Here's a fun thought for you: Dune was written before Life of Brian came out, so it's entirely possible that Monty Python's satirical portrayal of that idea was directly inspired by Frank Herbert playing it straight.
@@Randoman590 The trouble is, I can't really recall an exact equivalent to that scene in the book. In general, Paul is a little less conflicted about taking advantage of the Fremen in the book. His hesitancy is mostly about the Jihad and he tries to avoid it while still getting the revenge he wants.
I love this movie with all my soul but the moment after Paul killed Feyd and Stilgar just instantly cheers Lisan Al Gaib as if he's paid to do it is fucking hilarious.
In that instant, Paul saw how Stilgar had been transformed from the Fremen naib to a creature of the Lisan al-Gaib, a receptacle for awe and obedience. It was a lessening of the man, and Paul felt the ghost-wind of the jihad in it. "I have seen a friend become a worshiper," he thought.
you forgot my favorite part. stilgar talking with his followers "the messiah is too humble to say he is the messiah" & all of his followers start going "yeah", "ahhh", "hes right" that shit was so funny in theatres
The thing is... are they wrong? When the _genuine_ messiah appears, not a phony, not someone _almost_ there, but "the one", how are people supposed to resist? Unfounded fanaticism is dangerous, but when the prophecies come true and the messiah appears, it's almost logical. If it happened on modern day Earth we'd be just the same.
how is this any different from a president ordering you to attack another country for whatever reason? religion might not have much authority anymore but it got replaced by nationalism rather quickly. authority works on all levels, its just that religion tends to work on simple people with no infrastructure more often.
@@anthtan you realize he’s seen every single outcome right? War was the only option. He literally says it in the film “in so many futures I see us failing, but there is one narrow way through where we win” that’s why he seems to know every outcome when he talks. That’s why he’s not surprised when they reject his rise to power. He already knows the out come but he still asked and hopes they’ll sue for peace. He’s of course correct and that’s why he looks so sad when tells the fremen to “lead them to paradise” because he knows even tho the fremen will win. He still hates the fact that it’s come to this. But there was no other choice
@@lordmiow he can see the future through his dreams. He can also see the past. Everyone’s past. Even their dreams. Along with the voice. Which is basically Jedi mindtricks on steroids
Stilgar saying Lisan Al Gaib after Paul killed Feyd😭😭 he said it like we just witnessed a magic trick and people don’t immediately clap so you have to say “tada” for special effect
1:44 the fanatic religious fervor in Stilgar’s eyes was insane when I first watched it in theaters. You got to give Javier Bardem props for bringing this out in a character such as Stilgar whose so fanatically loyal to his beliefs and Paul being the messiah.
as the servant in part one once said, "when you've lived with prophecy for so long, the moment of revelation is a shock." stilgar was the embodiment of that statement
The moment when Paul defeats Feyd and Stilgar has that moment of hesitation before championing his messiah to the people is my favorite scene from the entire film. That look of doubt and confusion and fear before snapping back into the trance is just amazing
The funniest thing about Stilgar and the Fremen is how they had never even thought about getting into a spaceship and blasting themselves into outer space in their whole lives... But "MUAD'DIB LEADS THE WAY so let's get on this giant metal dildo to blow up anyone that says otherwise."
Ikr lol I was thinking the same thing. And how did they never think of using the sandworms to attack their oppressors after all this time??? Surely someone must’ve thought of it but I guess not until Paul led them.
@@rafaellelinner6501 I'm not sure 100% but I know that the Fremen have their own smugglers who distribute spice off-world, so I assume they at least have some space travel savvy folks amongst their ranks. Using the weapons on the ships is another thing, but this is Dune we're talking about, so I'd like to imagine the Fremen just board the enemy ships pirate style and slaughter everyone on it. They could'nt attack their opressors beforehand, as the cities had shieldwalls and were often built behind a natural shieldwall on top of that, like a mountain range. Only through use of the family atomics, and the cover of a very big, rare sandstorm, could Paul destroy that mountain range and push through with the worms. The Harkonnen and Sardaukar had every right to believe they were safe. They literally got surprised and steamrolled so quickly, it was hard to react in time.
