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#Bijaz
antinarratives · 2 months
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“no children will spring from my loins, for i no longer have loins”
- frank herbert
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pristina-nomine · 2 years
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Dune Messiah character portraits by Marc Simonetti
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j-august · 26 days
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"I don't speak," Bijaz said. "I operate a machine called language. It creaks and groans, but is mine own."
Frank Herbert, Dune Messiah
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selfiesforalgernon · 3 months
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Hey, Dune casuals close your ears for a sec this is for real book fans lol but I just finished Dune Messiah and... was Bijaz implied to have been the ghola of the Tleilaxu Kwisatz Haderach? He seems full of angst, wants desperately to remember his past lives (all of them, he says, with all that THAT implies) has prescience or at least it's suspected by Paul that he has prescience, and in general has, as Hayt sees, not only control but a "certain charisma" that would be in line with the natural talents of a Haderach that would be inherited through the ghola body.. Also as we know, the Tleilaxu do not waste anything, it makes sense then that would keep the body of their created Haderach (I finished Messiah but haven't started the 3rd book yet so apologies if I'm jumping the gun and they explain it in later books lol)
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trainedchimpanzee · 6 months
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BRB reading the stoneburner sequence again to try and decipher Bijaz's riddles
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tagnoob · 11 days
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Thoughts on the Path to Dune Part 3
Just out in front of all of this I am going to say if Peter Dinklage doesn’t get cast as Bijaz I am going to be extremely disappointed.  I mean, he can’t get ALL the dwarf roles, I know.  But I also think his body of work shows him to be well suited for this particular part. So yeah, it has been confirmed that Denis Villeneuve will be bringing us a third film in the Dune saga based off of the…
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ferretteeth · 1 month
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$5 say they cast Peter Dinklage as Bijaz in Dune part 3
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thefalkon · 5 months
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can’t wait to see Bijaz bandy philosophical with [REDACTED] on the big screen
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incorrectdunequotes · 3 years
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Bijaz: Change is inedible.
Hayt: Don’t you mean inevitable?
Bijaz: No, I did not.
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blue-mint-winter · 2 years
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They call her Hawt, the Fish Monster, on the out-worlds
Bijaz about Alia
Looks like Herbert had Fish Speakers planned pretty far back.
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im just so enthralled by dune messiah coming off of this heroic narrative with a kind of foreboding ending in dune and saying “now lets watch how this played out over the next decade and some years”, taking the hero character and forcing him to keep inhabiting that role as the mythos around him grows beyond his control, forcing him to come to terms with the overwhelming pressure of being someone defined entirely by the role placed on him... so while it starts as this almost noir-like political drama, paul’s prescience forces him to understand the inevitability of his own downfall, and that casts this shadow over the whole scheming of paul’s enemies where you have to ask how much any of this matters when paul himself has accepted his eventual death. and this is reflected intersetingly through the shift from events-based storytelling focused on the complex politics, to a more tonal narrative that evolves through the way paul and alia and hayt grapple with their changing roles in this drama. and this culminates wonderfully in the 3rd act when paul lets himself be lured by scytale to otheyms home to collect bijaz, climaxing in pauls blinding and his total submission to playing out the role in the future he saw that would guarantee safety for his children... i know none of this is really coherent but its just. the way this book launches off of dune to break down the heroic narrative and the way that book structures itself as this anti-drama where the events are all ordained through prescience... man its the most joancore shit imaginable. this book kicks ASS
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willpottorff · 3 years
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The Blind Preacher from COD, I’m totally keep drawing my favorite Dune characters now. Bijaz I’m looking at you! • • • #art #illustration #frankherbert #godemperor #comicart #warmup #monster #worm #dune #paulattriedes #creaturedesign #scifi #childrenofdune #spice #pencil #duneart #artwork #horrorlife #creature #artoftheday #horrorart #willpottorff #loveyourself #arrakis #thespicemustflow #fearisthemindkiller #scifiart #dunemovie #illustrator #studies (at Chemical Dog Productions) https://www.instagram.com/p/CSxHQe6rBbx/?utm_medium=tumblr
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Just finished the Hayt and Bijaz conversation chapter, and well, this whole book has been me going from "oh no" to "oh nooo" to "OH NOOO" all right.
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Paul: Kill him before I succumb.
Bijaz: Nooooo!....
Me: Yeeeees!
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kwebtv · 6 years
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Children of Dune - Sci Fi Channel -  3/16/2003 -  3/26/2003
Science Fiction (3 episodes)
Running Time:  266 minutes total
Stars:
Alec Newman as Paul Atreides/Muad'Dib
Julie Cox as Princess Irulan
Edward Atterton as Duncan Idaho 
Ian McNeice as Baron Vladimir Harkonnen
Barbora Kodetová as Chani 
Steven Berkoff as Stilgar 
Daniela Amavia as Alia Atreides 
Alice Krige  as Lady Jessica
Susan Sarandon as  Princess Wensicia
P. H. Moriarty as  Gurney Halleck
James McAvoy  as  Leto II Atreides 
Jessica Brooks as  Ghanima Atreides
Jonathan Brüün as Farad'n
Rik Young as Javid
Martin McDougall as Scytale
Jakob Schwarz as Otheym
Klára Issová as Lichna
Zuzana Geislerová as Reverend Mother Gaius Helen Mohiam
Karel Dobry as Korba
Gee Williams as Bijaz
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number63liveblogs · 6 years
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Dune Messiah, part 23
Normally I would complain that Paul should have realized that one of his children was psychic like he was, as he already knows that psychics interfere with each other and that was the most obvious answer, but this was right after his girlfriend died so I’m willing to cut him a lot of slack. Even if he knew it was coming, a death is always a shock, this isn’t much different than someone dying of a terminal disease in that sense.
Paul’s grief was over all written really well, in this chapter. As someone who enjoys a good tragedy, everything flowed nicely and the emotions were believable. I’d say this was my favourite part of the book thus far.
Even though Bijaz is dead I doubt the plot with the Tleilaxu ends here. After all, if the author just wanted Duncan to come back he could just have hand-waved that he was gone and had amnesia for some other reason.
And the confrontation with Scytale, that seems like something that needed to happen for the sake of the future. After all, when Paul realized who he was, he could have had him killed but instead he deliberately noted that Scytale needed to stay alive. I don’t think he’s done anything else in the meantime, what else could his importance have been?
Although, come to think of it, it’s possible the Tleilaxu don’t get to know what happened here. After all, even if Paul starts talking about Hayt as Duncan from this on, it can be seen as just wishful thinking. It all depends on how many people knew about Bijaz’s and Scytale’s plan.
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