The novel goes into extensive worldbuilding to justify the presence of knife fighting as the primary means of combat throughout the galaxy. Personal DeflectorShields are ubiquitous enough to render projectile guns useless, galaxy, including the Imperial and have noble forces on other planets. Since the side-effect of generating explosions equivalent to a nuclear weapon if they are shot using a lasgun. This means that knives are the only practical weapon in all but the most unique of circumstances, which is how the knife-wielding Fremen are able to the best knife-fighters, they can easily overwhelm the Harkonnen and Sardaukar. Sardaukar troops. The miniseries, however, simply gives the Harkonnen and Sardaukar soldiers guns and simply has the Fremen knife-fight them anyway.
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* RewardedAsATraitorDeserves: Baron Harkonnen has Dr. Yueh killed after he betrayed the Atreides. He points out that you can never trust a traitor, not even one you created yourself.


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* YouSaidYouWouldLetThemGo: Dr. Yueh betrayed the Atreides to the Harkonnens because the Baron had his wife hostage, and promised to free her if he cooperated. When the Baron shows Yueh her body, he says that he is a man of his word: [[ExactWords She is free of her life]].

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* AdaptedOut: Lady Fenring is not present in the miniseries, [[CompositeCharacter with some aspects of her role given to Irulan]].

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* AdaptedOut: AdaptationInducedPlotHole: The novel goes into extensive worldbuilding to justify the presence of knife fighting as the primary means of combat throughout the galaxy. Personal DeflectorShields are ubiquitous enough to render projectile guns useless, and have the side-effect of generating explosions equivalent to a nuclear weapon if they are shot using a lasgun. This means that knives are the only practical weapon in all but the most unique of circumstances, which is how the knife-wielding Fremen are able to overwhelm the Harkonnen and Sardaukar. The miniseries, however, simply gives the Harkonnen and Sardaukar soldiers guns and has the Fremen knife-fight them anyway.
* AdaptedOut:
** The Combine Honnete Ober Advancer Mercantiles (CHOAM) is the fourth powerhouse of society in the original novel alongside the Spacing Guild, the Imperium, and ''Landsraad'' (Nobility). They are completely absent from this adaptation, with society explicitly described as a ''tripod'' balanced between just the Guild, Imperium and Nobles.
**
Lady Fenring is not present in the miniseries, [[CompositeCharacter with some aspects of her role given to Irulan]].



* CharacterTics: Baron Vladimir Harkonnen has a distinctive habit of rubbing his right temple when he was frustrated. Later on, Paul Atreides does this himself, demonstrating the family connection between the two.

to:

* CharacterTics: Baron Vladimir Harkonnen has a distinctive habit of rubbing his right temple when he was is frustrated. Later on, Paul Atreides does this himself, demonstrating the family connection between the two.



* CompressedAdaptation: Sections of the novel had to be removed during the adaptation. CHOAM is completely absent, and Thufir Hawat is killed during the Harkonnen invasion of Arrakis. This removes a lot of the economic conflicts, and the entire plotline of Thufir on Giedi Prime manipulating (And being manipulated by) the Baron and Feyd-Rautha.



* DeflectorShields: Personal shields exist in the setting, but they are only seen once at the beginning when Paul and Gurney are sparring. They are mentioned occasionally afterwards, but are not used on Arrakis because they attract sandworms and stir them into a frenzy.



* FatBastard: Baron Vladimir Harkonnen, is gluttonous, sadistic and perverted.

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* FatBastard: Baron Vladimir Harkonnen, Harkonnen is gluttonous, sadistic and perverted.perverted. He is so overweight that he needs an antigravity harness to move.


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* VoiceOfTheLegion: How [[CompellingVoice The Voice]] is portrayed.

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General re-writes throughout the article, and cleaning up remnants from when this was combined with other adaptations


The ''Franchise/{{Dune}}'' miniseries, billed as ''"Frank Herbert's Dune"'', is a television adaptation of the 1965 novel ''Literature/{{Dune}}'' by Creator/FrankHerbert, often credited as "the masterpiece of science fiction". The miniseries aired in the year 2000 on the [[Creator/{{Syfy}} Sci-Fi Channel]]. Its $20 million budget was small for a sci-fi blockbuster -- especially since the three-part nature of the series functionally meant they were making multiple feature-length films -- but was almost unprecedented for a series intended for an initial TV release. It received a significant marketing push (Including full theatrical trailers) as the Sci-Fi Channel tried to break into serious made-for-TV production.

This adaptation is sometimes referred to as "the one with the hats" because of its use of flamboyant costume design to distinguish between the different factions within the story. This adaptation also notably [[AscendedExtra expands the role of]] Princess Irulan to further drive the story and [[CompositeCharacter replace characters]] that weren't adapted over.

Dune stars Creator/WilliamHurt as Duke Leto, who despite top-billing [[DeadStarWalking is only in about the first third of the story]]. Alec Newman stars as Paul 'Muad'Dib' Atreides, with Ian [=McNeice=] as Baron Harkonnen and an international cast of actors.

While it was made on a much smaller budget and scale than the [[Film/Dune1984 1984 film version]], the miniseries is generally praised for taking fewer liberties with the story and [[TruerToTheText staying truer to the original book]].

to:

The ''Franchise/{{Dune}}'' miniseries, billed as ''"Frank Herbert's Dune"'', is a three-part television adaptation of the 1965 novel ''Literature/{{Dune}}'' by Creator/FrankHerbert, Creator/FrankHerbert. The novel is often credited as "the masterpiece of science fiction". fiction" and is famous for the interweaving of politics, economics, and religion in its action/adventure plot, much of it drawn from real-life global politics of the 18th and 19th centuries. The miniseries aired in the year 2000 on the [[Creator/{{Syfy}} Sci-Fi Channel]]. Channel]].

In the galaxy-spanning Galactic Empire of the far future, the Atreides family are ordered by the Emperor to move from their traditional home world of Caladan to Arrakis, also known by the sobriquet 'Dune'. Arrakis is a [[SingleBiomePlanet desert world]] that is the only source of [[FantasticDrug spice]], the single most valuable resource in the galaxy. This transfer is officially a promotion and reward for the exemplary service and loyalty of Duke Leto Atreides, but everybody can see that it is part of some plot by the Harkonnens, the ancestral enemy of the Atreides and the former rulers of Arrakis. With no choice but to [[TrapIsTheOnlyOption walk into the trap in the hope of avoiding its pitfalls]], the Atreides move to Arrakis and try to forge an alliance with the native Fremen and survive the scheming of their enemies.

