1:42 The fact that this one thought to cancel the WHOLE fight just because ONE Atreides soldier wasn't drugged - The Harkonnens really feared House Atreides. And for good reason.
@@WhyTho525 The Baron was taking a calculated risk. He's pretty confident Feyd will win, but knows how dangerous the Atreides fighter is. if the guy kills Feyd, then he's not a worthy successor anyway. If Feyd kills him, he's proven his worth not only to the Baron but to all of Giedi Prime.
In the books, these fights are meant to be for show, more symbolic rather than a genuine display of actual prowess under a life-or-death situation. Feyd is another 'prospect' of the sisterhood, so him being put at such a risk is also highly contentious. However, Feyd being a psycho chad, just killed the guy anyway, and later threatened his uncle.
I actually don’t like them. if that’s how actually fireworks would look in an infrared (or reverse infrared?) camera, then okay… but they just look too much like something that’s obviously a CG effect 🤷🏻♂️
@@Sam_T2000 that was meant to be a rhetorical question describing your ability to comprehend the making of movies, *which is low* *so of course the fireworks were CGI*
In the book (and the ‘84 Lynch adaptation), he isn’t. During his final fight with Paul, he attempt to use a poison spur hidden between the plates of his armour - a cheap, dishonourable move if there ever was one.
In the Behind-The-Scenes, they talk about how hard it was to get this scene right because they filmed it with a freaking infrared camera, which gives the whole thing that un-Earthly feel. That along with the black sun and the ink blot fireworks, it really puts you in another world. I'm glad Denis Villeneuve hates dialogue, because these images are incredible.
Having a gladiator arena in scifi is nothing new, other films have done it (Star Wars: Attack of the Clones for example), but Dune really made it stand out with the unique cinematography and creating an immersive ambience for the Harkonnen arena. This is pure scifi cinema.
@@SHIVAMKUMAR-cw7bt HE WAS hundred eyes? He doesn’t look the same at all? He looks so different and I LOVED Marco Polo so much because I wanted a third season so bad! Edit: I just looked it up, bro, it’s two different actors. Tom Wu plays Hundred Eyes. Roger Yuan is the main fight choreographer of the movie!
I love the attention to detail where you see Lieutenant Lanville carved the Atreides emblem on his forearm. He wanted to show them he was still fighting for House Atreides as one of its lasts. And still gave Feyd a hard time at his weak. Shows why the Emperor saw the Atreides as a threat.
And the guy gave him a good fight. In the book, he nearly kills him. But Feyd needed to be built up as a more dangerous opponent for Paul in the film. In both versions, the fight is kind of anti-climactic - Paul has already won, his myth is instilled, and even if Feyd kills him, the Fremen will just kill Feyd anyway and the jihad will proceed. But in the film, the risk that Paul could actually die is heightened, so it feels a little more like a climax. Paul''s victory also prevented the slaughter of all the Corrinos left in the room. And as disillusioned by Paul as Chani is by this point, she still feels something for him, so she is legitimately worried that he could die. Although in the book, Feyd is still a dangerous opponent. He nearly kills Paul through deception. But that's not cinematic. So it was a good change.
Ugh the character design of this movie is so consistent. The drugged Atreides are of peak physical form. The un-drugged Atreides, though older and smaller, has the eyes and demeanor of a warrior with wisdom and experience. All point to the Atreides’ devotion to discipline and deliberate practice. Awesome.
The un-drugged Atreides is Lt. Lanville, who also appeared throughout in the first movie (Duncan's introduction, disembarking on Arrakis, telling Leto and Gurney they have to close the shutters due to the heat, sitting between Leto and Gurney at the strategy meeting, with the group inspecting the spice harvesters, Stilgar's introduction, inspecting the sand compactor after Gurney, etc). He is played by Roger Yuan, who is also the fight/stunt coordinator for both Villeneuve Dune movies.
It’s crazy how different each depiction of the same character is, Sting is so over the top camp (which I love) while Austin Butler is a complete psycho but both are iconic.
Yes the effects of going from color to black and white, were so cool. The whole film kept me on the edge of my seat. I'm so glad i spent the extra money on imax.
I love how Feyd lost it at the minion who dared to interfere. They were still treating it like toying with a helpless captive but he wanted a proper fight against an opposing warrior.
