‘Dune: Part Two’ boasts brilliant casting and a lot of fancy desert-walking and sandworm-riding

TIMOTHÉE Chalamet as Paul Atreides in the action adventure ‘Dune: Part Two’. Picture: Niko Tavernise/Warner Bros. Pictures

TIMOTHÉE Chalamet as Paul Atreides in the action adventure ‘Dune: Part Two’. Picture: Niko Tavernise/Warner Bros. Pictures

Published Feb 29, 2024

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By Ann Hornaday

IMAGINE a world devoid of colour or warmth, foundering amid environmental catastrophe and tribal factions that threaten to bring humanity to the edge of fatal fanaticism.

Now let’s talk about Dune: Part Two.

In this big, basso profundo follow-up to 2021’s first instalment, we catch up with Timothée Chalamet’s Paul Atreides and Zendaya’s Chani on the arid planet of Arrakis, fighting off a Harkonnen ambush and making their way to a redoubt of the Fremen, the ragtag group of freedom fighters trying to protect their homeland from invaders greedy for their most valuable resource: the universally coveted substance known as spice.

TIMOTHÉE Chalamet as Paul Atreides and Austin Butler as Feyd-Rautha Harkonnen in ‘Dune: Part Two’. Picture: Niko Tavernise/Warner Bros. Pictures

Paul and his mother, Jessica (Rebecca Ferguson), who is pregnant with his little sister, have joined the Fremen after the assassination of Duke Leto Atreides, played by Oscar Isaac in the first film; now, Paul is grappling with some Fremens’ belief that he’s the leader sent to save them, while others – including the tough, sceptical Chani – consider him a false prophet.

If you’ve already lost the plot, worry not: With Dune: Part Two, film-maker Denis Villeneuve does a smooth job of bringing the audience back up to speed, even if some viewers will have to remind themselves of the difference between a T-probe and a crysknife.

Those who need no refreshing will want to hasten to their nearest multiplex to plunge once again into novelist Frank Herbert’s wildly imaginative universe, brought to expansive, very sandy life by Villeneuve.

If it all leaves you colder than a dying ice planet, the thundering insistence of Dune on its own importance might begin wearing thin after the first two hours – at which point, cheer up! You only have 46 minutes to go!

As he did in Dune: Part One, Villeneuve brings passion and detail to a project steeped in cinematic legend and lore.

Alejandro Jodorowsky’s abandoned 1970s Dune film remains a tantalising what-if; David Lynch’s 1984 adaptation of Herbert’s sci-fi epic was an ambitious but largely dismissed good try.

It didn’t help that George Lucas seemed to lift much of the book’s plot and overall vibe to create Star Wars, slathering it with generous dollops of nostalgia and playful humour.

Zendaya as Chani and Rebecca Ferguson as Lady Jessica in ‘Dune: Part Two’. Photo Credit: Warner Bros. Pictures

Villeneuve’s Dune movies deserve admiration if only for their fealty and ambition; the film-maker’s respect for Herbert’s source material radiates from every frame of movies that feel as massive as they are minutely orchestrated.

What’s more, he has done a brilliant job of casting: Chalamet is the perfect actor to play a character who begins as something of a callow princeling, only to morph into someone more charismatic and sinister; Zendaya, mostly grim-faced, still exudes convincing moments of tenderness while teaching the tender-footed Paul the ropes of mercenary warfare and survival on Arrakis.

There’s a lot of fancy desert-walking and sandworm-riding in Dune: Part Two, as well as a fair amount of blue-eyed glaring; while Ferguson’s Jessica goes off the deep end when it comes to Paul’s messianic future (donning some spectacular costumes and make-up in her role as a newly minted Reverend Mother), Javier Bardem provides the movie’s only genuine laughs in his warm and funny portrayal of Fremen leader Stilgar, whose insistence that Paul is The One borders on Life of Brian-esque goofiness.

Newcomers to the cast are all first-rate: Florence Pugh and Christopher Walken slip easily into their roles as Princess Irulan and her father, the Emperor Shaddam IV, and Austin Butler thoroughly banishes Elvis – at least for now – in his bald, blank-eyed portrayal of the psychotic Feyd-Rautha, whose gladiatorial exhibitions for his uncle Vladimir Harkonnen (Stellan Skarsgard, returning in all his prodigiously padded glory) are staged with fascistic precision.

Heavy with biblical themes of prophecy, sacrifice, redemption and resurrection – with Shakespearean grace notes of fate, family and revenge – Dune: Part Two manages to be busy and oddly inert at the same time.

Things happen for sure in a plot wherein Paul must decide whether he’s an all-in revolutionary or a reluctant demigod; Villeneuve stages the requisite number of fights and battle scenes, which grow ever more incendiary with each confrontation.

The audience is treated (subjected?) to more shots of a baby in utero than might be entirely comfortable, all in service to a sub-plot involving the sister who will presumably be joining Paul in the next chapter.

It’s all meticulously conceived and impressively staged, but becomes repetitive and monotonous, devolving for anyone not completely steeped in the Dune universe into a hazy orange-and-ochre soup of dust, smoke, flames and sand.

So much sand. Like its predecessor, Dune: Part Two builds a world that’s undeniably spectacular, compressing a sprawling, borderline incomprehensible story into an efficient narrative-delivery system (Villeneuve’s perfunctory editing style takes getting used to, but it keeps things moving apace).

For Dune fans, it gives them the majestic treatment their beloved novels have long deserved; everyone else might need to fight their way through the fog of canonical arcana and the Arrakis elements to find a grain of escapist pleasure.

It’s in there somewhere, even if we have to wait for Part Three.

Dune: Part Two is showing at cinemas nationwide.