Creator/WilliamHurt stars as Duke Leto, who despite top-billing [[DeadStarWalking is only in about the first third of the story]]. Alec Newman stars as Leto's son, Paul 'Muad'Dib' Atreides, with Ian [=McNeice=] as Baron Harkonnen and an international cast of supporting actors.

Its $20 million budget was small for a sci-fi blockbuster -- especially since the three-part nature of the series functionally meant they were making multiple feature-length films -- blockbuster, but was almost unprecedented for a series intended for an initial TV release. It received a significant marketing push (Including full theatrical trailers) as the Sci-Fi Channel tried to break into serious made-for-TV production.

This adaptation is sometimes referred to as "the one with
production. After the hats" because success of its use of flamboyant costume design to distinguish between this project the different factions within the story. This adaptation also notably [[AscendedExtra expands the role of]] Princess Irulan to further drive the story and [[CompositeCharacter replace characters]] that weren't adapted over.

Dune stars Creator/WilliamHurt as Duke Leto, who despite top-billing [[DeadStarWalking is only in about the first third of the story]]. Alec Newman stars as Paul 'Muad'Dib' Atreides, with Ian [=McNeice=] as Baron Harkonnen and
Sci-Fi channel began producing high-budget miniseries on an international cast of actors.

annual basis.

While it was made on a much smaller budget and scale than the [[Film/Dune1984 1984 film version]], the miniseries is generally praised for taking fewer liberties with the story and [[TruerToTheText staying truer to the original book]].
book]]. This adaptation is sometimes referred to as "the one with the hats" because of its use of [[ColourCodedForYourConvenience flamboyant costume design to distinguish between the different factions within the story]].



* AdaptedOut: Lady Fenring (Irulan goes to Giedi Prime with Count Fenring instead).
* AdaptationalCurves: In this adaptation, they cast decidedly voluptuous Barbora Kodetova as Chani, a character described as slender and devoid of body fat in the books.
* AdaptationExpansion: Princess Irulan -- who only shows up in the novel in person in the ''very last chapter,'' and barely speaks -- gets a greatly expanded role, since the people in charge of the series thought it was a bit much to ask viewers to accept Paul marrying a total stranger. Irulan befriends Paul early on in the plot, and when House Atreides is seemingly destroyed she attempts to find out what her father is plotting. Unfortunately, this makes Irulan a much more sympathetic character, meaning that her fate at the end of the series -- being married to Paul, who clearly considers Chani his ''real'' wife in everything but name -- is even harsher than in the source material.
** Irulan appears to have aspects of Margot Fenring combined with her character. Since the latter was adapted out, this would make the miniseries' Irulan more of a [[CompositeCharacter composite character]].
* AdvertisedExtra: Creator/WilliamHurt is billed as a major character, but he's killed before the end of Part One. The real lead of the miniseries is Creator/AlecNewman.

to:

* AdaptedOut: Lady Fenring (Irulan goes to Giedi Prime is not present in the miniseries, [[CompositeCharacter with Count Fenring instead).
some aspects of her role given to Irulan]].
* AdaptationalCurves: In this adaptation, they cast decidedly voluptuous Barbora Kodetova as plays Chani, a and is much more voluptuous than the character described as slender and devoid of body fat in the books.
* AdaptationExpansion: Princess Irulan -- who is a minor character with only shows up one appearance in the novel in person in the ''very last chapter,'' and barely speaks -- gets a greatly expanded role, since the people in charge of the series thought it was a bit much original novel, but receives significant screentime to ask viewers set up her marriage to accept Paul marrying a total stranger. Irulan befriends Paul early on in the plot, and when House Atreides is seemingly destroyed she attempts to find out what her father is plotting. Unfortunately, this makes Irulan a much more sympathetic character, meaning that her fate at the end end. Some of the series -- being married to Paul, who clearly considers Chani his ''real'' wife in everything but name -- is even harsher than in the source material.
** Irulan appears to have aspects of Margot Fenring combined with her character. Since the latter was adapted out,
this would make the miniseries' Irulan more includes portions of a [[CompositeCharacter composite character]].
* AdvertisedExtra: Creator/WilliamHurt is billed as a major character, but he's killed before
Lady Fenring's character from the end of Part One. The real lead of the miniseries is Creator/AlecNewman.book]].



* AnimalMotif: The Atreides symbol is a hawk, and the Corrino symbol is a golden lion - both of which are mentioned prominently in the first book in the series, which this is based on. At the dinner party scene in the part one, however, Paul mentions that the Harkonnen symbol is a griffin - this actually is part of the book canon, but it was only established retroactively in the ''fifth'' novel in the series.
* AscendedExtra:
** Princess Irulan gets a greatly expanded role in this series, fulfilling the arcs of several other characters.

to:

* AnimalMotif: The Atreides symbol is a hawk, hawk and the Corrino symbol is a golden lion - both of which are mentioned prominently in the first book in the series, which this is based on. lion. At the dinner party scene in the part one, however, one Paul mockingly mentions that the Harkonnen symbol is a griffin, and that they should really be 'House Hog'. These representations are all from the novel series, although the Harkonnen griffin - this actually is part of the book canon, but it symbol was only established retroactively in the ''fifth'' novel in the series.
* AscendedExtra:
** Princess Irulan gets a greatly expanded role in this series, fulfilling the arcs of several other characters.
series.



* ByTheLightsOfTheirEyes: The miniseries visualized the Eyes of the Ibad as glowing. This was toned down in the ''Series/ChildrenOfDune'' sequel.
* CharacterTics: Baron Vladimir Harkonnen in this miniseries had a distinctive habit of rubbing his right temple when he was frustrated. Later on, Paul Atreides does this himself, demonstrating the family connection between the two. In ''Series/ChildrenOfDune'', we see Alia performing the gesture when she hears the Baron's voice in her head.
* ColourCodedForYourConvenience: The Sci-Fi Channel's miniseries portrays the Harkonnens in red, the Imperial Corrinos are purple and gold (likely a reference to the purple togas worn by Roman emperors), the Atreides primarily in tan and white, Fremen in brown and dark orange, and Spacing Guild members in black.
* CombatBreakdown: Paul and Feyd's knife fight has them throwing punches and kicks after one, then the other, is disarmed, in contrast to the book and the earlier film. Though they pick up their knives again to finish it.
* CompellingVoice: In the mini-series, the Voice is clearly heard as the VoiceOfTheLegion, although only to its target. In the film, it can be heard playing over and over in the target's mind, forcing him to comply.
* CrazyCulturalComparison: The "gift of moisture" scene appears in adaptations with variations. In the mini-series, it is Paul who thanks Stilgar for the gift.
* CreepyUncle: The miniseries takes this further than the book, and has the Baron rapturously watching a naked Feyd-Rautha emerging from a swimming pool.
* DeadStarWalking: William Hurt gets top billing as Duke Leto Atreides in SciFi Channel's Dune Miniseries, despite his character getting killed at the end of part one (of three).

