Everyone is talking about how hearing this chant on the battlefield would be terrifying (and it would, don't get me wrong) but... every time the Sardaukar attacked in the movie they were menacingly silent and that has its own level of terror for me.
Completely terrifying. I think the craziest part was when the fremen were making spice coffee and noticed the intruders, the fact they land silently, but the GOD DAMN FREMEN still managed to out stealth them.
The legions of Rome, like the Sardaukar, attacked in near complete silence. While their enemies voice their war chants, the Romans advanced quietly, with serious intent. It would be like facing down a machine.
I love how the film actually make the world look like a distant future where every human culture have had its chance to mix together. The Atreides bagpipes, the Sardaukar throat singing, the Fremen's Arabic coffee, everything is so familiar and yet so exotic at the same time.
the bagpipes are included for the most ridiculous reason (Villeneuve "sees the Atreides as Celtic"). But in reality the Atreides are of greek origin, and the greeks actually have their own version of bagpipes. So Villeneuve could have included bagpipes and could have had it match the books as well.
I was very happy with the portrayal of Selusa Secundus in the movie, a hell world populated by brutal warriors. I think this short scene did the books some justice.
I doubt your friend understood the essence of the Sardaukars. They are a joke in this movie. They being baddas has nothing to do with blood sacrifices or kneeling in the rain. They have survived one of the harshest planet in the Universe of Dune.
@@thh420 sure but, do you think the Sardaukar would really send their best to help some shitty noble eradicate another shitty noble? Based on how Sardaukar are depicted in both book and movie, I imagine them sending their worst - after all, even those are surely leagues above anyone else, right?
Aren't they supposed to be scary? They just look sterile and get massacred by some sand people...hiding in the sand...the fights were the worst part about Dune. Kinda like game of thrones...Just silly
The Movie also opened suddenly with the first few verses of this chant displaying the quote "dreams are messages from the deep" before even the Warner Brothers logo. It felt like screaming to the audience "Pay attention something special is starting"
The bodies being drained of their blood was so chilling. 1000s of years into the future and we’re still doing mass blood sacrifice in such a cruel way. A great villain.
@@chadsknnr it is a prison planet. the newly arrived prisoners are prey to the tribes that have been there for thousands of years. these tribes provide the troops to the sardaukar
@@toomanyaccounts Ive seen it speculated that people being drained were Sardaurkar recruits that didnt make it through the training process, being used to baptize the ones that did succeed before they went into combat. I personally thought it made more sense that these were prisoners, and that the Sardaukar are being baptized for battle with the blood of the enemies of the Imperium.
To my Mongolian ear, It sounds like praising, and worshiping about their really old ancestors. Actually "buural deedes" mean "ancient ancestors" in Mongolian language. It's really sounds terrifying and fascinating. They done some great work on this alien language stuff.
Personally to my Slavic ear when the Sardukar leader spoke to Peter de Vries I felt a Slavic influence on his language. He even looked quite Slavic to me. Of course the Baron is called Vladimir, his mentat is called Piter. There seems to be that slavic streak. And of course modern Russia borders Mongolia, so there's that connection. I guess in the far future these ancient peoples are still somehow connected, now more intertwined. Intriguing.
@@pseudonymousbeing987 only thing is that barrons people really dont have much to do with sardaukar, sardaukar are emperors personal force from a prison planet of salusa secundus, while harkonnens are a house rulling the planet of geidi prime
@@pseudonymousbeing987 The name Harkonnen was inspired by a Finnish name Herbert had seen on a newspaper or something. The Corrino's in the books mainly draw inspiration from the Ottomans and the Persians, while the Atreides are explicitly stated to have descended from Agamemnon himself.
@@BLooDCoMPleX "descended from Agamemnon himself" - but not from iliadic Agamemnon. Future Atrides are descendants of Agamemnon, leader of cymek titans - basically transhuman junta of heavily cyborgised and augmented people, who made coup in old empire, and under whose reign sentient machines took over humanity on Earth ans older colonies. Outer colonies resisted and declared jihad, which lead to destruction of Skynet of Duneverse and establishment of Corrino Empire.
So glad the battle scene’s music had different themes for different sides like in Lord of the Rings. Throat chanting for Sardaukar and bagpipes for the Atreides. Now that’s what I call musical worldbuilding.
ya just went to see it again last night, one thing I noticed when the Atreides are first engaging the Harkonnens on the steps its playing their theme, before as they Sardaukar start to deploy behind them it starts to slowly switch to their theme
@Eight lnfinity The Tuvan style is mostly sung by Mongolian so as a catch all term it's not wrong. Also, this is NOT Tuvan by any means. Soft style? Really?
@Eight lnfinity Probably, you are right. They are not the same, but have the same ethnic roots and in the not so long past, Tuva was a part of Mongolia. In general, Mongols, Tatars and Turk-Seljuks belong to Ural-Altay language and family groups.
@Eight lnfinity There's a reason why Mongolia exists and tuva is just a small spite piece of russia, also throat singing is 100% Mongolian, tuva is not even a country or ethnicity anymore, russia annexed tuva and there's literally nothing you could say against historians it was really yours
@@LAZISH You're mistaking small stan countries that was part of the Mongol empire, they were really turks, but the Mongols never shared blood with turks, also i suggest u to grab a map and see where Mongolia is located.
Sardaukar: the solider-fanatics of the Padishah Emperor. They were men from an environmental background of such ferocity that it killed six out of thirteen persons before the age of eleven. Their military training emphasized ruthlessness and a near-suicidal disregard for personal safety. They were taught from infancy to use cruelty as a standard weapon, weakening opponents with terror. At the apex of their sway over the affairs of the Universe, their swordsmanship was said to match that of the Ginaz tenth level and their cunning abilities at in-fighting were reputed to approach those of a Bene Gesserit adept. Any one of them was rated a match for any ten ordinary Landsraad military conscripts. By the time of Shaddam IV, while they were still formidable, their strength had been sapped by overconfidence, and the sustaining mystique of their warrior religion had been deeply undermined by cynicism. From Terminology of the Imperium, Dune by Frank Herbert
It may sound interesting but its not "feasible" or realistic. People coming from rough environment would not make good soldiers in a high tech environment where the handling and manipulation of complex technology would make well educated, well fed (from infancy) and sound of mind soldiers much superior to "rough" Taliban types.
@@gustavoritter7321 You forget that Dune is actually pretty low-tech due to the purge of most computer technologies a few centuries earlier because of fear of AI rebellion. In addition the Sardaukar primarily fight in melee due to the prevalence of personal shields making most small-caliber projectile weapons useless.
