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Frank Herbert's Children of Dune was the sequel to the Frank Herbert's Dune miniseries produced by the United States Sci Fi channel. It was directed by Greg Yaitanes, adapted for television by John Harrison, with music by Brian Tyler.
Plot
Part One
This three part, two-hour miniseries picks up where the previous one left off. It covers the events in Dune Messiah and Children of Dune. Paul Atreides (Alec Newman), also known as Muad'Dib, has led forth the Fremen of Arrakis to overthrow the Padishah Emperor Shaddam IV and forced the Corrino family into exile on Salusa Secundus. Now leader of House Corrino, Princess Wensicia (Susan Sarandon) continues to plot during her exile.
Through the various interlocking schemes of the Bene Gesserit, Tleilaxu, House Corrino, and rebel Fremen, Paul's authority is challenged. Paul is caught in an accident with a stoneburner that causes him to go blind. Due to his extraordinary prescient abilities, however, he is still able to see in some manner.
The first part ends with the birth of Paul's children, by his concubine, Chani (Barbara Kodetova), who is severely weakened by the childbirth . Upon her death, Paul's ability to see even though he is blind disappears, rendering him at a disadvantage when the Tleilaxu face dancer Scytale (Martin McDougall) triggers the ghola mentat Duncan Idaho's brainwashing (Edward Atterton). Duncan is forced to confront his original memories, but ultimately remains loyal to his Duke Paul and betrays Scytale.
It is at this point that Paul discovers his twin children are preborn and prescient as well. Paul's son Leto (James McAvoy), whom has been appearing to him as a young adult in prescient visions, allows his father to "use his eyes" in order to react quickly enough to kill Scytale before the face dancer can kill the children.
At the conclusion of the first part, Paul walks off into the desert, a "single, blind Fremen", in reference to the ancient Fremen custom of abandoning blind members of the tribe to the great worms of Arrakis. His children, now heirs to his empire, are left in the care of their aunt Alia (Daniela Amavia), who is tortured by her own prescience. She turns to Duncan Idaho for emotional support and comfort.
Part Two
The second part opens a considerable time after the conclusion of the first part. Paul's children, Ghanima (Jessica Brooks) and Leto, are now in their young adulthood, and under the eye of their aunt Alia, who is regent of Paul's empire. Jessica Atreides (Alice Krige), mother to Paul and Alia, arrives on Arrakis, ostensibly to visit her grandchildren. Alia fears that her mother has resumed her alliegance to the Bene Gesserit. A character known only as the Preacher has surfaced at court, and the popular rumour is that he is in fact Paul Muad'Dib. The Preacher speaks out against Alia's ritualistic, fundamentalist rule, but Alia refuses to get rid of him because she cannot be absolutely sure of his identity.
As the episode progresses, Alia's control over her own mind weakens further. All Bene Gesserit obtain the memories of their female ancestors after being exposed to the Spice Agony. Alia as a pre-born child is regarded as an Abomination: in the past, such pre-born children have been overwhelmed by the consciousnesses of their ancestors (both female and male) and gone mad. In Alia's case, one particular personality manifests itself, that of the dead Baron Vladimir Harkonnen (Ian McNeice), whom was killed by Alia's own hand. The Baron is in fact Jessica's father, and thusly Alia's grandfather. This shade strikes a bargain with Alia, whereby he silences the other personalities, and in return she allows the hedonistic Baron access to her senses.
Meanwhile, House Corrino launches yet another assassination attempt on the Atreides heirs, in the form of vicious wildcats that are controlled via a remote control. Leto uses this opportunity to fake his own death in order to sojurn into the desert. Like his father, his prescience is forcing him to seek answers to certain questions.
Part Three
The conclusion to the miniseries, part three entails the return of Leto Atreides to Alia's court. Stuck in the middle of a brewing civil war, Alia has to deal not only with the external pressure of rebel Fremen, but the internal pressures of the ever-strengthening Baron Harkonnen. Formerly loyal naib Stilgar (Steven Berkoff) becomes the leader of the rebels after Duncan Idaho forces his hand by murdering the priest Javid (Rick Young) in Stilgar's sietch. Alia had recently taken Javid as a lover, and grown ever distant from Idaho.
Princess Wensicia visits Arrakis, bringing her son Farad'n (Jonathan Brüün) with the intent of wedding him to Ghanima, now the soul heir of the empire. Farad'n betrays his bitter mother, however, by revealing that she was in fact the instigator behind Leto Atreides' death. In a rage, Alia orders Wensicia imprisoned, and Farad'n would have met a similar fate had not Ghanima intervened--the proposed marriage alliance is salvaged.
While rebel Fremen summon worms to ride toward Arakeen (capital of Arrakis), Leto returns to court. He has absorbed several sandtrout as part of a destined transformation into something that could lead humanity along the Golden Path and prevent humanity's destruction. The sandtrout is slowly transforming his skin, metamorphisising him into something that transcends human. In addition to his already superhuman prescient and Bene Gesserit-like abilities, Leto survives a Coriolis sandstorm and can run extremely fast now.
Upon his arrival in Arakeen, Alia loses control of her mind and body to Baron Harkonnen. Leto confronts Alia, and in the end she chooses to commit suicide rather than surrender herself unto 'Abomination', and Leto becomes the Emperor.
Related Wikipedia Articles
- Frank Herbert, author of the Dune novels.
- Dune, the original science fiction novel.
- Frank Herbert's Dune, the United States Sci-fi channel miniseries, and predecessor to the Children of Dune miniseries.
External Links
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