his voice really got me... it was like young Baron. As Tyrants just want to make others pretty much copies of themselves Austin was really like a young version of Stellen's Baron.
This was a genius casting decision. He even have the pouty lips that Frank Herbert described in the books. To quote Princess Irulan, "Feyd Rautha? He's psychotic."
We as a society are blessed to have such a great crop of Hollywood actors man, this movie directly represented a directors visions come to life! The body language and dialogue was insane, coupled with Hans Zimmer and great action sequences and top of line cinematography, this movie could bring Hollywood back from the shadows!!!!
@@edwardmulholland7912He hasn’t got the filmography yet to say and I don’t think you’re wrong at all in what you said. He played Elvis, which respectfully he did great as but the move itself had a lot of poor decisions in writing/editing/score and I don’t imagine myself ever wanting to watch that again. He’s about to be in a bunch of movies so the games on now and we will know in ten years if he’s a legend or not.
I can hear skarsgard’s accent for baron even in this interview. Butler has a hard time shaking the voices he plays. 😂😂 but it’s great also not a bad thing
His voice is interesting, as it is an emulation of Stellan's voice, though Stellan is already doing an American accent with very subtle flavors of his native Swedish accent peaking through (in interviews his Swedish accent is heavier). Butler's accent is like an American / faded (Fayded?) Swedish accent which is probably harder to pull off than either a heavy Swedish accent or American, which Butler already has. Pretty cool.
Pretty sure I'm just jealous cause he's such a a handsome and seems to be a pretty wholesome guy. I will say though, he was awesome in Dune. Makeup department deserves house props, too. They made him look like this embryotic almost android. Just soulless. Then he did a great job of letting everyone know he has a soul and it's blacker than his teeth.
**Spoiler alert** . . . The one thing that I really resent having Butler play Feyd Rautha is that he will most likely not be around for any future Dune films. Nevertheless, he has made his memorable mark.
I agree, he is such a captivating villain. But so much of what they did in Pt 2 was a success, I'm looking forward to what new incredible things they pull off in Messiah!
The voice was a little distracting at first, until I realized Austin was trying to make sure he was a member of the family. He would look AND sound at least something like the Baron.
No thanks, he's far too good an actor to waste in the Marvel franchise. Hope he continues to do varied and interesting projects with great directors rather than getting stuck in a contract to churn out paint by numbers movies with shonky dialogue for people with no attention span.
Watched it today. As a many time read fan of the series I have to say they changed many aspects or character intentions within the story. I won't go on in this thread about all the bits I found off but It was well put together and this character held the screen. He did a fantastic job in a squiffy book adaption.
It works primarily on a visual and emotional level. The film does a really good job of making you feel the things you're seeing. The weakness is that it is primarily visual and they kind of skirt along the surface on the story without truly penetrating its depths. Non book readers will have a harder time understanding intentions of certain characters or the meaning of some things.
@@abudgie6909 This is exactly how I see it. So much of the book is internal to Pauls or Jessica's thoughts including the final duel. They had to depart from that and make it their own and they did a very good job. I would have changed some things personally but this is the best adaptation we're likely going to have of this work.
Man the final fight scene with Paul... really made me cringe imagining feeling that sort of wound! If you know what I'm talking about I'm sure you agree.
That's CRAZY, that's WILD. Find a better way to describe things that are slightly surprising or uncomfortable, this internet language trend of overreacting to everything is tiresome.
To me he came off as "worst universe Opie" from the Andy Griffith show. Replace all the positive reinforcement and life lessons with hate and pain and fear.
Technically they did a 3/3 casting a rockstar as Mick Jagger was going to be Feyd in Jodorowsky’s Dune, obviously they had Sting in the David Lynch film & now Austin Butler who portrayed Elvis Presley in a film that while it was not good he wasn’t the problem with. I feel that’s the case for this film too, it’s not good but he’s not the problem with it.
It's a shame that Feyd as a character came to such a final end. I felt like, as a ruthless, villainous character, there was much more growth that should have been explored. He still has a vulnerable, immature essence to him in Dune: Part 2 and I would have liked to see him grow as a man and as a father. Will his child play a role in a sequel?
@@AloutkaKazawa oh yes; he has a daughter but nothing comes of it. Waste of time & energy. Feyd could have been the ruler of the Empire if he had won against Paul.
That bald cap to protect the actor's hair really made Feyd's head look bulbous. I couldn't un see it. I can't be the only only who thought he wasn't scary, just a young, protected edgelord.
Feyd was, in the books, pretty charismatic. Here, because of the director's perspective, they took out the red hair and any real charisma in the characters, (this includes color, lol) from the Harkonnen line but focused on visual FX to represent them. I still think Sting's performance in the 80's was closer to the real Feyd in the books. None of this, again, was Butler's failure but a difference in vision from the director.