@@gustavoritter7321 Actually, it fits perfectly in the context of Dune. Dune's universe is an absolute nightmare world controlled chiefly by monarchies and religion. Due to the abolishment of all computers in the Butlerian Crusade, some of their technologies are inferior even to our confined-to-one-planet tech. I would say the most unrealistic thing is a civilization developing, let alone surviving, being so driven by religion and without the use of computing machines.
This scene captured what I always thought Herbert did best in his writing: demonstrating humanity being at once impossibly advanced while catastrophically regressed. The Sardukar are efficient, well trained soldiers not only because they have the best equipment but because they’re forced to live on a hell world and raised to worship the Emperor.
I don't know, looked silly to me how all they do run into a mob and swing their little blade then get massacred by some sand people that swing their little blade a little faster. O impact, 0 brutality, 0 effect of armor and terrible fight choreography that not doubt was intended to look fancy, but it just looked like kids fighting.
@@mcmarkmarkson7115 I agree, that's one part where this movie definitely fell short. Villeneuve isn't very good at fight scenes, just look at BR2048's ending fight scene. It was also kinda trash.
@@mcmarkmarkson7115 The problem was that the film was so condensed that we didn't receive much context as to just how powerful the Sardaukar are. There are a few clips of the Sardaukar killing the Atreides troops (who have been ambushed so are already disadvantaged), but that's all. The main fights we see are between Sardaukar and Duncan Idaho (one of the greatest individual hand-to-hand combatants of his time), and between the Sardaukar and Fremen (whose combat skills were underestimated and are masters of guerrilla warfare in the desert). The Sardaukar are supposed to be the most feared and brutal fighters in the Known Universe, but in these two encounters they are made to look slightly tame comparatively.
You must have known that I was just watching this movie tonight. You must have also known that I would immediately have come looking for this as soon as I finished.
I love that the only thing the Sardukar do in their spare time is execute prisoners of war and worship the Emperor. Really puts the “fanatic” into “Soldier Fanatics”
Also the fact Selusa Secundus was not only a prison planet but was also a very tough to survive in thus any survivors here are very much super bad hombres. But Arrakis proved to be more feral to produce a better, tougher fighter.
It's so great that this movie didn't compromise on its vision. This could be considered a "weird" scene, maybe off-putting to the average moviegoer, and I'm so so so glad that Denis and the team maintained their artistic vision. This scene and the movie as a whole is so otherworldly and captivating. I can't praise it enough.
They captured the power of the Sardaukar and the terror they induce perfectly. Now, imagine what it'll be like when Villeneuve introduces Paul's personal guard/commando unit - the Fedaykin.
I really love how the sardaukar all wear almost space-suit looking armour, they're regularly deployed anywhere and everywhere the emperor needs them, regardless of climate, environment, atmosphere etc. The armour is likely designed so that no matter where they're deployed they'll be able to complete their sole mission: Slaughtering the enemies of the emperor
It feels like the singer is not just singing but wondering and contemplating the mysteries of the universe. Epic job Mr. Dennis V. You've done it again.
I have been dreaming about Sallus Secundus for 40 years and did not think that the sheer zealotry of these soldiers/prisoners could be expressed cinematically but here it is. I think even Genghis Khan would pause before he engaged these monsters.
In the middle of a night between fighting, imagine the physiological effect this would have on an enemy with just a few hundred Sardaukar chanting like this.
It seems like this is battle prep. High priest is rallying the troops, offering blood sacrifice for strength, and singing praises to the warrior gods/ancestors. Sarduakar attack in silence.
I haven’t killed anybody in this life, my reward is to come back in 8000 years as a badass Sardaukar!! My Dad loved Dune (book), this scene made me cry, they did an astonishing job. My Pops missed this movie by 9 months. Screw you COVID!
@@milotura6828 - I saw it on HBO Max when it looked like he might come home. Then on opening night with a friend to take my mind off things. Then that night he ran a fever of 107.
This scene did nothing to move the plot forward. It was pure world-building. Some directors would cut it for that reason, not realizing that this is the sort of thing people go to the movies to see. This is heart, not filler. As someone who knew the books even I didn't know I needed this scene. Thanks for filming it, Denis.
I thought the book was pretty boring when I read it some 2 years ago and finishing this movie I didn’t think much of it. It has been 2 days and this movie WILL NOT leave my head. I can’t pinpoint exactly what about it is incessantly sticking to my mind but I feel I have to watch it again to be rid of this feeling. Cool movie, would recommend.
I wish this version was actually on the soundtrack. There are fragments of it, but not enough for my liking! I'm glad this is here, and I'm glad they used a real throat singer for this piece! (Heh...this music isn't alien, it's Mongolian.)
Thank you for posting this. This scene was hair raising for me, the layering of one breath taking visual after another floored me. The naked bodies draining their lives into stone drains , the blood diluted by hammering grey rain, above them this physically distorted figure chanting a totally relentless anthem of death that comes from the place of no return and below them endless battalions of the Emperor's Sardukar each receiving the mark that only the elite may have, a smear of blood on their foreheads as the Harkonnenn Mentat clearly out of his comfort zone secures the deal for the Baron, from the commander who makes it clear with every fibre of his being that they only serve the Emperor. Dune is a gift I am glad I lived long enough to see.
@@hawk66100 Yes that's true. I read the first three around 40 years ago actually, that's what amazed me abut this scene was that it wasn't in Dune. Villeneuve uses film to tell us everything in one short sequence i.e. the harkonnenn/ Emperiial conspiracy against House Atreides and the formidable reputation of Gurney Halleck which helps explain Pauls skill levels. I might read them again now lol.
@@peterjensen5586 bro, thanks. This is honestly the most positive, wholesome comment back I've had on UA-cam. You are worthwhile, never let yourself feel you aren't.
20 minutes into the movie i had to go to the bathroom, i finally couldn't hold it any longer and jumped up right before this scene. . . I don't think i've ever walked out of a theatre at a more wtf moment - that throat chant as i stumbled through the darkness was way beyond surreal.
This throat chanting was a nonhuman experience in the cinema. I could feel my ears explode by how powerful the sound was, but it felt so fucking good, like I was transported to this magnificent, breathtaking universe.
Mongolian throat singing. Probably passed down from the days of Genghis Khan. Ruthless, warriors. Think that fits these Sardaukar and how they were raised as the Emperor's Army.
This had the raw badass energy that previous Dune adaptations didn't quite have. These Sardukar could beat any other iteration of themselves. No pomp, some ceremony, but only in blood and basic colors.
