Dune: Prophecy is an American science fiction television series developed by Diane Ademu-John and Alison Schapker for HBO. Set in Frank Herbert's Dune universe, the series focuses on the origins of the Bene Gesserit, a powerful social, religious, and political force whose members possess superhuman powers and abilities after undergoing years of intense physical and mental conditioning. Dune: Prophecy is a prequel to the Denis Villeneuve films Dune and Dune: Part Two, taking place some 10,000 years prior. It draws upon, but is set after, the Great Schools of Dune novel trilogy (2012–2016) by Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson. The show is produced by Legendary Television, with Schapker serving as showrunner, writer, and executive producer.
Dune: Prophecy | |
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Genre | |
Based on | |
Developed by |
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Showrunner | Alison Schapker |
Starring |
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Music by | Volker Bertelmann |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language | English |
No. of seasons | 1 |
No. of episodes | 4 |
Production | |
Executive producers |
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Producers |
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Production locations |
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Cinematography | Pierre Gill |
Running time | 63–66 minutes |
Production companies |
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Original release | |
Network | HBO |
Release | November 17, 2024 present | –
During Legendary Entertainment's 2016 acquisition of the television and film rights to the Dune book series, it began development of a two-part film adaptation with Denis Villeneuve serving as director by 2017. Legendary Television ordered the series in 2019 as a spin-off project from Villeneuve's films. Various creative figures joined by 2019, and following creative overhauls, Schapker became the show-runner with Anna Foerster serving as director for multiple episodes by June 2023. Meanwhile, casting took place from November 2022 to June 2023. Principal photography began in November 2022 in Budapest and Jordan, and wrapped in December 2023.
The first season of Dune: Prophecy premiered on November 17, 2024 to mostly positive reviews. It is set to conclude with its sixth episode on December 22, 2024.[1]
Plot
editSet 10,000 years before the events of Dune, the series "follows sisters Valya and Tula Harkonnen as they combat forces that threaten the future of humanity, and establish the fabled sect known as the Bene Gesserit."[2]
Cast and characters
editMain
edit- Emily Watson as Mother Superior Valya Harkonnen, leader of the Sisterhood[3]
- Jessica Barden as Young Valya, an ambitious, stubborn and forceful woman who "dreams of restoring her family's noble status."[4]
- Olivia Williams as Reverend Mother Tula Harkonnen, Valya's biological sister and close ally.[5]
- Emma Canning as Young Tula[6]
- Travis Fimmel as Desmond Hart, "a charismatic soldier with an enigmatic past, who seeks to gain the Emperor's trust at the expense of the Sisterhood."[2]
- Jodhi May as Empress Natalya,[5] "a formidable royal who united thousands of worlds in her marriage to Emperor Corrino."[7]
- Sarah-Sofie Boussnina as Princess Ynez, "an independent young princess dealing with the pressures of her responsibility as heir to the Golden Lion Throne."[8]
- Chloe Lea as Sister Lila, "the youngest acolyte at the Sisterhood School with a deep empathy beyond her years."[8]
- Chris Mason as Keiran Atreides, Swordmaster of House Corrino[9]
- Shalom Brune-Franklin as Mikaela, "a strong-willed Fremen woman who serves the royal family while longing for a home planet she's never known."[8]
- Mark Strong as Emperor Javicco Corrino, "a man from a great line of war-time Emperors, who is called upon to govern the Imperium and manage a fragile peace."[9]
- Jade Anouka as Sister Theodosia, "a talented and ambitious acolyte at the Sisterhood who harbors a dangerous secret about her past."[9]
- Edward Davis as Harrow Harkonnen, a "rising politician from a once-great family, who harbors a strong desire to elevate his House to its former glory."[10]
- Josh Heuston as Constantine Corrino, the illegitimate son of Javicco who is "torn between seeking his father's approval and his own happiness."[10]
- Faoileann Cunningham as Sister Jen, "a fierce, unpredictable acolyte in training at the Sisterhood School who rarely reveals her emotional core."[8]