@@rickymartin4457 damn I didn’t know all that. Well good to know. I honestly was kinda half asleep when I was watching it so I might’ve dozed off or wasn’t paying attention to those parts. But now you mentioning all this, it makes more sense why they never attacked with the sandstorms until now.
@@rafaellelinner6501 To be fair, it is quite the dense movie, lots of things you can miss if you don't pay attention. I was discovering a lot I missed the first time after a second watch myself.
Why did india not kick out the british during colonialism? Or African countries the French? Its usually divide and conquer and lack of any ability to pool resources and finally human resources are not correctly positioned. Its a bit of a play on reality. Poverty of the locals in a sea of resources just like oil companies in Nigeria oil rich regions.
1:01 I'm from Spain, like Javier Bardem. And I swear, the way he hugs Chalamet here... it's the most Spanish I've ever seen him in a non-Spanish speaking role!! lol
Words can't describe how much I'm in love with Spain. I live my life listening to flamenco music. Say hello to the sacred soil of Spain for this little guy in Tehran.
Stilgar is such a tragic f*cking character. To want to believe in something, _anything_ badly enough to forego all reason. He was born into a hopeless world and a hopeless war, and he was made leader because of his strength. For so long, he held in his heart dreams of Paradise, finding signs in places where they didn’t exist. He just didn’t want all the fighting to be for nothing. Stilgar is the tale of a man slowly transformed by blind faith into an instrument of evil.
How did he take advantage of them? Was it because he wanted to seek vegence for his father and used the Fremen? The Fremen hated the Harkonen too, and not only that; the Fremen hated the occupying houses of their planet. How is morally or ethically wrong if your goals align? He made it quite clear to Stilgar, Choni, and the Fremen people in his command that he wasthe why and how. He tells Stilgar and Choni verbatim about his father, and why he does what he does. He tells everyone in his command during the acension speech to the emperor. Through his leadership he took back Arrakis and saved the Fremen. He did so with the least amount of casualities, and he genuinely cared for the people in his command. How is any of that evil? He even outright refused to kill stilgar, he fought his own battles at the forefront on the ground along side his people and did h2h combat with the emperors champion in lieu of someone else in the final scene with a 50/50 chance of dying according to his timelines vision. If anything, it was the Bene gesserit are the real evil. They orchestrated everything, and have been manipulating all the houses all along including the lesser groups of Arrakis (fremen).
@@xw33b36 Paul said at one point that if he took control billions would die AND he still took control. the point is that when Paul took up the fremens to fight the harkonen they believed it would stop there and what would come next would be building paradise. So you tell me if its morally wrong to make a nation-planet be your weapon of mass destruction just because they believed you would lead them to paradise. (pauls action actually did lead to a better future for humanity but its so far down the line that stilgar's great great great - (you get the idea) grandkids wouldn't even experience it.) He may do things honorably but that doesn't detract from the point that what he is doing morally fucked up and evil. (things can be grey , surprise surprise)
Stilgar lived a long and prestigious life under Paul and his son Duke Leto II. He even wrote a history book about paul and their time together on arrakis. He only laments that when arrakis becomes a paradise, his people abandoned the fremen way of life and basically killed their entire culture in the process. He died happy and satisfied. He didn't bore witness to the horror that is to come when Leto II turned into a tyrant.
