Summary
- Villeneuve successfully adapted Dune to the big screen, generating box office success and awards.
- Villeneuve’s exit paves the way for Gareth Edwards to take over the franchise post-Dune: Messiah.
- Despite creative challenges, Edward’s potential entrance signals a shift towards a fresh storyline in the Dune universe.
The Dune franchise made it to the big screen thanks to the efforts of filmmaker Denis Villeneuve in spite of a decades-long consensus that the IP was entirely unworkable on the big screen. However, there’s a new creative mind in line to take over for future projects.
Dune was unable to make the jump to the big screen despite being one of the most successful science fiction book series ever. Despite this history, Villeneuve was able to adapt the IP to massive success in 2021 with Dune and even hit a second home run with Dune: Part Two in 2024, with both films doing massive box office numbers and Dune: Part Two netting a surprising number of Golden Globes nominations. A third film was quickly announced, with Villeneuve still attached to the project. However, the director was adamant that this third entry would be his last go at adapting the books, citing the anticlimactic nature of the rest of Frank Herbert’s book series and how the story didn’t gel with his vision for the franchise.

Related
Dune Director Denis Villeneuve Shares One Item He Bans On Set
Dune director Denis Villeneuve shared what he did on set to keep the actors present when they were shooting.
Despite Villeneuve’s strong stance on the issue of adapting more of the Dune book series, it’s been strongly rumored that the Dune franchise might be going even further than fans thought despite the filmmaker behind the successful adaptations making an exit. While this was open-ended when the report first dropped, trusted source Daniel Richtman on Patreon has now alleged that director Gareth Edwards is currently considering taking over from Villeneuve after the upcoming Dune: Messiah. According to Richtman, Edwards will be tasked with making at least one more entry in the Dune movie franchise for Warner Bros. Edwards is best known for his work on 2014’s Godzilla and Rogue One: A Star Wars Story from 2016. More recently, the British filmmaker wrote, directed, produced, and worked in cinematography on 2023’s The Creator to great effect.
While Edwards is a capable hand that could helm a big franchise film, the problems facing a fourth Dune film are much less about competence and much more about feasibility. This might not be as much of a problem as Villeneuve makes it out to be anymore, though, and it’s mostly thanks to his creative hand on the wheel. The films have diverted so much from the books in subtle and overt ways due to both necessity and creative choices that the ending of Dune Part 2 might even pose a problem for Dune Messiah, but that actually works in the franchise’s favor. There’s no question that Villeneuve has the right of it when he says that the rest of the franchise is too esoteric, and much of the OG Dune fanbase would agree. However, the franchise has set the stage to potentially do its own thing beyond Dune: Messiah and that will be where Edwards steps in and shines through with a fourth installment. There’s a lot of lore to the franchise and worldbuilding that can be brought in to prop up a completely new storyline. There’s also a chance that the studio greenlights a new POV for the fourth film, setting aside Paul and his allies in favor of some other corner of the Dune universe.
Fans will have to wait and see what Warner Bros. actually decides and who gets the nod in the end, but Edwards is a strong choice for the role, and it won’t be any great loss for Villeneuve as the filmmaker’s next sci-fi epic is already set and makes Dune look easy. Sci-fi fans can look forward to Dune: Messiah and more from both the franchise and the filmmaker who made the impossible possible with his work on adapting one of the most difficult works of fiction ever.
The Dune franchise is available to stream on Max, with Dune Messiah still in development.


More
Dune: Awakening Hands-On Preview – Beginnings Are Such Delicate Times
After six hours with Dune: Awakening, it’s clear I have only scratched the surface of the open-world survival game—for better or worse.
Source: Daniel Richtman/Patreon
Leave a Reply