franciskenstein’s review published on Letterboxd:
Godlike, scorchingly almighty, terrifyingly unforgettable. Establishes a seamless continuation of the futuristic sandblasting redemption warfare along technical aspects—divine cinematography, angelic yet earsplitting score, thundering sound design, unbelievably shrewd visual effects and a towering set production as colossal as its budget—built and strewn with the most expensive material possible in order to properly finish and pay justice Frank Herbert's beloved sci-fi novel.
Denis Villeneuve propels his visual vastitude with preternatural fashion that drips and wafts on every scene in "Dune: Part Two" whose inner nature lies within the bewildering and rough throes of science fiction which Villeneuve was known to inhabit and effortlessly direct (courtesy of his past projects such as "Enemy" and "Blade Runner 2049"). So meticulously edited that it feels shorter than its actual runtime, this was every bit as portentously umpteen and artistically cinematic as "Dune: Part One" proving Villeneuve as a powerful force in the field of futuristic mythos and loreal philosophy.
Immediately go to a near theater and sit through a godsent theatrical experience to simmer your eyes and impale your ears (no pun intended).