Just imagine being Paul hesitating saying it, knowing if he does he will send billions to their deaths and if he doesn't the Fremen will be destroyed by their beliefs and the Houses
Timothy did a good job showing the frustration and hesitation of calling for the jihad, knowing that the alternative of not doing it would be so much worse!
I think they are saving that last part of the sentence for part 3. As you can see, that last part would be an awesome start line for the movie. At least thats what i see@sawtooth808
I don’t understand her attitude during the whole movie, what was she on? What’s so special she saw or knew was coming, only her, a young girl with pretty face, and nobody else?
@@ojneverdidit22 she was a fremen, but renounced religion. The fremen are very reminescent of the arab states during the western ocupation, with a freedom movement divided by religion. She loved the fremen, agnostic Paul/Usul, but despised the tirany of the Lisan al Gaib and the ambition of the Atreides duke. Despite that, she keeps fighting alongside Paul for he is the only chance to free Arrakis. She can stand that, but when she maries Irulan, it's enought for her.
@@eduardopadilla6876 it’s such a small, unrealistic reason. You fight for years, forced to live in a sand, robbed of treasure of your planet, so you fight for many years. Then you meet a man, good man, good heart, good fighter, smart, he doesn’t beg, doesn’t demand, he earns everything he is given. He has power, visions. He’s not a simple man, he is there to rule, conquer the conquerors, take revenge for his family. He drank some shi* that was supposed to kill him, but he survived and can see future now. Your people want to believe he is the one, so they call him some name and follow him. SO WHAT??????????????? What’s so TERRIBLE about it???? He just won a fkin war for you! He is THE man! And you have to b*tch about some SH*T?? Let me tell you what it is exactly.
Rebecca didn’t get alot of scenes, but whenever she appeared she stole the scenes.. such a captivating actor.. her acting is subtle yet precise.. when Chani yelled at her “you did it”, Jessica was like “bitch you didn’t
It reminds me of the way she snarls out "You will see... the beauty and the horror!" to Paul right after she awakes from becoming Reverend Mother. Chilling.
I remember there being some moments where Gurney doesn’t need to bow aswell, he knew that paul had to manipulate their religious beliefs to weaponize them against the harkonnens and was encouraging paul tofollow through when Paul was actively still trying to avoid that path
Doubt Irulan is that important to him, it's just her standing symbolises that she's the only person on almost equal footing after his ascendancy, even the Emperor bows because he knows he has lost
@@HeretixAevum hes right but also wrong. theres many things that do not make sense in the movie sense its supposed to be an adaptation of the book. Great movies overall for the book, but many many things are wrong/missing.
Because he has gone further as his visions and couldn't turn it back. He can only try to finish what he has started, although in the books, it was his son Leto II who "finished" his Jihad.
@@peetwitechnically the jihad was the beginning of the golden path, Paul just didn’t have the stomach to follow through. The whole point of the golden path was to permanently integrate a strong mistrust in central authority into humanity through tyranny so that they scattered to every corner of the universe, ensuring humanities survival.
This choice of music was perfect, its not hopeful, or inspiring, its not a rallying cry, or victorious. Its sorrowful and mournful. The perfect song for Paul's greatest atrocitie.
When he looks back at Chani and sees her leave in disappointment and then he just puts his head down in sorrow was one of my favourite parts of this movie I don’t know why just gave me chills lol
I like how well Irulan recognizes and even seems to almost empathize with(?) Chani. She sees her and understands. Such a sneaky intelligence. She's gonna be something in the future films
1:46 The shivers I felt when I saw that flicker of a smirk from Jessica as Paul begins the jihad. Rebecca Ferguson's portrayal of Reverend Mother Jessica was chilling and spectacular
@@lanusaxnailed it. These two narrowly escaped extinction, death by water of life, and two duels for Paul’s life. With no love for the spacing guild or those who conspired against them. “Time for my enemies to know my dread”
Paul - "I just took out the most feared army in the universe with my own fighting force and claim the throne. Which means I (theoretically) control the second greatest fighting force in the universe (what's left of them)." Great Houses- "Yea, no we'll fight you anyways"
@@MetalGearChris1They knew, and they were realistically confident they can fight them, what they didnt know was that their general can see the future. They never stood a chance to begin with.
@@sentientmustache8360 matter the fact 20.000 fedyakin is enough to take down hundreds of worlds due to they have Weirding way fighting style that make them move super human speed
Maybe I'm misinterpreting it, but at 0:32 Paul turns but stops and looks back towards Gurney, as if he's thinking internally 'I've seen this. They're about to tell me the great houses refuse to honour my ascendancy'
@@dball_94 that's a continuing theme in the books that I'm glad Villaneuve got across. Paul's son has a more powerful prophetic ability than Paul does, and basically tells a follower "I pray for a universe filled with surprise! But my prayers are rarely answered."
The knowledge Paul has that not one of the Fremen warriors he is sending off to War that day will ever be alive to see The Green Paradise nor there descendants for the next 3,000 something years
@@carlosandleonhe means, storywise from the books, that paul not only keep arrakis as this sand land fief but also leaves it to his son to do some shenanigans and almost waping out all life form from the planet till the scattering (this last thing need some more lore explanation)
In the books, Paul sees Stilgar rallying the Fremen to board the ships and reflects, sadly, that the man Stilgar was has been entirely subsumed by a fanatic loyal to Paul.
1:32 - It's kinda poetic that the first time I heard bells used in a Dune-related soundtrack was in the game Dune 2000, in the track "The Atreides Gain" by Frank Klepacki, an eerie, sinister piece that definitely did not cater to the notion of a "good guy" faction.
