![](https://i.kinja-img.com/image/upload/c_fit,q_80,w_636/9592fbe09ae88f3f166ec2ee96673f6b.jpg)
Seeing book authors beam with pride is one thing. When those authors are two of the main creatives behind not just the book, but its subject as well, it’s something else.
Seeing book authors beam with pride is one thing. When those authors are two of the main creatives behind not just the book, but its subject as well, it’s something else.
It’s not quite the same as seeing Dune: Part Two in glorious IMAX, but there’s something to be said for getting to watch the nearly three-hour sci-fi epic
Dune: Part Two finally drops in theaters next week, and anticipation for the film has grown as big as Arrakis’ sandworms.
Denis Villeneuve’s Dune: Part Two dives deeper into the world of Frank Herbert’s seminal sci-fi novel series.
Denis Villeneuve got deadly serious when io9 mentioned the Dune Lego set to him. “I’ll be honest with you,” the director of Dune: Part Two said. “Probably I’m making movies because first I was a hardcore Lego player. I’m from that first generation where it was just bricks, right?
With shifting release dates and mandated radio silence due to the Hollywood strikes, the buildup to Dune: Part Two has been nothing short of eventful.
Before anyone goes screaming to the comments, we know it’s not a space guitar—it’s a Baliset, the nine-stringed instrument played by Josh Brolin’s Dune character, Gurney Halleck.