It’s funny at first but when you deep it and having read the books it’s actually very sad because, as Paul says, he stops becoming his friend and becomes his follower
It's hilarious but at the sametime there are literal instances in the movie that are foretold, and the actually happends exactly as foretold.. So you, yourself also start to think "Do i have the craziness in me"
Paul: You're all individual! Fremen: Yes, we're all individual! Paul: You're all different! Fremen: Yes, we're all differrent! Chani: I'm not Gurney: Shhh
I am not crazy! I know he is Lisan al-gaib. I knew it was him. One from the outer world. As if I could ever make such a mistake. Never. Never! I just - I can prove it. He knew our ways, he comes with the reverend mother. You think this is nothing? You think this is bad? This? He is maud'dib! He is Lisan al-gaib!
It’s funny as hell till you see that this is actually how overly faith-blinded people act. Reminds me of old babushkas in Central and Eastern Europe xD
@@nicksojka7457 man Dune part 2 did a lot better job at conveying that message than that David Lynch movie that now looks like a bad fanfic adaptation in comparison
It's amazing how big a role Javier Bardem played in this movie. He carries more than half the emotional weight of this movie. Unbelievable performance...
When they get all they want, water, status a confortable life and a GREEN PARADISE. Some of them get very depressed, they even forget how to ride sandworms and make proper stillsuits....Then they extiguish. Thats the end of the third book
Idk if anyone else agrees but I think Javier Bardem should win the Oscar for Best Supporting Actor. I've read the Dune series and Bardem perfectly portrayed Stilgar the way I imagined him while reading the books. Such a fantastic performance imo
I know people like to poke fun at Stilgar, but he captures the mindset of a religious zealot hyped up on fundamentalist beliefs perfectly. They’re funny, until suddenly they’re not.
"“In that instant, Paul saw how Stilgar had been transformed from the Fremen naib to a creature of the Lisan al-Gaib, a receptacle for awe and obedience. It was a lessening of the man, and Paul felt the ghost-wind of the jihad in it.”
Even though he fanboys.. The point where paul accepts the belief the freeman have in him, and starts monologueing, and every roars with awe, inspire, dedication and loyalty, for the promised savior of their planet.. It's beyond fucking epic.
Firm and strong believer Stilgar is, yet, he did not force his followers to believe what he believe, at least in the movie he did not shut up anyone who disagree with him.
It was funny at first but then you sit down and think for a second and realized that yeah, it WAS funny at first the way he was fanboying but then it turns into so much blind fanaticism that it becomes terrifying
fun fact: that guttural sound that Stilgar makes when he arrives at Sietch Tabr is him giving Paul the gluck gluck 5000 with the amount of dickriding he does in the film
Stilgar must be what every devoted disciple or follower must've been like when their leader was paving the way, interesting to see it played it in this move/books
Bardem fucken nailed it!! I mean how can you play the religious zealout hype man and also be the comedic release of the movie without killing the more serious themes of the movie... What a fucking great movie
how did you miss the best part? when Paul claimed he wasnt Lisan al Gaib, and Stilgar took it as a sign of humbleness.
"The Lisan Al Gaib is too humble" 😂😂😂😂😂
Here's a fun thought for you: Dune was written before Life of Brian came out, so it's entirely possible that Monty Python's satirical portrayal of that idea was directly inspired by Frank Herbert playing it straight.
I had to hold back a laugh in the theatre at that bit.
@@Randoman590 The trouble is, I can't really recall an exact equivalent to that scene in the book. In general, Paul is a little less conflicted about taking advantage of the Fremen in the book. His hesitancy is mostly about the Jihad and he tries to avoid it while still getting the revenge he wants.
that was a moment worth of Life of Brian ;)
I love this movie with all my soul but the moment after Paul killed Feyd and Stilgar just instantly cheers Lisan Al Gaib as if he's paid to do it is fucking hilarious.
Paul: *Breathes*
Stilgar: DID YOU SEE?!!??! HOW HE BREATHED????!!? ONLU THE LISAN AL GAIB COULD BREATHE LIKE THAT AS IT WAS WRITEEENNNN.
Religious hype man
Brother, whenever Stilgar opened his mouth during the movie I would be chuckling and annoying everyone around me in the theater.