Dude I didn’t catch that one but I did notice a couple brief moments earlier in the movie that reminded me of D2K tracks. Love love love Frank Klepacki’s work in both Dune II and D2K
Also the snorkels used by the fremen wen digged in into the sand reminded me to the Dune 2 cover. It pleased me a lot to see that little detail, even if not intended. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dune_II
I heard one good line of review “The moment Paul know the future, he became a slave to it, to reach the victory he saw, he must follow it path without mistake, not even a single blink” “Lead them to paradise” Paul knew, oh he knew the irony of that line, but yet again, he knew the future. And now is a slave to it
This ending is EPIC. And that last shot on Chani is everything. The way she is holding her tears because Fremen do not waste water no matter what. What great acting.
No fremen understood -at that time- that reaching a GREEN PARADISE wil absolutely destroy all their culture, traditions and way of life... that to me is big tragedy in a story full of them
Their way of life is surviving in scarcity and trying not to die from the harkonnens, and they are sick of it, they want revenge, they wouldve went to jihad anyway even if paul ordered to stay.
And the “Green Paradise” comes back to bite The Fremen (and let’s be honest the Navigator Guild) in the 🍑 in a very big way in “Children of Dune”…but I’m getting a little too ahead of myself.
That's a very "white privilege" perspective. Their "way of life" was miserable, living on the edge of survival. It's like wanting Native American Indians to still live in teepees. Here, the "white privilege" perspective is to want the Fremen to live in caves in the desert, preserving every drop of water, and pissing into a body suit. It's a romanticization of an extremely difficult way of life, and ignores the idea that people who live in such miserable conditions would actually want something better for themselves, like to have normal indoor plumbing that delivers running water, to be able to take a shower, etc. For the Fremen, that way of life is born out of fire necessity, while the privileged outsider thinks that it is a "tragedy" that these people can finally live in better conditions. And for the story to ultimately portray this sea change (sorry the pun) as a bad thing is like saying to a Native America Indian, "See? You shoulda never left the reservation."
That's a very privileged perspective. The Fremen "way of life" was a miserable existence on the edge of survival where they literally lived in caves in the desert and pissed into body suits so the could drink their own piss. The privileged perspective is to romanticize this way of life. But would *you* like to live this way? It's like wanting people to live in poverty and hardship because *you* think it looks cool, but it ignores the idea that people who actually live in such dire situations would love to have a much better life just like everyone else on other worlds. This romanticization of their "way of life" is like wanting Native American Indians to still live in teepees or huts with no running water and no electricity, and thinking that leaving this way of life would be a ”tragedy." That ideology usually comes from people who've never lived in poverty, hardship and struggle. It's a very privileged perspective. Not much about the Fremen way of life is actually as cool as you think it is from the outside. Sure, they road sandworms. But riding sandworms was a dangerous thing. It wasn't like hopping into a car. And it's not like you can just come home and take a shower after riding a sandworm and being covered in sand. As for cultures and traditions, those things change over time. It happens here in our world too. Think of what cultures and traditions might have existed in any of our societies a couple hundred years ago vs today. A *lot* changes in any culture or society just with the natural progression of time.
I'm a recovering fentanyl addict and I think this movie was the first experience of joy and bliss I found since my last hit. That's how good this movie was.
“I have to admit that without the Fremen it would not have been a victory.” “Victory? Victory, you say? Daughter Alia, no victory. The shroud of the Mahdi has fallen. Begun, the holy war has.”
There was something so powerful seeing the emperor kneel and then everyone else in his court kneel then the entire room… It was the moment that the house of Atreides ascended the throne… And the start of unspeakable crimes against the human race to be committed by our hero…
that music and the Clone Wars-esque shot of the transports lifting off hits me right in the heart. Millions of troops, on their way to die for beliefs not their own.
I cried of how out of the loop and bad this ending was. Totally unjustified with the scale of the events of the movie and emphasizing the worst cast in the movie...
Throughout the movie every time Stilgar said "Lisan al Gaib" it was mostly played for comedic effect causing a bit a laughter in the audience. Paul could have farted in front of him "Lisan al Gaib!" But at 1:21 not one person laughed in the theater, Stilgar was ready to kill and die for his belief in the Lisan al Gaib.
A lot of people online seem to think it’s dumb that Stilgar was played for comedic effect, but I actually thought it was an interesting idea to use him specifically. Fanaticism can seem silly or funny to onlookers at its most innocent, but as we see in this film, it can quickly become dangerous, and in some ways, tragic.
@@rorschach221 Agreed. Just look at any video of most devout religious people. To us they seem like fanatics and we may even laugh at them for looking silly but to them they are 110% sure that their faith is absolute and nothing will convince them otherwise.
Chalamet does an incredible job here. Paul is so defeated, so resigned, because he's seen this exact scene before. None of this is new to him. Its so tragic. DV does an amazing job conveying every moment, and Zimmer's absolutely breathtaking score just elevates it all.
This movie did a superb job at capturing the hopelessness of the jihad and the plot that had been set in motion. I think Herbert would have been pleased that his original vision was so reverently respected.
It's remarkable how Villeneuve and Co. managed to seamlessly turn the initial catharsis of the finale into horror and tragedy. When I saw this in a theater for the first time, I wasn't able to fully comprehend and feel what was happening. On each repeat viewing, it hits even harder. What a movie. Bring on Dune: Messiah.
The music and vibes of this movie man!!!! I shit on dune for 2 years without watching it or knowing anything about it except for what my friends told me. Last week i watched dune 1 and in the same day dune 2. I've watched dune 1 five times and dune 2 twice. I love rhis franchise now. Omg. Havent read the books and idk if i will. Videos I've seen say the movie differs in some key things and i love the movies.
To me the movies do keep the central themes, it's just that the books have a lot of inner monologues, that you can't really pull off on the big screen. Dune is incredibly allegorical and Dennis has kept to the key themes; to know the future is to be trapped by it, and the danger of combining politics and religion.
@@Ecthelion842 " it's just that the books have a lot of inner monologues, that you can't really pull off on the big screen." - The SCi-Fi. miniseries is a FAR better version, far more faithful to the books. This version is all flash, no substance.
