Ep.6: The High-Handed Enemy (Showrunner/EP/Writer Alison Schapker, EP/Writer Jordan Goldberg; Actor Olivia Williams; and Production Designer Tom Meyer) - podcast episode cover

Ep.6: The High-Handed Enemy (Showrunner/EP/Writer Alison Schapker, EP/Writer Jordan Goldberg; Actor Olivia Williams; and Production Designer Tom Meyer)

Dec 23, 20241 hr 5 min
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Episode description

Hosts Ahmed Ali Akbar and Greta Johnsen unpack the big moments in the finale with Showrunner/EP/Writer Alison Schapker, and EP/Writer Jordan Goldberg. Then, Actor Olivia Williams gives us a peek into the mind of Tula Harkonnen. And finally, Production Designer Tom Meyer reveals the secrets of the sets in Dune: Prophecy.  Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Transcript

The Harkonnen sisters have been lying to you about the history of this place. This order was grown on blood-soaked roots. It's time you learn the truth. Welcome to the official Dune Prophecy podcast. I'm Greta Johnson. And I'm Amidali Akbar. Today, we're talking all about the season one finale of Dune Prophecy. Yes. And to break it all down with us, we are joined once again by showrunner, writer, and executive producer, Alison Schapker, and executive producer and writer, Jordan Goldberg.

Then we're going to sit down with one of the key actors at the heart of the series, Olivia Williams, who plays Tula Harkonnen. And finally, we will talk with production designer Tom Meyer about the secrets of the Imperium. Now, here is your spoiler warning. There are spoilers for the entire first season of Dune Prophecy in this episode. So catch up if you haven't already and then come back to us. I wanted to teach you about power. So let this be a lesson.

Okay, let's get a quick recap of this finale titled The High-Handed Enemy. So much to talk about. So much to talk about. All right, you want to start us off? Sure. We start with a flashback to the early sisterhood, where we learned that Valya not only killed Dorotea, but also recruited her posse to kill all of Dorotea's followers. Crucially, we also find out that Tula was pregnant with Ori Atreides' baby. but faked a stillbirth so that the child wouldn't be raised in the sisterhood.

And that baby grew up to be Desmond Hart. No big deal. A lot, a lot, a lot. I was not ready for that. I know. That's not even the half of it either. So in the present, Tula is trying to figure out how to stop the virus with sister Nazir. Nazir tries to transmute. the virus, but is burned alive in the process, which gives Tula a key insight into how it works. And so she heads off to Seleuza Secundus. Rest in peace, Nazir.

Meanwhile, on Walk 9, Dorotea's spirit is channeled through Lila's body, and she reveals the secrets of the sisterhood to the Acolytes. Then she convinces them to destroy the animal breeding index. On Seleucia Secundus, Emperor Javiko has lost complete control of Natalia and Desmond. Natalia has her own daughter arrested and tells Javiko that she is done listening to him. And then poor Javiko dies by suicide in front of...

of Francesca, and Francesca winds up getting killed herself by Empress Natalia. Valia, meanwhile, we haven't even gotten to Valia yet, schemes her way into the palace to rescue Princess Inez and Kieran Atreides. But she sacrifices Theodosia in the process. Along the way, Velia faces Desmond and his virus, and with Tula's help, is able to face her fears and survive.

And in that moment, we also see into Desmond's mind, and we learn that his abilities come from some sort of surgery done against his will. By a second hidden hand, who is using a thinking machine. Mm-hmm. So as we end this season, Tula is reunited with her secret son, Desmond, and then he has her arrested, and Valya, Inez, and Kiran land on Arrakis, the desert planet. that Valia believes is the key to uncovering their enemies.

There is a lot to unpack here. I think we have to start in the past because it really feels like the past is informing everything that's happened in the world, not just for the sisterhood, but like the empire. The entire series, let alone this episode. Yeah. So Ahmed, one of the first things we learn in this episode is we get confirmation of Desmond's parentage, that it's Tula and her lovely Atreides boy.

I want to acknowledge the fans here. Okay. And the discussions that are happening around Desmond Hart. Desmond Hart added a lot of kind of questions for, you know, Dune fans because of who is he? What is he doing? Like, what is this power? And like the reveal here. Works on so many levels because it was hiding in plain sight for me. I will say the other thing that I think has a lot of thematic resonance for me, I am rereading all the books. I'm on book three and now reading it as a parent.

One of the things that comes up a lot is the question of how much do you let your inheritance from your parents who may have the best intentions or may have terrible intentions, like shape your future? And are you going to make a choice for yourself? You don't realize the way in which you have. become your parents um i'll use some dune words here freak or abomination until you're like old enough to realize what's been done to you so to see like these characters like desmond who was like

given the ability to break free from his family trauma, but still got pulled back in. And then Lila, also separate from her family trauma, and yet... She inherits all of that. And I think that's one of the arguments that I see as a thematic resonance here is how much do we take what is good from our parents versus how much do we let their dreams for us, which may not be our dreams. shape our future yeah and i'm trying not to do that with my future generation

And now it's time for us to go beyond the veil and unpack this episode with our special guests, showrunner, writer, and executive producer, Alison Shapker, and executive producer and writer, Jordan Goldberg. Let's get to it. Allison Jordan, welcome back to the podcast. Great to be back. Good to see you. The finale. It's all out. We are so excited to get into this one. Y'all packed a lot into this final episode.