Hilarious and perfect... Anything other than like it was wouldn't be as funny and epic at the same time
This should win him an Oscar.
1:55 Stillgar every time he wakes up
He has a "My Faith Belongs to Lisan al Gaib" t-shirt no doubt.
KKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKK
Or finished shitting.
Lisan al gaib😖
@@9f81rsd00 he has a
"Team Lisan Al-Gaib" T-Shirt no doubt
As foretold in the prophecies
Stilgar is the greatest Hype man on the known universe
Men would kill to have a friend like him
@@CBRN-115
Modern problems required modern solutions
Stilgar vs ser Davos seaworth.
@@captainross4706 Stilgar clears
@@captainross4706 Davos is too gloomy and unenthusiastic. Stilgar with his crazy eyes would make anyone believe Paul is the Lisan al-Gaib!
"I don't care what you believe, I believe!" - Stilgar
As it was written!!!!!
Me: Changed TV from HDMI 1 to HDMI 2
My grandma: *Lisan Al-Gaib*
Jaden Williams made a vid on that exact scenario
As Written.
Wheezing😂😂😂😂
he was so unconfident during the fight, that relief when Paul wins is hilarious 🤣
Actually no. He was very confident until Paul gets stabbed.
Bruh he believed in him blindly
Lol yea. You can tell he was having doubts the longer the fight went on.
His belief is fighting his common sense since Paul looks kinda shrimpy and it's def more plausible Feyd would win.
I think that's why he was kind of surprised like "oh SHIT HE WON". Lisan al-Gaib!!!!
In that instant, Paul saw how Stilgar had been transformed from the Fremen
naib to a creature of the Lisan al-Gaib, a receptacle for awe and obedience. It
was a lessening of the man, and Paul felt the ghost-wind of the jihad in it.
"I have seen a friend become a worshiper," he thought.
God tier writing.
Yoooo literally read that line today. Then he wonders if the same will happen to Gurney or not.
I'm assuming this is an exerpt from the book?
Gotta love the passion whenever Stilgar says “ Lisan al-gaib “
you forgot my favorite part. stilgar talking with his followers "the messiah is too humble to say he is the messiah" & all of his followers start going "yeah", "ahhh", "hes right" that shit was so funny in theatres
Ikr. I’m still trying to find that scene.
as written
it's funny on the first viewing, on the second viewing you realize how dangerous fanaticism is
That's the point of Dune.
it's pretty obviously dangerous even on first viewing
The thing is... are they wrong? When the _genuine_ messiah appears, not a phony, not someone _almost_ there, but "the one", how are people supposed to resist?
Unfounded fanaticism is dangerous, but when the prophecies come true and the messiah appears, it's almost logical. If it happened on modern day Earth we'd be just the same.
how is this any different from a president ordering you to attack another country for whatever reason? religion might not have much authority anymore but it got replaced by nationalism rather quickly. authority works on all levels, its just that religion tends to work on simple people with no infrastructure more often.
@@xondeez757
I almost agree with you. Except the Fremen have huge infrastructure and are not simple.
when your in a meatriding contest and your opponent is stilgar
Yeah no, I'm losing in seconds.
Don’t disrespect our boy Stilgar like that. He’s more of a hype man.
Literally everyone in Metal Gear saga
The "Lead them to paradise" line is unbelievably powerful
His delivery is everything. He doesn’t want utter those words but he knows it’s the only way. All the death he is about to cause is the only way.
@@trev9168 Why is it the only way? Can't he just, like, ask for negotiations? Why does it go straight to all out war?
@@anthtan you realize he’s seen every single outcome right? War was the only option. He literally says it in the film “in so many futures I see us failing, but there is one narrow way through where we win” that’s why he seems to know every outcome when he talks. That’s why he’s not surprised when they reject his rise to power. He already knows the out come but he still asked and hopes they’ll sue for peace. He’s of course correct and that’s why he looks so sad when tells the fremen to “lead them to paradise” because he knows even tho the fremen will win. He still hates the fact that it’s come to this. But there was no other choice
@@trev9168 yo so does paul have divination power or something? dang that cool af. Lisan Al Gaib!!!