Warrior Sounds. Aztec blood ritual meets Sparta’s 300 meets Atilla the Hun. The very last bunch of badasses you ever want to cross paths with. As has been said: they did the Sarduakar right in this film.
Aztec? This was more like old Nordic ritual, Aztec is completely different. The chant would also be more similar to old Viking ones or Mongolian throat singing. Aztecs didn't drain the blood and collect it like Viking tribes did. All they cared about was offering the heart to their gods. Overall this seems more Nordic and Viking inspired although the throat singing is more popular from Mongolia. Grab a book mate.
@@JM-kv2kn I didn’t think an exhaustive list of every warrior tribal culture drawn from for the scene was required. There’s clear elevation in pyramidical fashion in the scene and quite large stone structures. That said Aztec to me - not Nordic, so I said Aztec. The sword baring all male raised as fanatic thing speaks of Spartans to me. The throat singing evokes the Huns. I was making a general comment on the scene - not an in-depth critique, complete with cultural analysis requiring a bibliography.
@@JM-kv2kn he meant Aztec as in sacrificing individuals to appeal to the Gods. The posture of the victims looks similar to those of the Aztecs. Look at "Apocalypto" how they would lay them on their backs with arms and legs out before they carved their hearts out. Also Frank and Brian Herbert make several references to Aztec gods and culture in their books, like the Tlaloc and the Bene Tleilax for example. Let's not forget the Axlotl tanks which they used to reproduce a human being from the cells of a cadaver to make a "ghola". Axtlotl are a species of salamander indigenous to Mexico.
Denis Villeneuve and his sound team pulled off a real feat of subtle atmospheric creativity with the Sardaukar chant. It's like a creepily distorted Buddhist meditative prayer, solemnly haunting and with a clear devotional element, yet menacing and angry with that elliptical reverb effect, as if the high priest was vibrating a jaw harp right at his vocal cords. One of the eeriest sonic tapestries I've heard.
This scene, with the bleak environment and the eerie throat singing gives you the sense that Sardukars are like Spartans: Trained and moulded from a young age with the sole intention to be made into living weapons.
Gotta love how Villenueve gives us scenes that he probably didn't think were gonna be that memorable but ended up being the scenes that really stick with you: Blade Runner 2049 the baseline test The Sardaukar Chant in Dune.
I get the feeling Villeneuve knows exactly what he's doing, and how to mindfuck with the viewer. The chant scene is one that truly stuck in my mind; you're sat there trying to work out what the fuck is going on, whilst seeing people hung upside down, during a truly disturbing chant that echoes out around the room.
At first it sounds like rain as if it purifies but the more I listen the more it sounds like coins, pearls, gold, sand….spice pilling up. And that rough, heavy almost savage vocal fits the scene so good it’s unreal. I loved this movie. Everything was perfection - actors, score, cinematography, story….everything! The one thing I didn’t like is that it’s a true representation of human kind - greedy, power hungry creatures that will never collectively reach our potential of “good”. It’s what was, what is and what will be. Damn that movie was brilliant!
You got the last part VERY right, it's a VERY true representation of humankind and future technologies.. think USA,think Afghanistan,Libya,Syria and the war for oil and gas.. Your first part must be the drugs
“Dreams are messages from the deep” is the direct translation from the very first seconds of the film, and if you listen close you can hear this guy repeat that part of the chant.
Each line spoken literally vibrates my entire body and gives me goosebumps, then add onto that the visuals of this scene and you are left completely speechless
I thought I was the only one! That’s aWesome Yeah this felt like some tech priest performing rights on an imperial guard regiment in an outer rim siege world, just needed more skulls and bionics but still haunting as fuck
This was one of the best scenes in the movie, the absolutely thundering voice of the Sardaukar priest chanting, with rows upon rows of draining bodies feeding into the legions of Sardaukar Warriors… Denis did this book right, can’t wait for part 2.
I watched this movie blazed out of my goddamn mind and this for some reason was my favorite part in the whole movie. Idk why but i just think about it a lot now for some reason
@@arighteousname5882 idk why but i remembered the dude having a cylinder hat to match the outfit. Idk i was a little too high watching it but it was still cool
This sound isn’t made up. It’s real. This is the sound of the most fanatic killers in the history of history. The Huns. Mongolian slaughter merchants. This naturally strikes fear into people like a snakes rattle or a dogs frothy growl. Very cleaver use of real menacing stuff. And - fascinating when you learn it’s a man. Not a synthesiser. It draws you in. Totally get you.
@@madmammoth9022 I took magic mushrooms (liberty caps) and went to the cinema to watch this movie. This scene has been stuck in my head ever since. The whole viewing was a borderline religious experience. Such a great piece of cinema. Cheers.
The Sardaukar priest who leads the chant is somehow absolutely creepy looking. I remember when I saw in theaters that the image of him gave me chills. He just looks…. Unnatural in a way that really set off my internal alarms or something. Such a well done scene. This truly is the art of showing, not telling. You don’t need an over abundance of exposition if you know how to write and direct scenes such as this.
They really did an amazing job introducing these guys. In a brief scene they impress on the audience these guys are something to be feared and a menace to the main characters. A refreshing change of pace from villain minions in other films that are treated as disposable cannon fodder meant purely to be killed by the protagonist.
I dunno man, but that guy standing with only just his hand moving slowly with the throat singing perfectly blend well, they have introduced Sardaukar in the movie perfectly, It's chilling and i agree to everybody, this must be the best scene in the entire movie
Glad to see people liked this movie enough that this little clip has almost half a million views. Gives me hope that we will see content beyond the first book.
I love listening to this chant. And it seems my neighbours seem to love it as well. Every time I play it, they raise their hands, raise their hands and sing along! So nice to have something in common.
This movie hits you like a bag of bricks when it comes to its expansive universe, lore, and its characters. I can't wait until the rest of the movies release.
This scene gave me chills, they really did a great job depicting the Sardukar and how ruthless they are. The combo of the hunting throat siging chant a long with the blood sacrifices made by draining the blood of the sacrificed. Really gives the true feeling of how evil and dark they are. The scene is very captivating for sure.
Calming throat singing and rain ASMR to commit warcrimes to
Lasguns are out. Knives, atomics and warcrimes are fine.
FOR THE EMPIRE!
This would make a good ASMR vid done right.
Its not a war crime the first time you do it.
Not so much "war crimes" as outright massacre. lol
Everyone is talking about how hearing this chant on the battlefield would be terrifying (and it would, don't get me wrong) but... every time the Sardaukar attacked in the movie they were menacingly silent and that has its own level of terror for me.