- Aoife Hinds as Sister Emeline, "a zealous acolyte descended from a long line of martyrs, who carries fervent religion to her training at the Sisterhood."[8]
- Mark Addy as Evgeny Harkonnen, Valya and Tula's uncle[11]
Recurring
edit- Barbara Marten as Sister Avila, an aide to Valya
- Sarah Oliver-Watts as Young Avila, one of Dorotea's followers
Guest
edit- Jihae as Reverend Mother Kasha Jinjo, the Emperor's Truthsayer, whose loyalty to the Sisterhood is challenged[12]
- Camilla Beeput as Reverend Mother Dorotea, a pious Reverend Mother and Raquella's granddaughter[6]
- Cathy Tyson as Mother Superior Raquella Berto-Anirul, founder of the Sisterhood[6]
- Brendan Cowell as Duke Ferdinand Richese
- Hannah Khalique-Brown as Sister Farouz, an acolyte with an eye for Constantine Corrino
- Flora Montgomery as Reverend Mother Vera, Truthsayer of House Richese
- Laura Howard as Duchess Orla Richese
- Tessa Bonham Jones as Lady Shannon Richese
- Charlie Hodson-Prior as Lord Pruwet Richese[6]
- Sam Spruell as Horace, a member of a rebellion against the Great Houses
- Karima McAdams as Sister Nazir, a Suk doctor previously trained by the Sisterhood
- Polly Walker as Sonia Harkonnen, Valya and Tula's mother
- Earl Cave as Griffin Harkonnen, Valya and Tula's brother
- Milo Callaghan as Orry Atreides
- David Bark-Jones as Vergyl Harkonnen, Valya and Tula's father
- Archie Barnes as Albert, the only survivor of Tula's massacre of the Atreides
- Tabu as Sister Francesca, a powerful Bene Gesserit and the Emperor's former lover, whose return to the palace "strains the balance of power in the capital."[13]
- Charithra Chandran as Young Francesca, whose early life and romance with the Emperor are seen in flashbacks.[14]
Episodes
editNo. | Title [15] | Directed by | Written by [16] | Original air date [15] | U.S. viewers (millions) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | "The Hidden Hand" | Anna Foerster | Diane Ademu-John | November 17, 2024 | 0.205[17] | |
Over 10,000 years before the events of Dune, sisters Valya and Tula Harkonnen join the Sisterhood, an order of women trained to serve the Great Houses of the Imperium as Truthsayers. Mother Superior Raquella Berto-Anirul dies after envisioning a future reckoning (Tiran-Arafel), which she dubs the Burning Truth. Valya uses the Voice to force Dorotea, Raquella's granddaughter/successor, to kill herself before she can destroy the Sisterhood's breeding program. Thirty years later, Valya, now Mother Superior, arranges for Princess Ynez, daughter of Emperor Javicco Corrino, to marry nine-year-old Pruwet Richese, which they expect will stabilize the Corrino bloodline for generations to come while strengthening their control of desert planet Arrakis and its invaluable spice. Imperial Truthsayer Kasha Jinjo has unsettling visions after meeting soldier Desmond Hart, who claims Imperium-based insurgents, and not the native Fremen, were responsible for the ambush that wiped out his regiment. Valya dismisses Kasha's concerns. Visiting a nightclub, Ynez has sex with Imperial Swordmaster Keiran Atreides. Following a conversation with Javicco that reveals his unease with Ynez's marriage, Desmond meets with Pruwet and uses a "great power" to immolate him, an attack that simultaneously immolates Kasha. Seeing Kasha's burning body prompts Valya to recall Raquella's vision. | ||||||
2 | "Two Wolves" | John Cameron | Elizabeth Padden and Kor Adana | November 24, 2024 | 0.142[18] | |
After Kasha's inconclusive autopsy, Valya leaves with Theodosia to secure Princess Ynez. Natalya angers Ferdinand by claiming Pruwet's death is accidental. Desmond, who claims a sandworm swallowed him, tells Javicco he killed Pruwet for him; disturbed, Javicco has him arrested, but Natalya suggests they use Desmond. Valya has Tula put her protégée, Raquella's great-great-granddaughter Lila, through the Agony ritual to unlock her Other Memory and contact Raquella. Lila learns of a "revenant", envisions Valya killing her grandmother Dorotea, becomes overwhelmed, and seemingly dies. Constantine has sex with Shannon Richese and reveals Desmond's involvement in Pruwet's murder. Valya brings news of Kasha's death, agonizing Ynez, and interrogates Desmond, who again admits both murders; Javicco eschews prosecution. Keiran, a clandestine anti-imperial insurgent, copies the palace layout for the rebels and Ynez recounts how rebels once kidnapped her and Constantine. Ferdinand threatens Javicco and Desmond burns him as a warning. Valya acquires from her spy, Division bartender Sister Mikaela, a list of Arrakis rebels the Sisterhood secretly supports, saying she may surrender them to bolster Javicco. Desmond confronts Valya, saying he intends to destroy the Sisterhood. She employs the Voice to compel him to commit suicide but he successfully resists; Valya, shocked, retreats. | ||||||
