Entertainment

Denis Villeneuve signs on for Dune reboot

With one iconic sci-fi classic firmly in hand, Canadian filmmaker Denis Villeneuve is poised to dive into another: a reboot of the epic and influential tale Dune.

Quebec director currently working on Blade Runner sequel

Director Denis Villeneuve, right, gives guidance to Amy Adams and Jeremy Renner on the Montreal set of Arrival. The Quebec director, who followed alien tale Arrival with the upcoming Blade Runner 2049, is next set to tackle the sci fi epic Dune. (FilmNation Entertainment)

With one iconic sci-fi classic firmly in hand, Canadian filmmaker Denis Villeneuve is poised to dive into another: a reboot of the epic and influential tale Dune.

Writer Brian Herbert, son of original Dune author Frank Herbert, revealed Tuesday that the Quebec director has been tapped for the upcoming project.

Villeneuve, an Oscar contender for his widely praised alien first-contact drama Arrival, is currently at work on the much anticipated Blade Runner sequel Blade Runner 2049

Denis Villeneuve, right, poses with his Blade Runner 2049 star Ryan Gosling at the Critics' Choice Awards in Santa Monica, Calif., in December. (Jonathan Leibson/Getty Images for Landmark Vineyards)

He had been rumoured to be in early talks to helm the Dune reboot in December, after Legendary Entertainment had garnered film and TV rights to Herbert's iconic 1965 novel a month earlier.

An earlier film adaptation by director David Lynch and starring Kyle MacLachlan in 1984 was poorly received at the time but, in the years since, has gained somewhat of a cult status. The tale was also adapted as a TV miniseries in 2000.

Set in a distant future, Dune explores an interstellar feud over control of a desert planet prized as the sole producer of a valuable, life-extending substance (a narcotic called melange, nicknamed "the spice") coveted across the universe. After releasing the acclaimed novel, Hebert published five sequels.