to:

* ByTheLightsOfTheirEyes: The miniseries visualized the Eyes of the Ibad as glowing. This was toned down in the ''Series/ChildrenOfDune'' sequel.
* CharacterTics: Baron Vladimir Harkonnen in this miniseries had has a distinctive habit of rubbing his right temple when he was frustrated. Later on, Paul Atreides does this himself, demonstrating the family connection between the two. In ''Series/ChildrenOfDune'', we see Alia performing the gesture when she hears the Baron's voice in her head.
two.
* ColourCodedForYourConvenience: The Sci-Fi Channel's miniseries portrays the Harkonnens in wear red, the Imperial Corrinos are purple and gold (likely a reference to the purple togas worn by Roman emperors), the Atreides primarily in dress tan and white, Fremen in wear brown and dark orange, and Spacing Guild members are always in black.
* CombatBreakdown: Paul and Feyd's knife fight has them throwing punches and kicks after one, then the other, is disarmed, in contrast to the book and the earlier film.disarmed. Though they pick up their knives again to finish it.
* CompellingVoice: In the mini-series, the The Voice is clearly a technique of the Bene Gesserit to compel obedience. It is heard as the VoiceOfTheLegion, although only to its target. In the film, it can be heard playing over and over in the target's mind, forcing him to comply.
target.
* CrazyCulturalComparison: The "gift of moisture" scene appears in adaptations with variations. In the mini-series, it Atreides have trouble comprehending just how precious water is Paul who thanks on Arrakis. When Stilgar spits on Duke Leto's desk, Paul steps forward and thanks him for the gift.
'gift of water' when the other Atreides personnel are infuriated at the apparent insult.
* CreepyUncle: The miniseries takes this further than the book, and has the Baron rapturously watching watches a naked Feyd-Rautha emerging from a swimming pool.
pool, and makes several comments about Feyd and other young men.
* DeadStarWalking: William Hurt gets top billing as Duke Leto Atreides in SciFi Channel's Dune Miniseries, Atreides, despite his character getting killed at the end of part one (of three).



* DistantReactionShot: The mini-series has a dead-serious one of these with a spice-blow right after Liet-Kynes realizes that he's right on top of it and begins screaming, "I am a desert creat-"
* EliteMooks: Sardaukar elite troopers.
* ErmineCapeEffect: Padishah Emperor Shaddam IV in the miniseries wears very elaborate outfits even when he's just working in his study or meeting with his advisers. This is different from the book, where Shaddam IV wore an ordinary Sardaukar officer's uniform with no decoration other than a black helmet even at official state functions. This was stated to not be the case throughout history, being a personal affectation of Shaddam's which symbolized his reliance on the Sardaukar to maintain power.

to:

* DistantReactionShot: The mini-series has a dead-serious one of these with When Liet-Kynes is left in the desert to die, a spice-blow right after Liet-Kynes erupts just as he realizes that he's right on top of it and begins screaming, "I am a desert creat-"
creat-". We cut to other characters seeing the eruption from a long ways away.
* EliteMooks: The Sardaukar elite troopers.
are the troops of the emperor, and are regarded with such fear that their ''presence'' is viewed as a threat.
* ErmineCapeEffect: Padishah Emperor Shaddam IV in the miniseries wears very elaborate outfits even when he's just working in his study or meeting with his advisers. This is different from the book, where Shaddam IV wore an ordinary Sardaukar officer's uniform with no decoration other than a black helmet even at official state functions. This was stated to not be the case throughout history, being a personal affectation of Shaddam's which symbolized his reliance on the Sardaukar to maintain power.



* FatBastard: Baron Vladimir Harkonnen, no question about that!
* FlashStep: How "the weirding way of fighting" is depicted in the ''Dune'' and ''Children of Dune'' miniseries.
* GunsVsSwords: Played straight as per the novel, but without the novel's justification -- the rebels just ZergRush troopers armed with firearms without the mass casualties that would ensue in real life.

to:

* FantasticDrug: Spice, the most valuable resource in the universe. Its benefits are numerous and depend on the style of use and quantity, including granting perfect health (And an extended lifespan), euphoria, and even ''precognition''. The precognition is what makes space travel possible, as the Spacing Guild uses it to navigate the ships.
* FatBastard: Baron Vladimir Harkonnen, no question about that!
is gluttonous, sadistic and perverted.
* FlashStep: How "the weirding The "weirding way" is portrayed this way of fighting" is depicted in combat, moving faster than the eye can see to dodge attacks and maneuver around opponents.
* GlowingEyes: Excessive spice consumption causes a person's eyes to turn blue, and they are also portrayed as glowing
in the ''Dune'' and ''Children of Dune'' miniseries.
dark.
* GunsVsSwords: Played straight as per The Fremen are primarily a knife-fight culture, and are so skilled that they overwhelm the novel, but without the novel's justification -- the rebels just ZergRush troopers armed gun-toting Harkonnen's with firearms without ease. This is a legacy from the mass casualties that would ensue in real life.novel where knife-fighting is the primary means of combat galaxy-wide because the omnipresent shields protect against bullets with ease, and cause nuclear-equivalent explosions if they are shot by a lasgun.



* MiniSeries: 2000 SciFi. Adapted the first three books, the first titled ''Frank Herbert's Dune'' and the second ''Children of Dune'' (combined with the second book, ''Dune Messiah'').
* NiceHat: In the [[Creator/{{Syfy}} Sci-Fi Channel]]'s production, there were several {{Nice Hat}}s, most notably the Bene Gesserit, [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Ghm.jpg seen here]] (the hat is the thing extending back from her head).
* OhCrap:
** The Fremen have a four-part opening to their assault on Arrakeen. First, they blow up the Shield Wall with a nuke. This is followed by a massive sandstorm, a squadron of ornithopters, and four sandworms carrying Fremen warriors. In between each part, we shift back to the Imperial Palace to see the OhCrap reactions on everyone's faces.
** Also satisfying is the expression on Rabban's face when he sees that he is surrounded by an immense, eerily silent mob of the very people he had enjoyed brutally oppressing. The fact that he just drops his knife and lets out a cry of abject despair as the mob swarms in and guts him is icing on the cake.
*** To make this one worse, is the HopeSpot Rabban has when he sees Stilgar there with a gun, and you can almost sense that he hopes for a quick death by gunshot... only for Stilgar to turn and walk away, leaving him at the mercy of a hundred villagers and Fremen who are hardly going to give him such mercy. In other words, OhCrap, HopeSpot, then double OhCrap.
** And the expression on the Baron's face when he realizes that a little girl had just poisoned him. Him, the Baron of Geidi Prime, brought low by a four-year-old girl. OhCrap indeed.
* ProperLady: Lady Jessica in the miniseries behaves like one, even though she's technically not part of the nobility. [[spoiler:she actually is, though she doesn't know it: she's the Baron's daughter, hard as that is to believe.]]

