Feyd's Cannibal Pets | Harkonnen Harpies Explained | Dune Lore

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Published 2024-03-19
An exploration of the significance of Feyd Rautha's cannibal darlings within the context of Villeneuve's adaptation, their alignment with the source material and the ways in which they compliment a few fascinating elements present in Herbert's original work.

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All Comments (21)
  • Dennis had to change the perversions of the Baron so that Hollywood execs wouldn’t feel personally attacked.
  • @westofthemoon
    The lack of food he was referring to on the trip over were corpses. Aka: he didn't get a chance to murder anyone to feed to his harpies during the ride over. It has nothing to do with feeling responsible for anyone. Its actually a thinly vailed threat to anyone in the room who might oppose him. In essence "watch out cause I haven't killed anyone in a while and I'm looking for a reason to do it".
  • @Omar_listenin
    I didn't put together that Feyd saw Chani as nothing more than Paul's pet. It makes sense given how twisted his perspective is
  • @manuelkong10
    I think the cannibal harpies were introduced to replace the fact that in the books Baron Harkonen wanted s3x with little boys ....this way the harkonen could remain VERY EVIL yet the movie could avoid controversy
  • I think the Harpies are an homage to Dracula's brides in the Coppola film. Clever and fitting.
  • @MattsCollection
    Dr Yueh mentions in the first movie that the Harkonnens take his wife apart and put her back together again "like a doll." There may or may not be a nod to the Benne Teilax in the movies, or we're supposed to think that the Harkonnens do this to people just because they can.
  • @Questionthis1
    They make it more fascinating and powerful when he looks at Chani and asks Paul if he needs to give any "special attention for the pet"?
  • @DraugSatan
    I would like to add, as a neuroscientist, eating human flesh does not in any meaningful way regress or diminish cognitive faculties in and by itself. What I presume the video is talking about is prion disease, or a very specific prion disease called "Kuru", an epidemic phenomenon amongst a tribe of people practising ceremonial cannibalism. The current best explanation for Kuru was that, at some point, a tribesman developed Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD; a known prion disease) and upon his death his brains were eaten by others who, in turn, developed the fatal neurodegenerative illness. The long incubation time of CJD (10-50 years) ensured that the brains of those infected could be ingested without anyone ever having seen its symptoms in the living before they were, well, harvested for consumption. Thus, unless you specifically eat uncooked brain tissue from someone with CJD, you will probably not regress to bestiality and lose cognitive functions. If you do, it will also take decades, so you'll never know. Just don't eat brains, folks. That being said, my picking at that loose thread is only meant as a helpful appendix to the video itself, I very much enjoyed it and it is well thought out and well made. Thank you for making it for us!
  • @joshDammmit
    Fayd utters the phrase, “you fought well, atreides,” twice; once when killing a member of the house, and then again when being killed by Paul.
  • @splunkmastah4609
    I think it's an excellent way of showing off Harkonnen depravity without devoting a large amount of runtime to it. Between their look, their world, their pets, and the way they treat their inferiors, you get a good look at who they are, and it's nasty.
  • @bdso9593
    May we also discuss the dark horned " bull like" lancers in the arena as well? Is it ironic that the "bulls" and their lancing of victims is also reminiscent of bull fighting? An effigy of House Atreides and the old Duke's demise??
  • @300mirrors
    Great video! Studying Feyd, I don't think it's affection like we would have for other people or actual pets. He's giving Ramsay Bolton energy with his dogs. He starves them on purpose to kill. Feyd is voicing a threat that they're hungry, letting everyone know they could be his next victim. He's described as a psychopath and sociopath. These people are not known to have remorse or deep emotional connections. Denis describes him as a Rockstar, and a Rockstar isn't complete without groupies. They're like having the latest designer handbag.
  • @alden1132
    In Chapterhouse Dune, they confirm the Axolotl tanks ARE in fact the Bene Tleilaxu women. The last Tleilaxu divulges the secrets of the tanks, which the Bene Gesserit find abhorrent, but not so much so that they refuse to adapt their own women for the purpose, including for the production of artificial Spice.
  • Funny. During my viewings, I interpreted 'The lack of food during the trip' as one additional layer of Feyd's brutality. I imagined durations of starvation were a means by which Feyd forced 'his pets' into cannibalism and a means by which he kept them ravenously enthusiastic for whatever meat we would provide them.
  • @evanramp536
    Feyd's twisted sense of love, honor, and responsibility are integral components to his character in the book, and I love how Denis Villeneuve translated this to screen. Given how much of a minimalistic director he is, combined with Feyd only getting a few minutes of screentime, the addition of his little harpe cult to show this side of him is pure genius.
  • @Shimra8888
    Why are the Harkonnens so depraved? How can a dynasty like that survive? Why don’t the people of Giedi Prime revolt? In our history you see this Ancient Rome overthrowing the tyrant King Tarquinius and the Zhou Dynasty overthrowing the depraved Shang dynasty.