Dune: The Sisterhood is facing some serious setbacks after its director and one of the leading actresses recently dropped from the project.
Warner Bros.
Ever since the first installment of Denis Villeneuve’s adaptation of Dune hit the big screen back in 2021, the series and the lore within it has become a popular focal point for a new era of sci-fi projects. Not only is the cinematic sequel Dune: Part Two set to hit theaters this coming November, a spin-off prequel series titled Dune: The Sisterhood has been in the works at HBO for awhile now. However, per an exclusive update from Deadline, the series is now facing a huge production setback.
Related: Dune: The Sisterhood Continues to Round Out Its Cast With Josh Heuston Joining the HBO Max Series
Despite the series adding more to its cast and otherwise showing progress and bright prospects, Dune: The Sisterhood is now officially on production hiatus due to its director Johan Renck (Chernobyl) dropping from the project. Having been slated to direct the first two episodes of the series, his absence has pulled the breaks on everything until a replacement is chosen. Actress Shirley Henderson, who was to fill one of the lead roles as in the series as Tula Harkonnen has also left the project. This all comes on top of creator Diane Ademu-John, who had written the pilot script, stepping down as co-showrunner. While including no hints of potential replacements yet, a spokesperson from HBO had this to say about the current state of the series and the plans for moving foward.
As Dune: The Sisterhood (wt) has entered a pre-scheduled hiatus, there are some creative changes being made to the production in an effort to create the best series possible and stay true to the source material. Johan Renck has completed his work on the series and a new director will be brought on; through mutual agreement, Johan is moving on to pursue other projects. Additionally, Shirley Henderson will be exiting the series and will no longer be playing Tula Harkonnen.”
Reasoning Behind Dune Prequel’s Slew of Departures
Renck’s “auteur” vision of the series had reportedly departed too far from Villeneuve’s approach with the films, network heads understandably wanting to keep the aesthetic cohesion. Whether any of his footage will be used in the final production remains to be seen, but it’s likely safe to say that it will be shelved indefinitely. Why Anderson left her lead role on the project is unclear, whether it’s also creative conflicts or the more likely reason of scheduling conflicts. Delays on productions can often lead to otherwise promising actors getting recast, due to unmovable commitments they have on other projects. This could potentially lead to even more of a domino effect on the series production, with more actors and crew possibly in limbo. While Villeneuve would seem a strong contender for the position that Renck left, he previously stepped down from director to producer on the project to focus entirely on the film franchise.
Alison Schapker remains the sole showrunner on the project at the moment, putting the pressure on her to do rewrites as soon as possible while keeping things with the production which had just started in Budapest.
Dune: The Sisterhood, based on Frank Herbert’s classic novel, is set 10,000 years before the ascension of Paul Atreides. It follows the Harkonnen Sisters as they combat forces that threaten the future of humankind, and establish the fabled sect known as the Bene Gesserit.
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