@@lordmiow he can see the future through his dreams. He can also see the past. Everyone’s past. Even their dreams. Along with the voice. Which is basically Jedi mindtricks on steroids
Stilgar saying Lisan Al Gaib after Paul killed Feyd😭😭 he said it like we just witnessed a magic trick and people don’t immediately clap so you have to say “tada” for special effect
Of course he relieved he betted on paul for 10 bottles of water with Thanos.
"Please clap"
1:44 the fanatic religious fervor in Stilgar’s eyes was insane when I first watched it in theaters.
You got to give Javier Bardem props for bringing this out in a character such as Stilgar whose so fanatically loyal to his beliefs and Paul being the messiah.
I know right?? That look in his eyes gives me chills
as the servant in part one once said, "when you've lived with prophecy for so long, the moment of revelation is a shock."
stilgar was the embodiment of that statement
The moment when Paul defeats Feyd and Stilgar has that moment of hesitation before championing his messiah to the people is my favorite scene from the entire film. That look of doubt and confusion and fear before snapping back into the trance is just amazing
The funniest thing about Stilgar and the Fremen is how they had never even thought about getting into a spaceship and blasting themselves into outer space in their whole lives... But "MUAD'DIB LEADS THE WAY so let's get on this giant metal dildo to blow up anyone that says otherwise."
Ikr lol I was thinking the same thing. And how did they never think of using the sandworms to attack their oppressors after all this time??? Surely someone must’ve thought of it but I guess not until Paul led them.
@@rafaellelinner6501 I'm not sure 100% but I know that the Fremen have their own smugglers who distribute spice off-world, so I assume they at least have some space travel savvy folks amongst their ranks. Using the weapons on the ships is another thing, but this is Dune we're talking about, so I'd like to imagine the Fremen just board the enemy ships pirate style and slaughter everyone on it.
They could'nt attack their opressors beforehand, as the cities had shieldwalls and were often built behind a natural shieldwall on top of that, like a mountain range. Only through use of the family atomics, and the cover of a very big, rare sandstorm, could Paul destroy that mountain range and push through with the worms. The Harkonnen and Sardaukar had every right to believe they were safe. They literally got surprised and steamrolled so quickly, it was hard to react in time.
@@rickymartin4457 damn I didn’t know all that. Well good to know. I honestly was kinda half asleep when I was watching it so I might’ve dozed off or wasn’t paying attention to those parts. But now you mentioning all this, it makes more sense why they never attacked with the sandstorms until now.
@@rafaellelinner6501 To be fair, it is quite the dense movie, lots of things you can miss if you don't pay attention.
I was discovering a lot I missed the first time after a second watch myself.
Why did india not kick out the british during colonialism? Or African countries the French? Its usually divide and conquer and lack of any ability to pool resources and finally human resources are not correctly positioned. Its a bit of a play on reality. Poverty of the locals in a sea of resources just like oil companies in Nigeria oil rich regions.
1:01 I'm from Spain, like Javier Bardem. And I swear, the way he hugs Chalamet here... it's the most Spanish I've ever seen him in a non-Spanish speaking role!! lol
lmao. i lived in spain for over a decade. yalls hugs aren't unique at all in the way you're implying. You're reading way too much into that
Yeah, that's a Spanish hug right there
No need to insult my man like that... Not good. Not good at all... Not as written
Words can't describe how much I'm in love with Spain. I live my life listening to flamenco music. Say hello to the sacred soil of Spain for this little guy in Tehran.
Stilgar is such a tragic f*cking character. To want to believe in something, _anything_ badly enough to forego all reason. He was born into a hopeless world and a hopeless war, and he was made leader because of his strength. For so long, he held in his heart dreams of Paradise, finding signs in places where they didn’t exist. He just didn’t want all the fighting to be for nothing.
