Dune: Part Two is a wild, violent masterpiece that changes the plot - Action News
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Dune: Part Two is a wild, violent masterpiece that changes the plot

Dune: Part Two is a towering achievement of artistic vision, clearly crafted by a director with both a deep love for the source material and mastery over his craft. The only problem is, like the first, the only way to accomplish that was to make what is not really even a movie.

Sci-fi epic is a sweeping adaptation that fixes elements of the novel but is still missing an ending

A man and woman stare longingly into each other's eyes. Behind them are desert dunes.
Timothe Chalamet, left, and Zendaya appear in a still from Dune: Part Two. Denis Villeneuve's film is a sweeping epic, but still in want of a finale to tie it together. (Warner Bros. Entertainment)

The only thing you could fault Denis Villeneuve's 2021 epicDunefor was also, really, the only reason it worked.

After all, Frank Herbert's 1965 sci-fi novel, a mythopoeic, quasi-religious, desertpunk, anti-colonial, anti-demagoguery, speculative history masterpiece, was long deemed pretty much unfilmable. Simply making a cohesive movie out of it is the Hollywood equivalent of splitting the atom and others have tried.

Already saddled with a faithful but bloated 2000s miniseries, oneself-described "failure" of a David Lynch movieand anotherfrom surrealist director AlejandroJodorowskythat was somehow so terrifyingly bizarreit was cancelledwhenhis other 1970s desertnightmare,El Topo,made itto theatres,adaptations of Dune carry some bad blood.

Which is why Villeneuve's Dune: Part Onewas an act of movie magic: racking up over $400 million US at the box office, pulling in six Oscars and making an unlikely leading man out of Timothe Chalamet.And itwas all based on the director's ability to ignore an impulse to condense and instead spread a single story over two films releasing years apart.

In the sequel, finally out this week, Villeneuve managed to do it all over again.Dune: Part Two is a towering achievement of artistic vision, clearly crafted by a manwith both a deep love for the source material and mastery over his craft.

The only problem is, like Part One, the only way to accomplish this was to make something that is, for all intents and purposes, not even really a movie.

WATCH | Dune: Part Two trailer:

A return to a complex world

Focusing on a single planet caught in the crosshairs of an interstellar feud, Dune follows the powerful Atreides family as it attempts to govern the desert world Arrakis.

The position is particularly valuable to patriarch Duke Leto Atreides (Oscar Isaac in Part One) and his son Paul (Chalamet), as Arrakis is the only known source of "spice." Both a drug and sort-of-but-not-really fuel (forgive me Duneheads, I have a word limit), that substance happens to be the most important resource in the universe.

The Atreides management of the planet, which was previouslycontrolled by the decidedly more evil Harkonnens (led by Stellan Skarsgrd's fantastically disgusting Baron Harkonnen), is hampered by threats that more than warranted the first book's four appendices and 30 page glossary.

Paul is up against everything from the indigenous "Fremen," to the witchlike "Bene Gesserit" sisterhood,Sardaukar, slip-tips, shigawire and, of course, Shai Hulud the gigantic sandworms that are the source of both spice, and the film's uncomfortably familiar tie-in popcorn bucket.

The background is a hugely complex and, to the uninitiated, potentially impenetrable wordsoup. But Villeneuve's genius way around that wasn't to simplify or substantively change Herbert's plot; instead, he went the other way.

An incredibly large, bald man is bathing in a black tub. He is pale and blue veins can be seen under his skin. He is smoking from a long thin pipe.
Stellan Skarsgrd appears as Baron Harkonnen in a still from Dune: Part Two. (Warner Bros. Entertainment)

Even before he got confirmation that he'd get asequel, the Qubcois director split the novel in two and the first movie was marketedas simply Dune, without the "part one" that wouldindicate to audiences that itwas part of a franchise.

Dune: Part One, though beautiful and made with obvious intention, operated more as a primer for a hypothetical future film than a self-contained story of its own. Dune: Part Two doesn't close the loop. Instead, it kicks the can down the road once again callingfor a sequel that might finally tie the whole breathtaking thing together.

Another beginning

InPart One, thestumbling block was simple: a singular focus on exposition. Because of a need to get movie-goers up to snuff on whose crysknifepierced which Mentat's stillsuit,we eventually arrive at the endwith a better understanding of the characters and world but at the expense of any fully realized character arc.

Part Two feels similarly awe-inspiring but not quite finished, though for a different reason. It begins with Paul wanderingthe desert after a violent coup and attempt on his life by the Harkonnens. Forced to take refuge with the Fremen, he falls back on an old trick.

Having predicted a situation like this, the mystical Bene Gesserithad already seeded the planet with fabricated prophecies of a coming messiah from beyond their world. Paul and his mother, Lady Jessica (Rebecca Ferguson), take advantage of this, positioning Paul as the fabled Lisan al Gaib, come to bring freedom to the Fremen and turn their planet into a lush paradise.

A woman with bright blue eyes peers out from under a hood. Her face is covered in tattooed letters of a non-english language.
Rebecca Ferguson appears as Dune's Lady Jessica in a still from the film. (Warner Bros. Entertainment)

That gives Part Two a much more cinematic track to follow: the Avatar, Pocahontas, Fern Gully or Lawrence of Arabia (adirectinspiration for Herbert's Dune) formula of a turncoat colonial hero come to identify with and save a persecuted population.

But a large reason why Herbert's novel eventually found such a wide audience is because of a fundamental misunderstanding of its intent. In fixing that,Dune: Part Twonow brings a subtext to the fore that demands more closure than it gets.

"Dune Messiah is the most misunderstood of Frank Herbert's novels," Frank Herbert's son, Brian, writes in the introduction to Dune's sequel initially hated for the same reasons the original was loved.

"The second novel in the series flipped over the carefully crafted hero myth of Paul Muad'Dib and revealed the dark side of the messiah phenomenon that had appeared to be so glorious in Dune. Many readers didn't want that dose of reality."

Villeneuve, a lifelong Dune fan who carved Paul's Fremen name into his graduation ring, understood that message: the theme so cleanly following the BertoltBrecht quote "Unhappy the land that needs heroes," it's seemingly echoed in the text as, "No more terrible disaster could befall your people than forthem to fall into the hands of a Hero."

WATCH | Qubcois directorDenis Villeneuveon bringingDune home:

Dune director Denis Villeneuve on premiering the film in his home province of Quebec

8 months ago
Duration 0:55
Director Denis Villeneuve attended the Dune: Part Two premiere in Montreal on Wednesday. The French-Canadian filmmaker was born in Quebec and started his career in Canada before directing Hollywood films such as Arrival, Prisoners and Dune.

To get that across, he made his few changes.

"People were thinking Paul was a hero, [Herbert] wanted to be the opposite. He wanted Paul to be [an] anti-hero," Villeneuve told CBC at the Montreal premiere. "Me, knowing that, I decided to make my adaptation to be more faithful to Frank Herbert than to the book."

Dune: Part Two makes its audience directly aware that Paul's successes aren't successes; they're dangerous manipulations. And when you're not allowed to see his actions as direct Labours of Hercules, but instead actions that exist only to get to the real point of the story, even this masterpiece can't be called perfect.

But this is also themovie's saving grace. BecauseVilleneuve subtly darkensPaul's choices and givesvastly more agency to many ofDune's women like Florence Pugh's Princess Irulan and most vitally Zendaya's Chani Dune: Part Two sets a future movie up to more cleanly, and explosively, confront its major theme.

If and when asequel or sequels stick that landing, Villeneuve's Dune franchise could be viewed as a flawless triumph. But how do you judge a story without an ending?

With files from Sarah Leavitt