DUNE Writer Reveals An Alternate Opening For The Blockbuster That Would Have Broken Its Budget

DUNE Writer Reveals An Alternate Opening For The Blockbuster That Would Have Broken Its Budget

Dune writer Eric Roth reveals that he dreamed up an imaginative opening sequence ultimately deemed too expensive to shoot. Why? Because it would've left no money for the rest of Denis Villeneuve's vision!

By JoshWilding - Jul 23, 2022 04:07 AM EST
Filed Under: Dune
Source: Script Apart (via SFFGazette.com)

Dune was released to glowing reviews, better than expected box office numbers, and a lot of recognition at prestigious award ceremonies. It's hardly surprising that Warner Bros. is moving forward with Dune: Part Two (much to the delight of fans), while there have also been rumblings this world will expand with a TV series on HBO Max. 

During a recent interview on the Script Apart podcast (via SFFGazette.com), Dune co-writer Eric Roth, who penned the screenplay alongside Jon Spaihts and director Denis Villeneuve, shared what sounds like a jaw-dropping alternate opening.

Unfortunately, it would have made it quite a bit harder for the blockbuster to turn the all-important profit that ensured we now have a sequel on the way!

"The original opening of the movie was like [The Book of] Genesis from the Bible...and you would see the creation of a planet," Roth says. "We think it's Earth and [instead] it's Dune, with these oddball animals and [we see] how the water went away and how the sand dunes were formed and all of that."

"And it was pretty great," the writer continued, "I think [laughs] but Denis said 'This is magnificent but we can't afford the rest of the movie,' so that was it."

The Oscar-winning scribe later added that he didn't work on Dune: Part Two, though says he would be open to reading the script should Spaihts and Villeneuve want his input. Of course, cameras are now rolling on the sequel, so we'd guess Roth will be moving on to other projects rather than returning to the world created by author Frank Herbert.

The movie will explore the mythic journey of Paul Atreides as he unites with Chani and the Fremen while on a warpath of revenge against the conspirators who destroyed his family. Facing a choice between the love of his life and the fate of the known universe, he endeavors to prevent a terrible future only he can foresee.

Dune: Part Two stars Timothee Chalamet, Zendaya, Rebecca Ferguson, Javier Bardem, Josh Brolin, Stellan Skarsgård, Dave Bautista, Charlotte Rampling, and Stephen McKinley Henderson. New additions include Austin Butler, Christopher Walken, Florence Pugh, Léa Seydoux, and Souheila Yacoub.

Dune: Part Two is currently set to arrives in theaters on November 17, 2023.

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Spock0Clock
Spock0Clock - 7/23/2022, 4:23 AM
I've seen roughly the first half of Dune now (had to take a break for reasons), and while I'm certainly enjoying it because it's a good adaptation, I'm finding myself still favoring the Sci-Fi Channel miniseries version.



There are just so many great tweaks that the miniseries made (like following Princess Irulan throughout the story), and the eerie effect of those fluorescing contact lenses is still the best eye-effect in the franchise... though, I'm pretty sure they did real damage to the actor's corneas by exposing them to those big blacklights for so many hours of filming.

In any case, nobody really watched that version (as much as I like it), so I'm at least glad a big budget movie with a huge A-list cast has put Dune on people's radar.
rebellion
rebellion - 7/23/2022, 4:54 AM
@Spock0Clock - so you saw only half of the film that covers the first half of the book and you think you are making a fair comparison? Lol.
bkmeijer1
bkmeijer1 - 7/23/2022, 4:56 AM
@rebellion - well, it's still half a movie. And with Dune Part One, that is already almost the length of a movie itself
Spock0Clock
Spock0Clock - 7/23/2022, 5:15 AM
@rebellion - Well, when they're adapting a book I've read, and the movie itself is already just half of the book, I do think I've got a good feel for it, yeah. Both the movie and the miniseries followed the book quite closely, so I absolutely can compare like-to-like. Scene-for-scene.

If there are any big surprises coming in the last 50 minutes (in the vein of Lynch's turning of the Voice into a gun or making it rain), I'm always afraid it's not going to be a change I'm going to love since I think Dune as written is damn near perfect. But so far, it doesn't feel like Villeneuve wants to change anything anyway (and that's basically a good thing). It's not like I was aiming to insult the movie, though.
ProfessorWhy
ProfessorWhy - 7/23/2022, 5:22 AM
@Spock0Clock - I'm with you here in many regards, but the casting for Paul threw me too hard. Sarandon was born for that role tho....
bobevanz
bobevanz - 7/23/2022, 8:59 AM
@Spock0Clock - just watch it
Spock0Clock
Spock0Clock - 7/23/2022, 3:23 PM
@bobevanz - I was watching it with someone who had to leave unexpectedly, not a big deal. We got to the end of the first section of the book anyway, it was a natural place to take a break.
bobevanz
bobevanz - 7/23/2022, 8:59 AM
I can't wait! This'll make a billion, then they'll announce children of Dune for one more movie. Bet.
Forthas
Forthas - 7/23/2022, 9:21 AM
That does not sound very interresting. Wathcing a planet being formed woould seem like a huge waste of time for a films that already had to be broken up into two parts.
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