to:

* MercyKill: When Rabban is surrounded by a horde of Fremen, he sees Stilgar there with a gun and manages a twitchy, bare-bones smile at the thought of such a quick death instead of being hacked to pieces. Instead, [[SubvertedTrope Stilgar turns his back and walks away]].
* MiniSeries: 2000 SciFi. Adapted This adaptation presented the first story in three books, the first titled ''Frank Herbert's Dune'' and the second parts instead of as a single film. It also received a sequel, ''Children of Dune'' (combined Dune'', which adapted that same novel combined with the second book, ''Dune Messiah'').
Messiah''.
* NiceHat: In the [[Creator/{{Syfy}} Sci-Fi Channel]]'s production, there were several {{Nice Hat}}s, most notably For the Bene Gesserit, [[http://en.Gesserit ([[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Ghm.jpg seen here]] (the hat is here]]) and the thing extending back from her head).
Spacing Guild, their headdresses had a height you could measure in ''feet''.
* OhCrap:
**
OhCrap: The Fremen have a four-part opening to their assault on Arrakeen. First, they blow up the Shield Wall with a nuke. This is followed by a massive sandstorm, a squadron of ornithopters, and four sandworms carrying Fremen warriors. In between each part, we shift back to the Imperial Palace to see the OhCrap reactions on everyone's faces.
** Also satisfying is the expression on Rabban's face when he sees that he is surrounded by an immense, eerily silent mob of the very people he had enjoyed brutally oppressing. The fact that he just drops his knife and lets out a cry of abject despair as the mob swarms in and guts him is icing on the cake.
*** To make this one worse, is the HopeSpot Rabban has when he sees Stilgar there with a gun, and you can almost sense that he hopes for a quick death by gunshot... only for Stilgar to turn and walk away, leaving him at the mercy of a hundred villagers and Fremen who are hardly going to give him such mercy. In other words, OhCrap, HopeSpot, then double OhCrap.
** And the expression on the Baron's face when he realizes that a little girl had just poisoned him. Him, the Baron of Geidi Prime, brought low by a four-year-old girl. OhCrap indeed.
* ProperLady: Lady Jessica in the miniseries behaves like one, even though she's technically not part of the nobility. [[spoiler:she actually is, though she doesn't know it: she's the Baron's daughter, hard as that is to believe.]]
faces.



* SpaceClothes: The 2000 miniseries (aided by the meager budget) sets groups apart by very large hats.

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* SingleBiomePlanet: Arrakis is a desert world, with no naturally occurring surface water outside of its small polar ice caps.
* SpaceClothes: The 2000 miniseries (aided by Costumes were extravagant throughout the meager budget) sets groups apart by very large hats.series to establish allegiance and clearly divide the separate cliques. This included [[NiceHat giant hats]] for the Bene Gesserit and Spacing Guild.



* TechnicolorEyes: A result of high-level Spice addiction, when enough ingestion saturates the bloodstream and stains the eyes. Turned into GlowingEyesOfDoom in both live-action adaptations.
* TruerToTheText: The 2000 miniseries takes some liberties with Frank Herbert's book, but compared to the 1984 David Lynch movie, its fidelity is nigh-slavish.
** Even the invented Irulan scenes are more trying to depict what the Corrinos probably were doing "off-screen" in the books: they wanted to interweave the imperial family into the story more organically, so it wasn't as jarring when they show up at the end. The way the novels did this was by quoting excerpts at the beginning of each chapter from books that Irulan wrote years later about these events - which doesn't translate neatly into a visual format. Thus the invented Irulan scenes are more of an "adaptation" of those book excerpts, now presented as her real-time reactions.

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* TechnicolorEyes: A result of high-level Spice addiction, when enough ingestion saturates the bloodstream and stains the eyes. Turned into GlowingEyesOfDoom eyes blue.
* TrapIsTheOnlyOption: Everybody can see that moving the Atreides to Arrakis is part of a plot by the Harkonnens, but Duke Leto goes along with it
in both live-action adaptations.
the hopes that in realizing it is a trap he can avoid the danger.
* TruerToTheText: The 2000 miniseries takes some liberties with Frank Herbert's book, but compared to the 1984 David Lynch movie, its fidelity is nigh-slavish.
** Even the invented Irulan scenes are more trying to depict what the Corrinos probably were doing "off-screen" in the books: they wanted to interweave the imperial family into the story more organically, so it wasn't as jarring when they show up at the end. The way the novels did this was by quoting excerpts at the beginning of each chapter from books that Irulan wrote years later about these events - which doesn't translate neatly into a visual format. Thus the invented Irulan scenes are more of an "adaptation" of those book excerpts, now presented as her real-time reactions.
nigh-slavish.
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Creator/WidescreenGames developed a VideoGameAdaptation -- also titled ''VideoGame/FrankHerbertsDune'' -- in 2001, published by Creator/CryoInteractive, the developers of the [[VideoGame/Dune1992 original Dune game]] based on the 1984 film.

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Creator/WidescreenGames developed a VideoGameAdaptation -- also titled ''VideoGame/FrankHerbertsDune'' ''Frank Herbert's Dune'' -- in 2001, published by Creator/CryoInteractive, the developers of the [[VideoGame/Dune1992 original Dune game]] based on the 1984 film.
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!!!'''[[SimilarlyNamedWorks For the other adaptations]] of ''Literature/{{Dune}}'', see ''Film/Dune1984'' and ''Film/Dune2021''.'''
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For the other live-action adaptations of ''Dune'', see ''Film/Dune1984'' and ''Film/Dune2021''.
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* FatBastard: Baron Vladimir Harkonnen, no question about that!
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* AdaptationExpansion: Princess Irulan -- who only shows up in the novel in person in the ''very last chapter'' -- gets a greatly expanded role, since the people in charge of the series thought it was a bit much to ask viewers to accept Paul marrying a total stranger. Irulan befriends Paul early on in the plot, and when House Atreides is seemingly destroyed she attempts to find out what her father is plotting. Unfortunately, this makes Irulan a much more sympathetic character, meaning that her fate at the end of the series -- being married to Paul, who clearly considers Chani his ''real'' wife in everything but name -- is even harsher than in the source material.