Stilgar is the tale of a man slowly transformed by blind faith into an instrument of evil.
How did he take advantage of them? Was it because he wanted to seek vegence for his father and used the Fremen? The Fremen hated the Harkonen too, and not only that; the Fremen hated the occupying houses of their planet.
How is morally or ethically wrong if your goals align? He made it quite clear to Stilgar, Choni, and the Fremen people in his command that he wasthe why and how. He tells Stilgar and Choni verbatim about his father, and why he does what he does. He tells everyone in his command during the acension speech to the emperor. Through his leadership he took back Arrakis and saved the Fremen. He did so with the least amount of casualities, and he genuinely cared for the people in his command. How is any of that evil?
He even outright refused to kill stilgar, he fought his own battles at the forefront on the ground along side his people and did h2h combat with the emperors champion in lieu of someone else in the final scene with a 50/50 chance of dying according to his timelines vision.
If anything, it was the Bene gesserit are the real evil. They orchestrated everything, and have been manipulating all the houses all along including the lesser groups of Arrakis (fremen).
@@xw33b36 Paul said at one point that if he took control billions would die AND he still took control. the point is that when Paul took up the fremens to fight the harkonen they believed it would stop there and what would come next would be building paradise.
So you tell me if its morally wrong to make a nation-planet be your weapon of mass destruction just because they believed you would lead them to paradise. (pauls action actually did lead to a better future for humanity but its so far down the line that stilgar's great great great - (you get the idea) grandkids wouldn't even experience it.)
He may do things honorably but that doesn't detract from the point that what he is doing morally fucked up and evil. (things can be grey , surprise surprise)
Stilgar lived a long and prestigious life under Paul and his son Duke Leto II. He even wrote a history book about paul and their time together on arrakis. He only laments that when arrakis becomes a paradise, his people abandoned the fremen way of life and basically killed their entire culture in the process. He died happy and satisfied. He didn't bore witness to the horror that is to come when Leto II turned into a tyrant.
Javier Bardem was superb in this role
2 minutes? How about 2 hours and 46 minutes. lol
He’s wayyyy too much of a fanboy throughout the movie, it’s so hilarious to see him on screen 😂
I love how his fanboying has a comedic aspect to it without taking away from the story impact.
It’s funny at first but when you deep it and having read the books it’s actually very sad because, as Paul says, he stops becoming his friend and becomes his follower
It's funny at first yeah, but if you think about it, as others said, it's downright scary and sad at the same time.
It's hilarious but at the sametime there are literal instances in the movie that are foretold, and the actually happends exactly as foretold.. So you, yourself also start to think "Do i have the craziness in me"
Stilgar was easily my favorite character in the movie. A breath of fresh air
Part of me hopes they visit Caladan and the Fremen just look at all the water.
Stilgar: How many people died to fill up this much water?
Paul: Cant you listen?!? Im not Al-Gaib!
Stilgar: *HE IS THE AL-GAIB!!!*
Paul: You're all individual!
Fremen: Yes, we're all individual!
Paul: You're all different!
Fremen: Yes, we're all differrent!
Chani: I'm not
Gurney: Shhh
Stilgar is the friend we all need to believe in us lol.
This movie unlocked a new fear for me. The fear of blind faith
This story is more relevant now than ever before
I am not crazy! I know he is Lisan al-gaib. I knew it was him. One from the outer world. As if I could ever make such a mistake. Never. Never! I just - I can prove it. He knew our ways, he comes with the reverend mother. You think this is nothing? You think this is bad? This? He is maud'dib! He is Lisan al-gaib!
Well, Paul does have the power to see the past and future, also can command people with his voice, so he is kind of half God half Human.
