Juicy Details About The New “Dune”


Rejoice!
Frank Herbert’s “Dune” comes out on big screens later this
year. Vanity Fair has recently shown us a lot of new information
about the fresh adaptation of Dune, including some movie stills and
what to expect in the future, so let’s take a look at the juiciest
details!

What’s
it about?

In
the distant future, humankind has built an intergalactic empire, and
entire planets are owned by a bunch of noble families. After the
robot uprising, people abandoned electronic devices and developed
extrasensory abilities. The most valuable resource in the galaxy is
the “spice,” which allows people to send ships through
space wormholes or something like that. The arid planet Arrakis, aka
Dune, is the only source of this invaluable resource, but to collect
the spice, you first need to survive the climate, and gigantic worms
living in the sands. The rest is politics and epic family drama, but
people seem to love it. The best part of Dune is the setting.

Who’s
in it?

The
Dune (2020) is directed by Denis Villeneuve, who’d created gorgeous
movies like “The Arrival,” “Blade Runner 2049”
and “Sicario.” Almost all of his films were highly appreciated by
both critics and viewers, even though some flopped financially.

There
he is, directing and stuff.

Hans
Zimmer is in charge of composing the score, so you know it’s going
to rock your socks off. In the end, he was the mad genius behind
soundtracks for such hits as “The Lion King,” “Inception,”
“Interstellar,” and “The Dark Knight,” along with many
others.

As
for the on-screen performances, we got some
hot movie stills with Timothee Chalamet, Zendaya, Jason Momoa, Oscar
Isaac, Javier Bardem, Josh Brolin, and more. But we’re yet to see
Dave Bautista’s character. Or maybe he’s so well-hidden he’s
basically invisible!

Beautiful
Zendaya as Chani

Timothee
Chalamet as Paul Atreides

Timothee
Chalamet and Rebecca Ferguson Lady Jessica

Oscar
Isaac as Leto Atreides

Jason
Momoa as Duncan Idaho

Representatives
of the House Atreides

Josh
Brolin as Gurney Halleck

Sharon
Duncan-Brewster as Liet-Kynes

This
is only the beginning!

The
Dune books cleverly intertwine topics of politics, religion, ecology,
and faith with phenomenal worldbuilding and drama. This is why it’s
insanely hard to do the story justice without spending billions of
dollars on 15 seasons of television. Therefore, the director decided
to split the first book into two parts, because two hours are not
nearly enough to fit the whole plot of book one.

As
you can see, sequels are a-coming if the movie doesn’t tank.

Are
you excited to see the spice worms on the big screen? I know I am!

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