3 | "Sisterhood Above All" | Richard J. Lewis | Monica Owusu-Breen and Jordan Goldberg | December 1, 2024 | 0.137[19] | |
In the past, Valya advocates revenge on the Atreides for House Harkonnen's banishment. Her brother Griffin joins the Landsraad, seeking commercial privileges, but dies, allegedly murdered by Vorian Atreides. Valya joins the Sisterhood, and Tula, hiding her Harkonnen identity, visits lover Orry Atreides' Caladan bull-hunt. Dorotea criticizes Valya for questioning if Sisters can withhold truth from rulers, and for being without loyalties. At a rainy vow-taking ceremony, Valya refuses to put the Sisterhood first. She uses the Voice on Raquella, impressing her. Orry proposes to Tula; she accepts, and they have sex. Next morning, Tula has slaughtered his family, and kills him too, avenging Griffin. Raquella shows Valya her ambitious DNA database using forbidden technology. When Dorotea and Valya are to undergo the Agony, the latter refuses; one of Dorotea's followers calls her coward. Raquella remands Valya to Lankiveil, telling her to return as a Reverend Mother or not at all. During a tense exchange, Valya employs the Voice on her mother. She later puts herself through Agony, surviving; Tula joins her in the Sisterhood. In the present, Valya visits her family as a recourse; Tula pretends to euthanize a comatose Lila but connects her to a thinking/life-support machine. | ||||||
4 | "Twice Born" | Richard J. Lewis | Kevin Lau & Suzanne Wrubel | December 8, 2024 | TBD | |
Jen discovers other Sisters' nightmares, preventing Emeline's suicide. Valya becomes the Harkonnens' truthsayer. Ynez hears Desmond's murder confession. Desmond unsuccessfully recommends Javicco remove the Landsraad's Truthsayers. Keiran and Horace acquire an Ixian flying thermal bomb to kill Javicco, telling Mikaela. Valya hears, revealing she plans to save Javicco, and turn over Keiran. Sisters reveal Pruwet's murder to various Houses, which invite Harrow to replace the departed Richeses on the High Council and investigate. Tula has spice-imbibing acolytes draw images from their dreams: Shai-Hulud and blue eyes. Natalya reveals she leaked the truth about Pruwet's murder, so Javicco could prosecute thinking machine abusers. At Division, Ynez notes Vorian rejected the throne, excluding Keiran from power. She tells him Desmond's guilt, volunteering to act. Harrow tells the Landsraad kanly was violated, almost naming the Corrinos; but Ynez accuses Desmond, who brings in Horace, bound. Desmond concurs but calls it an execution, flourishing the bomb. Javicco lets him immolate Horace and his co-conspirators. Valya traces wounded Desmond's blood. Tula dreams she kills Emeline, who knows her crimes; Lila wakes. Evgeny laments Valya warping her siblings; criticizing his weakness, she withholds his respirator, killing him. Theodosia channels Griffin; Valya asks if she pushed him too far. | ||||||
5 | "In Blood, Truth" | TBA | Carlito Rodriguez & Leah Benavides Rodriguez | December 15, 2024 | TBD | |
6 | "The High-Handed Enemy" | TBA | Elizabeth Padden & Suzanne Wrubel | December 22, 2024 | TBD |
Production
editDevelopment
editIn November 2016, Legendary Entertainment had acquired the film and television rights for the 1965 novel Dune by Frank Herbert from his estate.[20][21] Legendary eventually contacted Denis Villeneuve to direct a two-part film adaptation of the novel by the next month, and was confirmed as director by February 2017.[22][23] Legendary Television announced a full series order of Dune: The Sisterhood in June 2019, produced for WarnerMedia's then-streaming service HBO Max.[24][25][26] The series would focus on the Bene Gesserit order and serve as a prequel to Villeneuve's 2021 film Dune,[27] based on material from Dune and the 2012 prequel novel Sisterhood of Dune by Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson.[16] Villeneuve was set to direct and produce the series' pilot with Jon Spaihts writing the screenplay. Both would serve as executive producers alongside Byron Merritt, Kim Herbert, Kevin J. Anderson, and Herbert's son, Brian.[28][29] Villeneuve said, "The Bene Gesserit have always been fascinating to me. Focusing a series around that powerful order of women seemed not only relevant and inspiring but a dynamic setting for the television series."[30]