And I think a great place to start would be our sisterhood of the past because we learn so much more about not only the secrets that Tula... and Valia have been keeping, but also like the plans that they have made and how meticulous this has been for so long. I would love to hear how you decided to save some of these juicy details for the finale.

I think we wanted to unfold a story in the past that would, you know, have plans within plans in true Benny Gesserit style and to understand, like, there was this plan you found out about in the premiere. But actually underneath that were some personal things that it takes a whole season to understand that there is more going on. There's more going on for Valia. There's more going on for Tula. And they're also still...

Harkonnen sisters, even though they're at the sisterhood now. And I thought that was really thrilling to kind of start there in the finale, to sort of mirror. the premiere in a way, to come back to it in memory, to understand that night. There was more going on. And to add that dimension and when Tula finally tells Valya she's pregnant. And then I love that Valya has a sort of supportive sisterly reaction to it. Is that real?

Yeah, I don't think it is. You think it is? Okay. Oh, I really 100% do. I feel like Valia, that's Valia, like her fierce loyalty. And I mean, she's very loyal to Tula and Tula has followed. her to the sisterhood and she is going to take care of her and she's going to take care of them. I think the problem with Valya is what's...

behind that commitment. Yeah. You know, it can be the most comforting thing in the world, I think, and also the scariest thing when Vali is on her side. And also she could change her mind if the plan changes. You know what I mean?

Like, that's what it's like. I agree with you, Allison. I was like, she is being genuine right now. But you just think about the future. Things will change for her. And those feelings may not last. Oh, yeah. As good as it might feel in that moment for Valia to be like, you and me, we got this. I think Tula agrees with you, Ahmed. Right. Yeah, I mean, at the end of episode three, the condition that she...

makes to go fall of value to the sisterhood was a fresh start. There's no greater fresh start, I guess, for people than having a baby, and that is the promise. I mean, you know, I've had two, and it's not much of a fresh start. For a minute. For a minute. It feels fresh for about 10 seconds. It's a new human. Yeah, exactly. But I do feel like, as Taliesin's saying, there's a lot of... optimism uh that we're going to raise this kid together which really kind of

furthers this idea that this is, you know, this is going to be good for them, even though this happens at the heels of murdering someone. But again, it's like, you know, but I think that Dorothea and what happened there was sort of, you know, necessary.

to what the sister was up against. I think what's really powerful about this particular backstory is why mother and son aren't together. And it all has to do with what... unfreshes that fresh start um and uh um what ends up becoming you know tool is saying i i can't allow this person to grow up in this environment I love the human conflict, of course, that's so big. But what I also loved about what was done here was how it recontextualizes.

You called it the foundational crime, I think, in the first episode, the murder. For me, it was just like I had a different feeling about the other sisters. I was like, oh, they're values pawns. And now they're like, oh, they're really values conspirators. Like they're fully in. They're not like, what did you do? They're like, what do we do? You know, like that was such an interesting thing for me to see. Yeah. They don't see that.

how Valya is going to solve the problem. And I don't know that Valya in that moment totally sees how she's going to solve the problem. She just knows that Dorothea cannot be allowed to win, that there's just too much. riding on the future. And we can't destroy the breeding index. We can't destroy Raquel's great work. Like, we can't take this Butlerian anti-technology stance.

Or we're not going to be able to do what we need to do. And so Dorotea has to be made to cede to our plan. And when she doesn't, obviously Valia takes like drastic action. And again, I don't think she wanted to, but she's willing to do it. And I think that's what makes her Valja Harkonnen. Yeah. But they were willing to go along with it. Yeah, it's all built on the mass grave. Yeah. Now you have to go back and see, oh, that was a mass grave. That's a mass grave that they're doing all this.

That's right. I think that was the most mind blowing reveal for me of the series was just how, how deeply violently. valia really did claim power i mean you know obviously we knew from the beginning but like the exponentiality of that was just so significant right that the sisterhood is founded in a you know it is not immune from the violence No, it's a mass execution. Yeah. I thought the choice of the word choose was so provocative. Did you consider other words or was it always choose?

Well, we did consider other words, but we didn't want them on film. Like, I don't want, like, you know, kill yourself, you know, like, was just like not something I think I wanted a meme out there in the world, you know, like, but also choose. felt to me like it was actually more the heart of what was going on. And I think it was genuine. And I think those sisters were such believers that they all chose very much as sisters, you know. Fuck this. Like the way Avila doesn't, obviously.

makes the alternate choice. And I think that was really provocative too. And you see Valia accept it. And then now you understand what it was like that she was at their side the whole season. But that she actually, too, has a past that she's haunted by. And, you know, she goes from being the woman behind Vali at the very beginning in the premiere.

to breaking with Valia in the finale. So she's kind of the final sister we touch on too, you know, as somebody who you're like, oh, that's a Vila story. I think the other wild thing about the word shoes is that even within the world of using the voice, it still allows for free will. Yeah, in a weird way. It's like a test.

But it's also an amazing character thing because what I liked about it was like, you know, what we've seen Valia do up to this point is essentially feed people to the grinder for her master plan. But in this moment, she uses a... tool for submission to give people the moment to tell them their own truth. Right. They get to pick. in a way, redeems Valia a little bit to me. Oh, you think so? I personally think so. I think that had they not done, like Avila, done the thing, she would be...

cool with her. You know what I mean? That's a really interesting point, Jordan. I actually really like that. I can see the redemption. And I'm very skeptical. I don't know if I would use that. But she tried. I think she would like to convince everyone. I think she would have wanted to convince everyone. Dorotea. I think she gave these Butlerian sisters within the Dorotea's followers some time to sort it out. But I love the way she walks over and goes, I hear some of you.