Austin definitely has star quality, he's a good looking guy and he's very "cool." But I increasingly find myself thinking, what else you got? He's a decent actor but I don't see a ton of depth to him. I feel like we may have already seen his limits
Yeah, it's a complete departure from the novels. Neither his looks nor his motivations are consistent with the source material. It's basically the director's fanfiction at this point.
Anyone care less about his accent and Elvis. Bad actor who couldn’t get rid of an accent from past roles. Can’t wait for his next movie so he talks about having to drop the accent from dune and he was saying the exact same thing for masters of the air
I honestly felt like casting him for Feyd was one of the worst decisions of the film. His portrayal of Feyd insipid and devoid of charisma. I don't know if it was due to the way Villeneuve directed him, or if it was his own choice of approach to the character, but it didn't work for me. I felt absolutely nothing when he died. I feel like this is part due to the way Villeneuve approached the Harkonens in Dune Part 2. They took a major backseat to Paul's story and had little to no development arc, which really shows its toll in the story when he kills the Baron and it feels like a minor moment in the story. I really feel like going with someone else for this role would've helped to have a more interesting Feyd in Part 2.
@@thataintrightisit I think I just had a clear idea how Feyd looked because of the books. I just feel like this Feyd felt like the most generic "bad guy" ever. It needed some charisma infused in the performance, but sadly... wasn't there.
@@1marcelo That's it. They have no arc. They're awful people and they die as awful people. But for a film, it doesn't translate as well as it does in the book. Villeneuve turned Chani into an anti fundamentalist, but in the book she has Paul's back the whole time. But in the film, it works well. For me, it becomes difficult to look at these characters solely based on the first book because I read them all and I followed their path when some characters return as ghoulas, like the Baron.
I kept chuckling multiple times throughout this interview, this guy doesn't look like a real human being. He acts like someone playing the role of "upcoming male star doing interview" and he's going for a over the top masculine approach, like a rockstar doing a perfume ad vibe. It's like he's doing a bad Johnny Depp impression, but Depp always comes off as a real sincere guy in interviews. Just be yourself my man, otherwise you look so pretentious lmao
his voice really got me... it was like young Baron. As Tyrants just want to make others pretty much copies of themselves Austin was really like a young version of Stellen's Baron.
He was the Baron before he got fatted. The Baron could not be control whereas Feyd could be control.
The son the Baron never had
Like Kim Jong Il and Kim Jong Un
Yeah that tough Harkonnen voice
@@franticzenster8140 life is art. art is life
Butler's portrayal of Feyd ended up being the best break-out character of the movie. He stole all the scenes.
He did a fantastic job, no doubt, but I think Javier Bardem's Stilgar ran away with the movie. Loved every second he was on screen.
@@fcon2123 yusss funny stillgar was an absolute treasure.
@@fcon2123 totally!
@@TheSparrowLooksUp absolutely was!
This was a genius casting decision. He even have the pouty lips that Frank Herbert described in the books. To quote Princess Irulan, "Feyd Rautha? He's psychotic."
I really love this channel. No flashy edits just straight actors discussing their process
They did a really good job at making him a dark mirror of Paul in every way. He's a mini version of the Baron and the Devil of the Harkonnens.
they're both dark, but I see your point. a darker mirror, perhaps?
@@quinncillian Their both dark, but initially Paul is less dark until his father gets killed.
@@gimmeyourrights8292 true! good point
No, they're both pretty light skinned
He brought my favorite character to life and did him justice.
Feyd Rautha looks absolutely insane and maniacal as Austin Butler!
austin killed it insanely good portrayal. So many stellar performances in ᑐᑌᑎᕮ
Hey... how did you write Dune like that?
saw it in another comment and copied it lmao @@msfundio
@@msfundio ASCII no questions, I'll tell you no lies.
We as a society are blessed to have such a great crop of Hollywood actors man, this movie directly represented a directors visions come to life! The body language and dialogue was insane, coupled with Hans Zimmer and great action sequences and top of line cinematography, this movie could bring Hollywood back from the shadows!!!!
Very interesting interview! i love listening to actors talk about their process of becoming! I want to see Dune 2 soon.
He gave a great performance in the film - this guy is definitely going to be big in the future.
He already is bro….
@@Rozq
Really? I must be old school - I’ve never heard/seen this guy before. My bad.
@@edwardmulholland7912He hasn’t got the filmography yet to say and I don’t think you’re wrong at all in what you said. He played Elvis, which respectfully he did great as but the move itself had a lot of poor decisions in writing/editing/score and I don’t imagine myself ever wanting to watch that again. He’s about to be in a bunch of movies so the games on now and we will know in ten years if he’s a legend or not.
@@stalwartzero7001
He is definitely a talented actor, good luck to the guy.
The bts shots are really great. It makes me want to see Austin interview as himself in makeup!