All the little details are astounding. Like how he orders the harkonnen guards to stay back when Roger Yuan has his blade in front of his face, to clearly show to the audience that Feyd-Rautha never felt threatened.
Its suprising how no other Dune adaptation has done this fight. 1984 doesnt even have an extended version of this. The mini series kind of has it, but its more of a sparring session in a dojo than a big arena. They truly were able to master this despite not having any visual examples to go off of.
The design of the arena is very accurate to the book. The triangle shape of it especially is accurate as well as the mentioning a sun. Which I remember reading that and always thinking it contrasted with the idea of Giedi Prime being this industrial hellscape. The idea of the sun shining infrared light is absolutely genius in my opinion.
Can you elaborate on the planet? Damn I wish he would have recruited the guy who was drugged probably impossible since they are soo at odds with each other but damn the scene was intense…. Fun fact I have still yet to watch the sequel make sure to check out a youtuber films comics explained dude breaks down dune to us common folk who myself haven’t been able to read the books in an incredible amount of detail
First the chilling voice of the announcer and then the disturbing music. This is one of the strangest and best film scenes I have ever seen, it really felt alien. The infrared shot was a great decision, human eyes look reptilian in infrared, which perfectly represents the depravity of the Harkonnens. The ink fireworks and the Harkonnens' architectural style, which is reminiscent of H. R. Giger, also give me the feeling of an alien world. Denis Villeneuve did a damn good job with Dune: Part Two.
This is how you introduce a villain. You show their personality through their actions and the scene should showcase what they bring to the table for the upcoming events of the film
Villeneuve is a master of showing not telling - sometimes, when on his A game, George Lucas could kind'a sort of do it (the reveal of Darth Maul in the major fight scene in Phantom Menace is an example) - but Villeneuve seems to bring that leve of game to most every scene.
In the movie, the ploy with the slave-gladiator was the Baron's idea, to test his nephew. Well and good, I suppose. There was too much material to adapt, and this was one way to do it. In the book, the Harkonnens actually captured the Atreides Mentat, Thufir Hawat, and the Baron kept him in his service. It was Hawat who prepared this plot together with Feyd-Rautha, keeping it from the Baron. By having Feyd-Rautha fight an undrugged slave-gladiator, they discredited the Baron's Slavemaster. To the Baron it seemed that the Slavemaster tried to have Feyd-Rautha killed, so he had the Slavemaster executed, and Feyd-Rautha's man was advanced to his position. Later, Feyd-Rautha tried to assassinate the Baron by having his man send him a slave boy with a poisoned needle. And it would have succeeded, too, if Thufir hadn't warned the Baron. He was playing the Harkonnens against each other, with the ultimate goal of destabilizing them and turning the Emperor's wrath against them, in order to avenge the fall of his Duke.
Dune Part 2 is going to end in my top 10 best films of the year . Because in my opinion this is the best year of the movies , what a great day to live people 🎥🎥🎥🎥🎥 .
Hey matiasrocha, is it better or just as good than alot of great movie sequels. Like empire strikes back, aliens, T2, or even blade runner 2049?🤔people say the dune movies of today is the lawrence of arabia/lotr of our generation.
Only top 10 😂. I haven’t even seen that many movies this year. This is the best movie I have ever seen and is a flawless adaptation that somehow pleases both hardcore fans of the books and normies who are new to the dune universe.
I watched this on a plane and let me tell you, I might've watched this on a small screen but when they introduced the Harkonnen in this scene I was legit sacred. Cinematography 💯 Fight Scenes 💯 SFX 💯
3:55 that little smirk and slight wink was a good touch to this character, not gonna lie but the actor playing Feyd surprised the heck out of me, he was sooo good
From what I heard Harko is a scandinavian word meaning 'bull'. In the books Giedi Prime is an Earth like planet, but destroyed by insane industrialization, Vladimir and his house live in Barony "45 kms and 950 levels of ferrocrete and plasteel, a monstruosity with no openings at groud level. Gardens and luxury palaces cover the roof, while at the lower levels only the most abject servitude allows you to climb up the levels to a better life."