I'm not accepting my leadership. But I think that's true. Most people with like overriding ambition, I feel like sometimes in a way they feel alone because no one understands. Their ambition, and it's very alienating to them. They just, why can't you just understand what I'm trying to do? And, you know, I feel for those kind of people. I mean, you know, sometimes they do disastrous things, but they're struggling with that.

Should we jump to the sisterhood of the present? Oh, yeah. The virus. We have to talk a little bit about the virus. We want to know a little bit more about what the virus plot line like. Is it right that it's like a nanomachine? It's like a machine. Yeah, it's like a bioweapon with a thinking machine component. But like on a nanoscale, as Anirul says, so like, you know, very micro. Yeah. Well, on a thematic level for both of us, it reminded us also of the agony, just like...

Once we got to the resolution of the fear stuff, it felt like a similar test to the agony. What do you see as the connections between Desmond's virus and the agony? What are the differences and similarities in your view? I think Nazir says it, like the process, like she thinks it's organic and it is a bioweapon, so it's partially organic. Like she thinks she can manipulate it.

And that process is similar. I mean, that is using the sisterhood ability to control their body on a cellular level. And as she says, only our target is different. So you're absolutely right. I mean, that's what... Lila was trying to do on the table. too. I mean, everybody's trying to change their body chemistry and synthesize an antidote or find a way to defeat what's happening. But they're different, obviously. And Nazir successfully does it.

But then the virus fights back. And I think that to me is the machine. Like she can't keep pace with the machine. So she's super skilled. And if her hypothesis going in was correct, she might have been able to do it. Like I don't think it was out of her. reach to do it. It's just she hid something that was not human. And it's still horrifying to die that way. I hate every single time somebody dies like that. It's still not fun to watch. No, not at all.

So in this episode, we are also getting a very strong sense that threats to the sisterhood as we know it are coming not only from without, but also from within. And we see that very clearly with... Lila, who now is Dorotea. Let's listen to a clip and then I would love to talk about it. The sisterhood has lost its way, but I will not be silenced again. in the name of all who have fallen. I will return us to our righteous path.

The only bummer about just playing the audio is you can't see the intensity on her face and her giant eyes. I mean, oh my God. I know. And I love that the spice changed her eye color. So, you know, her eyes are a little bit... weird and I think that's so effective.

You see a very effective charismatic leader. Like Haviko, when he is rousing the crowd, it feels like a little weaker. When she does it, she's like, people move with her. That's scary. You know, that's the whole thing is like, what can a charismatic leader do even with the best of intent?

Yes. It was literally people who were like bashing up machinery. I know. We went full crowbar. Yeah, full crowbar. I love that. Well, I mean, we were like, what's around? They had those gardening tools and they used it to pry open the well. So it felt like it was sort of in this story. Yeah.

And it really signified for us, that was Avila's little moment of kind of like understanding that like she was now kind of transferring her allegiance and she's no longer keeping the secret and she's empowering Dorotea. to do what she needs to do so they spend so much time saying you can't bring emotion into the training like we have to suppress our emotions you know now the dorate is back

She seems to have a bone to pick. Now emotion is like kerosene to this place. It's going to get dirty. So let's move to Seleucia Secundus because a lot of things happen there too. One of the big takeaways in this finale is Natalia's rise to power. And for her plan to work, she has her own daughter arrested, which I think it's fair to say both Ammon and I did not see coming. Are we calling this a coup? What do y'all think?

Yeah, I mean, I think a soft coup. I mean, like she's saying to him, you're going to still be on the throne, but no more are you going to be discounting me because Desmond and I are together. So if, you know, you want to be a strong man, we're all going to. be talking now. So, and I think that very much puts Havako on notice that he's not going to be calling the shots, really, or he's going to be taking her position into account.

I think, I just want to say, to me, what's very exciting about this episode is up until this point, one through five, I feel like, you know, there's the kind of cat and mouse relationship between Valya and Desmond. They feel like... They are the two characters, the untethered characters that are kind of waging this kind of, you know, soft war against each other, using all the kind of pieces on the board in this chess mess.

What's cool about this episode is that everyone else in this episode now becomes untethered. The free will question is interjected into the situation. It's like billiard balls going all over the place. And the two people that were untethered are now.

tethered and the question is whether they become tethered to each other you know or they they go through the mind killer experience at the end there so it's it's it's an interesting kind of dynamic to uh to watch there uh personally i think what happens to the emperor is the kind of the epitome of that

You know what I mean? The idea that your life has been controlled and here's an act of free will you don't see coming. You know, it's a strange thing when you finally realize you've never known one true moment of freedom. But I can control this.

I have always really loved that idea of, you know, so much of like prophecy is so Dooney. I mean, obviously it's called Dune Prophecy, but then the how free will plays into that, I think is so interesting and comes up with the breeding index a little bit too, right? That idea of like, if all. goes according to plan, here's what will happen. But you can only actually account for so much, which is how you still do potentially, and in this case, literally, you know, end up with a Desmond Hart.

Right. It's not a perfect system. You can never tamp it all down. I think it's also interesting that Tula sees Desmond as a victim as soon as he figures, like, this has been done to me. We see also that he is a victim for sure. And that surgery looks... Horrible. Thank you for letting me see that. You feel bad for him. He's been doing a lot of horrible stuff, but you feel really awful for him. And Tula clocks it right away. She says, we should help him. And I think...