They clean their blades the exact same way. The land completely silently. They whisper orders to each other. They move. In unison. Amazing portrayal
Completely terrifying.
I think the craziest part was when the fremen were making spice coffee and noticed the intruders, the fact they land silently, but the GOD DAMN FREMEN still managed to out stealth them.
@@tangoechobravo806 Yes! That Fremen ambush really sets the stage for what is to come.
@@tangoechobravo806 You do not fuck with the Fedaykin.
The legions of Rome, like the Sardaukar, attacked in near complete silence. While their enemies voice their war chants, the Romans advanced quietly, with serious intent. It would be like facing down a machine.
I love how the film actually make the world look like a distant future where every human culture have had its chance to mix together. The Atreides bagpipes, the Sardaukar throat singing, the Fremen's Arabic coffee, everything is so familiar and yet so exotic at the same time.
Bagpipes😂🤣
That’s one of the things I love about _Dune._ So familiar and yet so alien.
the bagpipes are included for the most ridiculous reason (Villeneuve "sees the Atreides as Celtic").
But in reality the Atreides are of greek origin, and the greeks actually have their own version of bagpipes. So Villeneuve could have included bagpipes and could have had it match the books as well.
@@Johnsmith69448 They are a mix, just like other cultures. Duncan Idaho is not a very Greek name now is it.
@@Johnsmith69448 Theyre Spanish they even fight bulls lol
So much worldbuilding with just one short scene. Incredible. This is truly peak cinema.
go to the books
@@briantotse3 the movie is much better
I was very happy with the portrayal of Selusa Secundus in the movie, a hell world populated by brutal warriors. I think this short scene did the books some justice.
@Time Code no
@Time Code this is pure kino. cinema is an insult to this masterpiece
I saw this scene at IMAX with a friend who knew nothing about Dune.
And my friend understood Sardaukar at once through this scene.
hamburger
cheeseburger
big mac
@@MrBruh-yb9qi whopper
I doubt your friend understood the essence of the Sardaukars. They are a joke in this movie. They being baddas has nothing to do with blood sacrifices or kneeling in the rain. They have survived one of the harshest planet in the Universe of Dune.
They did the Sardaukar right in this movie.
Definitely
A-fuckin-men
still too soft and slow. the really good ones are almost half as fast as a gene gesserit initiate.
@@thh420 sure but, do you think the Sardaukar would really send their best to help some shitty noble eradicate another shitty noble?
Based on how Sardaukar are depicted in both book and movie, I imagine them sending their worst - after all, even those are surely leagues above anyone else, right?
Aren't they supposed to be scary? They just look sterile and get massacred by some sand people...hiding in the sand...the fights were the worst part about Dune. Kinda like game of thrones...Just silly
The Movie also opened suddenly with the first few verses of this chant displaying the quote "dreams are messages from the deep" before even the Warner Brothers logo. It felt like screaming to the audience "Pay attention something special is starting"
Much like the opening sequence for LOTR!
Yeah, that startled the crap out of me, but was cool nonetheless. All I could think about was hoping to hear that sound again in the movie.
Yup!
Ε ναι, αφού σου πετάνε τόσους συμβολισμούς, φιλοσοφίες και τεχνολογία στη μάπα
Paul's dreams are messages from what deep? ;)
The bodies being drained of their blood was so chilling. 1000s of years into the future and we’re still doing mass blood sacrifice in such a cruel way. A great villain.
They are humans??
@@JM-kv2kn Sadly, yes; The Sardaukar are human boys who are basically shaped into bloodthirsty fanatical men . . . .
@@chadsknnr it is a prison planet. the newly arrived prisoners are prey to the tribes that have been there for thousands of years. these tribes provide the troops to the sardaukar
@@toomanyaccounts Ive seen it speculated that people being drained were Sardaurkar recruits that didnt make it through the training process, being used to baptize the ones that did succeed before they went into combat.
I personally thought it made more sense that these were prisoners, and that the Sardaukar are being baptized for battle with the blood of the enemies of the Imperium.
@@shockwave68 honestly I thought they were Harkonnen slaves or something along the lines of that they looked Harkonnen.
The throat singing combined with the blood ritual was unsettling.
It was so rad!
*just your average day in california*
Thats why they were upside down ?
@@TimothyMark7 There was way too much rain for it to be California.
@@phillewis2630 frick your right
Sardaukar are feared because they have the most powerful audio system in galaxy
bass-boosted audio system
Observable universe, I would say. The Imperium rules over the entire observable universe.
Me, trying to sleep
Guy driving by outside with his boosted stereo cranked up:
Monster Cables, meh.
Sardaukar Cables, yayayah!
The kind of bass that makes long hair stand up
To my Mongolian ear, It sounds like praising, and worshiping about their really old ancestors. Actually "buural deedes" mean "ancient ancestors" in Mongolian language. It's really sounds terrifying and fascinating. They done some great work on this alien language stuff.
Personally to my Slavic ear when the Sardukar leader spoke to Peter de Vries I felt a Slavic influence on his language. He even looked quite Slavic to me. Of course the Baron is called Vladimir, his mentat is called Piter. There seems to be that slavic streak. And of course modern Russia borders Mongolia, so there's that connection. I guess in the far future these ancient peoples are still somehow connected, now more intertwined. Intriguing.
@@pseudonymousbeing987 only thing is that barrons people really dont have much to do with sardaukar, sardaukar are emperors personal force from a prison planet of salusa secundus, while harkonnens are a house rulling the planet of geidi prime
@@pseudonymousbeing987 The name Harkonnen was inspired by a Finnish name Herbert had seen on a newspaper or something. The Corrino's in the books mainly draw inspiration from the Ottomans and the Persians, while the Atreides are explicitly stated to have descended from Agamemnon himself.
@@jakovmysteriofan
Absolutely true, that slipped my mind. The two factions are not related are they.
@@BLooDCoMPleX "descended from Agamemnon himself" - but not from iliadic Agamemnon. Future Atrides are descendants of Agamemnon, leader of cymek titans - basically transhuman junta of heavily cyborgised and augmented people, who made coup in old empire, and under whose reign sentient machines took over humanity on Earth ans older colonies. Outer colonies resisted and declared jihad, which lead to destruction of Skynet of Duneverse and establishment of Corrino Empire.
It’s all fun and games till that one guy start goin “BOODUELLHMMMMDELLBOYEWLDUUULLLHMMDUUUULGAROWLHMMMMDOIUUULLBOIDOIL.”
E-fuckin-vacuate post haste
Hahahahahhaahhahahah😂😂😂
Run like Hunter Biden out of meth!