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* AdaptationExpansion: Princess Irulan -- who only shows up in the novel in person in the ''very last chapter'' chapter,'' and barely speaks -- gets a greatly expanded role, since the people in charge of the series thought it was a bit much to ask viewers to accept Paul marrying a total stranger. Irulan befriends Paul early on in the plot, and when House Atreides is seemingly destroyed she attempts to find out what her father is plotting. Unfortunately, this makes Irulan a much more sympathetic character, meaning that her fate at the end of the series -- being married to Paul, who clearly considers Chani his ''real'' wife in everything but name -- is even harsher than in the source material.
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* TauntingTheUnconscious: During the confrontation between Leto, Baron Harkonnen, and Piter de Vries, Leto is awake and sitting upright but paralyzed, and can only watch as Dr. Yueh [[RewardedAsATraitorDeserves is disposed of by the Baron's men]]. Piter tries to get the Baron [[WhyDontYouJustShootHim to go ahead and just kill Leto]], but the Baron instead gloats about how he will bring about the destruction of House Atreides. Leto releases the poison gas in his fake tooth, killing himself, Piter, and the Sardukar surrounding them, but the Baron is able to float away before the gas can reach him.
-->'''Piter:''' Perhaps we should get on with it then?\\
'''Baron Harkonnen:''' Get on with it? ''[[PunctuatedForEmphasis THIS-IS-KANLY]], Piter! Vendetta!'' And I am going to savor every minute of it. My family has hated the Atreides for generations. They have been the sand in our eyes, the ''stink'' at our meals. These arrogant Atreides, ''always'' standing in our way. I want Leto to appreciate the ''beauty'', of what I have done to him. I want him to know that [[SuddenlyShouting I, BARON VLADIMIR HARKONNEN]], am the instrument of his family's demise, the extinction of House Atreides, and the ascendance of House Harkonnen.
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The ''Franchise/{{Dune}}'' miniseries, billed as ''"Frank Herbert's Dune"'', is a television adaptation of the 1965 novel ''Literature/{{Dune}}'' by Frank Herbert, often credited as "the masterpiece of science fiction". The miniseries aired in the year 2000 on the [[Creator/{{Syfy}} Sci-Fi Channel]]. Its $20 million budget was small for a sci-fi blockbuster -- especially since the three-part nature of the series functionally meant they were making multiple feature-length films -- but was almost unprecedented for a series intended for an initial TV release. It received a significant marketing push (Including full theatrical trailers) as the Sci-Fi Channel tried to break into serious made-for-TV production.

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The ''Franchise/{{Dune}}'' miniseries, billed as ''"Frank Herbert's Dune"'', is a television adaptation of the 1965 novel ''Literature/{{Dune}}'' by Frank Herbert, Creator/FrankHerbert, often credited as "the masterpiece of science fiction". The miniseries aired in the year 2000 on the [[Creator/{{Syfy}} Sci-Fi Channel]]. Its $20 million budget was small for a sci-fi blockbuster -- especially since the three-part nature of the series functionally meant they were making multiple feature-length films -- but was almost unprecedented for a series intended for an initial TV release. It received a significant marketing push (Including full theatrical trailers) as the Sci-Fi Channel tried to break into serious made-for-TV production.
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* AdvertisedExtra: Creator/WilliamHurt is billed as a major character, but he's killed before the end of Part One. The real lead of the miniseries is Creator/AlecNewman.
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Image quality upgrade.


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[[quoteright:214:https://static.[[quoteright:323:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/61d5c36c3987a3a72c28deb325beea5c.jpg]]
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!! ''Dune'' contains examples of:

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!! ''Dune'' !!''Frank Herbert's Dune'' contains examples of:



* AdaptationalCurves: In this adaptation they cast decidedly voluptuous Barbora Kodetova as Chani, a character described as slender and devoid of body fat in the books.
* AdaptationExpansion: Princess Irulan -- who only shows up in the novel in person in the ''very last chapter'' -- gets a greatly expanded role, since the people in charge of the series thought it was a bit much to ask viewers to accept Paul marrying a total stranger. Irulan befriends Paul early on in the plot, and when House Atreides is seemingly destroyed she attempts to find out what her father is plotting. Unfortunately, this makes Irulan a much more sympathetic character, meaning that her fate at the end of the series -- being married to Paul, who clearly considers Chani his ''real'' wife in everything but name -- is even more harsh than in the source material.

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* AdaptationalCurves: In this adaptation adaptation, they cast decidedly voluptuous Barbora Kodetova as Chani, a character described as slender and devoid of body fat in the books.
* AdaptationExpansion: Princess Irulan -- who only shows up in the novel in person in the ''very last chapter'' -- gets a greatly expanded role, since the people in charge of the series thought it was a bit much to ask viewers to accept Paul marrying a total stranger. Irulan befriends Paul early on in the plot, and when House Atreides is seemingly destroyed she attempts to find out what her father is plotting. Unfortunately, this makes Irulan a much more sympathetic character, meaning that her fate at the end of the series -- being married to Paul, who clearly considers Chani his ''real'' wife in everything but name -- is even more harsh harsher than in the source material.



* HotterAndSexier: Compared to the previous adaptation. Jessica and Leto and later Chani and Paul are shown naked in bed together, while the 1984 film had them clothed in equivalent scenes. Paul sees the Fremen, including Chani, strip off their stillsuits without regard for gender or modesty by offworlders' standards. The sietch's "spice orgy" is depicted as both communal religous ecstasy and a literal orgy. Feyd-Rautha is shown naked from behind and ministered to by topless, near-naked slaves. Some or all of this may have been trimmed for the original TV airing.
* InCaseYouForgotWhoWroteIt: '''''Creator/{{Frank Herbert}}[='=]s''' Dune''.

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* HotterAndSexier: Compared to the previous adaptation. Jessica and Leto and later Chani and Paul are shown naked in bed together, while the 1984 film had them clothed in equivalent scenes. Paul sees the Fremen, including Chani, strip off their stillsuits without regard for gender or modesty by offworlders' standards. The sietch's "spice orgy" is depicted as both communal religous religious ecstasy and a literal orgy. Feyd-Rautha is shown naked from behind and ministered to by topless, near-naked slaves. Some or all of this may have been trimmed for the original TV airing.
slaves.
* InCaseYouForgotWhoWroteIt: '''''Creator/{{Frank Herbert}}[='=]s''' '''''Frank Herbert[='=]s''' Dune''.