I can hear skarsgard’s accent for baron even in this interview. Butler has a hard time shaking the voices he plays. 😂😂 but it’s great also not a bad thing
Butler did a fantastic job, every time Feyd was on screen his physicality screamed that he was a predator.
Clever lad. Good job
never realized how much he looks like Bill Skarsgård
I went through the whole movie thinking it was Bill Skarsgård.
His voice is interesting, as it is an emulation of Stellan's voice, though Stellan is already doing an American accent with very subtle flavors of his native Swedish accent peaking through (in interviews his Swedish accent is heavier). Butler's accent is like an American / faded (Fayded?) Swedish accent which is probably harder to pull off than either a heavy Swedish accent or American, which Butler already has. Pretty cool.
Pretty sure I'm just jealous cause he's such a a handsome and seems to be a pretty wholesome guy. I will say though, he was awesome in Dune. Makeup department deserves house props, too. They made him look like this embryotic almost android. Just soulless. Then he did a great job of letting everyone know he has a soul and it's blacker than his teeth.
**Spoiler alert**
.
.
.
The one thing that I really resent having Butler play Feyd Rautha is that
he will most likely not be around for any future Dune films.
Nevertheless, he has made his memorable mark.
I agree, he is such a captivating villain. But so much of what they did in Pt 2 was a success, I'm looking forward to what new incredible things they pull off in Messiah!
How is that Austin’s fault he was supposed to die in part 2 no matter the actor lmao?
@@nateb5544 Not resenting him playing the role, resenting the fact that he won't be reappearing.
I wish we get more scene of Feyd Rautha..
The voice was a little distracting at first, until I realized Austin was trying to make sure he was a member of the family. He would look AND sound at least something like the Baron.
Probably my favorite performance in the movie. Austin Butler did a phenomenal job. And thank God he’s not in a metal codpiece. Lol
He was so fucking scary in this film
The meanest villains are always acted by the nicest people.
Killed it
They better make him MCU’s Gambit damn it
No thanks, he's far too good an actor to waste in the Marvel franchise. Hope he continues to do varied and interesting projects with great directors rather than getting stuck in a contract to churn out paint by numbers movies with shonky dialogue for people with no attention span.
Watched it today. As a many time read fan of the series I have to say they changed many aspects or character intentions within the story. I won't go on in this thread about all the bits I found off but It was well put together and this character held the screen. He did a fantastic job in a squiffy book adaption.
It works primarily on a visual and emotional level. The film does a really good job of making you feel the things you're seeing. The weakness is that it is primarily visual and they kind of skirt along the surface on the story without truly penetrating its depths. Non book readers will have a harder time understanding intentions of certain characters or the meaning of some things.
I found it to be the best possible adaptation of Dune into cinema. It was perfect. The changes felt appropriate for the medium.
@@abudgie6909 This is exactly how I see it. So much of the book is internal to Pauls or Jessica's thoughts including the final duel. They had to depart from that and make it their own and they did a very good job. I would have changed some things personally but this is the best adaptation we're likely going to have of this work.
Man the final fight scene with Paul... really made me cringe imagining feeling that sort of wound! If you know what I'm talking about I'm sure you agree.
Acting is hard af
I swear I could hear some Elvis in some lines
He was absolutely excellent surpassed his role in Alivis
okay I just realized, this guy is now ready to play Voldemort when the HP tv show comes out!
Real Austin butler was so good looking amazing very handsome special be with
Wonder if they used a hair cap or shaved his head?
Hair cap
no but making him kiss Stellan Skarsgard on the mouth was CRAZY
Lol that’s what crazy to you?
He didn’t make him, he improvised that!
That's CRAZY, that's WILD.
Find a better way to describe things that are slightly surprising or uncomfortable, this internet language trend of overreacting to everything is tiresome.
🤓@@kievbutcher
@@kievbutcherunexpected but in character?
To me he came off as "worst universe Opie" from the Andy Griffith show. Replace all the positive reinforcement and life lessons with hate and pain and fear.
Technically they did a 3/3 casting a rockstar as Mick Jagger was going to be Feyd in Jodorowsky’s Dune, obviously they had Sting in the David Lynch film & now Austin Butler who portrayed Elvis Presley in a film that while it was not good he wasn’t the problem with. I feel that’s the case for this film too, it’s not good but he’s not the problem with it.
Marzipan!
Wasnt it just a stellan skaarrssggaarrd impression?
He still sounds like Elvis hehe
Do Elvis voice again, make it gravely
"As soon as I read the script, I knew Feyd-Rautha was gonna have Elvis' voice."
King of mumbling
It's a shame that Feyd as a character came to such a final end. I felt like, as a ruthless, villainous character, there was much more growth that should have been explored. He still has a vulnerable, immature essence to him in Dune: Part 2 and I would have liked to see him grow as a man and as a father. Will his child play a role in a sequel?
