
The saga of big name stars in bit parts is far from over
- History is written on the sands of Arrakis. A chapter has ended, swept away by the whirlwind. One door has closed, but another has opened. And on the other side... our future...— Ghanima Atreides
Children of Dune contains examples of:
- Adaptation Distillation: Rather than attempt to directly translate the convoluted and sometines contradictory plots of the two novels, the miniseries instead cherry picks basic elements of the story and pulls them together in a way that takes the viewer from the same beginning to basically the same endpoint, with much more focus on character, action, and tension than the often-meandering source material.
- Leto II's Faking the Dead gambit in particular stands out: in the novel, the twins hatch the plot together. Ghanima knows all the details, but is then brainwashed with a secret ancient technique from the Other Memory in order to forget her involvement so that her loss at her brother's apparent death will be genuine, and then has a code trigger implanted to reverse this effect later. All of this is sidestepped in the miniseries very simply: he just fakes his own death, and his sister's loss is genuine. The emotional stakes are made more real, and almost fifty pages are excised without the viewer even noticing anything is missing.
- Age Lift: Leto II and Ghanima are in their late teens in the miniseries, nearly a decade older than their book counterparts. Wensicia and Irulan's ages are more or less swapped thanks to the casting of Susan Sarandon. It leads to a little bit of Fridge Logic as the older daughter was not Shaddam's heir for whatever reason. Wensicia is age-lifted as well (or, at least, she looks about 2 decades older than her supposed older sister Irulan).
- Brother-Sister Incest/Twincest: There are strong incestuous overtones between Leto II and his sister Ghanima; they are aware of this and deliberately seek to avoid it.
- Character Tics: Baron Vladimir Harkonnen in the Dune miniseries had a distinctive habit of rubbing his right temple when he was frustrated. Later on, Paul Atreides does this himself, demonstrating the family connection between the two. In Children of Dune, we see Alia performing the same gesture when she hears the Baron's voice in her head.
- Compelling Voice: As with its predecessor, the Voice is clearly heard as the Voice of the Legion. However, the trope is played with in this story because it's mostly used to no effect, such as when Leto II and the Lady Jessica are conversing. Since they are both adept in its use and in diffusing it, it's more of a test in that context.
- Cool and Unusual Punishment: Korba is executed using the Fremen water sarcophagus, something meant for extracting all the water from dead bodies.
- Driven to Madness: Subverted when one of the Cast-out attempts to drive Leto II insane with too much spice consumption. He does have some "episodes"... but then becomes completely immune to the effects of spice and gains some superpowers into the bargain.
- Elite Mooks: Sardaukar elite troopers for the Corrinos and the Fedaykin for the Atreides.
- Face Death with Dignity: When Reverend Mother Mohiam predicts her own death and looks up to see Stilgar, sword in hand, she has a minor Oh, Crap! moment before closing her eyes in acceptance.
- Alia's death counts as well. Despite being under the thralls of Baron Harkonnen, she managed to free herself and then commit suicide so her nephew can usher in the Golden Path. They changed it from the Book's death scene for Alia (stabbing herself versus throwing herself out the window), but it works because her final scene with Jessica was so heartbreaking.
- Female Gaze: The Adonis-like (and often shirtless) Leto Atreides II is presented in a very sensual manner by the director. There are lots of close-ups of his Pretty Boy face and certain parts of his body, and the camera sometimes "lingers" on him like a woman's (or a gay man's) eyes would when staring at someone who is extremely attractive.
- Fish People: Barlowe's Guild To Extraterrestrials depicts a Guild Steersman as looking like this. This depiction has become standard in adaptations since.
- Flash Step: How "the weirding way of fighting" is depicted.
- In Case You Forgot Who Wrote It: Frank Herbert's Children of Dune, in case you forgot who wrote it AND forgot the name of the first miniseries.
- Instant Sedation: When Leto II arrives at Jacurutu, he experiences this after a dart hits him in the neck.
- Mini Series: This adaptation includes both Dune Messiah and Children of Dune.
- Monochromatic Eyes/Technicolor Eyes: A result of high-level Spice addiction, when enough ingestion saturates the blood stream and stains the eyes. Turned into Glowing Eyes of Doom.
- Mr. Fanservice: Leto II spends a large amount of his screen time looking like a shirtless Adonis.
- Notable Original Music: Brian Tyler's score for Children of Dune also joined Lux Aeterna and Two Steps from Hell as standard trailer music.
- Oh, Crap!: Edric as he helplessly sees the Fremen coming with the sledgehammers.
- Pretty Boy: Leto Atreides II is played by the boyishly beautiful James McAvoy. It symbolizes what a huge personal sacrifice it is for this teenaged and virginal character to give up his own humanity (by transforming into a grotesque Sand Worm) so that he can initiate the Golden Path and save humankind from extinction.
- Proper Lady: Lady Jessica behaves like one even though she's technically not part of the nobility.
- Role Reprisal: Paul, Irulan, Chani, Gurney, Baron Harkonnen, Otheym and Mohiam are all played by the same actors as the previous Frank Herbert's Dune miniseries.
- Confusingly, Karel Dorbý (who played Dr. Kynes / Liet in Frank Herbert's Dune ) also returns, but a completely different, and unrelated role. (He's a Fremen of roughly Chani's age, but it's never said that he's Dr. Kynes son or anything like that.)
- Rule of Sexy: The director goes to ridiculous lengths to remind the audience what a gorgeous youth Leto II is (e.g. numerous close-ups, lots of bare skin, etc.).
- Also, Alia's battle training scene is filmed with maximum grace and sex appeal in mind, even if the camera doesn't actually show her torso when she unnecessarily undresses right afterwards.
- Time-Shifted Actor: Alia from Dune to Children of Dune due to the Time Skip, goes from child actress Laura Burton to the very grown up Daniela Amavia.
- Walking Shirtless Scene: Leto II is always bare-chested after he first awakens from being sedated in Jacurutu.
- What the Hell, Hero?: Gurney Halleck when he finds the supposedly dead Paul while Alia is making ravages out of the newly-minted empire.
- Wolverine Publicity: Leto II is the central focus of two out of three episodes, but he's very small on the poster
◊, and you don't even get to see James McAvoy's face. This gets rectified for the North American DVD release
◊.