You know, there's a bit of a... In some ways, between Valia and Tula, like their reckoning of like younger sister, older sister, who's calling the shots, whose plan are we following? And, you know, up until this point, it's always been Valia. And this is the first time in the finale where Tula is.

Like, I want to do it my way. It's also who's keeping secrets, right? Because we haven't seen Tula do that either. Like, that's the big reveal there, too. Absolutely. Yeah, that Tula is the best liar of everyone. Yep. You lied to me. All this time? It was for his protection. From what? You think I'm a monster, sister? All the carnage and deception. All by your orders.

But your hold on the sisterhood wasn't fixed. I could have broken it at any time. Why didn't I? Because we're the same, you and I. Two wolves born to feed with no care for the cost. If my son had the potential that Anarul promised, he deserved a better fate than us. You can make the argument, you know, a lot of Valia's life, unbeknownst to her, has been controlled by this lie.

You know what I mean? Ooh, that's cool. Well, you and Desmond, who seem like the free agents are now, like, you know, not so free. And, you know, and everyone else is sort of... bursting out of their chains. And it's, you know... Totally. That's also part of the emotional reckoning of this whole episode. You know what I mean? Yeah. It just gets exponentially worse and worse. This show is so good, guys. I mean, it's so good. I mean, this show is so bad. Because Desmond...

like you feel like he's so free and it's totally you're totally right that at the end you're like this guy seems to have multiple levels of no choice and he's searching for a certain level of I don't know what he's searching for but anything that we might be searching for. Meaning, you know, connection, like, you know, purpose. And obviously he does horrible things, but... Well, he's not wielding the sword. He is the sword. I mean, and that... Right, right. I think, yes. That's the irony, right?

And he becomes a tool that his mom was trying to stop him from being. This is the tragic fate of the guy. I think he walks in in the first episode actually thinking that he has these abilities. Like, this is true. You know what I mean? This is a thing that's happened to him, and I don't know how much of it is true. You know what I mean? I mean, that's got to blow your stack when you understand that.

And what does it mean for this child to feel chosen? Like chosen by Shai Halut. Like why does that story work on him? You know, like somebody who felt rejected, abandoned, not good enough, not worthy, you know, like having a life. understand. And, you know, I hope we get to peel back more layers on that. But like the idea that he would believe his own myth, you know, on some level only to realize like, oh my God, like it's not a gift from God. It's a, it's a thinking machine.

He is what he's been trying to destroy. He is what he's been trying to destroy. It's like, how do you metabolize that? You know, for him, I think it's going to be a very... powerful journey he's on because that's a lot to reckon with, I think. Yeah, totally. There are so many reveals in this episode and I would actually love to know at what point you conceived of like all of them. But anyway, the one I think we should focus on.

is about Desmond being, either being a thinking machine or at least having elements of thinking machine inside of him. At what point did you realize that that... was going to be part of this story. I mean, it really adds so many layers. I mean, I think that was like... very baked into his character from early on because I think that there had to be an explanatory mechanism on the table for this power that he was going to be manifesting. And I think it was very self-consciously decided that...

Like he would, you know, arrive with a mystery and arrive with a story and a story that was kind of mythic. He was almost like a prophet, almost like a Rasputin figure coming, you know, a sense of some kind of a mystical Arrakis. power we don't understand. But I think as that was being constructed, what was also right underneath it was like the understanding that...

There was a, yes, another mystery, but a more insidious mystery and that the sisterhood would uncover that layer. Does he know that he has that thing in his eye after that moment? Does he also see that vision? In my mind, I think that he is only in a position now where he's going to start reckoning with that component. I think he believed. So he did not know up until now. Yeah, like a little more like that. Yeah, that's right.

I would love to talk a little bit about Valia and Desmond and what Valia sees when she is having her moment of, can we call it infection? That's Trax, right? Yeah. which is when she goes back to this moment that was referred to kind of obliquely a couple times in episode three. And...

At the time, I was a little bummed that we didn't actually get to see it. Yeah. But we get to see it here. And it is the origin of the voice, which is also pretty profound. Of course, it also has to deal with her brother Griffin, about whom she has a lot of very complicated feelings, including... some sense of guilt, I would say. Why there and then? Well, we were dying to see it too. I mean, if this is activating Valia's fear and what is her primal fear, losing Griffin.

seeing him you know under the ice and it just felt so powerful i would also say that the other cool thing that alice and i were talking about alice you could probably talk about this more eloquently than i can but just this idea of like you know Obviously, it being, you know, Griffin falling through the ice is, you know, kind of a foundational fear, a thing of panic. But also being back in that place and being lost in that place, I also think is an equally horrifying.

Faint for Valle, because it's lack of... of opportunity that's what she was looking at on the bluff when she had her conversation with with griffin about like there's nothing out here for us and am i stuck on this planet like am i not gonna you know when when dorothea threatens her if you don't get with the sisterhood you're gonna go to your

back to your planet. I mean, just that fate alone is also terrifying to her. And it feeds into these fears, her ambition. I think that's so well put. I mean, yes, I think her fear that she will... amount to nothing, that it is just Lancavale, that is nothingness, nothingness, nothingness, is definitely activated. I think her guilt over, did she?

cause Griffin's death, you know, which is what she basically killed Evgeny for kind of insinuating. Like, you know, that sense of, like, you know, she can't allow herself. To really let that in, and it has to be the Atreides. She can't internalize that, but here it is. In her kind of most intimate sort of peeling back of her fears, you see that her guilt is there too.

