Summary
- Denis Villeneuve's Dune: Part Two delves into Paul's descent into fanaticism and existential dread on a grand scale.
- Changes in the adaptation enhance Paul's tragic pivot towards fundamentalism and the terrifying consequences of prophecy.
- Revenge, sacrifice, and destiny drive the visually stunning and imposingly grand Dune: Part Two, culminating in an epic book-to-screen adaptation.
The task of adapting Frank Herbert's Dune was never going to be easy, but Denis Villeneuve chose to do it twice and managed to pull it off. Dune: Part Two is an awe-inspiring sci-fi spectacle and a devastating collision of myth and destiny on a galactic scale. In returning to the world of Arrakis, Villeneuve has crafted one of the bleakest modern blockbusters as Timothée Chalamet's Paul Atreides falls into a well of prophecy. Even in sacrificing some of what gives Dune its signature weirdness, Villeneuve brings Herbert's work to life in a way that feels definitive.

Dune: Part Two
- Release Date
- February 27, 2024
- Runtime
- 167 minutes
- Director
- Denis Villeneuve
Cast
- Paul Atreides
- Chani
Dune: Part Two continues the epic saga of Paul Atreides as he allies with Chani and the Fremen. Pursuing retribution for his family's devastation, Paul grapples with a significant decision impacting his personal desires and the universe's future, attempting to avert a dire destiny that only he anticipates.
- Denis Villeneuve brings Herbert's world to life in excellent detail
- The film's visual language is stunning
- The film is a sci-fi epic that earns its title
- The characters' inner struggles are on full display
Timothée Chalamet Gives One Of His Best Performances In Dune: Part Two
Dune: Part Two has a sense of dread that lingers over it like the sand that coasts over the desert. Instead of a looming attack from a rival house, though, the dread is much more existential as Paul is fighting against destiny itself. Upon ing the Fremen, Paul is pulled in two directions. He eagerly shrugs off Bene Gesserit prophecy in favor of simple revenge, but Fremen factions fight over his place in their society and, in his willful ignorance, Paul misses what was true all along: His mother and the manufactured Kwisatz Haderach prophecy are too powerful to be ignored.
In changing key parts of the novel, Villeneuve makes Paul's reluctant pivot towards fundamentalism all the more tragic.
It's a terrifying thing to behold as Paul becomes a willful victim of fate, but, as the gom jabbar test proved, he's not one for impulsive decisions. Paul's turn from fighter to leader, from reluctant prophet to full-blown messiah, is a decision he makes with full knowledge of the personal and political consequences. It's a big ask from Villeneuve, as it was from Herbert decades ago, and the director's take on Paul is slightly more sympathetic than the author's.
Dune: Part Two Is A Dark Descent Into Fanaticism
Dune was long considered un-adaptable for a myriad of reasons — its dense world full of otherworldly technology seemed nearly impossible to realize visually, but it's the internal worlds of its main characters that seemed most difficult to bring to life. In changing key parts of the novel, though, Villeneuve makes Paul's reluctant pivot towards fundamentalism all the more tragic. Zendaya's Chani serves as a perfect foil for Paul and her chemistry with Chalamet sells what would feel a bit thin otherwise in the first half of the film.
Ultimately, it's Lady Jessica and Feyd-Rautha that reveal the true terror of unfettered belief. Watching Rebecca Ferguson stride through the Fremen's desert hideaway as she whispers to her fetus could easily fall into caricature if it weren't so chilling. As she embraces the role of Reverend Mother and pushes Paul towards his fate, the lines between prophecy and family begin to blur, recalling a pivotal conversation between Duke Leto and Jessica about protecting Paul. Jessica, in her own way, is protecting her son, but to shield someone in mythology is to invite different dangers.
One of those dangers is Feyd-Rautha, a bald and eyebrow-less Austin Butler oozing with insanity. Paul and Feyd have more in common than either of them would it, and their intertwined destinies make the inevitability of Paul's visions that much clearer. Dune: Part Two's scenes of Giedi Prime expand Herbert's world in visually arresting ways — the black-and-white effect produced by the planet's black sun feels harsh against the warm earth tones of Arrakis and a scene between Lea Seydoux's Lady Fenring and Feyd manages to be terrifying and sexy, an effect Butler is clearly aiming for (and pulls off).

Dune 2's "Unrecognizable" Feyd-Rautha Is Already Better Than The Original
Austin Butler's severe look as Dune: Part Two's Feyd-Rautha has led to some complaints, but it's already a vast improvement on Sting's version.
Dune: Part Two Blows Expectations Out Of The Water On All Fronts
Paul's quest for revenge against the Harkonnens is the driving force of the first half of the film, and it allows Villeneuve and cinematographer Greig Fraser to show off the true desert power Duke Leto kept on about in Part One. They nail every element of the world that was teased or glimpsed briefly in 2021: Villeneuve's sand-bound action is as impressive and foreboding as the angular Arrakeen palace — Fremen silently erupt from below the sand to knife their enemies and Spice harvesters explode with world-shattering might.
The scale of the first film is multiplied tenfold with extended visits to Giedi Prime, Kaitan, and the supposedly uninhabitable southern deserts of Arrakis, all against the backdrop of grand tragedy and revenge — something that, as Jessica points out, Paul's father would reject. It's an early indicator that, despite his best intentions, Paul will fall prey to the plots at play.
Through Dune: Part Two, this revenge morphs into something deadlier and more monumental, and, in the desert of Arrakis, Paul is eventually forced to choose between holy war-inducing survival or the end of everything he has come to love. Alongside Chalamet's transformation, Javier Bardem's Stilgar goes from skeptic to disciple as his unbridled thirst for prophecy realized overtakes any logic that Paul or Chani attempt to thrust upon him.
It's the perfect encapsulation of the thematic center — it doesn't matter whether the Kwisatz Haderach is a manufactured myth. No matter what anyone does, Paul is always going to confirm the Fremen fundamentalists' belief in the messiah, leading to billions of casualties across the imperium. His acceptance of this fate is perhaps the most terrifying thing of all in Dune: Part Two, and it's hard to overstate just how impressive Villeneuve's film and Chalamt's performance really is.
It's an epic science-fiction tale told in a visual language that is both uncomfortably intimate and imposingly grand, a terrifying thing that you can't look away from and perhaps one of the best book-to-screen adaptations of all time.
Dune: Part Two releases in theaters on March 1. The film is 166 minutes long and rated PG-13 for sequences of strong violence, some suggestive material and brief strong language.
Dune: Part Two
Cast
- Rebecca Ferguson
- Release Date
- February 27, 2024
- Director
- Denis Villeneuve
- Writers
- Denis Villeneuve
- Sequel(s)
- Dune: Part Three
- Franchise(s)
- Dune
- Studio(s)
- Legendary Pictures
- Distributor(s)
- Warner Bros. Pictures
- Budget
- $122 Million
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