@@Mixam-256 Mini-series Dune had a fraction of the production budget of new Dune yet was still far more faithful to the books and was actually watchable, (nowhere near as boring), versus new Dune with moody Emo-Paul. But this is modern day audiences - it's all about the "looks" and "sounds" of a movie, not the actual story...
I love how Paul instinctively looks back at Gurney. That look of “They’re about to tell me that the great houses refuse to honor my ascendency”, because he has seen how this plays out. He knew. Hence the look on his face, that almost depressed look, because even though he knows how it is all going to play out, he is essentially powerless to stop it.
One of the most powerful scenes and music score I’ve ever seen. Just a perfect combination of cinematography, acting, music and timing. Gives me chills every time.
I’m sure the fremen took the crew hostage and forced them to pilot those ships, unless they go through the same training as the main saudukar troopers then idk how they could be gotten them off the ground
A valid question - there are several important things that the film failed to explore (probably for brevity reasons) - the spacing guild. They had no other choice but to side with Paul and their support was even more crucial than Fremen themselves.
@@buttercup9884 I have a feeling that having them may be a bit overwhelming for the duration of the film. So it's likely that they will play a big role in the next movie, if that does happen.
I truly believe no where near enough people realize the power in the moment he looks back at Chani. Sorrow, regret, pain, guilt for what he has become had to be. Yet the stare of omnipotence, for when you see all, you can no longer be in the present; I think it’s this he feels.
Paul and Chani and Irulan staring at each other without saying a word yet still sets up a great 'love' triangle and conveys a thousand words, love the visual storytelling.
“I want you to know, I will love you as long as I breathe.” Given what he knows he will do, one of the most tragic lines in any movie, surpassed by “lead them to paradise” delivered in a devastatingly defeated way. Chalamet deserves an Oscar.
This is my favorite scene of the movie, but seeing it at home doesn't do it justice. Hans Zimmer's soundtrack being played on a big sound system really adds to the sense of epic that this scene has. What I wouldn't give to watch this with a live concert.
The scene was great but the background soundtrack is just phenomenal!! Hans Zimmer The Maestro! always understands the task, he always knows what to do! 🥺😭🔥🤝💯🎉💪🙏
I was never sure of a movie iv watched gonna be the best movie iv ever watched .now im 200pur cent sure that dune is the best and great movie of all the time
I was disappointed they removed that line from the end of Dune where Jessica comforts Chani. IDK why, to leave things vague I guess. cause ultimately no one knows Paul's fate, even himself.
I view this ending as a departure from the book in a large way. Here Paul seems less reluctant to engage in the Jihad and Chanis departure is a marked difference
That was on purpose because Herbert himself admitted that he would have liked to show Paul more directly as a tyrant, that's why Dennis made the change with Chani to make that aspect more clear and so that the public would not confuse him with a hero, that is, for the cinephile. average although the change seemed quite good to me since Chani would accept something like that even knowing that it is only politics it is difficult and it also gives personality to the character
@@raulmora442I mean, that’s all well and good, but it makes the reconciliation (necessary for Leto II) either implausible or impossible It’s just a foolish change unless you are committed to only doing a bit part of the future material
Hans POURED his Soul into The ENTIRE Score but my Lisan Al Gaib does it Show in this Track Been listening since March 12 when I saw this masterpiece for the first time in 70mm
What really got me was the shot of the Fremen burning the Harkonnen bodies. They used to harvest each corpse for water since their culture revered it as an invaluable resource. By the end of the movie, they couldn't care less and just razed the corpses. It shows the death of the Fremen as a culture to make way for the religious fanatics that will carry-on Paul's genocidal jihad.
Villeneuve is trying to say the Fremen are just tools of Paul, in the same way the Harkonnens are tools of the Baron - who did the same thing at the start of the film, sooo clever
Did you even read the books? Converting Water of Life from Sandworm death-bile gave Paul such prescience powers that he now saw past, present, and future, all of them. And when he was speaking about "narrow way through" he wasn't talking about his conquest, He was talking about future of humanity itself. He saw that unless something changes, humanity would be soon wiped out; because Corrino Empire (simply Old Empire) was still small enough to be ruled by single family and with strong caste society, it was weak against universal threats, and also because of inherent weakness of human nature. He saw golden path which bade him to take control of humanity as a whole through Spice production, Fremen Jihad, taking control of Bene Geserit breeding programs and all other things. It was actually his son who will be able to complete it, because Paul in the end refused to shed his humanity and choose to go into dessert to join his beloved concubine. I will not spoil it more, you can read all of it in wiki.
@@Definitelylnterested The Golden Path wasn't revealed fully to Paul until Dune Messiah, and was only explicitly mentioned in Children of Dune first. The first book only had very vague hints of where the path would lead, so ultimately Paul's motivation was still primarily just to overthrow house Corrino and Harkonnen, rather than the scattering of humanity.
@@gracecalis5421 Maybe, but I have always considered books, any books or movies or games, as a whole; retroactively trying to find connections and things that seemed to be consequences of previous actions or inactions of characters and world around them; Dune has been hitting me right in the feels since I first saw it, and I am still raving about part 2🤭
@@winzyl9546 Because this is a deviation from the books. They want Chani to be different and not fanatical like the rest of the fremen, which is completely different from book Chani. Paul marries Irulan while Chani is his concubine.
2:32 This scene made me cry! The way she breathes and stares the horizon, like the way we do, when we try to be so strong against a disillusion in our lifes. Maybe I have a controversial opinion, but Zendaya did great in this movie, specially by showing Chani emotions.
Walking out of this movie was the closest I have felt to how it felt walking out of Return of the King.
Oh man....wait till you get to Dune Messiah.
Agree. The closest film in the last 20 years to that. Not *quite* as good as Return of the King but very close!
I had exactly the same feeling. Best movie since then. We'll have to see with time but I think it can be as influential and long-lasting.
Did the same for Oppenheimer…
Wow, I was deeply bored with Dune 2. For me it is not in the same league as a masterpiece as LOTR.