And then she has to become nothing. She has to let it pass through her. She has to let that fear go. She has to, you know, in some ways, and it's a little like a woo-woo, I guess, but like just that idea of like she has to kind of like. erase herself like so that there's nothing for the virus to latch on to as fear and that I think is what she always it's like the opposite of her ambition is her annihilation and she does it.

Not yet. It's okay. I saved you. You have to let go. You have to let go of your fears. That's it. That's it. You did this. You killed me. You killed us all. I love it's not like there's one fear. It's so cool. So good. The last scene of the season is Valia, Kieran, Inez. We haven't spent as much talking about them, but lots of stuff happening there too. They land on Arrakis. Why end here?

Well, it just felt very fitting as a place because Arrakis has haunted kind of the show. It's been exerting its pull from a distance. It's, you know, very alive and people's... in the world of our show, but it's not present. We're not on Arrakis, really. I mean, except through Desmond's subjectivity briefly. And the idea that Volia would now... armed with the knowledge that there's more to Desmond's story, kind of go back to where his story

started, you know, or at least maybe not started, but where this power started or, you know, what is the story of he was swallowed by a worm? And she's now going to go and figure out a little bit more about that. And so Boots on the Ground and Arrakis. just felt like a really exciting, thematically like a cool place to see, to have Valia sort of touch down on. It feels like it's promises a lot.

I think that this show is very much committed to being in the wider imperium and taking you to other places, but I do think there is story to tell there. All the potential. Yeah. What stories we can tell. We are very excited. We really are looking forward to being more on this world and your particular take on it. It has been such an amazing season. Thank you both for joining us. Thank you so much for taking the time. It's been really fun.

And now we're going to hear a conversation I got to have with Olivia Williams, who is phenomenal. She plays Tula Harkonnen. All right, let's listen to it. Olivia, thank you so much for coming on the podcast. Thank you. I'm excited to be here. Excited to talk with you. I'd love to hear what your relationship was like with Dune before you took on this project. I'm afraid I was one of the ignorant ones. My...

introduction to how significant it is to people all over the world is now a bit of a legend. An amazing man called Charlie who put in all my TV and Wi-Fi and sound in my house. When I told him I was playing Tula Harkonnen, he knelt at my feet. So I realized that. Um, I needed to do a bit more homework about what I was taking on when I took the job and, um, and he was my education. Oh my God. That's so perfect. Charlie.

informing you of how real this was. Here's to Charlie. And I want the word to go out because I've said I will name check him. Charlie was my dean education. Oh my God, that's so funny. So yeah, at what point did you realize, I mean, there's the dune of it all, but then there's also the Harkonnen of it all and the fact that you are taking on a very significant name in a very significant franchise. Yeah, I was quite...

pleased that we didn't have to do the bald cat thing. That the poor, our poor... Our descendants have a pretty rough ride in the makeup chair. No, I was lucky we got to have hair, but also tell the story of how we became so angry and embittered. And I think there is a serious point to be. made about society's outcasts and why they have been cast out and what happens if you alienate people because of their surname.

well, yeah, what has it been like to watch the show? I imagine it's got to be really fascinating, partly because there is... the Tula that you play and then there is young Tula and getting to actually see those scenes now has to be really interesting too right absolutely I mean it's almost sort of shaming hats off to Emma because she

She and Jess, they have watched us and taken mannerisms and habits and things that we do. And it's so beautifully observed. So I haven't had a chance to thank her for her. extraordinary performance and to make me look good in a way because if you haven't got the backstory and if the backstory isn't emotional and truthful then then to play the embittered older woman who's

this story counts for nothing. So she really gave me a beautiful kind of propulsion into the future. She was cold as ice and yet passionate and loving. And, you know, literally sort of stuck upon the horns of a dilemma. You see her absolutely torn in two by her emotions and her loyalty. She's no less angry than Valia. No. As so often happens in families, one person shows anger, you know, with full of sound of fury and the other person doesn't show their anger.

At all. But they're no less angry. I think we should also obviously discuss the reveal here that Tula is Desmond's mother. Yes. At what point did you realize that that was the case? I think it was one of the breadcrumbs that led me to take the role. It was up there. Okay. Very early on. I mean, that's an enticing breadcrumb. Yeah, exactly. And that was an extraordinary piece of plotting. You know, again, what a subtext to have to keep covering.

in your life. There's an amazing podcast on the BBC at the moment exploring the consequences of these genetic tests that you can do that people quite often give each other as Christmas presents. And what a Christmas present when two months later you find out that your father isn't your father and your brothers and sisters aren't your brothers and sisters. And as a source for...

for what this show does to people's lives. It's an amazing piece of real life reference as a thing to carry around in your life that so many women have had to keep secret. and a machine in the basement like Anna Rule or the present of a small pot into which you spit and send off to an enormous thinking machine. Yes. Yeah. The thinking machine piece is there too, right? Yeah. Yeah. And that's what's causing these interesting revelations about genetics. What a thing. What a thing. Yeah.

I would love to hear your reaction to the flashback scene after baby Desmond is born. This is just before Tula gives him up. Let's take a listen. Sweet boy. Barely in the world and already you know so much sadness. You are so special. You deserve the chance to find your own path. What that is for the hearkenings of the sisterhood. You're mine. That's the gift I give you. It's a heartbreaking scene. It's also oddly hopeful, right? I mean...