This movie was the loudest movie I have ever seen. My ears were ringing for 2 days. Excellent experience. On the IMAX screen, everything was enormous - the visuals, the story, the SOUND. Kaboooom!
I mean it's a three on one fight. You take the greatest sword fighters, martial artists, boxers whatever and you put them up against 3 opponents at once with decent skill and fitness and none of them could win
That last guy wasn't just any Atreides soldier but also a "Swordmaster" so I'm assuming that was a guy who helped Duncan Idaho and Gurney Halleck to instruct the rest of the Atreides soldiers how to fight.
Okay, book readers or more keen movie watchers, explain something for me about the ending of this fight Lady Margot Fenring says at the end (not in the clip) about Feyd-Rautha's 'He is impressive indeed'. Was she having a laugh? The dude faces off against three exhausted prisoners, while wearing the shield and always being watched by the guards to protect him in case if things went south. Even if you take that one last fighter who wasn't drugged and with whom Feyd-Rautha took off his shield, it's still not impressive enough to warrant the comment. The guy was half-dead when brought to the sands. What's impressive about beating an opponent in unequal fight?
He had zero fear of death even when he had the knife right against his face, and refused to let his victory be spoiled by Harkonnen guards. Atreides soldiers are also famously among the best in the universe, enough to help warrant the Emperor’s fear of the house in the first place.
That last soldier is no normal Atreides but lieutenant Lanville, Gurney's second-in-command show in the first film, and is likely an extremely skilled fighter (house Atreides' fighter at that point are able to rival the Emperor's Sardaukar army). For the fight itself Feyd removed his shield beforehand then threatened those picadors to back off so he defeating Lanville was indeed a feat for a man so young, of course it is not a fair fight strictly, but Lanville will probably eaten alive any other Harkonne fighters if it was not Feyd who fight him.
@nguyenphamthanhgiang8951 so (technically) but not technically the fight was fair in a sense because in an even confrontation fyed would lose given the Lieutenants rank and experience ? ....
This version of Feyd is definitely different but yet familiar. He has all the cruelty and savagery of the original concept, but in the field of battle he has his own personal honor that is his own gives him a certain distinction.
In the theater, seeing this for the first time, my jaw was on the proverbial ground. I returned to another two IMAX screenings to soak it all in. This movie still lives in my head rent-free.
This is a total masterpiece, the colors are some of the best things here, since they give the sensation of how bad this is, the music gives a lot to the ambientation also and if we talk about the choreography, is so well done
@@ahabkapitany i feel like it would've made more sense had they included the Thufir storyline, right now there's just one concurrent plan going on and it's the Baron trying to make Feyd into a heir, Thufir's presence would truly validate it being plans within plans
@@Nuuk_Nuke_Nook I think it wasn't confusing for those who didn't read the book,, but I really appreciated this just like the many other tiny nods they made to long time fans.
The announcer's voice in IMAX was incredible
Fr
IT absolutely was
It was even better in Dolby Cinemas
Total audio experience - I had chills the whole time
love being an A-Lister and seeing all these movies 4 like $23/month. nothin beats it.
1:42 The fact that this one thought to cancel the WHOLE fight just because ONE Atreides soldier wasn't drugged - The Harkonnens really feared House Atreides. And for good reason.
Meanwhile the Baron was like "Nah, he'll win."
@@WhyTho525 The Baron was taking a calculated risk. He's pretty confident Feyd will win, but knows how dangerous the Atreides fighter is. if the guy kills Feyd, then he's not a worthy successor anyway. If Feyd kills him, he's proven his worth not only to the Baron but to all of Giedi Prime.
The Harkonnens needed the Sardaukar to destroy House Atreides. I loved how the Sardaukar captain scoffed at Piter in Dune Part I
i think its more of the risk to Feyd no matter who the slave is if the slave is not drugged
In the books, these fights are meant to be for show, more symbolic rather than a genuine display of actual prowess under a life-or-death situation. Feyd is another 'prospect' of the sisterhood, so him being put at such a risk is also highly contentious.
However, Feyd being a psycho chad, just killed the guy anyway, and later threatened his uncle.
The announcer was on SMOKE the whole time
He’s on spice 🔥
"Under our glorious black sun"
What does that mean?