* MonochromaticEyes[=/=]TechnicolorEyes: A result of high-level Spice addiction, when enough ingestion saturates the blood stream and stains the eyes. Turned into GlowingEyesOfDoom in both live-action adaptations.
* NiceHat: In the [[Creator/{{Syfy}} Sci-Fi Channel]]'s production, there were several {{Nice Hat}}s, mostly notably the Bene Gesserit, [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Ghm.jpg seen here]] (the hat is the thing extending back from her head).

to:

* MonochromaticEyes[=/=]TechnicolorEyes: A result of high-level Spice addiction, when enough ingestion saturates the blood stream and stains the eyes. Turned into GlowingEyesOfDoom in both live-action adaptations.
* NiceHat: In the [[Creator/{{Syfy}} Sci-Fi Channel]]'s production, there were several {{Nice Hat}}s, mostly most notably the Bene Gesserit, [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Ghm.jpg seen here]] (the hat is the thing extending back from her head).



*** To make this one worse, is the HopeSpot Rabban has when he sees Stilgar there with a gun, and you can almost sense that he hopes for a quick death by gunshot... only for Stilgar to turn and walk away, leaving him at the mercy of a hundred villagers and fremen who are hardly going to give him such mercy. In other words, OhCrap, HopeSpot, then double OhCrap.
** And the expression on the Baron's face when he realizes that a little girl had just poisoned him. Him, the Baron of Geidi Prime, brought low by a four-year-old girl. Oh Crap indeed.

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*** To make this one worse, is the HopeSpot Rabban has when he sees Stilgar there with a gun, and you can almost sense that he hopes for a quick death by gunshot... only for Stilgar to turn and walk away, leaving him at the mercy of a hundred villagers and fremen Fremen who are hardly going to give him such mercy. In other words, OhCrap, HopeSpot, then double OhCrap.
** And the expression on the Baron's face when he realizes that a little girl had just poisoned him. Him, the Baron of Geidi Prime, brought low by a four-year-old girl. Oh Crap OhCrap indeed.


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* TechnicolorEyes: A result of high-level Spice addiction, when enough ingestion saturates the bloodstream and stains the eyes. Turned into GlowingEyesOfDoom in both live-action adaptations.
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[[caption-width-right:214:William Hurt does appear for a few minutes]]

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[[caption-width-right:214:William Hurt does appear for a few minutes]]

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!!!'''[[SimilarlyNamedWorks For the other adaptations]] of ''Literature/{{Dune}}'', see ''Film/Dune1984'' and ''Film/Dune2021''.'''




For the 2021 film, see [[Film/Dune2021 here]].
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The miniseries itself spawned a sequel, ''Series/ChildrenOfDune'' which adapted both ''Literature/DuneMessiah'' and ''Literature/ChildrenOfDune'' into a single story.

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The miniseries itself spawned a sequel, ''Series/ChildrenOfDune'' ''Series/FrankHerbertsChildrenOfDune'' which adapted both ''Literature/DuneMessiah'' and ''Literature/ChildrenOfDune'' into a single story.
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* CombatBreakdown: Paul and Feyd's knife fight has them throwing punches and kicks after one, then the other, is disarmed, in contrast to the book and the earlier film. Though they pick up their knives again to finish it.

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While it was made on a much smaller budget and scale than the [[Film/Dune1984 1984 film version]], the miniseries is generally praised for taking fewer liberties with the story and [[TruerToTheText staying truer to the original book]].



While it was made on a much smaller budget and scale than the [[Film/Dune1984 1984 film version]], the miniseries is generally praised for taking less liberties with the story and [[TruerToTheText staying truer to the original book]]. For the 2021 film, see [[Film/Dune2021 here]].

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While it was made on Creator/WidescreenGames developed a much smaller budget and scale than VideoGameAdaptation -- also titled ''VideoGame/FrankHerbertsDune'' -- in 2001, published by Creator/CryoInteractive, the [[Film/Dune1984 1984 film version]], developers of the miniseries is generally praised for taking less liberties with the story and [[TruerToTheText staying truer to the [[VideoGame/Dune1992 original book]]. Dune game]] based on the 1984 film.

For the 2021 film, see [[Film/Dune2021 here]].
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None


While it was made on a much smaller budget and scale than the [[Film/Dune1984 1984 film version]], the miniseries is generally praised for taking less liberties with the story and [[TruerToTheText staying truer to the original book]]. For the 2020 film, see [[Film/Dune2020 here]].

to:

While it was made on a much smaller budget and scale than the [[Film/Dune1984 1984 film version]], the miniseries is generally praised for taking less liberties with the story and [[TruerToTheText staying truer to the original book]]. For the 2020 2021 film, see [[Film/Dune2020 [[Film/Dune2021 here]].
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* HotterAndSexier: Compared to the previous adaptation. Jessica and Leto and later Chani and Paul are shown naked in bed together, while the 1984 film had them clothed in equivalent scenes. Paul sees the Fremen, including Chani, strip off their stillsuits without regard for gender or modesty by offworlders' standards. The sietch's "spice orgy" is depicted as both communal religous ecstasy and a literal orgy. Feyd-Rautha is shown naked from behind and ministered to by topless, near-naked slaves.

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* HotterAndSexier: Compared to the previous adaptation. Jessica and Leto and later Chani and Paul are shown naked in bed together, while the 1984 film had them clothed in equivalent scenes. Paul sees the Fremen, including Chani, strip off their stillsuits without regard for gender or modesty by offworlders' standards. The sietch's "spice orgy" is depicted as both communal religous ecstasy and a literal orgy. Feyd-Rautha is shown naked from behind and ministered to by topless, near-naked slaves. Some or all of this may have been trimmed for the original TV airing.

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* CreepyUncle: The miniseries takes this further than the book, and has the Baron rapturously watching a naked Feyd Rautha emerging from a swimming pool.

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* CreepyUncle: The miniseries takes this further than the book, and has the Baron rapturously watching a naked Feyd Rautha Feyd-Rautha emerging from a swimming pool.


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* HotterAndSexier: Compared to the previous adaptation. Jessica and Leto and later Chani and Paul are shown naked in bed together, while the 1984 film had them clothed in equivalent scenes. Paul sees the Fremen, including Chani, strip off their stillsuits without regard for gender or modesty by offworlders' standards. The sietch's "spice orgy" is depicted as both communal religous ecstasy and a literal orgy. Feyd-Rautha is shown naked from behind and ministered to by topless, near-naked slaves.
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* InCaseYouForgotWhoWroteIt: ''Frank Herbert's Dune'', the miniseries.

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* InCaseYouForgotWhoWroteIt: ''Frank Herbert's Dune'', the miniseries.'''''Creator/{{Frank Herbert}}[='=]s''' Dune''.
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Moving to trivia.