If they follow the books, from frank Herbert then no
If they adapt something from his son's books than the child will have a minor role
Damn movie has been out for like 2 days. Cool spoiler.
Feyd's child is a no go; once Paul's line sits on the Imperial Throne.
@JSTmore but the child supposed to be a girl. That was the plan Bene Gesserit had for him.
@@AloutkaKazawa oh yes; he has a daughter but nothing comes of it. Waste of time & energy. Feyd could have been the ruler of the Empire if he had won against Paul.
I'm not sure if people are there yet, but I'm just gonna say it: this performance is on par with Ledger's Joker.
That bald cap to protect the actor's hair really made Feyd's head look bulbous. I couldn't un see it.
I can't be the only only who thought he wasn't scary, just a young, protected edgelord.
Playing Elvis really changed this dudes voice permanently 😂
GAMBIT
I will accept no substitutes
Feyd was, in the books, pretty charismatic. Here, because of the director's perspective, they took out the red hair and any real charisma in the characters, (this includes color, lol) from the Harkonnen line but focused on visual FX to represent them. I still think Sting's performance in the 80's was closer to the real Feyd in the books. None of this, again, was Butler's failure but a difference in vision from the director.
Sting had watch A Clockwork Orange a couple of times and said "yeah I'll do that"
@@chetmanley1885 spot on my friend, as a free spirit, highly educated, well read. Thank you! Btw, Cwo was and is today, an absolute masterpiece!
Austin definitely has star quality, he's a good looking guy and he's very "cool." But I increasingly find myself thinking, what else you got? He's a decent actor but I don't see a ton of depth to him. I feel like we may have already seen his limits
He looks a bit weedy in the role, should have got in the gym and bulked up.
Bulk doesn't help in combat, which is all speed. He was incredibly toned in the coliseum scene.
The stupid masks 😂
He talks like he has COVID...
The better fighter didn't win.
RIP Feyd Rautha he did his best but lost to an augmented Paul juiced up on spice.
the "better" fighter always win
A cartoon character fought a flesh demon and lost. That’s what it was. That’s what it will always be.
Sorry, it seems I’m the villain here… but Austin’s "Feyd" interpretation didn’t convince me.
Yeah, it's a complete departure from the novels. Neither his looks nor his motivations are consistent with the source material. It's basically the director's fanfiction at this point.
@@HiuchiKiyoko 🤝
Anyone care less about his accent and Elvis. Bad actor who couldn’t get rid of an accent from past roles. Can’t wait for his next movie so he talks about having to drop the accent from dune and he was saying the exact same thing for masters of the air
I honestly felt like casting him for Feyd was one of the worst decisions of the film. His portrayal of Feyd insipid and devoid of charisma.
I don't know if it was due to the way Villeneuve directed him, or if it was his own choice of approach to the character, but it didn't work for me. I felt absolutely nothing when he died.
I feel like this is part due to the way Villeneuve approached the Harkonens in Dune Part 2. They took a major backseat to Paul's story and had little to no development arc, which really shows its toll in the story when he kills the Baron and it feels like a minor moment in the story.
I really feel like going with someone else for this role would've helped to have a more interesting Feyd in Part 2.
You’re like maybe one of 5 people ever that think this. He stole the scenes he was in. Bad take.
@@thataintrightisit I think I just had a clear idea how Feyd looked because of the books. I just feel like this Feyd felt like the most generic "bad guy" ever. It needed some charisma infused in the performance, but sadly... wasn't there.
Hard disagree. Feyd was easily one of the best parts of the movie for me.
what development arc have the Harkonen in the book?
@@1marcelo That's it. They have no arc. They're awful people and they die as awful people. But for a film, it doesn't translate as well as it does in the book. Villeneuve turned Chani into an anti fundamentalist, but in the book she has Paul's back the whole time. But in the film, it works well. For me, it becomes difficult to look at these characters solely based on the first book because I read them all and I followed their path when some characters return as ghoulas, like the Baron.
I kept chuckling multiple times throughout this interview, this guy doesn't look like a real human being. He acts like someone playing the role of "upcoming male star doing interview" and he's going for a over the top masculine approach, like a rockstar doing a perfume ad vibe. It's like he's doing a bad Johnny Depp impression, but Depp always comes off as a real sincere guy in interviews. Just be yourself my man, otherwise you look so pretentious lmao
Always gonna be some haters. This guy seems awesome.
@@thataintrightisitI'm not hating! i'm just saying. Seems like an alright kid.
He mentioned in another interview that the preperation for Elvis was so intense that it actually changed his personality.
@@TheJas20 seems like an alright kid? He is world famous and extremely accomplished and you feel the need to be condescending with him? wow!
@@1marcelono no you have to understand some random nobody has real pro tips for someone wildly more successful and ambitious
May thy knife chip and shatter