At the trailer launch event for “Dune: Part Three,” held inside an AMC theater in Los Angeles, Denis Villeneuve offered a revealing look at the creative instincts shaping his next chapter.

According to Variety, the director explained why “Dune: Messiah” remains his favorite entry in Frank Herbert’s series, and why bringing it to the screen carries a more personal weight than a typical franchise installment.

A Darker Lens on Power and Love

For Villeneuve, the appeal of “Dune: Messiah” begins with its tonal shift. “It’s a very dark, beautiful book,” he said, signaling a clear departure from the more outwardly epic framing of the earlier films and toward something more introspective and morally complex.

That shift is most visible in the story’s focus on Paul Atreides and Chani, whose relationship becomes the emotional core of the narrative. As Villeneuve described it, “It’s a story about Paul and Chani and them struggling with their relationship, having the burden and incredible pressure from the world around them,” a dynamic that reframes the saga through a more intimate lens.

At the same time, the director underscored the philosophical weight carried by Paul himself. “Paul is trying to find a way out of this cycle of violence,” he noted, pointing to a character arc that moves away from triumph and toward consequence, in line with his broader interpretation of the source material.

What ultimately elevates the novel for Villeneuve is the way it intertwines that emotional strain with a sense of evolution over time. “There’s something about their love, through time and the way they are, their relationship evolves,” he stated, highlighting the enduring, shifting connection at the heart of the story as a key reason the adaptation holds such personal significance for him.