“Lead them to paradise” being used in this context was the most chilling line in the movie for me
Just imagine being Paul hesitating saying it, knowing if he does he will send billions to their deaths and if he doesn't the Fremen will be destroyed by their beliefs and the Houses
still gives me goosebumps
Timothy did a good job showing the frustration and hesitation of calling for the jihad, knowing that the alternative of not doing it would be so much worse!
That sentence is kind of incomplete iirc it’s “Lead them to paradise…at the end of a Kris knife”
I think they are saving that last part of the sentence for part 3. As you can see, that last part would be an awesome start line for the movie. At least thats what i see@sawtooth808
"Fanatical legions waving the Atradies banner in my father's name"
United over one banner
Well it worked 61 billion dead 💀
@@maclemaster5966 they should've surrendered. Lmao 🤣
@@Ashaweshk it would not made a difference
@@Ashaweshkexactly
"Lead them to paradise" >>>>>>>>>>> "Send them to hell"
If it was me.... *"Eat em all! Leave no leftovers!" 🐛🍖👍😋
And 60 billions of souls to the oblivion
Lisan al Gaib!
Thats because that was for the fremen not the great houses🤦🏽
He probably would've said "send them to hell" if he didn't have to play Messiah.
I love how Chani does not drop a tear as any good fremen shouldn't
She did, when she tought paul was dead.
Yes, but she had to be coerced with The Voice for that
I don’t understand her attitude during the whole movie, what was she on? What’s so special she saw or knew was coming, only her, a young girl with pretty face, and nobody else?
@@ojneverdidit22 she was a fremen, but renounced religion. The fremen are very reminescent of the arab states during the western ocupation, with a freedom movement divided by religion. She loved the fremen, agnostic Paul/Usul, but despised the tirany of the Lisan al Gaib and the ambition of the Atreides duke. Despite that, she keeps fighting alongside Paul for he is the only chance to free Arrakis. She can stand that, but when she maries Irulan, it's enought for her.
@@eduardopadilla6876 it’s such a small, unrealistic reason. You fight for years, forced to live in a sand, robbed of treasure of your planet, so you fight for many years. Then you meet a man, good man, good heart, good fighter, smart, he doesn’t beg, doesn’t demand, he earns everything he is given. He has power, visions. He’s not a simple man, he is there to rule, conquer the conquerors, take revenge for his family. He drank some shi* that was supposed to kill him, but he survived and can see future now. Your people want to believe he is the one, so they call him some name and follow him. SO WHAT??????????????? What’s so TERRIBLE about it???? He just won a fkin war for you! He is THE man! And you have to b*tch about some SH*T?? Let me tell you what it is exactly.
Rebecca Ferguson's delivery of "The holy war begins" lives rent free in my head 24/7. It's the most menacing whisper I may have ever heard lol
The CGI fetus’ delivery of “What is happening mother” lives rent free in my head.
Rebecca didn’t get alot of scenes, but whenever she appeared she stole the scenes.. such a captivating actor.. her acting is subtle yet precise.. when Chani yelled at her “you did it”, Jessica was like “bitch you didn’t
the "as written" during the humble mahdi scene lives rent free in my head
It reminds me of the way she snarls out "You will see... the beauty and the horror!" to Paul right after she awakes from becoming Reverend Mother. Chilling.
The way she says "Holy" sounds like shes very close to using the voice, as if shes commanding the universe to fight.
I love how everyone bows except for Jessica, Chani and Irulan, the three most important people in Paul's life.
I remember there being some moments where Gurney doesn’t need to bow aswell, he knew that paul had to manipulate their religious beliefs to weaponize them against the harkonnens and was encouraging paul tofollow through when Paul was actively still trying to avoid that path
Lady Jessica held his Destiny, Chani held his Heart and Princess Irulan held his seat on the Throne.
BS
Doubt Irulan is that important to him, it's just her standing symbolises that she's the only person on almost equal footing after his ascendancy, even the Emperor bows because he knows he has lost
hard for a pregnant lady to bow
“How many times have you watched this?” - my concerned family
Me - “yes”
What a phenomenal story, thank you Dennis for giving Frank Herbert some justice
Some? Nah…ALL the justice it deserves!
Except he fucked it up
@@Hascucethere's always that one contrarian who never actually quantifies what they're talking about 🙄
@@Hascuce you’re gonna need bigger bait than that bud
@@HeretixAevum hes right but also wrong. theres many things that do not make sense in the movie sense its supposed to be an adaptation of the book. Great movies overall for the book, but many many things are wrong/missing.
0:59 I love how powerless Paul looks here. He knows what's about to happen... and he's powerless to stop it.
Because he has gone further as his visions and couldn't turn it back. He can only try to finish what he has started, although in the books, it was his son Leto II who "finished" his Jihad.
No, by the end of jihad Paul was still alive, very little left of the book with this ending
@@hadiyazid You're mistaking the Jihad with the Golden Path.
@@peetwitechnically the jihad was the beginning of the golden path, Paul just didn’t have the stomach to follow through.
The whole point of the golden path was to permanently integrate a strong mistrust in central authority into humanity through tyranny so that they scattered to every corner of the universe, ensuring humanities survival.
@@hadiyazidgiving book spoiler to this scene is so unpolite
This choice of music was perfect, its not hopeful, or inspiring, its not a rallying cry, or victorious. Its sorrowful and mournful. The perfect song for Paul's greatest atrocitie.
Its epic yet mournful
The bene gesserit, the emperor the Harkonnens are to blame, not Paul.
But he knows what will happen if he doesn't. Chani and her people will die. It was the only way to save her.
@aleckelly374 yea, but 10s of billions of people die in his jihad, and he knows they will.
Especially when you realize this track from the OST is named “Only I Will Remain”
An amazing film that only gets better with multiple viewings.
I'm about to go for the third 😅
I watched it seven times in IMAX 😅
I saw it saterday for the fourth time in IMAX
@@MrEmreWawasame! This the last weekend of showing it in IMAX near me and my dad’s gonna watch it for the first time
if they can continue with that quality on Part 3 this can be one of the best trilogies of all time
When he looks back at Chani and sees her leave in disappointment and then he just puts his head down in sorrow was one of my favourite parts of this movie I don’t know why just gave me chills lol
Read the book, this is not what happened in the book.
