On Mond
4. The film does end with one of the two key duels in the book
-- where Paul kills Jamis reluctantly. I kind of predicted
this -- the duel is at the exact middle of the book, and
nicely bookends the later, climatic duel. But it removes the
element that makes this scene great and unforgettable, namely,
Jessica's (and Stilgar's) cold shouldering of Paul afterwards.
Jessica does this to teach him a lesson; he should never be
allowed to enjoy besting someone vastly inferior to him in
training, lest he becomes the same monster that the Harkonens
are. I've watched so many martial arts films/TV shows and
none of them has this insight; their "heroes" are stone-cold
killers at their first kill.
Incidentally, when Chani gives Paul the knife in the book, she
actually also slips him tips about fighting Jamis -- that the
latter can fight with both hands. This hints at the complex
dynamics within the Fremen tribe, and perhaps Chani's attraction
to Paul right from the beginning, or her hope that he will indeed
be the "Messiah." In the film, she does nothing of the kind;
the filmmakers probably make the change to make Paul more
heroic, but like many of the other small changes, it detracts
from the emotional complexity of the book.
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