It's interesting thinking about we had a conversation with Jordan recently and he was like, well, yeah, baby's a fresh start. Right. And then he was like, just kidding. I have two children. That's it's never actually the case. Right. So much of the story that we're working with here is about. grief and guilt and the burdens you bring along. And, you know, as you said earlier, like the carrying around a surname and in so many ways, this is Tula's attempt for this baby to.

to have a fresh start, to be free from all of these things. Yes, there was a man in British history called Nicholas Winton who was called the British Schindler. And he... took many children out of Eastern Europe on trains just before the Nazis closed the borders.

And he would say to parents, give me your child and I will put them on a train and find them a home in the UK. And what... kind of choice is that again there's a famous film called Sophie's Choice um but I was thinking about and I'm sure Emma was too about What kind of danger would there be that would be so dreadful that you would hand over your child to a stranger and know that their life would...

be better with the stranger than it would be with you. That's devastating. And what is the added sort of shovelful of misery on this is that danger is your name. And your big sister who goes, this is going to be great. You're having a baby. We can do this together. We can fuck up this kid as a family.

And there's some elements of Handmaid's Tale, that idea that the sisterhood has. The sisterhood, this is supposed to be a piece of sort of feminist, but the sisterhood takes kids away from their mothers. Dodgy. Anyway, so I can see why you might want to spare your child that. Do you think Chula would have been a good mother? That's a good one.

It's tough, right? I mean, I think her intentions are good. Yeah, I do. I mean, I played her as having a heart in there. Yeah. Well, and she has maternal instincts for Lila. You see that. You know, again, I have to go back to Emma's performance. She was in the domestic situation and we had amazing Polly Walker playing our mum. Yeah.

Didn't look like a very happy home, but my husband had a very tricky upbringing. There was love and chaos in there, and he's become the most extraordinary father. Sometimes... you become a parent by watching what to do from your parents and sometimes you become a parent by watching not to do. And choosing to break a cycle. So maybe she'd have broken the cycle. Yeah, I feel excited if there is more to come. Yes. If Travis ever gives me a chance to give him a hug.

What do you think about, I mean, something I found myself wondering about too is clearly Tula believes the sisterhood is not a good place to raise a child. Do you think she ever considers just leaving herself? Like, why is she still there? Is she just that intertwined with Valia at this point that she can't possibly conceive of a life without her? Well...

That is the dilemma, the oxymoron, to use a really pretentious word, of Tula. Because let's not forget, she went off and hung out with the Atreides and slaughtered them all. As I said, she shows her anger in different ways. She's not. she's not raging against the machine. You know, she is someone who thinks and plots and works. So I think her taking second place and...

putting up with being second in command isn't necessarily submission. Yes. And just because she doesn't say it out loud and slit people's throats. She injects them with poison instead. Something that keeps coming up over the course of the interviews in this season is and I think the finale exemplifies it so perfectly is that. Tula is perhaps the best liar in this universe, don't you think? Yes!

I want to, I'm very competitive. If it's a competition, I want to win it. So yes, can I take that prize home, please? The best liar, yes. Yes, yes, you can. So let's talk about the final showdown between Valiya and Tula and Desmond. love to hear what it was like to film that scene. Tula kind of once again comes to Valia's rescue, which is really interesting. Yeah.

There's the humorous version, which was Emily and I found the set very like the underground parking lot of the National Theatre, which is a place we both know very well. Because we both worked there and both lost our cars, spending hours wandering around having done a play. So even the texture of the ground... And the sort of oily puddles were very like an underground car park we know very well. So that was the most striking.

It was like, oh, God, we've got to go back to the National Theatre Car Park and shoot that scene again because we actually shot it twice. It was extraordinary. It's an extraordinary moment. And I had to really kind of... I took poor Jordan and Alison to task. I was like, so I've got in a spaceship and I've gone to another planet and I'm looking for my sister and I come down into the National Theatre car park and there is the body of my son.

And my sister, who've just had a kind of face-off where, you know, one has infected the other with a deadly virus and one's dying from the effort of... giving the virus to the other and the other's dying of the virus. You know, who do you run to? It's like the worst show, you know, this awful thing that you put a dog in the middle of a field and say, okay, which one, which one do you prefer?

Yeah, so I go to my sister, interesting, first, and try and pull her back from the brink of death. And then... I stopped my sister from stabbing my son in the eye with her special dagger. You know, I went through all the podcasts and real life events I could muster and I couldn't find a precedent for that one. So further on in that scene.

We have a hug, which is intense and tender. And there are so many layers to that one. Speaking of subtext, what were you and weren't you trying to convey in that moment? It was interesting. It was a collaborative. Everybody had put their subtext on the table before we shot it. Travis was very much... He's not, he wasn't, didn't want to, he's too angry and too embittered. And I was really happy to go for trying to go in for the long loss.

baby hug and it to be rejected. And, you know, I think there's a pain that only a mother can experience when the first time your child... Bats away your... Turns away from... Give mummy a hug. And I speak as a mother of teenagers. So yeah, you know, not all reunions are happy. It does seem like there's some reverse Oedipus stuff happening in that scene too.

Oh, good. I'm glad you picked up on that. I mean, listen, what would you do if you found out Travis Femmel was your son? You know, it's a problem. If you've been following his career with interest and then you find out that he is of your loins. Oh, my. I mean, that is a really complicated one. Yeah. But it's that thing, you know, it's like he's misunderstood. My boy. Oh, God. Yeah, he just killed a bunch of our...

people and with his crazy virus, but he's a victim. He's a victim. I mean, Lord knows what happened to him, right? I mean, that's another huge question mark now. Yeah, someone really nasty in a big cloak and a hood put something horrible in his eye. It's not his fault. He did that. It's so empathetic.