Imagine you're in a trench during a war in the future and its pitch black at night and you hear this in the distance getting closer and louder.
I would run fast as fuck in the opposite direction honestly
@UA-camSucks They're Sardaukar. I don't think 'simply' is a word you can use when describing how you'd deal with those nutters.
The more terrifying part is, that the Sardaukar arent doing this chant when they attack. Just pure silence and youre dead.
I would be thankful to the distraction. Laying in a trench all the time is boring as fuck
*Intensify Artillery Barrage*
Girls have a high voice when they like someone.
Girls when they see me:
fuck dude that got me, lmao
Props for being legitimately funny lol
lmfaooo
Same here, lmao.
LOL
So glad the battle scene’s music had different themes for different sides like in Lord of the Rings. Throat chanting for Sardaukar and bagpipes for the Atreides. Now that’s what I call musical worldbuilding.
Atreides!
Leitmotif it is called.
ya just went to see it again last night, one thing I noticed when the Atreides are first engaging the Harkonnens on the steps its playing their theme, before as they Sardaukar start to deploy behind them it starts to slowly switch to their theme
The bagpipes gave it a (probably intentional) Braveheart vibe.
@@TheMonkeygoneape Thomas flight did a really good video on the soundtrack use. You should check it out!
Electronic Mongolion throat singing. Absolutely epic.
@Eight lnfinity The Tuvan style is mostly sung by Mongolian so as a catch all term it's not wrong. Also, this is NOT Tuvan by any means. Soft style? Really?
@Eight lnfinity But Tuvan and Mongolians are of the same origin. Tuvans are descendants of nomadic groups of Turkified Mongols.
@Eight lnfinity Probably, you are right. They are not the same, but have the same ethnic roots and in the not so long past, Tuva was a part of Mongolia. In general, Mongols, Tatars and Turk-Seljuks belong to Ural-Altay language and family groups.
@Eight lnfinity There's a reason why Mongolia exists and tuva is just a small spite piece of russia, also throat singing is 100% Mongolian, tuva is not even a country or ethnicity anymore, russia annexed tuva and there's literally nothing you could say against historians it was really yours
@@LAZISH You're mistaking small stan countries that was part of the Mongol empire, they were really turks, but the Mongols never shared blood with turks, also i suggest u to grab a map and see where Mongolia is located.
The bass in my theater was so amazing in this scene. Felt absolutely oppressive. Just like the Sardaukar.
Same here! Believe it or not, as good as the rest of the film was, THIS SCENE is what sold me . . . .
This should used be a fucking Dolby Atmos ad.
Saw it in IMAX today.
Hooooly sh¡t!!
@@davecrupel2817 Good for you, dude . . . .
This scene scared me to death in IMAX. The seats were shaking.
This is actually the most badass thing I've ever heard in my life.
sound like a pagan chant before a battle with crusaders hhah
@@milotura6828 Or a crusader chant before a battle with pagans. Depends on your perspective
Try to listenm to some music from REpublic of Tuwa or Mongolia. As well as buddist monk's chants
It sounds like orthodox chanting mixed with Turkic throat singing
@@johanneshjortshj8646 or that to yea, i just said pagan because in the books they are literal pagans
Sardaukar: the solider-fanatics of the Padishah Emperor. They were men from an environmental background of such ferocity that it killed six out of thirteen persons before the age of eleven. Their military training emphasized ruthlessness and a near-suicidal disregard for personal safety. They were taught from infancy to use cruelty as a standard weapon, weakening opponents with terror. At the apex of their sway over the affairs of the Universe, their swordsmanship was said to match that of the Ginaz tenth level and their cunning abilities at in-fighting were reputed to approach those of a Bene Gesserit adept. Any one of them was rated a match for any ten ordinary Landsraad military conscripts. By the time of Shaddam IV, while they were still formidable, their strength had been sapped by overconfidence, and the sustaining mystique of their warrior religion had been deeply undermined by cynicism.
From Terminology of the Imperium, Dune by Frank Herbert
It may sound interesting but its not "feasible" or realistic. People coming from rough environment would not make good soldiers in a high tech environment where the handling and manipulation of complex technology would make well educated, well fed (from infancy) and sound of mind soldiers much superior to "rough" Taliban types.
@@gustavoritter7321
You forget that Dune is actually pretty low-tech due to the purge of most computer technologies a few centuries earlier because of fear of AI rebellion. In addition the Sardaukar primarily fight in melee due to the prevalence of personal shields making most small-caliber projectile weapons useless.
@@gustavoritter7321 Actually, it fits perfectly in the context of Dune. Dune's universe is an absolute nightmare world controlled chiefly by monarchies and religion. Due to the abolishment of all computers in the Butlerian Crusade, some of their technologies are inferior even to our confined-to-one-planet tech. I would say the most unrealistic thing is a civilization developing, let alone surviving, being so driven by religion and without the use of computing machines.
6 out of 13 children dying before the age of eleven was literally all of humanity before the age of industrialization
The Gurkas say you are wrong.
This scene captured what I always thought Herbert did best in his writing: demonstrating humanity being at once impossibly advanced while catastrophically regressed. The Sardukar are efficient, well trained soldiers not only because they have the best equipment but because they’re forced to live on a hell world and raised to worship the Emperor.
This music actually is an unironical banger
I have legit listened to this like 7 times today lol
Honestly was waiting for a beat to drop
I could go for a 10 hour mix.
hanz zimmer
I think this is his magnum opus.
So creepy but so captivating. Does a good job of introducing the Satdaukar.
True , loved this scene
Listen to sounds of tengrism /Mongolian throat singing. It's quite similar. Soooo eerie and yet sooooo captivating
The movie is all about show don't tell
The price for your typo is your left index finger. Then you may go out and slay brother.
True they "sat" through the whole battle of arakeen, satdaukar...lol
Finally they made the Sardaukar menacing as they should be. Not guys running on plastic bags or renaissance painters, but pure brutal soldiers.
in the mini series they did look like painters lol hahahah... yeah this is the sardaukar we deserved
I don't know, looked silly to me how all they do run into a mob and swing their little blade then get massacred by some sand people that swing their little blade a little faster. O impact, 0 brutality, 0 effect of armor and terrible fight choreography that not doubt was intended to look fancy, but it just looked like kids fighting.
@@mcmarkmarkson7115 I agree, that's one part where this movie definitely fell short. Villeneuve isn't very good at fight scenes, just look at BR2048's ending fight scene. It was also kinda trash.
I kind of liked the painter look, it was perfectly arrogant. Like "year we wear dumbass berets, you got a problem with it?"
