Timothée Chalamet in Dune: Part Two.Photo:Warner Bros.

Warner Bros.
Dune: Part Twois finally here — and so is a uniquely choreographed movement only found on the fictional planet Arrakis.
In the movie,Timothée Chalamet’s character Paul Atreides — and later, his mother Jessica (Rebecca Ferguson) — are shown learning about the sandwalk, which characters in the open desert use so as to not attract the deadly worms, who attack beings and objects that generate rhythmic movements across the planet’s surface. To cross the desert safely, Paul and Jessica are shown making erratic steps and dragging their feet in a bizarre fashion to discourage patterned movement and stay alive.
Dune: Part Twofurther explores Paul’s journey into the desert. While speaking with PEOPLE in April 2023 abouthis movieCarmen, choreographer and filmmakerBenjamin Millepiedexplained how he helped Villeneuve, 56, visualize the sandwalk, an integral part of life on Arrakis.
“It was to come up with a walk that didn’t have rhythm,” Millepied, 46, says of creating the sandwalk. “I created [the walk] in the sense so they would make beautiful shapes too. It’s something that Denis was interested in.”
2021’s Dune: Part One.Everett

Everett
Millepied explains that the purpose behind the choreography was “so the actors would be comfortable breaking the rhythm, basically.”
Around the release of the firstDunemovie in 2021, Villeneuve toldEntertainment Weeklythat he tasked Millepied with creating “a very simple way of walking the desert so that you will not trigger anything.”
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“It’s something that we see just a little glimpse of inPart One, but it’s a really beautiful design,” he said at the time. “It’s a way of walking in the desert that will not create a rhythm, because if you walk with a certain rhythm, the worms are attracted to that. So we designed a walk that emulates the sand and the sound of the desert. It’s a genius idea from Frank Herbert that I wanted to make sure would be on the screen.”
Zendaya and Timothée Chalamet in Dune: Part Two.Courtesy Warner Bros. Pictures

Courtesy Warner Bros. Pictures
Herbert, the author behind the expansiveDuneseries, originally described the sandwalk as follows: “step…drag…drag…step…step…wait…drag…step,” in one passage in the novel.
“I learned it well in advance, because it’s Paul’s responsibility to show Jessica in that moment, and it also has to be, in his Muad’Dib fashion, instinctual to him,” Chalamet, 28, toldEWabout filming a scene in which he teaches Ferguson’s characterhow to safely cross the desert. “But it was an even greater physical challenge on the day, just doing it again and again.”
Dune: Part Twois in theaters now.
source: people.com