I think, too, the element of that that's so fascinating is to be reminded once again that Valya literally would not have been able to survive without Tula. Like, they are that intertwined. Yes, absolutely. And Emily talks a great deal about the extraordinary connection they have, which is blood and sister and love and hate. But also the secrets they both carry. And they both have, you know, if one goes down, the other goes down with her. But we do, I mean, I, again, in families, you know.

However dysfunctional the family is, they keep on going back for Sunday lunch or going back for Christmas or turning up at the ball game to have another crack at. making a happy family or finding approval or finding the love that you feel there's something that's missing from your life, trying to recreate something or to create something that's never really been there.

So when we had Emma and Jess Young, Valia and Tula on the podcast, we asked them who they thought was more dangerous. And I would love to know what you think, especially at this point in the end of an epic season. I just want to shout out to Emily here because she plays such a beautiful game of someone. I feel like the power is kind of...

I'm going to mix some metaphors. It's kind of running through her fingers like sand and she's trying to stop it. And then also there's kind of nails on a blackboard. She's kind of like, you know, that thing in cartoons where it's just like, she's trying. to hold on and she's trying to stem every kind of hole in the dike. There's another metaphor. And yeah, she's trying to hold on to power, whereas I feel...

Tula, selfishly for me, for my character, is just getting into her stride. She's like, okay. So I did this rebel thing. I did this thing that was the biggest sacrifice I could make. for the sisterhood, and then I have been dormant. I'm like one of those plants that is under the desert for 20 years, and then it rains, and it blossoms.

I can't wait. Olivia, it is such a pleasure to watch you on the show. And it has been so lovely to get to talk to you too. Thank you so much. Thank you. Pleasure. Nice talking to you. We are very excited to have as our final guest for the season, production designer, Tom Meyer. Tom, welcome to the podcast. Thank you. I'm super happy to be here. Tom, we've been asking everyone this season, what was your relationship to Dune prior to coming on to the show?

I think like probably everybody who's been speaking on these podcasts and that you've interviewed, we all read the book in some form at some point, and I definitely tackled it in high school. And so I backed up and I read both trilogies for this series. And it was kind of an amazing mind-expanding experience to see the thought and the history that had been put into the series that really backs up.

all the worlds that you get to when you finally get 10 000 years later to Paul Atreides you have all this groundwork and foundation so as kind of starting at point to have these thousands of pages of kind of text to kind of draw from gave us this kind of real firm, as I say, foundation to kind of build upon and expand and to experiment from.

Tom, one thing we have talked about over the course of the season that we've really admired with this show is that you can tell the sets were built out very elaborately. This isn't a lot of like standing around in front of a green screen stuff. Right. And I think you can tell that, especially with Seleucia Secundus. And we heard you say in an interview that it took 400 people to build the palace. Is that right? Yeah, we actually had...

Between the carpenters, the furniture makers, painters, plasters, all the different craftspeople, including the art departments and all the departments that... actually had to design and think up all of these ideas, there were in excess of 800 or 900 people. Oh, my God. And then when you add in your outside vendors and your freelance vendors, that probably, you know.

goes up to over 1,200 people. That's amazing. I think of it in many respects of like when you're building a city of any sort, a world of any sort. It's not just one person or one idea that creates it. I always say it's not one architect who designs a city. It's many architects. It's many generations of people. And so it was important to bring in a lot of artists, a lot of...

talent and visions, all kind of working and laboring to create one unified world under one unified idea. It does on some level have, I think, an impact hopefully on the actors as well that they feel. that they're not spending any excess time having to imagine their space or imagine what they're looking at. They can concentrate on telling the story. There's so many inspirations you could take. I think Seleuza is an especially interesting planet because...

It's an imperial planet. It's the head of an empire. And are there any specific things, especially things we may, now that we're at the finale here, and you can spoil things for us, any specific touches or references in there that you could tell us about?

In the production design of Seleuza Secundus, that was like a reference from something real or from the books. Well, I think to create the planet or the city of Zimia and the world of Seleuza and the palace in particular, it's important to remember that... The people that populate the planets and the galaxies of Dune are human beings. They're not space aliens that happen to look like human beings. They are human beings. So when we looked at...

recreating this sense of history on Seleucus Secundus, which does and is intentionally referenced as the most Earth-like of planets. Right there, we have this kind of... Warm light, warm stone, the materials that should feel familiar to the audience as earthly materials. Then in creating the palace, what we did is, without really being tricky, we just rethought what does...

the periods of the Roman, the Greek, you know, Greco-Roman architecture, how is that going to transform? Because it's really informed all of our modern Western civilization and architecture up until this point. How does that... go forward 10 000 years from now what does a crown molding or an architrave or a column even look like and how does it feel again familiar but yet foreign or alien or futuristic Well, I'll say one thing is just like in my reread of the books, just like the trainees are.

Greek, like they're literally Greek descendants. There's also like, of course, the whole Greek tragedy of the whole Dune universe. So I think hearing you talk about like Greek architecture in there also is helpful like for situating it. Absolutely. And you contrast that to the coolness of Wallach 9. which is a planet that's written as being a dead planet that had undergone a thermonuclear war from the great machine wars.