* DawsonCasting: 26 year old Alex Newman plays Paul Atreides, starting when Paul is only 15 years old in part one of a three part miniseries. Even with the three-year time jump between parts two and three, he's substantially older than Paul is. A general consensus among many reviewers was that Paul comes off as too petulant in part one - because he's ''supposed'' to be acting like an angsty teenager, but he's played by an actor a full decade older than that. It gets better as the character ages in the story.
** No spoilers explanation: the Dune story features time skips, and follows Paul as an adult in the sequels, spanning decades of his life. Scifi Channel had some hopes they would later cover them, which they did in ''Children of Dune''. They didn't want to cast multiple actors to play Paul Atreides, so they had Newman play-down as young teenaged Paul in part one of the first miniseries, because they were anticipating his portrayal of older Paul later. This did seem to pay off, because Newman's performance as older-Paul in ''Children of Dune'' was widely praised.
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None


While it was made on a much smaller budget and scale than the [[Film/{{Dune}} 1984 film version]], the miniseries is generally praised for taking less liberties with the story and [[TruerToTheText staying truer to the original book]]. For the 2020 film, see [[Film/Dune2020 here]].

to:

While it was made on a much smaller budget and scale than the [[Film/{{Dune}} [[Film/Dune1984 1984 film version]], the miniseries is generally praised for taking less liberties with the story and [[TruerToTheText staying truer to the original book]]. For the 2020 film, see [[Film/Dune2020 here]].

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Moved from Series.Dune.


[[redirect:{{Series/Dune}}]]

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[[redirect:{{Series/Dune}}]][[quoteright:214:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/61d5c36c3987a3a72c28deb325beea5c.jpg]]
[[caption-width-right:214:William Hurt does appear for a few minutes]]

->''And so it begins. The trap is set. The prey approaches. A glorious winter is about to descend on House Atreides and all its heirs, and very soon, the years of humiliation visited upon my family will finally be avenged."
-->--'''Baron Vladimir Harkonnen'''

The ''Franchise/{{Dune}}'' miniseries, billed as ''"Frank Herbert's Dune"'', is a television adaptation of the 1965 novel ''Literature/{{Dune}}'' by Frank Herbert, often credited as "the masterpiece of science fiction". The miniseries aired in the year 2000 on the [[Creator/{{Syfy}} Sci-Fi Channel]]. Its $20 million budget was small for a sci-fi blockbuster -- especially since the three-part nature of the series functionally meant they were making multiple feature-length films -- but was almost unprecedented for a series intended for an initial TV release. It received a significant marketing push (Including full theatrical trailers) as the Sci-Fi Channel tried to break into serious made-for-TV production.

This adaptation is sometimes referred to as "the one with the hats" because of its use of flamboyant costume design to distinguish between the different factions within the story. This adaptation also notably [[AscendedExtra expands the role of]] Princess Irulan to further drive the story and [[CompositeCharacter replace characters]] that weren't adapted over.

Dune stars Creator/WilliamHurt as Duke Leto, who despite top-billing [[DeadStarWalking is only in about the first third of the story]]. Alec Newman stars as Paul 'Muad'Dib' Atreides, with Ian [=McNeice=] as Baron Harkonnen and an international cast of actors.

The miniseries itself spawned a sequel, ''Series/ChildrenOfDune'' which adapted both ''Literature/DuneMessiah'' and ''Literature/ChildrenOfDune'' into a single story.

While it was made on a much smaller budget and scale than the [[Film/{{Dune}} 1984 film version]], the miniseries is generally praised for taking less liberties with the story and [[TruerToTheText staying truer to the original book]]. For the 2020 film, see [[Film/Dune2020 here]].
----
!! ''Dune'' contains examples of:

