Quentin Tarantino does not want to see “Dune” with Timothy Salame – “No, no, no”, he says stubbornly

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He has fanatical fans and more, fanatic haters. Legendary director, Pulp Fiction Quentin Tarantino, has expressed his opposition to the remake culture, saying he did not attend any of Denis Vilneve’s films starring Timothy Salame because he “does not need to see this story again”. Frank Herbert’s 1965 science fiction novel “Dune” had been prepared in the past, in 1982 by David Lynch. The American director, who was invited to the podcast by screenwriter Brett Easton Ellis said: “I saw Leeds’ “Dune” film sometimes. I don’t have to see that story again. I don’t need to see sandworms. I don’t need to see a movie in which the word “baharic” sounds so dramatic.” Film director “Pulp Fiction” went on to refer to Netflix’s recent series, Ripley and Shōgun, as examples of remake culture. “It’s one after another the remakes,” Tarantino said. “People ask: “Have you seen Dune?” “Have you seen the Ripley series?” “Have you seen the Shōgun series?”. And I say, “No, no, no, no”. “There are six or seven Ripley books, if you remix one again, why make up the same which has already been prepared twice? I’ve seen this story twice before, and I didn’t like it very much in either version, so I’m not really interested in seeing it third time” he noted.