@@mcmarkmarkson7115 The problem was that the film was so condensed that we didn't receive much context as to just how powerful the Sardaukar are. There are a few clips of the Sardaukar killing the Atreides troops (who have been ambushed so are already disadvantaged), but that's all. The main fights we see are between Sardaukar and Duncan Idaho (one of the greatest individual hand-to-hand combatants of his time), and between the Sardaukar and Fremen (whose combat skills were underestimated and are masters of guerrilla warfare in the desert). The Sardaukar are supposed to be the most feared and brutal fighters in the Known Universe, but in these two encounters they are made to look slightly tame comparatively.
*“When you're happy, you enjoy the music but when you're sad, you undestand the lyrics.”*
HMMMMMM BALALUEEEMMMM
BALLOOBOOOOOEMMENGME
EONGEM ENGNGGGGG HABBALALLEMMM GOLAGOLA BALAR GOOOO EUUOO EU EM EM
"HHHHÄÄÄÄÄMMMBÄÄÄÄÄMMMBÄÄBÎÎÎLL HÄMBÔRÄRÎMMM BÊNNNBØLÊNN"
You must have known that I was just watching this movie tonight. You must have also known that I would immediately have come looking for this as soon as I finished.
He knew us both
Same here
Lol same
I’ve been looking ever since the movie came out frontispiece, glad it’s finally here.
Saaaaame. I love throat singing.
I love that the only thing the Sardukar do in their spare time is execute prisoners of war and worship the Emperor. Really puts the “fanatic” into “Soldier Fanatics”
Peak warhammer 40k
@@jonnythedemon For The Emperor!
@@VedaRa501 Peace upon his children, glory unto him on earth
@@jonnythedemon 40k ripped Dune off >:)
Also the fact Selusa Secundus was not only a prison planet but was also a very tough to survive in thus any survivors here are very much super bad hombres. But Arrakis proved to be more feral to produce a better, tougher fighter.
It's so great that this movie didn't compromise on its vision. This could be considered a "weird" scene, maybe off-putting to the average moviegoer, and I'm so so so glad that Denis and the team maintained their artistic vision. This scene and the movie as a whole is so otherworldly and captivating. I can't praise it enough.
They captured the power of the Sardaukar and the terror they induce perfectly. Now, imagine what it'll be like when Villeneuve introduces Paul's personal guard/commando unit - the Fedaykin.
I can't wait to see the Fremen in action when they sweep across the galaxy
Ya Hya Chouhada!
*holds up a bloody palm*
@@chilliewhk Hopefully we'll get the other books in the series then.
If dune Messiah is made, how do you think Villeneuve will make the Tleilaxu?
I got chills watching this scene in DUNE
First time a scene like that has truly been intimidatingly spine chilling
Lol yeah the blood ritual didn't help
Same here . That's THE SCENE from this movie.
I couldn’t stop laughing, especially when the actor who played polka dot man showed up.
I always thought the Sardaukar were one of the coolest elements in the book and in this respect the new film did not disappoint
Haven’t seen a movie with such rich world building in a LONG time. Villanueve absolutely nailed this.
I like how his family name translate seamlessly into spanish
You must be joking.
and apparently a lot of the worldbuilding had to be left out because the books are just way too fucking full of lore for one movie to contain
Yes! The Lynch version of Dune is a joke compared to this.
Don't tell that to the gate keeping bookworms that hate everything not 1000% dedicated to their binded up pages of flattened dead trees.
I tried to introduce Mongolian throat singing to my DnD game's music and got laughed at. I was a genius ahead of my time
I wouldn’t have laughed. Well done
your friends sucks :(
Youre playing with the wrong people ;)
It's not Mongolian, throat singing is much broader than just Mongolian throat singing; it is pracied in Tibet, Alaska, Sardinia etc.
@@TheTokkie Okay, but the throat singing I introduced in my DnD game was specific Mongolian, but thanks for being pedantic
I really love how the sardaukar all wear almost space-suit looking armour, they're regularly deployed anywhere and everywhere the emperor needs them, regardless of climate, environment, atmosphere etc. The armour is likely designed so that no matter where they're deployed they'll be able to complete their sole mission: Slaughtering the enemies of the emperor
My thoughts exactly.
10,000+ years worth of scientific development. From our point of view it looks magic.
Dreams are messages from the deep.
It feels like the singer is not just singing but wondering and contemplating the mysteries of the universe.
Epic job Mr. Dennis V. You've done it again.
@Skelley-Priest Yeah, that's what I was thinking. Like he's praying and contemplating at the same time.
The Sardaukars need to drop this on spotify ASAP!
I have been dreaming about Sallus Secundus for 40 years and did not think that the sheer zealotry of these soldiers/prisoners could be expressed cinematically but here it is. I think even Genghis Khan would pause before he engaged these monsters.
In the middle of a night between fighting, imagine the physiological effect this would have on an enemy with just a few hundred Sardaukar chanting like this.
I don't want to imagine it, it would destroy me
Scary has a nightmare
Sounds very calming to me. The psychological effect of a silent enemy suddenly appearing is a lot more fearsome
It seems like this is battle prep. High priest is rallying the troops, offering blood sacrifice for strength, and singing praises to the warrior gods/ancestors. Sarduakar attack in silence.
I haven’t killed anybody in this life, my reward is to come back in 8000 years as a badass Sardaukar!!
My Dad loved Dune (book), this scene made me cry, they did an astonishing job. My Pops missed this movie by 9 months. Screw you COVID!
damn, sorry
My dad died the day after it came out in theaters. Badass moments like this made the movie really, really hard to watch.
@@lettuceprime4922 you still went to see it?
@@milotura6828 - I saw it on HBO Max when it looked like he might come home. Then on opening night with a friend to take my mind off things. Then that night he ran a fever of 107.
@@lettuceprime4922 oh that makes more sense
This scene did nothing to move the plot forward. It was pure world-building. Some directors would cut it for that reason, not realizing that this is the sort of thing people go to the movies to see. This is heart, not filler.
As someone who knew the books even I didn't know I needed this scene. Thanks for filming it, Denis.
I thought the book was pretty boring when I read it some 2 years ago and finishing this movie I didn’t think much of it. It has been 2 days and this movie WILL NOT leave my head. I can’t pinpoint exactly what about it is incessantly sticking to my mind but I feel I have to watch it again to be rid of this feeling. Cool movie, would recommend.
