Earlier today a group calling themselves Spice DAO tweeted that they were the proud owners of an original Jodorowsky’s Dune book, the compendium of concept art and notes that comprised filmmaker Alejandro Jodorowsky’s doomed attempts to get a Dune movie made in the 1970s. Spending vastly more than it’s worth, all in an attempted crypto-sham.
The thing is, there isn’t a single book. Multiple copies had to be made at the time, to be shared between various production members and executives, and it’s estimated there are still around ten copies still out there in the wild. One sold three years ago for just $42,500.
Which brings us to Spice DAO, who last year bought themselves a copy at auction for €2.66 million, which is around USD$3 million.
This is the part where I tell you that Spice DAO is a crypto hustle (there were shenanigans going on with the auction itself that you can read more about on Buzzfeed), using preservation of the book as a lovely excuse for selling $SPICE tokens to people whose only return—aside from the speculative-driven “value” of the token itself—will be a chance to vote on what actually happens with the book.
Which won’t be much, because they can’t sell everyone on making it public, because it already is. The book was scanned and photographed in 2021, and is available for everyone to read and enjoy right now, without the need to spend millions at auction or contribute to a crypto scam. And the “original animated series” pitch is even dumber, because if it’s too close to Herbert’s story and/or Jodorowsky’s vision, they’ll be shut down by lawyers. They only bought a copy of a book, not the rights to the project, and if it’s only loosely based on it then why did they need to buy the book?
Leaving the team with...a copy of the book. Good luck voting on who gets to keep it at their house on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, guys.
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