Wednesday, 29 January 2020

Dune logo unveiled at event; copyright claimants rush to remove it from the 'net

The logo for Denis Villeneuve's forthcoming Dune movie series was revealed at an event in France last night. It appears the movie's producers are rushing to remove it from the 'net, as photos of the logo are disappearing from popular Dune fan accounts with copyright enforcement notices left in their wake.

But they can't get everything, and it's easy to find with a search.

Perhaps they know it's futile, and the aggressive enforcement is itself a publicity stunt. Dune's fandom is old and intense, and a rich thread in the cultural fabric of the internet generation thanks to the sprawling novels, the magnificent badness of the 1982 David Lynch movie, and a conversely excellent series of computer games based on Frank Herbert's lets-not-get-started-trying-to-summarize-it epic. So every element of the production receives an unusual level of attention from mainstream journalists.

As for the logo itself, it's being well-received. It's similar to a typeface called Neon Club Mix, by TypoGraphic.

The spindly geometric type screams "sci-fi" almost to the point of retro camp, but the simple, epic elegance of the letterforms and the cleverness of the rotational symmetry is winning folks over.

There is a Frenchness to it, too, I think, at least in that it reminds me of the type on early games by Ere Informatique, the developer that would go on to make the wildly successful 1992 Dune computer game. Here's the title screen of their first hit, Captain Blood.