Watch it again and then read the book again
I wish this version was actually on the soundtrack. There are fragments of it, but not enough for my liking! I'm glad this is here, and I'm glad they used a real throat singer for this piece! (Heh...this music isn't alien, it's Mongolian.)
this form of throat singing is more viking than mongol, just that you know, but you are right not alien (even if exagerated)
@@malshai1789 AcShUaAlLLyy ....
@@wizewizard1840 XD well yes i do that not often
There are many versions of throat singing, not just Mongolian.
@@malshai1789 it's not viking at all lol cope
Thank you for posting this. This scene was hair raising for me, the layering of one breath taking visual after another floored me. The naked bodies draining their lives into stone drains , the blood diluted by hammering grey rain, above them this physically distorted figure chanting a totally relentless anthem of death that comes from the place of no return and below them endless battalions of the Emperor's Sardukar each receiving the mark that only the elite may have, a smear of blood on their foreheads as the Harkonnenn Mentat clearly out of his comfort zone secures the deal for the Baron, from the commander who makes it clear with every fibre of his being that they only serve the Emperor. Dune is a gift I am glad I lived long enough to see.
You should read the books. You’re in for a treat.
@@hawk66100 Yes that's true. I read the first three around 40 years ago actually, that's what amazed me abut this scene was that it wasn't in Dune. Villeneuve uses film to tell us everything in one short sequence i.e. the harkonnenn/ Emperiial conspiracy against House Atreides and the formidable reputation of Gurney Halleck which helps explain Pauls skill levels. I might read them again now lol.
Massively under liked comment!
@@mwd331 man you are the coolest . And Thankyou . This shows how rewarding not taking a selfish view can be . You made me feel worthwhile
@@peterjensen5586 bro, thanks. This is honestly the most positive, wholesome comment back I've had on UA-cam. You are worthwhile, never let yourself feel you aren't.
20 minutes into the movie i had to go to the bathroom, i finally couldn't hold it any longer and jumped up right before this scene. . . I don't think i've ever walked out of a theatre at a more wtf moment - that throat chant as i stumbled through the darkness was way beyond surreal.
This throat chanting was a nonhuman experience in the cinema. I could feel my ears explode by how powerful the sound was, but it felt so fucking good, like I was transported to this magnificent, breathtaking universe.
Mongolian throat singing. Probably passed down from the days of Genghis Khan. Ruthless, warriors. Think that fits these Sardaukar and how they were raised as the Emperor's Army.
I think its closer to Tibetan throat singing than Mongolian. Sounds like a mix, really.
Mongolian. Tuvan Throat singing. Kargyraa style. Cut a bit but that’s it.
@@PaterExcelsior Yep this is 100% Kargyraa
I have saved this in my music playlist
why would you have a mount & blade boyar as your youtube char?
We need 10 straight hours of this.
right click, loop
Phurpa
@@c0pyr1gh7 holy shit I’m so glad someone else knows of Phurpa… Absolutely thunderous, Alexei Tegin has got it together
Man I hope theres an extended version of this scene comming on an extended cut sometime in the future.
I had 30 seconds of audio to work with 😅
Unfortunately Denis already confirmed no directors cut will be coming 😔
@@omgpuppet Well that sucks. For once I hope some suit ignores the directors wishes then.
@@MattiasGrozny On the bright side, Part 2 is definitely happening and Denis has stated he'd love to do Messiah as well.
@@omgpuppet wait is part 2 actually confirmed? I tought that they have to greenlight it first
New workout mix
This had the raw badass energy that previous Dune adaptations didn't quite have. These Sardukar could beat any other iteration of themselves. No pomp, some ceremony, but only in blood and basic colors.
hamburger cheeseburger big mac whooper
I just read that in my mind with Sardaukar voice. Thank you for making my day
Man this scene was one of the best ones in this movie for me. I even played it back a few times because it was so awsome.🤙🕶
The future is such a beautiful place ♥️♥️
Sure after the whole A.I. take over. Giant worms don’t seem too bad.
Not if your on the receiving end of the Sardukar.
No, it isnt
where you can be involuntarily eaten by sandworms and meet big headed mutated humans who sniff cocaine
How much are you willing to bet this becomes a meme at some point
When he said "weembul beembul bee" I felt that
Warrior Sounds.
Aztec blood ritual meets Sparta’s 300 meets Atilla the Hun. The very last bunch of badasses you ever want to cross paths with.
As has been said: they did the Sarduakar right in this film.
Aztec? This was more like old Nordic ritual, Aztec is completely different. The chant would also be more similar to old Viking ones or Mongolian throat singing.
Aztecs didn't drain the blood and collect it like Viking tribes did. All they cared about was offering the heart to their gods. Overall this seems more Nordic and Viking inspired although the throat singing is more popular from Mongolia. Grab a book mate.
@@JM-kv2kn I didn’t think an exhaustive list of every warrior tribal culture drawn from for the scene was required.
There’s clear elevation in pyramidical fashion in the scene and quite large stone structures. That said Aztec to me - not Nordic, so I said Aztec. The sword baring all male raised as fanatic thing speaks of Spartans to me. The throat singing evokes the Huns.
I was making a general comment on the scene - not an in-depth critique, complete with cultural analysis requiring a bibliography.
@@JM-kv2kn he meant Aztec as in sacrificing individuals to appeal to the Gods. The posture of the victims looks similar to those of the Aztecs. Look at "Apocalypto" how they would lay them on their backs with arms and legs out before they carved their hearts out. Also Frank and Brian Herbert make several references to Aztec gods and culture in their books, like the Tlaloc and the Bene Tleilax for example. Let's not forget the Axlotl tanks which they used to reproduce a human being from the cells of a cadaver to make a "ghola". Axtlotl are a species of salamander indigenous to Mexico.
@@PaterExcelsior bro your reference of Aztec is actually spot on
Yeah, wait till you meet Paul's Fedaykin ;-)
Denis Villeneuve and his sound team pulled off a real feat of subtle atmospheric creativity with the Sardaukar chant. It's like a creepily distorted Buddhist meditative prayer, solemnly haunting and with a clear devotional element, yet menacing and angry with that elliptical reverb effect, as if the high priest was vibrating a jaw harp right at his vocal cords. One of the eeriest sonic tapestries I've heard.
This scene, with the bleak environment and the eerie throat singing gives you the sense that Sardukars are like Spartans: Trained and moulded from a young age with the sole intention to be made into living weapons.
I’m glad I’m not the only one captivated by this scene
:D
Gotta love how Villenueve gives us scenes that he probably didn't think were gonna be that memorable but ended up being the scenes that really stick with you:
Blade Runner 2049 the baseline test
The Sardaukar Chant in Dune.