@@ShieldSniper I’d say he’s 1/3 God (Abrahamic religion God) because Paul is only omniscient
1:55😂
😂😂😂😂😂
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
It’s funny as hell till you see that this is actually how overly faith-blinded people act. Reminds me of old babushkas in Central and Eastern Europe xD
Bruh. He almost forgot hahahahaha
"its the perfect time to cross blades with me, i am an easy kill", how did you skip that bit lool
How can you make this video and not include the part where he fanboys because Paul is too "humble" to admit he's the Lisan al-Gaib.
OMG yes, you’re right; that was the best fanboy moment 😂
I'm kind of glad he didn't include the best part. For people who haven't seen the movie. That part was just awesome.
The uploader was too humble to admit he liked that part too much to include, he's a follower
LISAN AL-GAIB!!✊️
At some point, it stops being Life of Brian, and starts to mirror real life fanatics...
Congratulations, you now understand Frank Herbert's intended message.
@@nicksojka7457 man Dune part 2 did a lot better job at conveying that message than that David Lynch movie that now looks like a bad fanfic adaptation in comparison
@@dissatisfiedgamer7436 that movie had a lot of studio interference, way more than these
@@dissatisfiedgamer7436 You mean the film that literally had Paul make it start raining didn't already look like a bad fanfic adaptation on its own?
@@nicksojka7457 no real reference before, what you got is what you got at the time. Now that there's a contrast it just looks soooo much worse
That 'blasphemy' stilgar mood looked dangerous
You missed the scene when Paul rejects and stilgar states that he’s just humble
It's amazing how big a role Javier Bardem played in this movie. He carries more than half the emotional weight of this movie. Unbelievable performance...
There’s a fine line between being too much and fortunately his praise was perfect every time
So he's likes morpheus. He believes in Neo so much that even when Neo doubted himself if he is the chosen one or not, morpheus still believed in him.
But was morpheus really a fanatic or did he just locate a glitch in the matrix's programming?
The Fremen make me so sad. They just get used and manipulated
Honestly, don’t we all? I think we all get manipulated by religion, politics, and society in general.
When they get all they want, water, status a confortable life and a GREEN PARADISE. Some of them get very depressed, they even forget how to ride sandworms and make proper stillsuits....Then they extiguish. Thats the end of the third book
@@harumasamichi7923 thats awful
@@harumasamichi7923 thanks for the spoiler
@@jashserfus You chose to keep reading lmao.
I don't care what you believe, I BELIEVE
When the President and CEO of your fan club would throw down with anyone who would besmirch your name. We all need a Stilgar in our lives.
Just like Morpheus to Neo.
Worse.
Much worse.
0:37 Lisus al-gaib
nauurrr
AMONG US
Get out of my head get out of my head get out of my head get out of my head get out of my head get out of my head get out of my head
Idk if anyone else agrees but I think Javier Bardem should win the Oscar for Best Supporting Actor. I've read the Dune series and Bardem perfectly portrayed Stilgar the way I imagined him while reading the books. Such a fantastic performance imo
absolutely, perfect cast
Javier Bardem always understood the assignment!
Paul : *Fart*
Stilgar : LISAN AL-GAIB!!!
AS WRITTEN
😌
🫸🫷
/ \
@@h00nn00h
Stilgar and followers: He is! He is the Messiah
1:55 was when I was laughing out too loud in the cinema. His energy and sudden movement are, for some reason, peak comedy.
I know people like to poke fun at Stilgar, but he captures the mindset of a religious zealot hyped up on fundamentalist beliefs perfectly. They’re funny, until suddenly they’re not.
... until they kill 26 billion people and sterilise planets.
Everytime Stilgar was on screen it was golden, best performance by far. Lisan Al-Gaib!!
1:55 has me crying 😂
1:50 BY FARR the best one!😂
Stillgar was BY FAR the best part of Dune 2
"“In that instant, Paul saw how Stilgar had been transformed from the Fremen naib to a creature of the Lisan al-Gaib, a receptacle for awe and obedience. It was a lessening of the man, and Paul felt the ghost-wind of the jihad in it.”
