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Synopsis: SCI FI Channel's December 2000 presentation of New
Amsterdam Entertainment's Emmy Award-winning six-hour epic Frank Herbert's
Dune was a star-studded action adventure that wove a complex tale of
messianic compulsion, ruthless power manipulation, back-stabbing betrayal
and heart-rending love. Wrapped in a stunningly visual package, the
miniseries garnered two Emmy Awards (Outstanding Cinematography/Special
Visual Effects) and became the most-watched program in the history of
the SCI FI Channel. It also earned a place among the Top 10 highest-rated
original basic cable miniseries in the past five years.
Frank Herbert's Dune told of the adventures of young Paul Atreides,
heir to a political dynasty and destined to become the next messiah.
Taking place amidst an ongoing power struggle among the Great Royal
Houses in the year 10191, the saga began with the Emperor sending House
Atreides to the desert planet Arrakis to oversee production of "spice"
- the most precious commodity in the universe. But when Paul's father,
Duke Leto Atreides, is assassinated by rivals within House Harkonnen,
Paul and his mother, a mystical 'Bene Gesserit' witch with powers of
mind control, are forced to escape into the desert. Under his mother's
tutelage, Paul hones his own considerable Bene Gesserit gifts, and begins
to see into the future. Rescued by the Fremen, a fierce desert people
who believe the young Atreides to be 'Mah'di' - the messiah of their
legends - Paul begins to recognize his power to shape the future.
Eventually, Paul accepts the mantle of his fate. Using the Fremen "desert
power," Paul, now known as Muad'Dib, leads his people in a successful
revolt against his enemies in the corrupt House Harkonnen. As this first
miniseries in the Dune saga draws to a close, Muad'Dib unites the ruling
houses and preserves peace by marrying the Emperor's daughter, Princess
Irulan. But it is a marriage in name only, as his heart belongs to his
concubine, Chani, the future mother of his heir.
In Frank Herbert's Children of Dune, we rejoin Muad'Dib twelve
years later. He has come to witness his glorious revolution become a
bloody jihad, with all manner of corruption performed in his name. While
bound to Irulan in a loveless marriage made for political expediency,
Paul has become Emperor of a society terrorized by its own soldiers.
The freedom he fought for has become a dictatorship of his own making,
and he has become the figurehead of a theocracy of which he wants no
part.
Further complicating matters, conspiracies to gain political power
abound, especially from Irulan's sister, Princess Wensicia. Paul's power
base is also eroding from within. His highly ambitious sister, Alia,
is gaining a political foothold. He is surrounded by corrupt priests
and bureaucrats and eventually comes to realize that the only hope for
the future may lay in the hands of his twin heirs, son Leto II and daughter
Ghanima. Ultimately, the only salvation from the revolution begun by
Muad'Dib may be the absolute destruction of his myth. And the tempest
begun by the father must somehow be ended by the son.
JOHN HARRISON, director of "Tales from the Darkside: The Movie,"
writer of Dinosaur and writer/director of Frank Herbert's
Dune was entrusted with the job of adapting "Dune Messiah"
and "Children of Dune," the second and third novels respectively
of Frank Herberts's six-book Dune Chronicles, into another blockbuster
television event. Frank Herbert's Children of Dune marks the first time
that either book has been adapted for the large or small screen.
According to Harrison, "Children of Dune is a musing on several themes
that come out of Frank Herbert's work. One is that every revolution
contains the seeds of its own destruction. The second is a phrase that
comes right from Herbert, but is applicable to human history, 'when
religion and politics ride in the same cart, the whirlwind follows.'"
The Cast:
Susan Sarandon as Princess Wensicia Corrino
Alice Krige as Lady Jessica
Edward Atterton as Duncan Idaho
Steven Berkoff as Stilgar
Daniela Amavia as Alia
James McAvoy as Leto Atreides II
Jessica Brooks as Ghanima Atreides
Alec Newman as Paul Atreides
Barbara Kodetova as Chani
Julie Cox as Princess Irulan Corinno
P.H. Moriarty as Gurney Halleck
Ian McNeice as Baron Vladimir Harkonnen
Jonathan Bruun as Farad'n Corrino
Rik Young as Javid
Martin McDougall as Scytale
Gee Williams as Bijaz
Production Credits:
Airdates:
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