@@seaman651 I don’t really care about that stuff I just thought it was good acting by Timothee chalamet
@@seaman651Bro what’s the point of pointing that out??
@@seaman651it happened in the movie and we are talking about movie.
@seaman651 they made changes for the good. Her sister should be a young girl who killed the baron, but people wouldn't have taken her seriously.
I like how well Irulan recognizes and even seems to almost empathize with(?) Chani. She sees her and understands. Such a sneaky intelligence. She's gonna be something in the future films
The book says something else, it would be a good thing to read the whole lot.
Lol
No, she looked cold towards her. She’s an adversarial mate to Paul and I think she was already smitten with Paul before she even met him
People read what they want into that look, but I saw what you saw. Recognition, understanding and a touch of empathy.
@@peterphan227 well in the books she poisons and kills Chani in the end.
1:46 The shivers I felt when I saw that flicker of a smirk from Jessica as Paul begins the jihad. Rebecca Ferguson's portrayal of Reverend Mother Jessica was chilling and spectacular
Any mother would be proud of her son ...both of them where underdogs now they are God tiers
@@lanusaxnailed it. These two narrowly escaped extinction, death by water of life, and two duels for Paul’s life. With no love for the spacing guild or those who conspired against them. “Time for my enemies to know my dread”
Everybody thinks Jessica had a son out of love for Duke Leto. Gaius Helen Mohiam said it was pride and ambition. Maybe she has a point?
@@tbjtbj7930 it’s both, no doubt
The Bene Jesserit were hardly “good” or “benevolent”. It was when Leto II
came to power, they thought “Ooh boy, we f…ed up big time”
1:06 love how stilgar closes his eyes as if hes thinking "bars"
That shit hit his soul 😂
Shit reminded me of when gandalf closed his eyes when frodo said "I will take the ring"
I laughed way too hard at this comment lmao
Chani just walked out of there like “fuck your shit, Paul. Spider-Man wouldn’t treat me like this, I’m hitching a sand-worm back to New York”
As it was written
😂😂
“And on the 3rd day, Chani ascended on a Sandworm and proclaimed “Later b…es”
Totally out of scale ending... Simply awful ending.
@@Zerradablewhat
This movie hits harder in IMAX
i envy you
Agree. I left the cinema literally speechless. This movie should be seen only on IMAX
I saw it 4 times in IMAX, it was mind blowing every time
Saw it twice in IMAX and once in Dolby, this film was made for the theater
@@SoapNugget Did you like more IMAX or Dolby?
Paul - "I just took out the most feared army in the universe with my own fighting force and claim the throne. Which means I (theoretically) control the second greatest fighting force in the universe (what's left of them)."
Great Houses- "Yea, no we'll fight you anyways"
at that time they didn't know how many and how fierce where the fremen
@@MetalGearChris1 and the guild initially was like "you guys better fucking fight them"
@@MetalGearChris1They knew, and they were realistically confident they can fight them, what they didnt know was that their general can see the future. They never stood a chance to begin with.
@@winzyl9546yes, Paul could lead an army of 200 against millions, but if he sees at least one outcome where he wins, it’s over.
@@sentientmustache8360 matter the fact 20.000 fedyakin is enough to take down hundreds of worlds due to they have Weirding way fighting style that make them move super human speed
Maybe I'm misinterpreting it, but at 0:32 Paul turns but stops and looks back towards Gurney, as if he's thinking internally 'I've seen this. They're about to tell me the great houses refuse to honour my ascendancy'
I thought exactly the same thing. He knows what is about to be said.
@@ctcat1980 Yep, almost like he's hoping more than anything that something will surprise him. But it never comes
Yup, he’s expecting it
@@dball_94 that's a continuing theme in the books that I'm glad Villaneuve got across.
Paul's son has a more powerful prophetic ability than Paul does, and basically tells a follower "I pray for a universe filled with surprise! But my prayers are rarely answered."
My thoughts too. He knew they were going to say no.
The knowledge Paul has that not one of the Fremen warriors he is sending off to War that day will ever be alive to see The Green Paradise nor there descendants for the next 3,000 something years
The Fremen are aware. Afaik they think Terraforming takes 500 years or so
@@carlosandleonhe means, storywise from the books, that paul not only keep arrakis as this sand land fief but also leaves it to his son to do some shenanigans and almost waping out all life form from the planet till the scattering (this last thing need some more lore explanation)
@@mikaelferrer1645 he still kept his promise to green it eventually
That’s not true dude. I don’t want to be that guy but actually ☝️🤓…
@@mikaelferrer1645 except he did make Arrakis a paradise but still needed the spice to fight a war
I left the theatre thinking, "I wish the recent Star Wars trilogy felt like this"
This film definitely put Star Wars on suicide watch
The people they have Star Wars to had no vision.
In the books, Paul sees Stilgar rallying the Fremen to board the ships and reflects, sadly, that the man Stilgar was has been entirely subsumed by a fanatic loyal to Paul.
1:32 - It's kinda poetic that the first time I heard bells used in a Dune-related soundtrack was in the game Dune 2000, in the track "The Atreides Gain" by Frank Klepacki, an eerie, sinister piece that definitely did not cater to the notion of a "good guy" faction.
Franl Klepacki is a phenomenal composer and musician
Dude I didn’t catch that one but I did notice a couple brief moments earlier in the movie that reminded me of D2K tracks. Love love love Frank Klepacki’s work in both Dune II and D2K
I Haven’t seen many people mention that game. That was what dune was to me for 20+ years lol
You hear about the Ukranian mine in the middle of a forest hooked to a doorbell on a tree? A Russian scout walked up and rang it, LOL. Big badda boom.