That really tells you immediately. So when the audience sees that cool, cold, gray environment of Wallach 9, you know exactly where you are. Yeah, it's damp, it's dark. And the idea in the books is that when they got to Wallach 9... The sisterhood is a group that's in exile. They're kind of bequeathed this series of buildings by Joseph Vimport, who...

precedes the Spacing Guild. Now I'm going really deep into the geek world. I love it. At the end here, we're getting the really deep lore. Allison and I had some really long conversations where we would get into the deep geek and we'd be like, well, what color was, you know, when we were talking.

It's like, well, it's one book. Let's talk a little more about Wallach 9 because it is such a tonally different shift from Solusia Secundus. When it comes to the school in particular, what was your inspiration for that? That's a good question. The idea to give it a sense of history was to make them look like buildings that had a utilitarian feature because these buildings were industrial leftovers that had survived the thermonuclear war.

And when we first see it in the young sisterhood version that takes place 30 years prior, you see that it's even a more bare, stripped-down version. It's really at the beginning of Raquelas.

strategy to make this into a center of the sisterhood and center of the universe and basically a controlling source for all of the universe. When we find it again 30 years later... it's warmed up a bit you could say of sorts yeah a little some carpets and rugs you know the idea that alice and i remember speaking about when we were talking about designing this space was that this is

school, the young girls and the women that are studying here, they've been sent here by prestigious families. And so it was important to make it feel as though that it had this kind of imposing sense of character. And also a sense of kind of some sort of scholastic or some sort of structured environment that they weren't just left here. For instance, also, if we look at the great courtyard.

of the well. Again, when we first see it in the young sisterhood, it's barren. It's pretty stark, as we know from the great... nutrients that the well has been fed with of all these dead sisters. I'm trying to put you nice about it. You know, we have this kind of sickly, almost moldish moss that's grown up around it.

So when we see it later, it looks kind of beautiful and green and it has kind of more of a light, but it is sickly at the end because we know that, you know, it's fed with all of the... The blood of the sisterhood. And I will say those green lines, they were very evocative. I was like, there's already hidden thinking machines in the bottom. There's something feeding this area that doesn't look so good.

It's natural, but it's not a good kind of natural. Yeah, at the core of the sisterhood, there's this kind of foulness, right? So was that courtyard a build or was it? That was a build, yeah. It was. It's beautiful. We used an old structure. There was a structure that had been built pre-World War II that was intended to be a church. It was never consecrated and it was abandoned.

pre-World War II. So we were able to use some foundational work to kind of build out the space. And it was fun to kind of have something of that scale or this kind of center kind of heart. you can see how they're always having to cross through it to get to different parts of the school. So you're always having to walk past what we find out in episode six is this kind of horrible secret and graveyard.

Well, you know, we could honestly have, I wish we had talked to you the whole season so we could ask about every setting. It feels like there's so much to cover. But, you know, as we're leaving you here, let's say these planets are real. Let's say you're daydreaming on your set thinking about what you would want to visit. Which of the planets that you helped create would you want to visit? That's a great question. Well, I like the snow.

And we don't see a whole lot of Lankavelle. We see enough to get the sense of it, though, I think. But I think creating that village for Lankavelle was pretty amazing. I think that Salusa Secundus, what's really cool about the city of Zimia there in Salusa is so much of it, what we're seeing is at night, which I think is intentional. So there's so much more to explore in such a mass space. to think about. It's a pretty tough world to live in.

Pretty happy here. Yeah, yeah. Well, that's why we asked about visiting and not living because that would be tough. I'll be honest. They're really exciting worlds. They're all kind of unending in their abilities to kind of. go down and explore there's so much that we hinted at that's the thing that i think is really enjoy about science fiction is that as much as you can dream and think up you can go and explore so

Tom, thank you so much for talking with us. Thanks for the time. I do appreciate it. That's all for this week and this season. Thank you all so much for joining us on this incredible journey. You can rewatch all of Dune Prophecy on HBO or streaming exclusively on Max.

Be sure to subscribe to the podcast so you don't miss an episode. And if you like what you're hearing, don't forget to leave a rating and review on your podcast player of choice and find us on the Dune Prophecy social media channels. The official Dune Prophecy podcast is produced by HBO in collaboration with Pineapple Street Studios. I'm Greta Johnson, and you can find me on socials at Greta M. Johnson. And I'm Amadele Yuckber. You can find me at Rad Brown Dads.

Our executive producers for Pineapple Street are Gabrielle Lewis, J. Ann Berry, and Barry Finkel. Our lead engineer for the show is Hannes Brown. Pineapple's head of sound and engineering is Raj Makhija. Pineapple's senior audio engineers are Marina Pais and Pedro Alvira. This episode is mixed by Hannes Brown. Our editor is Darby Maloney, and our producers are Ben Goldberg and Melissa.

Akiko Slaughter. Special thanks to Becky Rowe, Alison Cohen, and Aaron Kelly from the Max Podcast team. And an extra special thanks to all of our guests this season. And an extra special thanks to all the other great people who helped create this podcast. Thanks to... Kelsey Llewellyn, and for marketing, Emily Servodidio and Paris Aliazdi. Thanks to the Mac's concept and design team, Lynn Kim, Brett Krause, Tom Haskard, Marta Duarte-Diaz, Ryan Cronin, Kindleton.

Thomas, Eden McDevitt, Karen Guan, and Linda Gao. And to our legal team, Nina Festa and Aliza Block. And of course, thanks to all of you for listening. Thank you for coming along with us on this wild ride. Can we do the voice one last time? Yeah, yeah. I think we probably should. Sisterhood above all! I think my voice dropped out a little bit there.

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