@@Soccercrazyigboman bro was speaking heat my boy
20 packs a day😂
Whoever came up with the idea of ink blot fireworks deserves a raise
I actually don’t like them.
if that’s how actually fireworks would look in an infrared (or reverse infrared?) camera, then okay… but they just look too much like something that’s obviously a CG effect 🤷🏻♂️
@@Sam_T2000 Ya don't say?
it was Denis' vision himself
@@kaizserpokoina9538 - no, I _do_ say.
@@Sam_T2000 that was meant to be a rhetorical question describing your ability to comprehend the making of movies, *which is low*
*so of course the fireworks were CGI*
That guttural "FEYD RAUTHAAAAAGGHHH" is just awesome
Dikan hu burus siyaa, FEYD-RAUTHAAAAAAAAAA
Love that besides being a psycho, Feyd respects a good opponent
*psycho
*opponent
He is a warrior after all
In the book (and the ‘84 Lynch adaptation), he isn’t.
During his final fight with Paul, he attempt to use a poison spur hidden between the plates of his armour - a cheap, dishonourable move if there ever was one.
Sociopath with high intelligence, highly motivated by honor.
@@robynsun_lovei think it was a good change to make him more honorable. it added nuance to the character
In the Behind-The-Scenes, they talk about how hard it was to get this scene right because they filmed it with a freaking infrared camera, which gives the whole thing that un-Earthly feel. That along with the black sun and the ink blot fireworks, it really puts you in another world. I'm glad Denis Villeneuve hates dialogue, because these images are incredible.
You know he hates dialogue from phrases such as: "Old fashioned bombardment! Genius!"
Bro(baron), seriously?
The dialogue is pretty good though
The interesting thing about the ink blot fireworks is that the Baron is described as an octopus in the novel
Just watched for the first time, love how they visualized this planet and people. Best part of the flick
Show don’t tell
Having a gladiator arena in scifi is nothing new, other films have done it (Star Wars: Attack of the Clones for example), but Dune really made it stand out with the unique cinematography and creating an immersive ambience for the Harkonnen arena. This is pure scifi cinema.
And this scene is ripped straight out of the book which predates all those movies and potentially inspired them.
Dune predates Star-Wars know your lore please.
Unlike attack of the clones, this will still look good in 20 years
"Know your lore"? Star Wars took a lot of inspiration, but not all of it is Dune
@@hellyeah2k183 yep Dennis took it upon himself in interpretation of Harkonnen’s homeworld lack of Color saturation.
The non-drugged fighter is actually the fight coreogrpaher of the movie!😃
He's also a very famous Chinese actor
@@bhargavipba what's his name?
@@Gadget-Walkmen he was in marco polo, 100 eyes
@@SHIVAMKUMAR-cw7bt HE WAS hundred eyes? He doesn’t look the same at all? He looks so different and I LOVED Marco Polo so much because I wanted a third season so bad!
Edit: I just looked it up, bro, it’s two different actors. Tom Wu plays Hundred Eyes. Roger Yuan is the main fight choreographer of the movie!
@@Gadget-Walkmen Roger Yuan
2:22 when you remember something cringe you did in high school
lmfaooooooo.
Indeed! ;D
Thought I was the only one to have this 😂
@raiden1766 You are wrong. I am thinking of them too.
Literally me
I love the attention to detail where you see Lieutenant Lanville carved the Atreides emblem on his forearm. He wanted to show them he was still fighting for House Atreides as one of its lasts. And still gave Feyd a hard time at his weak. Shows why the Emperor saw the Atreides as a threat.
I think the Mark is because they are slaves ? Like they have BILLIONS of slave, so they Mark them as Atreides
true
I've been waiting for someone else to notice that from further away it looked spot on but up close you can see that it's just scratched on
that detail is straight from the book, and much appreciated
And the guy gave him a good fight. In the book, he nearly kills him. But Feyd needed to be built up as a more dangerous opponent for Paul in the film. In both versions, the fight is kind of anti-climactic - Paul has already won, his myth is instilled, and even if Feyd kills him, the Fremen will just kill Feyd anyway and the jihad will proceed.
But in the film, the risk that Paul could actually die is heightened, so it feels a little more like a climax. Paul''s victory also prevented the slaughter of all the Corrinos left in the room. And as disillusioned by Paul as Chani is by this point, she still feels something for him, so she is legitimately worried that he could die.