We all need a wingman like Stilgar in our lives.
Even though he fanboys.. The point where paul accepts the belief the freeman have in him, and starts monologueing, and every roars with awe, inspire, dedication and loyalty, for the promised savior of their planet.. It's beyond fucking epic.
Javier absolutely kills it as Stilgar
It’s actually sad when a friend and a mentor of yours turned into a blind fanatic parrot.
2:08
Me after leaving the theater.
😂😂😂✊️
Paul farts ,
Stilgar - lisan al gaib
Good edit!
Mind blowing performance out of Javer Bardem when you consider his prior roles in the Bond movies and No Country For Old Men.
I can't wait for when this comes out on digital and my friends and I make this a drinking game.
Great actor.
Glazing compilation
Javier Bardem is such an amazing actor. He IS Stilgar.
'Muadib leads the way '
I'd have him as my henchman everyday. His devotion is unparalleled
This writing was absolutely incredible
Stigar is my favorite character in the whole franchise I love his charisma and the way he believes in his faith
This guy played Anton Chigurgh, a most serious, shrewd, no-nonsense, amoral killer in cinema history.
Show up to the glazing sesh for Paul, but Stilgar there…
Firm and strong believer Stilgar is, yet, he did not force his followers to believe what he believe, at least in the movie he did not shut up anyone who disagree with him.
It was funny at first but then you sit down and think for a second and realized that yeah, it WAS funny at first the way he was fanboying but then it turns into so much blind fanaticism that it becomes terrifying
That's what Dune warns the reader about.
The danger of a charismatic leader.
One of my favorite RUclips comments I read on another video said:
Paul: *shits his pants*
Stilgar: he will know our ways as if his own, as written
0:28 love that group face palm moment 🤦🏾♂️ 🤦🏻♀️ 🤦🏽
Best hype man of all time 💯
Lol. Loved his characters depiction of his blind faith.. great story telling
it’s more interesting to watch Bardem play a religious fanatic, knowing that he is an agnostic🔥👍🏻
The first 2 seconds has me dead
fun fact: that guttural sound that Stilgar makes when he arrives at Sietch Tabr is him giving Paul the gluck gluck 5000 with the amount of dickriding he does in the film
oh my god.
Stilgar must be what every devoted disciple or follower must've been like when their leader was paving the way, interesting to see it played it in this move/books
1:55 this moment made me laugh
1:56 you're welcome
Paul : Shits
Stiglar : Lisan AL-Gaib
Stilgar deserve the prophecy to be fulfilled.
Stilgar is like vegeta. But instead of needing to say prince of all saiyans, he has to say Lisan al Gaib
You forgot the "so hunble" scene
1:25 The pain in his eyes when he realises he didn't say Lisan al Gaib first
Stilgar reminds me of that one uncle in your family lol.
Stilgar when Paul puts it in the wrong hole 1:56
If Dune 2 was directed by JJ Abrams
Paul: *fart
Stilgar: Lisan Al-Gaib
Javier played Stilgar perfectly.
Paul: breathes
Stilgar: *LISAN AL-GAIB!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!*
I’m going to start shouting this every time my son makes me proud
Bardem fucken nailed it!! I mean how can you play the religious zealout hype man and also be the comedic release of the movie without killing the more serious themes of the movie... What a fucking great movie
He glazes Paul so bad 😭
This how bad ass version of adoring fan looks
1:56 hypeman
Paul farts- Stilgar "that's exactly how the Lisan Al-Gaib would fart"
“As written”
i get so much secondhand hype and joy from Stilgar. Shit i gotta rewatch it again T_T
1:56 100% he forgot his cue for a microsecond
1:56 this made me laugh out loud in the cinema, fucking priceless lol
Here’s a fun game while watching the movie: every time someone says Lisan Al Gaib *take a shot.* 💀