Shortly after its announcement, the project received criticism for its lack of female creatives except for Herbert's granddaughter, Kim Herbert.[31][32] Dana Calvo was hired in July 2019 to serve as showrunner alongside Spaihts.[33][34] In November 2019, Spaihts left the series to focus on Dune: Part Two (2024).[35][36] The Hollywood Reporter reported that Legendary Television was "not happy" with Spaihts's early work as showrunner and opted to remove him.[35] Diane Ademu-John had been hired as the new showrunner by July 2021.[37][38] As production of Dune: Part Two progressed, Villeneuve was no longer able to direct and was replaced by Johan Renck as director for the first two episodes in April 2022.[39] Shortly after production began, Diane Ademu-John had exited the project as co-showrunner but remained the executive producer; this left Alison Schapker as the sole showrunner.[40] In February 2023, Renck also exited the project, resulting in the project being on hiatus.[5] He was replaced that June by Anna Foerster, who would direct multiple episodes, including the pilot.[41] In November 2023, the series was retitled Dune: Prophecy and set to release on Warner Bros. Discovery's streaming service, Max.[42][43] In November 2024, Schapker explained that the series would explore multiple time periods, with the characters' pasts adapted from the Great Schools of Dune novel trilogy, and the present timeline original to the television series.[44]
Casting
editIn October 2022, Emily Watson, Shirley Henderson, Indira Varma, Sarah-Sofie Boussnina, Shalom Brune-Franklin, Faoileann Cunningham, Aoife Hinds, and Chloe Lea were cast to star in the series.[3][7][8] Travis Fimmel joined the cast the following month.[2][45] On December 1, 2022, Mark Strong, Jade Anouka, and Chris Mason joined the cast in starring roles.[9] Josh Heuston and Edward Davis would join in recurring roles later that month.[10] During Renck's exit in February 2023, Henderson had also left.[41] In June, Olivia Williams was cast to replace Henderson, with Jodhi May cast to replace Varma, who exited the series due to scheduling conflicts.[5] In May 2024, it was announced that Tabu had joined the cast of the series as Sister Francesca,[13] Jihae was cast as Reverend Mother Kasha, the Emperor's Truthsayer,[12] and Jessica Barden was cast as the younger version of Valya.[4] The younger versions of Tula, Francesca and Kasha are portrayed by Emma Canning, Charithra Chandran and Yerin Ha, respectively.[6] Mark Addy plays Evgeny Harkonnen, Valya and Tula's uncle.[11]
Filming
editThe series was originally scheduled to start filming on November 2, 2020, in Budapest and Jordan.[46] It began production on November 22, 2022, under the working title Dune: The Sisterhood, with Renck confirming the start on his Instagram account.[47][48] In July 2023, Deadline Hollywood reported that, following a winter hiatus, production was set to resume in Budapest amidst the WGA and SAG strikes due to the series' talent working under the UK-based union Equity.[49] Filming had concluded by December 2023, with Pierre Gill having served as lead cinematographer. Gill did not use the StageCraft virtual production technology, which he had previously utilized in the television series Percy Jackson and the Olympians, as the production primarily relied on practical sets and production values.[50]
Music
editJónsi was originally hired to compose the show's score.[51] However, by October 2023, Volker Bertelmann was set to compose the score for the series.[52]
Marketing
editMax released a teaser trailer for the series on May 15, 2024.[53] A second teaser was released on July 18, 2024.[54] On October 17, 2024, the official trailer was unveiled during a panel at New York Comic Con.[55]
Release
editOriginally to premiere on the streaming service Max, Dune: Prophecy was rebranded as an HBO Original in July 2024 and was released on Max and HBO on November 17, 2024.[42][56][57]
Reception
editThe review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes reported a 69% approval rating with an average rating of 6.7/10, based on 70 critic reviews. The website's critics consensus reads, "Grounded by reliably terrific performances from Emily Watson and Olivia Williams, Dune: Prophecy lacks the spice of Denis Villeneuve's films but compensates with addictively perilous palace intrigue."[58] Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned a score of 64 out of 100 based on 34 critics, indicating "generally favorable" reviews.[59]
The premiere of Dune: Prophecy drew 1.2 million U.S. viewers across platforms, with the audience growing another 75% the following day, bringing the total to 2.1 million viewers.[60]
References
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