Although in the book, Feyd is still a dangerous opponent. He nearly kills Paul through deception. But that's not cinematic. So it was a good change.
these Harkonnen guards at 3:35 - 3:47 live rent free in my brain
Picadors
They make clicker sounds from the Last of Us
Feyd coming out the shadows lives rent free in my brain. 0:03
Also remember the Praetorian Guards of Snoke in Star Wars.
They're like demons of the night straight from a folk tale.
The fact this scene was shot with infrared cameras is insane
not really
Why is it insane?
@@roothikIf someone replies to this, i'll get to know about that too. This scene looks marvellous
Not really insane but okay
@@roothik i read somewhere they cost like 100k
Ugh the character design of this movie is so consistent. The drugged Atreides are of peak physical form. The un-drugged Atreides, though older and smaller, has the eyes and demeanor of a warrior with wisdom and experience. All point to the Atreides’ devotion to discipline and deliberate practice. Awesome.
The un-drugged Atreides is Lt. Lanville, who also appeared throughout in the first movie (Duncan's introduction, disembarking on Arrakis, telling Leto and Gurney they have to close the shutters due to the heat, sitting between Leto and Gurney at the strategy meeting, with the group inspecting the spice harvesters, Stilgar's introduction, inspecting the sand compactor after Gurney, etc).
He is played by Roger Yuan, who is also the fight/stunt coordinator for both Villeneuve Dune movies.
@@Colp2 Despite still being a lieutenant, he was definitely a member of the senior staff. Maybe he was Leto or Gurney's subaltern or adjutant.
He's also the main fight choreography director for both films.
"Fear old men in any profession where people often die young."
which one are you smoking?
Love that little wink Feyd does at 3:55. Didn't notice it on my first viewing.
it took me 3 rewatches of the movie to catch that too LMAOO
I don't think that was "Feyd," that was probably Austin having fun showing the fight choreographer what he'd taught him, and they kept it in.
Hearing the chants and the announcer over the theater speakers was insane!!!!
0:47 Never had I heard such a horrifying theme until then; drops upon you with evil glee.
Butler's head movements are just on another level, it adds this other layer to his performance.
Especially 2:22
@@shauna.a8701 exactly!
moves like a predator animal, always focused on it's prey, very deliberate movements
@@shauna.a8701and 3:55
@@pjetrs so true.
Butler stole the show with his performance as Feyd-Rautha
Almost all the main actors stole the show in this movie. That's just how good they were, as well as the movie in general.
i thought he was bill skaargard
1,000% agree
DAVE BUTISTA meh performance
@@zoro.73 It wasn't Bautista's performance that was flawed, the script of his character was just overall bad
Of all the versions of Feyd-‘84, SyFy series-this version to me showed the best, and most terrifying version
The 84 one was sting so.
His name is Feyd
@@cyvader101 thank you Feyd-Rautha-will correct
It’s crazy how different each depiction of the same character is, Sting is so over the top camp (which I love) while Austin Butler is a complete psycho but both are iconic.
The SyFy series dude was...fine. Not great, not bad. Fine. Enough so that you wanted him to die.
Hearing the announcer scream "Feyd-Rautha!" was beyond insane in IMAX. You actually felt like you were in the stadium. It got you hyped.
This scene was so intense in theatre, especially in imax! 👌🏻🔥
Yes the effects of going from color to black and white, were so cool. The whole film kept me on the edge of my seat. I'm so glad i spent the extra money on imax.
@@kylewilzon8612 Same, at first it seemed expensiv but the experience was absolutly worth it👌🏻
it really was, i watched it four times in imax lmao
missed opportunity to call this video Feyd-Rautha’s Birthday Bash
That's the description. lol
@@StefWriteroh dang i didn’t notice that lmao
@@insaneproductions8127 i think they edited that just for you. i don't remember seeing it when they first uploaded the video.
Фейд Раута мог спасти 60 миллиардов человек в конце фильма)
0:03 when that one unhinged friend joins the VC
And you can almost immediately hear everyone’s opinion of them joining.
