A mythic and emotionally charged hero’s journey, “Dune” tells the story of Paul Atreides, a brilliant and gifted young man born into a great destiny beyond his understanding, who must travel to the most dangerous planet in the universe to ensure the future of his family and his people. As malevolent forces explode into conflict over the planet’s exclusive supply of the most precious resource in existence—a commodity capable of unlocking humanity’s greatest potential—only those who can conquer their fear will survive.
“Dune: Part One is one of the most challenging movies I’ve ever done”
Photo Credit: Jamie Mills
Production took place in 2019. They traveled to many beautiful locations: Hungary for interior scenes, desert in Jordan, Caladans landscapes in Norway and Arrakis Dunes in The United Arab Emirates.
Even though desert colors dominate the movie, Fraser, Vermette and costume designer Jacqueline West created a color palette to make sure Dune was not monochromatic.
“For example, Patrice worked veins of reds and blues into the sand walls. He — and Jacqueline, who built these subtle gradations of color into the costumes — both did wonderfully subtle work, and I had to make sure we were capturing those subtleties." Says Fraser.
”The best way to do that is with the best light, and for me, that’s the Sputniks and the Creamsources. My approach was to pull as much color as possible out of non-colorful situations,” he continues. “It was all subtle differences, not necessarily bold color contrasts."
Photo Credit: Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures and Legendary Pictures
"Achieving bold color in film is super easy. Achieving depth [in the image while creating a natural-light look] when you’re working with a digital sensor and digital lights is harder than it might first appear. Part of it is the sensor, part of it is the lens, and part of it is the fixture.
We’ve all learned how to create depth with lenses and lighting — shoot on a larger format, open the T stop, use a bigger iris, place a shadow in the foreground, illuminate the midground and place a shadow in the background — but we can also create depth with color, and if we have the right color in the fixtures, then we have a lot more control over that depth.”
Photo Credit: Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures and Legendary Pictures
The Merciless Sun
“Everything is faded and bleached, and I wanted to capture the violence of the sun.” The director Denis Neuville commented. “I wanted nature to be powerful and abrasive, not beautiful. It seemed like the best look was to capture the brutality of the planet and cut-out any sense of romanticism about the desert.”

Photo Credit: Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures and Legendary Pictures
“We had reference images of these hazy skies from Abu Dhabi, and Denis really loved those. But the reality is we knew we’d have days of clear skies and would get that blue, so we had to find a way to treat the skies — partially photographically and partially in post — to get the look that Denis wanted.”
Senior colorist pulled the blue out of the skies and rolled off the overexposure. “We deliberately went for an unsaturated look. Our skies aren’t blue, our rocks aren’t red, our sand isn’t golden. We designed our LUT to take away the blues of the sky and so on. We actually used several different LUTs and our colourist Dave Cole, and lab, Fotokem, were able to combine the elements of highlights and shadows to create a LUT that worked for us.”

Photo Credit: Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures and Legendary Pictures
Effectively we had stone-coloured walls that very easily could have become monochromatic, or just really drab-looking, if we hadn’t got it right. So it was very important to me that I was able to light them with the most amount of colour-depth possible.
I really like using Digital Sputnik LEDs, because they’re a clean source and I feel they have the best colour rendition. We used a lot of studio lights for all the interiors, but we shot with a lot of natural light for all the exteriors. I backlit the actors during the exterior moments, in an effort to avoid dark ‘panda’ eye sockets caused by the bright and contrasty sunlight in Jordan and Abu Dhabi. It’s not hard for the sun to look super harsh.
Trying to find that balance and stay cinematic was still a challenge to ensure the shots weren’t badly lit.”

Photo Credit: Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures and Legendary Pictures
For wide interior shots of the expansive location, Fraser and his gaffer, Jamie Mills, simulated the reflected sunlight with Chroma-Q Studio Force II LED strip lights to provide punch and shape, and a pleasing ambient softness — as well as a distinctive strip of light on the opposite wall that mirrored the conceptual art. For closer work on actors, Mills swapped in Digital Sputnik DS fixtures.
"I saw Dune in an IMAX cinema and I could hardly contain myself. With the soundtrack, the acting, the colour grade and the design, it was an incredible, epic experience, like being on a rollercoaster. Working on Dune was a great collaborative experience with a great team led by Denis, and I’d love to repeat it."
Us too Greig, Us too.
Already waiting for Dune 2!