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Dune: Part Two, the anticipated second instalment of the sci-fi series, was released last week after a three-year wait. The world of Arrakis revisited on the big screen did not disappoint.
Director Denis Villeneuve’s Dune 2’, based on the 1965 novel by Frank Herbert, welcomes back characters Paul Atreides, Chani and the Fremen, with Paul “seek[ing] revenge against the conspirators who destroyed his family” and fighting to regain their home planet.
The epic odyssey features a star-studded cast including Timothée Chalamet, Zendaya, Rebecca Ferguson and Josh Brolin revisiting familiar desert-scapes from the 2021 film.
New faces in the fold for the sequel include Austin Butler, Christopher Walken and Florence Pugh, as well as fresh Italian backdrops. It’s expected the desert settings will expand even further for the unconfirmed Dune 3.
Here’s where to go to visit the real-life locations behind the sand-swept sets.
Many of the explosive battles and action sequences in Dune and Dune: Part Two were filmed in Budapest’s Origo Studios’ backlot.
Other notable movies staged on the Hungarian set include Poor Things, Blade Runner and Inferno.
The red sand landscapes, harsh, arid climate and otherworldly terrain of Wadi Rum in southern Jordan transport viewers to the Fremen sietches (villages) and homeland.
In a promotional behind-the-scenes video, Villeneuve said: “Dune is about the relationship of human with nature.
“It was important for me to bring that nature to the screen so that the audience will believe that, and feel that there’s something that feels real, feels tactile.”
Filming headed back to the Liwa Oasis in Abu Dhabi for the rock shelters and sandworm-infested exteriors of Arrakis.
Tanya Lapointe, a producer on Dune, said that they went “even deeper” into the desert than the first film, with an established “network of 18 miles of road leading to different filming locations”.
Variety reported that the team spent a month in the Arabian desert’s rolling dunes – some 300m high – with the cast holed up in the luxury Qasr Al Sarab Desert Resort.
A new filming location to the Dune franchise, the Italian municipality of Altivole plays host to the extravagant home of Princess Irulan and the Corrino house. A world away from the Fremen’s barren wasteland, the Italian architecture sets this faction apart in shades of grey.
Elsewhere in Treviso, the Memoriale Brion’s contemporary design stood for the exterior of the Corrino home. The tomb in Altivole is a monumental burial ground for the Brion family.
Carlo Scarpa’s 1968 design was restored in 2021 – the complex of modernist architecture featuring concrete buildings, zen gardens and water fountains.
‘Dune: Part Two’ is in cinemas now.
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