How I think I when I am about to make a wild joke in a chat 😂
It's just the Baron casually smoking hookah LMAOOOOOO
I love how Feyd lost it at the minion who dared to interfere. They were still treating it like toying with a helpless captive but he wanted a proper fight against an opposing warrior.
he definitely murdered him later
this seen was a joy to watch in theaters. Sound is unreal
My favorite seen
All the little details are astounding. Like how he orders the harkonnen guards to stay back when Roger Yuan has his blade in front of his face, to clearly show to the audience that Feyd-Rautha never felt threatened.
here's another detail, the non drugged fighter is the general calling for the shields when paul lands on atreides, like after their ship lands.
This is art, this is cinema. Watching this scene on imax will be a memory that we will proudly tell our children in the future.
Experiencing this in IMAX felt like using my eyes for the first time
this is such a good way to word the experience
i just want socks for my birthday, but hay each to his own .
LMAO 😂
I wonder if he got a cake
@@starmancrusader
He did get Lady Fenrig's cake, if you know what I mean
@@WhyTho525💀
Its suprising how no other Dune adaptation has done this fight. 1984 doesnt even have an extended version of this. The mini series kind of has it, but its more of a sparring session in a dojo than a big arena. They truly were able to master this despite not having any visual examples to go off of.
The design of the arena is very accurate to the book. The triangle shape of it especially is accurate as well as the mentioning a sun. Which I remember reading that and always thinking it contrasted with the idea of Giedi Prime being this industrial hellscape. The idea of the sun shining infrared light is absolutely genius in my opinion.
The Total audio experience in IMAX was otherworldly - I had chills the whole time.
Seeing this scene in the IMAX will go down as my most memorable cinema experience. SHOCKING stuff.
I totally agree. I feel the same way. 💖
I truly truly hope this has allowed more people who aren't familiar with Dune to read the books. It really is an astounding world.
The infrared footage to compliment Giedi Prime's black sun is just *chef's kiss*
Can you elaborate on the planet? Damn I wish he would have recruited the guy who was drugged probably impossible since they are soo at odds with each other but damn the scene was intense…. Fun fact I have still yet to watch the sequel make sure to check out a youtuber films comics explained dude breaks down dune to us common folk who myself haven’t been able to read the books in an incredible amount of detail
First the chilling voice of the announcer and then the disturbing music. This is one of the strangest and best film scenes I have ever seen, it really felt alien. The infrared shot was a great decision, human eyes look reptilian in infrared, which perfectly represents the depravity of the Harkonnens. The ink fireworks and the Harkonnens' architectural style, which is reminiscent of H. R. Giger, also give me the feeling of an alien world. Denis Villeneuve did a damn good job with Dune: Part Two.
Can we just appreciate the IMMACULATE cinematography, scripting, and acting of this movie?!
This is how you introduce a villain. You show their personality through their actions and the scene should showcase what they bring to the table for the upcoming events of the film
Villeneuve is a master of showing not telling - sometimes, when on his A game, George Lucas could kind'a sort of do it (the reveal of Darth Maul in the major fight scene in Phantom Menace is an example) - but Villeneuve seems to bring that leve of game to most every scene.
It was an interesting choice to save Feyd until the second movie.
2:20: "HUUACH!!!" -So unhinged :o
One of the best movies ever made!
In the movie, the ploy with the slave-gladiator was the Baron's idea, to test his nephew. Well and good, I suppose. There was too much material to adapt, and this was one way to do it.
In the book, the Harkonnens actually captured the Atreides Mentat, Thufir Hawat, and the Baron kept him in his service. It was Hawat who prepared this plot together with Feyd-Rautha, keeping it from the Baron. By having Feyd-Rautha fight an undrugged slave-gladiator, they discredited the Baron's Slavemaster. To the Baron it seemed that the Slavemaster tried to have Feyd-Rautha killed, so he had the Slavemaster executed, and Feyd-Rautha's man was advanced to his position. Later, Feyd-Rautha tried to assassinate the Baron by having his man send him a slave boy with a poisoned needle. And it would have succeeded, too, if Thufir hadn't warned the Baron. He was playing the Harkonnens against each other, with the ultimate goal of destabilizing them and turning the Emperor's wrath against them, in order to avenge the fall of his Duke.