* AdaptedOut: Lady Fenring (Irulan goes to Giedi Prime with Count Fenring instead).
* AdaptationalCurves: In this adaptation they cast decidedly voluptuous Barbora Kodetova as Chani, a character described as slender and devoid of body fat in the books.
* AdaptationExpansion: Princess Irulan -- who only shows up in the novel in person in the ''very last chapter'' -- gets a greatly expanded role, since the people in charge of the series thought it was a bit much to ask viewers to accept Paul marrying a total stranger. Irulan befriends Paul early on in the plot, and when House Atreides is seemingly destroyed she attempts to find out what her father is plotting. Unfortunately, this makes Irulan a much more sympathetic character, meaning that her fate at the end of the series -- being married to Paul, who clearly considers Chani his ''real'' wife in everything but name -- is even more harsh than in the source material.
** Irulan appears to have aspects of Margot Fenring combined with her character. Since the latter was adapted out, this would make the miniseries' Irulan more of a [[CompositeCharacter composite character]].
* AllEncompassingMantle: The Spacing Guild representatives wear purple velvet-ish capes. However, these just keep going up and up into giant purple-velvetish cones.
* AlwaysNight: Giedi Prime. Presumably following the book's explanation that the planet is fouled with pollution.
* AnimalMotif: The Atreides symbol is a hawk, and the Corrino symbol is a golden lion - both of which are mentioned prominently in the first book in the series, which this is based on. At the dinner party scene in the part one, however, Paul mentions that the Harkonnen symbol is a griffin - this actually is part of the book canon, but it was only established retroactively in the ''fifth'' novel in the series.
* AscendedExtra:
** Princess Irulan gets a greatly expanded role in this series, fulfilling the arcs of several other characters.
* BlackComedy: When a dying Dr. Yueh says "[[ThanatosGambit You think you've defeated me?]]", Baron Harkonnen just nods while silently mouthing, "Oh yes."
* ByTheLightsOfTheirEyes: The miniseries visualized the Eyes of the Ibad as glowing. This was toned down in the ''Series/ChildrenOfDune'' sequel.
* CharacterTics: Baron Vladimir Harkonnen in this miniseries had a distinctive habit of rubbing his right temple when he was frustrated. Later on, Paul Atreides does this himself, demonstrating the family connection between the two. In ''Series/ChildrenOfDune'', we see Alia performing the gesture when she hears the Baron's voice in her head.
* ColourCodedForYourConvenience: The Sci-Fi Channel's miniseries portrays the Harkonnens in red, the Imperial Corrinos are purple and gold (likely a reference to the purple togas worn by Roman emperors), the Atreides primarily in tan and white, Fremen in brown and dark orange, and Spacing Guild members in black.
* CompellingVoice: In the mini-series, the Voice is clearly heard as the VoiceOfTheLegion, although only to its target. In the film, it can be heard playing over and over in the target's mind, forcing him to comply.
* CrazyCulturalComparison: The "gift of moisture" scene appears in adaptations with variations. In the mini-series, it is Paul who thanks Stilgar for the gift.
* CreepyUncle: The miniseries takes this further than the book, and has the Baron rapturously watching a naked Feyd Rautha emerging from a swimming pool.
* DawsonCasting: 26 year old Alex Newman plays Paul Atreides, starting when Paul is only 15 years old in part one of a three part miniseries. Even with the three-year time jump between parts two and three, he's substantially older than Paul is. A general consensus among many reviewers was that Paul comes off as too petulant in part one - because he's ''supposed'' to be acting like an angsty teenager, but he's played by an actor a full decade older than that. It gets better as the character ages in the story.
** No spoilers explanation: the Dune story features time skips, and follows Paul as an adult in the sequels, spanning decades of his life. Scifi Channel had some hopes they would later cover them, which they did in ''Children of Dune''. They didn't want to cast multiple actors to play Paul Atreides, so they had Newman play-down as young teenaged Paul in part one of the first miniseries, because they were anticipating his portrayal of older Paul later. This did seem to pay off, because Newman's performance as older-Paul in ''Children of Dune'' was widely praised.
* DeadStarWalking: William Hurt gets top billing as Duke Leto Atreides in SciFi Channel's Dune Miniseries, despite his character getting killed at the end of part one (of three).
* DeathWail: {{Inverted}} here, where [[spoiler:Rabban]] does this when he realizes that ''he'' is about to become the metaphorical ex-beloved ally.
* DistantReactionShot: The mini-series has a dead-serious one of these with a spice-blow right after Liet-Kynes realizes that he's right on top of it and begins screaming, "I am a desert creat-"
* EliteMooks: Sardaukar elite troopers.
* ErmineCapeEffect: Padishah Emperor Shaddam IV in the miniseries wears very elaborate outfits even when he's just working in his study or meeting with his advisers. This is different from the book, where Shaddam IV wore an ordinary Sardaukar officer's uniform with no decoration other than a black helmet even at official state functions. This was stated to not be the case throughout history, being a personal affectation of Shaddam's which symbolized his reliance on the Sardaukar to maintain power.
* EvilGloating: When his Mentat wants to GetItOverWith, the Baron argues that rubbing Duke Leto's face in his own defeat is the entire point!
-->'''Piter deVries:''' Perhaps [[WhyDontYouJustShootHim we should get on with it then?]]\\
'''Baron Harkonnen:''' Get on with it? ''[[PunctuatedForEmphasis THIS-IS-KANLY]], Piter! Vendetta!'' And I am going to savor every minute of it. My family has hated the Atreides for generations. They have been the sand in our eyes, the ''stink'' at our meals. These arrogant Atreides, ''always'' standing in our way. I want Leto to appreciate the ''beauty'', of what I have done to him. I want him to know that [[SuddenlyShouting I, BARON VLADIMIR HARKONNEN]], am the instrument of his family's demise, the extinction of House Atreides, and the ascendance ''(MilkingTheGiantCow)'' of House Harkonnen.
* FlashStep: How "the weirding way of fighting" is depicted in the ''Dune'' and ''Children of Dune'' miniseries.
* GunsVsSwords: Played straight as per the novel, but without the novel's justification -- the rebels just ZergRush troopers armed with firearms without the mass casualties that would ensue in real life.
* InCaseYouForgotWhoWroteIt: ''Frank Herbert's Dune'', the miniseries.
* MiniSeries: 2000 SciFi. Adapted the first three books, the first titled ''Frank Herbert's Dune'' and the second ''Children of Dune'' (combined with the second book, ''Dune Messiah'').
* MonochromaticEyes[=/=]TechnicolorEyes: A result of high-level Spice addiction, when enough ingestion saturates the blood stream and stains the eyes. Turned into GlowingEyesOfDoom in both live-action adaptations.
* NiceHat: In the [[Creator/{{Syfy}} Sci-Fi Channel]]'s production, there were several {{Nice Hat}}s, mostly notably the Bene Gesserit, [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Ghm.jpg seen here]] (the hat is the thing extending back from her head).
* OhCrap:
** The Fremen have a four-part opening to their assault on Arrakeen. First, they blow up the Shield Wall with a nuke. This is followed by a massive sandstorm, a squadron of ornithopters, and four sandworms carrying Fremen warriors. In between each part, we shift back to the Imperial Palace to see the OhCrap reactions on everyone's faces.
** Also satisfying is the expression on Rabban's face when he sees that he is surrounded by an immense, eerily silent mob of the very people he had enjoyed brutally oppressing. The fact that he just drops his knife and lets out a cry of abject despair as the mob swarms in and guts him is icing on the cake.
*** To make this one worse, is the HopeSpot Rabban has when he sees Stilgar there with a gun, and you can almost sense that he hopes for a quick death by gunshot... only for Stilgar to turn and walk away, leaving him at the mercy of a hundred villagers and fremen who are hardly going to give him such mercy. In other words, OhCrap, HopeSpot, then double OhCrap.
** And the expression on the Baron's face when he realizes that a little girl had just poisoned him. Him, the Baron of Geidi Prime, brought low by a four-year-old girl. Oh Crap indeed.
* ProperLady: Lady Jessica in the miniseries behaves like one, even though she's technically not part of the nobility. [[spoiler:she actually is, though she doesn't know it: she's the Baron's daughter, hard as that is to believe.]]
* RhymesOnADime: In this adaptation, Baron Harkonnen has this as a coda to his scenes.
--> "By the time the traitor is fully revealed, the fate of Atreides will already be sealed."
--> "So let the emperor mock House Harkonnen, call us swine. Because in the end his throne will be mine."
* SceneryPorn: Whatever the budget might have been, the interior sets of the palaces look gorgeous (well, except for the Harkonnen's StylisticSuck, but that was intentional).
* SpaceClothes: The 2000 miniseries (aided by the meager budget) sets groups apart by very large hats.
* TruerToTheText: The 2000 miniseries takes some liberties with Frank Herbert's book, but compared to the 1984 David Lynch movie, its fidelity is nigh-slavish.
** Even the invented Irulan scenes are more trying to depict what the Corrinos probably were doing "off-screen" in the books: they wanted to interweave the imperial family into the story more organically, so it wasn't as jarring when they show up at the end. The way the novels did this was by quoting excerpts at the beginning of each chapter from books that Irulan wrote years later about these events - which doesn't translate neatly into a visual format. Thus the invented Irulan scenes are more of an "adaptation" of those book excerpts, now presented as her real-time reactions.
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