The Jihad's going to be stymied at birth if the Guild refuses to transport the Fremen warriors anywhere. Blackmailing them by threatening to cut off their access to spice and thereby throttling their income likely does the trick.
The Jihad's going to be stymied at birth if the Guild refuses to transport the Fremen warriors anywhere. Blackmailing them by threatening to cut off their access to spice and thereby throttling their income likely does the trick.
The Jihad's going to be stymied at birth if the Guild refuses to transport the Fremen warriors anywhere. Blackmailing them by threatening to cut off their access to spice and thereby throttling their income likely does the trick.
Yup. Which is how the book ends. Paul threatens to destroy the spice via the water of death (changed to nukes in the book, which is a change I totally get to simplify things for audiences) and the Guild surrenders to him.
Great discussion - The problem for book readers is that our minds are filling in things - sometimes differently to the film.
The last few comments have caused me to check the scripts and ask a question - why is spice important in the two films and ignoring the books entirely?
Entirely true in my case. The few big changes I noticed; the small details I'm remembering from the novel.Great discussion - The problem for book readers is that our minds are filling in things - sometimes differently to the film.
It's explained very early on to Paul by that Wikipedia entry type thing he was listening to.Great discussion - The problem for book readers is that our minds are filling in things - sometimes differently to the film.
The last few comments have caused me to check the scripts and ask a question - why is spice important in the two films and ignoring the books entirely?
Yup.Didn't Paul's recording education thing explain spice was needed for safe FTL travel in Part 1?
In other news I'm just out of the cinema and loved the movie. I've become very picky with movies in my dawning middle age so it's been such a joy to be blown away like I was a child again.
It being a secret in the book is important only in that it explains why no one did what Paul does before him. If the Harkonnens knew they had the Guild under their thumb, they'd have exploited it.
In the movie, to simplify things, it's one of the things they decided was easier just to reveal right away as an explanation for the spices importance instead of it being for rich people to extend their life considerably. Then just ignore why the Harkonnens or anyone else never took advantage.
The Baron would have no reason to risk it. It would trap him on Dune or on his dump of a world.Well, the book explains how Paul could do it by killing the entire Sandworm life cycle through drowning of Sandtrouts. This crucial piece of information was known only to Fremen, which is why no one ever considered it. I'm not even sure it was known that the Sandworms actually produce the Spice.
It's just easier for the general audience to correlate atomic weapons ( which everyone knows about) with mass scale destruction. Careful and thinking viewers however might stumble upon a new plothole that is opened up by this version - if it's that easy to destroy all Spice why did the Harkonnen never attempt it? About the only in-movie explanation i can think of is that Baron Harkonnen might deem it too risky and too high stakes. Much safer to get filthy rich and enjoy the power it brings.
The Baron would have no reason to risk it. It would trap him on Dune or on his dump of a world.
Paul would be happy enough to trap himself on Dune (or it would look that way to the people he is trying to bluff. In reality he would not irradiate the area)
Does anyone have a clear explanation of the 'Black Sun' mentioned for Geidi Prime and all the weird coloring? I don't remember anything like that from the book although it has been several years since I read it last.
It's not in the books. Villeneuve wanted to add a cool alien world. And it was impressive. One of my friends (doesn't know the book) couldn't get over it.
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