Photo by Chiabella James

Denis Villeneuve spent a whole year redesigning Dune’s sandworms

Let’s hope the creatures faced by Timothée Chalamet get a better reception than David Lynch’s 1984 version

Frank Herbert’s epic science fiction novel Dune is notoriously difficult to adapt for the big screen, so it’s no surprise that Denis Villeneuve has been taking his time to perfect every detail in his upcoming adaptation.

In particular, Villeneuve has recently told Empire about labouring over the film’s giant sandworms, which populate the dangerous mining planet Arrakis, where Timothée Chalamet – playing the lead role of young nobleman Paul Atreides – will presumably have to battle them.

“We talked about every little detail that would make such a beast possible, from the texture of the skin, to the way the mouth opens, to the system to eat its food in the sand,” says Villeneuve, as reported by Indiewire

“It was a year of work to design and to find the perfect shape that looked prehistoric enough.”

Even if this does seem like a long time to focus on one specific creature, it’s also probably a pretty good idea to give the design a lot of attention. The sandworms’ appearance in David Lynch’s infamous adaptation of Dune from 1984 is often considered one of the film’s major flaws, not helped by some, erm, questionable effects.

Lynch now apparently has “zero interest” in Villeneuve’s version, due to the fact his own production was such “a heartache” and – as Lynch himself dubs it – “a total failure”. After all of Villeneuve’s hard work, let’s hope the new sandworms get a slightly better reception (even if Lynch won’t get to see them for himself).

Read Next
Q+AHarris Dickinson’s Urchin is a magnetic study of life on the margins

We speak to Dickinson about directing and acting alongside Frank Dillane, the fragility of the human mind and his upcoming role as John Lennon

FeaturePaul Thomas Anderson on writing, The PCC and One Battle After Another

The director talks to Dazed about his most ambitious film yet – a sweeping father-daughter thriller about activism, revenge and the price of a past that won’t stay buried

FeatureWayward, a Twin Peaks-y new thriller about the ‘troubled teen’ industry

Mae Martin talks about their new Netflix miniseries Wayward, a dystopian thriller centred around a sinister brainwashing school for kids

Life & Culture8 Dazed Clubbers on the magic and joy of living in Berlin

Taking place at our event celebating VanMoof's latest S6 series, the creatives share all the different things that keep them in the city