This film is next level. An instant classic
I LOVE when the gates open at 0:04. The sound design of this movie is UNreal.
“How evil do you want the Harkonnens to seem?”
Villeneuve: “yes”
i love the genuine respect and fairness he gives the Atreides during the fight.
I wish we could have had more of Feyd Rautha. He was one of the best villains I have ever seen.
When the announcer said "feyd rautha" at the beginning and the music started the theatre genuinely shook it was insane
Dune Part 2 is going to end in my top 10 best films of the year . Because in my opinion this is the best year of the movies , what a great day to live people 🎥🎥🎥🎥🎥 .
Hey matiasrocha, is it better or just as good than alot of great movie sequels. Like empire strikes back, aliens, T2, or even blade runner 2049?🤔people say the dune movies of today is the lawrence of arabia/lotr of our generation.
A visually stunning movie
Only top 10 😂. I haven’t even seen that many movies this year. This is the best movie I have ever seen and is a flawless adaptation that somehow pleases both hardcore fans of the books and normies who are new to the dune universe.
Will probably be one of the best 10 films of the 2020's, more like.
It's my top 1 movie of all time
I watched this on a plane and let me tell you, I might've watched this on a small screen but when they introduced the Harkonnen in this scene I was legit sacred.
Cinematography 💯
Fight Scenes 💯
SFX 💯
This scene was too badass. The chanting, the music, the announcer, the fighting, everything is so cool
I wish i could rewatch this masterpiece on theater
3:55 that little smirk and slight wink was a good touch to this character, not gonna lie but the actor playing Feyd surprised the heck out of me, he was sooo good
Not often do you come across a second film in a series just as good if not better than the 1st movie...AMAZING movie applause 👏
To be fair, its one story split in two so it makes sense the rising action being in the second movie makes it more exciting.
True..I just love the whole thing...I watched both films 10 times@@joehill4094
The difference between the book and movie are insane, but i like this Feyd Rautha more
Coolest scene I've seen in a movie in a very long time
Wow, Elvis really went all out on his latest concert.
Geidi Prime was epic. The absolute perfect villain planet.
The Harkonnens are so fascinating. I want to know how this absolutely insane culture came to be
read the book then
From what I heard Harko is a scandinavian word meaning 'bull'. In the books Giedi Prime is an Earth like planet, but destroyed by insane industrialization, Vladimir and his house live in Barony "45 kms and 950 levels of ferrocrete and plasteel, a monstruosity with no openings at groud level. Gardens and luxury palaces cover the roof, while at the lower levels only the most abject servitude allows you to climb up the levels to a better life."
It'll be us in a few thousand years lol
Fascism, as well as their stinking cess pit of a home planet that would leave anyone depressed
@@_Feyd-Rautha dune is never gonna happen bubba
can’t have more good things to say about this scene…insane dude
if genie granted me 1 wish, i’ll wish to watch this for the first time again
This movie was the loudest movie I have ever seen. My ears were ringing for 2 days. Excellent experience. On the IMAX screen, everything was enormous - the visuals, the story, the SOUND. Kaboooom!
Bro just mogging 💀💀💀💀
"How did you know I wanted murder for my birthday! 😊"
OH GOD, I REALLY LOVE THIS SCENE SO SO MUCH
1:05 ... recognizable. Looks like the Evil Eye whom Frodo Baggins defeated
I honestly think that if none of those Atreides soldiers were drugged, Feyd-Rautha would've been butchered like cattle.
No fake
oh absolutely, they were scared of one not being drugged three wouldve gut him like a fish
I mean it's a three on one fight. You take the greatest sword fighters, martial artists, boxers whatever and you put them up against 3 opponents at once with decent skill and fitness and none of them could win
@@omberman Lisan al Gaib could
That last guy wasn't just any Atreides soldier but also a "Swordmaster" so I'm assuming that was a guy who helped Duncan Idaho and Gurney Halleck to instruct the rest of the Atreides soldiers how to fight.
When was it say he was a swordmaster?
@@lexysraymont9627 In the books, sorry I didn't mention in it previously.
Anyone else notice that when the slave holds the knife to Feyd's face at 4:20 he starts drooling
A Harkonnen birthday without at least 3 deaths is considered a usual affair.