I get the feeling Villeneuve knows exactly what he's doing, and how to mindfuck with the viewer. The chant scene is one that truly stuck in my mind; you're sat there trying to work out what the fuck is going on, whilst seeing people hung upside down, during a truly disturbing chant that echoes out around the room.
Actually I think a master of his craft as meticulous as Villeneuve knows exactly the kind of scene that has the potential to become a standout
We need a 10 hrs
At first it sounds like rain as if it purifies but the more I listen the more it sounds like coins, pearls, gold, sand….spice pilling up. And that rough, heavy almost savage vocal fits the scene so good it’s unreal. I loved this movie. Everything was perfection - actors, score, cinematography, story….everything! The one thing I didn’t like is that it’s a true representation of human kind - greedy, power hungry creatures that will never collectively reach our potential of “good”. It’s what was, what is and what will be. Damn that movie was brilliant!
You got the last part VERY right, it's a VERY true representation of humankind and future technologies.. think USA,think Afghanistan,Libya,Syria and the war for oil and gas.. Your first part must be the drugs
@@NaceK84 lol I don’t need drugs to have vivid imagination and interpret things I see and hear specially when there is a context to said things
It warms my heart to know that after 10k years, that Yello is still performing
Love that this short, minute long scene was the absolute standout. Shows how powerful atmosphere can be.
Ringtone accepted
Straight up the scariest scene I've seen all year in a movie.
You want to know if your sound system is good? Play this.
If you don't get a goosebump, it's trash.
Most epic scene in years of cinema.
“Dreams are messages from the deep” is the direct translation from the very first seconds of the film, and if you listen close you can hear this guy repeat that part of the chant.
Each line spoken literally vibrates my entire body and gives me goosebumps, then add onto that the visuals of this scene and you are left completely speechless
This was the scene where it really felt like we're 10,000 years in the future.
20,000+ The AG calender actually starts some 10,000 years in the future.
That, and the fact that every fight in the movie was done with knives. X'D
This scene made me think "Damn, we humans get scary in the future."
Unironically soothing and focusing.
-What kind of music do you listen to?
-It's complicated...
That scene gave me pretty solid warhammer 40k vibes, certainly one of the best part of the movie
I thought I was the only one! That’s aWesome
Yeah this felt like some tech priest performing rights on an imperial guard regiment in an outer rim siege world, just needed more skulls and bionics but still haunting as fuck
Warhammer 40k was heavily HEAVILY inspired by Dune.
Warhammer was created because of Dune influence
This sounds so foreign but eeriely human and I think that's why I'm so obsessed with it lol.
This was one of the best scenes in the movie, the absolutely thundering voice of the Sardaukar priest chanting, with rows upon rows of draining bodies feeding into the legions of Sardaukar Warriors… Denis did this book right, can’t wait for part 2.
I watched this movie blazed out of my goddamn mind and this for some reason was my favorite part in the whole movie. Idk why but i just think about it a lot now for some reason
Yeah same here. I reminded this scene a few times just to make what I was watching cuz it was so dope. It stuck with me as well.
@@arighteousname5882 idk why but i remembered the dude having a cylinder hat to match the outfit. Idk i was a little too high watching it but it was still cool
This sound isn’t made up. It’s real. This is the sound of the most fanatic killers in the history of history. The Huns. Mongolian slaughter merchants. This naturally strikes fear into people like a snakes rattle or a dogs frothy growl.
Very cleaver use of real menacing stuff. And - fascinating when you learn it’s a man. Not a synthesiser.
It draws you in. Totally get you.
@@PaterExcelsior yeah, we know what throat singing is..
@@madmammoth9022 I took magic mushrooms (liberty caps) and went to the cinema to watch this movie. This scene has been stuck in my head ever since. The whole viewing was a borderline religious experience. Such a great piece of cinema. Cheers.
Let’s all give a moment of silence for the great Frank Herbert. The incredible mind behind the dune universe.
A really good sequence of the movie. Felt really alien and was impressive.
Sardaukar is what would happen if an entire planet's anthem is Blackmetal.
This has quickly become one of my favorite bits of audio to listen to when I need to chill out and center myself. Love that throat singing.
Also, thinking back to this scene and the blood sacrifice of countless innocents really fills me with a pure sense of serenity.
This was one of my favorite scenes in the film, glad someone else thought so too and made a video of it.
I'm really glad I watched this in theaters, because the bass from this part really gets into you.
So much world building in such a short scene.
Listening to this in theater was simply mindblowing
This was my favorite scene from the movie. Didn't think we'd get to see Salusa Secundus. I hope we get to see more in part two.
The Sardaukar priest who leads the chant is somehow absolutely creepy looking. I remember when I saw in theaters that the image of him gave me chills. He just looks…. Unnatural in a way that really set off my internal alarms or something.
Such a well done scene. This truly is the art of showing, not telling. You don’t need an over abundance of exposition if you know how to write and direct scenes such as this.
Imma play this shit when I lift
Enemies of the Emperor dislike this chant.
I disliked this comment (jk I didn't)
They really did an amazing job introducing these guys. In a brief scene they impress on the audience these guys are something to be feared and a menace to the main characters. A refreshing change of pace from villain minions in other films that are treated as disposable cannon fodder meant purely to be killed by the protagonist.
Are you sure they were Sardaukar?
Trust me when you fight Sardaukar, you know
I dunno man, but that guy standing with only just his hand moving slowly with the throat singing perfectly blend well, they have introduced Sardaukar in the movie perfectly, It's chilling and i agree to everybody, this must be the best scene in the entire movie
This scene changed my life. I'm not even joking.
Felt it in IMAX. Sardaukar chant is terrifying...
Glad to see people liked this movie enough that this little clip has almost half a million views. Gives me hope that we will see content beyond the first book.
I love listening to this chant. And it seems my neighbours seem to love it as well. Every time I play it, they raise their hands, raise their hands and sing along! So nice to have something in common.
Sardaukar are badass until someone mentions Fedaykin.
This movie hits you like a bag of bricks when it comes to its expansive universe, lore, and its characters. I can't wait until the rest of the movies release.
This scene gave me chills, they really did a great job depicting the Sardukar and how ruthless they are. The combo of the hunting throat siging chant a long with the blood sacrifices made by draining the blood of the sacrificed. Really gives the true feeling of how evil and dark they are. The scene is very captivating for sure.
Sure those are Sadaukars bleeding out a little for their comrades?
@@Fridaey13txhOktober Salusa Secundus is also the prision planet of the Empire. They could be prisoners that where sacrificed
Such a motivation story, start digging. thank you!
Want this as my morning alarm