Also the snorkels used by the fremen wen digged in into the sand reminded me to the Dune 2 cover. It pleased me a lot to see that little detail, even if not intended. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dune_II
I heard one good line of review
“The moment Paul know the future, he became a slave to it, to reach the victory he saw, he must follow it path without mistake, not even a single blink”
“Lead them to paradise” Paul knew, oh he knew the irony of that line, but yet again, he knew the future. And now is a slave to it
Getting into Dune after Attack on Titan is an interesting experience. Some very clear inspiration.
Much like the goat, Eren Yeager
Both Atreides and Eren Jaeger are slaves to freedom.
This was the best movie I've ever saw in theatres and probably my favourite movie of all time at the moment.
This ending is EPIC. And that last shot on Chani is everything. The way she is holding her tears because Fremen do not waste water no matter what. What great acting.
No fremen understood -at that time- that reaching a GREEN PARADISE wil absolutely destroy all their culture, traditions and way of life... that to me is big tragedy in a story full of them
Their way of life is surviving in scarcity and trying not to die from the harkonnens, and they are sick of it, they want revenge, they wouldve went to jihad anyway even if paul ordered to stay.
And the “Green Paradise” comes back to bite The Fremen (and let’s be honest the Navigator Guild) in the 🍑 in a very big way in “Children of Dune”…but I’m getting a little too ahead of myself.
That's a very "white privilege" perspective. Their "way of life" was miserable, living on the edge of survival. It's like wanting Native American Indians to still live in teepees. Here, the "white privilege" perspective is to want the Fremen to live in caves in the desert, preserving every drop of water, and pissing into a body suit. It's a romanticization of an extremely difficult way of life, and ignores the idea that people who live in such miserable conditions would actually want something better for themselves, like to have normal indoor plumbing that delivers running water, to be able to take a shower, etc. For the Fremen, that way of life is born out of fire necessity, while the privileged outsider thinks that it is a "tragedy" that these people can finally live in better conditions. And for the story to ultimately portray this sea change (sorry the pun) as a bad thing is like saying to a Native America Indian, "See? You shoulda never left the reservation."
Yup the water will drown the worms bye bye spice melange
That's a very privileged perspective. The Fremen "way of life" was a miserable existence on the edge of survival where they literally lived in caves in the desert and pissed into body suits so the could drink their own piss. The privileged perspective is to romanticize this way of life. But would *you* like to live this way? It's like wanting people to live in poverty and hardship because *you* think it looks cool, but it ignores the idea that people who actually live in such dire situations would love to have a much better life just like everyone else on other worlds. This romanticization of their "way of life" is like wanting Native American Indians to still live in teepees or huts with no running water and no electricity, and thinking that leaving this way of life would be a ”tragedy." That ideology usually comes from people who've never lived in poverty, hardship and struggle. It's a very privileged perspective.
Not much about the Fremen way of life is actually as cool as you think it is from the outside. Sure, they road sandworms. But riding sandworms was a dangerous thing. It wasn't like hopping into a car. And it's not like you can just come home and take a shower after riding a sandworm and being covered in sand.
As for cultures and traditions, those things change over time. It happens here in our world too. Think of what cultures and traditions might have existed in any of our societies a couple hundred years ago vs today. A *lot* changes in any culture or society just with the natural progression of time.
0:19 - that music cue cuts through to the soul every time. Tears. It’s just - perfect.
I'm a recovering fentanyl addict and I think this movie was the first experience of joy and bliss I found since my last hit. That's how good this movie was.
“I have to admit that without the Fremen it would not have been a victory.”
“Victory? Victory, you say? Daughter Alia, no victory. The shroud of the Mahdi has fallen. Begun, the holy war has.”
Heh😂
'Begun the clone wars have...'
Amazing comment bro
Cut to a scene of Paul and Princess Irulan getting married on Caladan
Star Wars barrowed From Dune and now Dune is borrowing from Star Wars.
The soundtrack is just beautiful, as usual Hans Zimmer never disappoints ❤
There was something so powerful seeing the emperor kneel and then everyone else in his court kneel then the entire room… It was the moment that the house of Atreides ascended the throne… And the start of unspeakable crimes against the human race to be committed by our hero…
Not crimes but the actions needed to save the human race.
Dude… Paul is navigating the least damaging path for humanity, he is definitely a hero.
@@quierover4locas You have misunderstood the story. By Frank Herbert’s own account…
@@simsandsurgery1 nah ah
@@quierover4locas lmao okay genocidal maniac sympathizer
that music and the Clone Wars-esque shot of the transports lifting off hits me right in the heart. Millions of troops, on their way to die for beliefs not their own.
Truly one of the most moving songs in a modern movie I’ve heard
MOOOOOOVINNNGGG
Hans Zimmer is a genius, what an exciting soundtrack and one of the best I've ever heard 😢
"Lead Them to Paradise" (I can Kill with but a Word)
63 Billion Souls
Just an unbelievable, film, goosebumps watching this clip, nobody and I mean nobody is ready for Messiah
FINALLY someone uploaded it
I feel like CZcams started not blocking clips of dune 2 this past week
I remember tearing up in the cinema when she called the sand-worm - dune 2 was the first movie that made me this emotional in a looooong time.
"Only I will remain."
weakling
I cried of how out of the loop and bad this ending was. Totally unjustified with the scale of the events of the movie and emphasizing the worst cast in the movie...
@@rodrigobarros6607😂😂 funny
I was in fucking tears in the theaters and it’s mainly cause of the music with this scene it really gets you wanting more Dune
In 2 min i will see it again, for the 5th time. Last screening in my local cinema. The best movie since The Return of the King.
Hans Zimmers music always never fails to impress. Chilling. Beautiful. This series of films are astounding.
Throughout the movie every time Stilgar said "Lisan al Gaib" it was mostly played for comedic effect causing a bit a laughter in the audience. Paul could have farted in front of him "Lisan al Gaib!" But at 1:21 not one person laughed in the theater, Stilgar was ready to kill and die for his belief in the Lisan al Gaib.
