‘Dune: Part Three’ First Look Posters Revealed, Robert Pattinson Joins Cast
Denis Villeneuve’s sci-fi trilogy concludes on 18 December as Timothée Chalamet and Zendaya return, with Robert Pattinson joining the ensemble in a role drawn from Frank Herbert’s Dune Messiah.
First look character posters for Dune: Part Three have been unveiled, offering the earliest glimpse of the concluding chapter in Denis Villeneuve’s sprawling science fiction trilogy. The film will open in cinemas and IMAX screens across India on 18 December, with releases planned in both English and Hindi.
The posters were shared by Warner Bros. Pictures, highlighting a mix of returning characters and new additions to the saga’s expanding world. The film once again centres on Timothée Chalamet as Paul Atreides and Zendaya as Chani, whose story continues after the political upheaval and desert warfare that defined the earlier films.
Among the most widely discussed developments is the addition of Robert Pattinson to the cast. Pattinson is set to play Scytale, a character drawn from the later chapters of Frank Herbert’s science fiction canon. His casting introduces a new presence into a franchise that has steadily expanded its ensemble across two films.
Another newcomer is Isaach de Bankolé, who joins the film as Farok. Their arrival adds to a cast that already includes several returning performers from the earlier instalments. Among them are Rebecca Ferguson, returning as Lady Jessica, and Javier Bardem, reprising his role as Stilgar. Anya Taylor‑Joy will appear as Alia Atreides, while Florence Pugh returns as Princess Irulan, continuing the political and dynastic tensions that have shaped the story’s arc.
The narrative of Dune: Part Three draws inspiration from Herbert’s novel Dune Messiah. Set roughly 12 years after the events depicted in Dune: Part Two, the story explores the consequences of Paul Atreides’s rise to power and the shifting alliances that follow.
Villeneuve has previously described the film as the closing chapter of a trilogy that began with Dune in 2021. Across the series, the director has attempted to translate Herbert’s dense world of politics, religion and ecology into large scale cinematic spectacle.
