Despite its massive failure, the first attempt at adapting Frank Herbert’s Dune to the big screen made it possible for one of the most iconic science-fiction films to come out. Alejandro Jodorowsky’s Dune promised to be one most ambitious and artistic sci-fi movies ever filmed. Jodorowsky, a director with a very powerful artistic vision, had gathered a dream team to make a ten-hour-long film. However, it was also one of the biggest failures in cinema history as it never got actually made. There are many stories around the film’s production and the people involved in it, but the one regarding the creation of another iconic script is certainly the best.
In 1974, French producer Michel Seydoux reached out to Alejandro Jodorowsky and asked him to direct an adaptation of the novel Dune. Driven by his extravagant and artistic personality, Jodorowsky’s vision was more than ambitious. Among other important people, Chris Foss and Jean Giraud were in the art department, Pink Floyd was in charge of the music, and Salvador Dalí and Orson Welles were part of the cast. Additionally, Dan O’Bannon, who had already co-written John Carpenter’s Dark Star, was the visual effects supervisor. Although the movie was canceled and turned out to be “The Greatest Film Never Made”, this gave Dan O’Bannon the opportunity to develop a different script.