A lot of people online seem to think it’s dumb that Stilgar was played for comedic effect, but I actually thought it was an interesting idea to use him specifically. Fanaticism can seem silly or funny to onlookers at its most innocent, but as we see in this film, it can quickly become dangerous, and in some ways, tragic.
@@rorschach221 Agreed. Just look at any video of most devout religious people. To us they seem like fanatics and we may even laugh at them for looking silly but to them they are 110% sure that their faith is absolute and nothing will convince them otherwise.
Chalamet does an incredible job here. Paul is so defeated, so resigned, because he's seen this exact scene before. None of this is new to him. Its so tragic. DV does an amazing job conveying every moment, and Zimmer's absolutely breathtaking score just elevates it all.
This movie did a superb job at capturing the hopelessness of the jihad and the plot that had been set in motion. I think Herbert would have been pleased that his original vision was so reverently respected.
I love this movie, I love this scene and the soundtrack❤
chani's heart belonged to the fremen
but now, it only belongs to herself
wow didn't realize that
Maybe Chani preferes to be oppressed by the Harkonnens and get her Sitches destroyed one by one?
Spoilers from the books
She stays with paul
@@drugsarebad97we know. Paul even says she’ll come around
Actually the movie slips away from the book when it comes to Chani and Irulan.
What. A. Film.
I love the Chani never knelt.
This soundtrack is just pure epicness, this ending scene is just worth the wait for the next movie
So immensly powerful! One of the best movies in many years
My god, the music is chefs kiss
It's remarkable how Villeneuve and Co. managed to seamlessly turn the initial catharsis of the finale into horror and tragedy. When I saw this in a theater for the first time, I wasn't able to fully comprehend and feel what was happening. On each repeat viewing, it hits even harder. What a movie. Bring on Dune: Messiah.
The music and vibes of this movie man!!!! I shit on dune for 2 years without watching it or knowing anything about it except for what my friends told me.
Last week i watched dune 1 and in the same day dune 2. I've watched dune 1 five times and dune 2 twice. I love rhis franchise now. Omg.
Havent read the books and idk if i will. Videos I've seen say the movie differs in some key things and i love the movies.
To me the movies do keep the central themes, it's just that the books have a lot of inner monologues, that you can't really pull off on the big screen.
Dune is incredibly allegorical and Dennis has kept to the key themes; to know the future is to be trapped by it, and the danger of combining politics and religion.
@@Ecthelion842 " it's just that the books have a lot of inner monologues, that you can't really pull off on the big screen." - The SCi-Fi. miniseries is a FAR better version, far more faithful to the books.
This version is all flash, no substance.
@@looneyburgmusicfor the life of me, I have never understood how people can have such taste, but to each their own I guess.
@@Mixam-256 Mini-series Dune had a fraction of the production budget of new Dune yet was still far more faithful to the books and was actually watchable, (nowhere near as boring), versus new Dune with moody Emo-Paul.
But this is modern day audiences - it's all about the "looks" and "sounds" of a movie, not the actual story...
Everything in this sequence was just beautiful! Music, the dialogue, acting…chefs kiss 🤌🏼
I love how Paul instinctively looks back at Gurney. That look of “They’re about to tell me that the great houses refuse to honor my ascendency”, because he has seen how this plays out. He knew. Hence the look on his face, that almost depressed look, because even though he knows how it is all going to play out, he is essentially powerless to stop it.
Best Cinematic experience ever. Period
Stilgar is ready!!😂😂
I’m excited!!!!!
One of the most powerful scenes and music score I’ve ever seen. Just a perfect combination of cinematography, acting, music and timing. Gives me chills every time.
He always knew what was coming, and he knew no one could stop him, not even himself.
Lisan Al-Gaib
LISAN AL-GAIB
LISAN AL- GAIB!!
LISAN AL-GAIB
LISAN AL-GAIB
LISAN AL_GAIB!!!!
I wonder if those large ships came with operating manuals?
Most airplanes do IRL so... Yeah I think?
I’m sure the fremen took the crew hostage and forced them to pilot those ships, unless they go through the same training as the main saudukar troopers then idk how they could be gotten them off the ground
A valid question - there are several important things that the film failed to explore (probably for brevity reasons) - the spacing guild. They had no other choice but to side with Paul and their support was even more crucial than Fremen themselves.
@@buttercup9884 I have a feeling that having them may be a bit overwhelming for the duration of the film. So it's likely that they will play a big role in the next movie, if that does happen.
@@LNgKhoi I hope so.
Played the hell out of dune 2000 back in early 2k's, having these films out makes me so happy.
I truly believe no where near enough people realize the power in the moment he looks back at Chani. Sorrow, regret, pain, guilt for what he has become had to be. Yet the stare of omnipotence, for when you see all, you can no longer be in the present; I think it’s this he feels.
That petulant foot stomp was great. It's easy to forgot that Paul isn't an adult yet, he's still a teenager.
He’s definitely an adult, he’s killed, he knows what he’s doing, he’s starting a holy war.
Nah, it was for all the witnesses to hear. He doesn’t need to yell everything
Same, I love that. I love how the stomp communicates like "You had better kiss my ring if you want to keep your head" lol
@@silkscrimAgreed. He didn’t need to waste any more words on the emperor.
"Kiss the ring bish"
Music was so 🔥
Paul and Chani and Irulan staring at each other without saying a word yet still sets up a great 'love' triangle and conveys a thousand words, love the visual storytelling.
this is a masterpiece... music, acting, lights even hairstyle ...all of it!!! good luck dune 3... ull need it
Hear me out. If Stilgar had turned around on the ramp and yelled “Cmon you apes! You want to live forever?!?” It would’ve worked lol
“I want you to know, I will love you as long as I breathe.” Given what he knows he will do, one of the most tragic lines in any movie, surpassed by “lead them to paradise” delivered in a devastatingly defeated way. Chalamet deserves an Oscar.