Fine, I'll watch both movies again...
I'll always love the nod and smile Feyd gives to the Baron like "yeah I expected as much, but I don't entirely hate it" lol.
Best entrance scene by a character
Okay, book readers or more keen movie watchers, explain something for me about the ending of this fight
Lady Margot Fenring says at the end (not in the clip) about Feyd-Rautha's 'He is impressive indeed'. Was she having a laugh? The dude faces off against three exhausted prisoners, while wearing the shield and always being watched by the guards to protect him in case if things went south. Even if you take that one last fighter who wasn't drugged and with whom Feyd-Rautha took off his shield, it's still not impressive enough to warrant the comment. The guy was half-dead when brought to the sands. What's impressive about beating an opponent in unequal fight?
He had zero fear of death even when he had the knife right against his face, and refused to let his victory be spoiled by Harkonnen guards. Atreides soldiers are also famously among the best in the universe, enough to help warrant the Emperor’s fear of the house in the first place.
That last soldier is no normal Atreides but lieutenant Lanville, Gurney's second-in-command show in the first film, and is likely an extremely skilled fighter (house Atreides' fighter at that point are able to rival the Emperor's Sardaukar army). For the fight itself Feyd removed his shield beforehand then threatened those picadors to back off so he defeating Lanville was indeed a feat for a man so young, of course it is not a fair fight strictly, but Lanville will probably eaten alive any other Harkonne fighters if it was not Feyd who fight him.
@nguyenphamthanhgiang8951 so (technically) but not technically the fight was fair in a sense because in an even confrontation fyed would lose given the Lieutenants rank and experience ? ....
impressive that he was willing to risk death at all when the fight was meant to be rigged
Feyd is like the Roman Emperor Commodus.
This movie gave me chills at every scene, honestly impressive
One Gladiator scene in Dune is more iconic than all Gladiator 2 scenes together.
30,000 years into the future. We still celebrate birthdays. And somehow the state of "Idaho" lived on in memory...
Just realizing that the same finishing move was used against him by Paul at the end of the movie.
どかどんぶろっしゃー!フェイドラウサアアアア!!
The sound in the cinema was incredible in this part, it deserves the Oscar for sound and music
👌
Rabban was a Beast, but Feyd, he’s a goddamned Demon
This version of Feyd is definitely different but yet familiar. He has all the cruelty and savagery of the original concept, but in the field of battle he has his own personal honor that is his own gives him a certain distinction.
This and the two scenes after are my favorites from the movie. Love a good villain.
I couldn't stop myself from taking snaps of feyd rautha while I watching Dune 2 first in theatre. The character was so awesome.
The inkblot fireworks are awesome.
Magnificence of the arena, champion of the Harkonnens!
IMAX experience is another movie at this point
that's one of the most powerful and badass songs i've ever heard. in imax when the beat drops I lost my mind
I don't even love dune like that but this is one of if not the best scene ive seen in the cinema
In the theater, seeing this for the first time, my jaw was on the proverbial ground. I returned to another two IMAX screenings to soak it all in. This movie still lives in my head rent-free.
This scene is a masterpiece that I have never seen before
the music in the cinema was incredible
Such a good scene
This is a total masterpiece, the colors are some of the best things here, since they give the sensation of how bad this is, the music gives a lot to the ambientation also and if we talk about the choreography, is so well done
experiencing his scene in theatre was magical
This scene is one of the best of DUNE
This scene in Imax was glorious
Watching this scene on 1.43 IMAX yesterday was a genuine treat.
4:07 looks like that zombie screaming in "I am Legend"
3:01 he looks like Prometheus guy, less mosity.
Plans within plans. What a masterful line🔥
It's a direct line from the book. It doesn't necessarily make much sense here without context, it's just one of the many hidden nods to the fans.
@@ahabkapitany it's a great line and there was context haha
@@ahabkapitany i feel like it would've made more sense had they included the Thufir storyline, right now there's just one concurrent plan going on and it's the Baron trying to make Feyd into a heir, Thufir's presence would truly validate it being plans within plans
@@Nuuk_Nuke_Nook I think it wasn't confusing for those who didn't read the book,, but I really appreciated this just like the many other tiny nods they made to long time fans.