This is my favorite scene of the movie, but seeing it at home doesn't do it justice. Hans Zimmer's soundtrack being played on a big sound system really adds to the sense of epic that this scene has. What I wouldn't give to watch this with a live concert.
"A green paradise." (lights up the Bong Jabbar) - Paul Maud'Doob
1:50 las naves ascendiendo hacia su misión bélica y fanática mientras ella camina frustrada y dolida. Impresionante!
Beautiful tragic ending
A true masterpiece! All together thrill me. The story, image, music, actors. Brilliant.
The scene was great but the background soundtrack is just phenomenal!! Hans Zimmer The Maestro! always understands the task, he always knows what to do! 🥺😭🔥🤝💯🎉💪🙏
2:19 I feel so bad for her, true love always takes a back seat and it’s not fair.
It’s such a chilling and sad ending to the story. I love this movie so much. How does a victory feel so defeating?
God, the power of the music sends chills down my spine.
I was never sure of a movie iv watched gonna be the best movie iv ever watched .now im 200pur cent sure that dune is the best and great movie of all the time
I can't wait to see the billions of lives Paul saves in Dune Mesiah!
Lamo
Cannot wait for part 3
I love how it’s so beautiful yet tragic. The music carries this completely.
This music and the time before the storm lives rent free in my head😭😭
I was disappointed they removed that line from the end of Dune where Jessica comforts Chani. IDK why, to leave things vague I guess. cause ultimately no one knows Paul's fate, even himself.
I view this ending as a departure from the book in a large way. Here Paul seems less reluctant to engage in the Jihad and Chanis departure is a marked difference
That was on purpose because Herbert himself admitted that he would have liked to show Paul more directly as a tyrant, that's why Dennis made the change with Chani to make that aspect more clear and so that the public would not confuse him with a hero, that is, for the cinephile. average although the change seemed quite good to me since Chani would accept something like that even knowing that it is only politics it is difficult and it also gives personality to the character
@@raulmora442I mean, that’s all well and good, but it makes the reconciliation (necessary for Leto II) either implausible or impossible
It’s just a foolish change unless you are committed to only doing a bit part of the future material
@@roykeane1922Well Paul himself said she would return
@@YEDxYED If I remember correctly he said she will understand eventually. Not sure if she returns.
1:09 almost looks like a cross from this perspective
Just a great masterpiece of 2 dune movies with this song kiss the ring is just make my soul fly thanks Denni villeneuve to take to paradise
he could just ship half of the fremen to his home planet caladan. which is lush green and full of water.
I loved stilgar in this movie
He was so fantastic I want him to win an Oscar
Reminds me so much of King in the North - Jon Snow
Robb was more inspiring. He got the loyalty of a whole extra kingdom. Jon got dregs.
Hans POURED his Soul into The ENTIRE Score but my Lisan Al Gaib does it Show in this Track
Been listening since March 12 when I saw this masterpiece for the first time in 70mm
This is nothing short of a MASTERPIECE!!!
What really got me was the shot of the Fremen burning the Harkonnen bodies. They used to harvest each corpse for water since their culture revered it as an invaluable resource. By the end of the movie, they couldn't care less and just razed the corpses. It shows the death of the Fremen as a culture to make way for the religious fanatics that will carry-on Paul's genocidal jihad.
Villeneuve is trying to say the Fremen are just tools of Paul, in the same way the Harkonnens are tools of the Baron - who did the same thing at the start of the film, sooo clever
Did you even read the books? Converting Water of Life from Sandworm death-bile gave Paul such prescience powers that he now saw past, present, and future, all of them. And when he was speaking about "narrow way through" he wasn't talking about his conquest, He was talking about future of humanity itself. He saw that unless something changes, humanity would be soon wiped out; because Corrino Empire (simply Old Empire) was still small enough to be ruled by single family and with strong caste society, it was weak against universal threats, and also because of inherent weakness of human nature. He saw golden path which bade him to take control of humanity as a whole through Spice production, Fremen Jihad, taking control of Bene Geserit breeding programs and all other things. It was actually his son who will be able to complete it, because Paul in the end refused to shed his humanity and choose to go into dessert to join his beloved concubine. I will not spoil it more, you can read all of it in wiki.
@@Definitelylnterested The Golden Path wasn't revealed fully to Paul until Dune Messiah, and was only explicitly mentioned in Children of Dune first. The first book only had very vague hints of where the path would lead, so ultimately Paul's motivation was still primarily just to overthrow house Corrino and Harkonnen, rather than the scattering of humanity.
@@gracecalis5421 Maybe, but I have always considered books, any books or movies or games, as a whole; retroactively trying to find connections and things that seemed to be consequences of previous actions or inactions of characters and world around them; Dune has been hitting me right in the feels since I first saw it, and I am still raving about part 2🤭
It is something that must be fought so that in the distant future the human race can survive.
Rebecca Ferguson was fucking brilliant in this movie.
I walked out of the theatre, and didnt talk for the next 4 hours. All i said was "That movie was SOOOOOOO GOOD"
Irulan and Chani standing while others bow down...And Irulan staring at Chani...Just outstanding piece of work!!!!!!
Lol she was gonna ride the worm without her goggles or facemask.....
She was that mad bruh lmao
Whats her problem though, its not a love marriage, she would still be his concubine like jessica did.
@@winzyl9546 still mad
@@winzyl9546 Because this is a deviation from the books. They want Chani to be different and not fanatical like the rest of the fremen, which is completely different from book Chani. Paul marries Irulan while Chani is his concubine.
@@chaptermastermoloc4171they have to make her a Boss Babe because of woman power. She won't knell to no man.
Love how Chani didn’t waste any more of her tears on Paul after saving his life with one earlier.
2:32 This scene made me cry! The way she breathes and stares the horizon, like the way we do, when we try to be so strong against a disillusion in our lifes. Maybe I have a controversial opinion, but Zendaya did great in this movie, specially by showing Chani emotions.
Love Paul and Chanis song, this and Arrival are my favourite peices from the soundtrack