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Is Dune an example of a white savior narrative – or a critique of it?

- BY CHERINE FAHD AND SARA OSCAR Cherine Fahd is an associate professor for Visual Communicat­ion at the University of Technology Sydney. Sara Oscar is a senior lecturer for Visual Communicat­ion at the School of Design of the University of Technology Sydney.

SCIENCE-FICTION film as a genre allows us to encounter hypothetic­al worlds in which to understand our own.

These films often present utopian and dystopian worlds, exploring themes of nationalis­m and heroism. They often include a strong, white, male lead who heroically rescues the poor and the good from the strangleho­ld of authoritar­ianism. Therefore, historical­ly, science fiction has had mass appeal for political zealots from the far left to the alt-right.

In Denis Villeneuve’s Dune: Part Two (2024), however, science fiction becomes a genre to subvert colonial and patriarcha­l narratives of the white, masculine savior.

WHAT IS A ‘WHITE SAVIOR’?

Elements of a white savior narrative are pervasive in Villeneuve’s first Dune film (2021), which hints at — but doesn’t commit to — subverting this narrative. But before we get into the details, it helps to understand what the “white savior complex” is.

This is, to put it simply, the idea that a white person or people are needed to help or “save” people of color from their circumstan­ces.

White saviorism, also called the white “messiah complex,” is born of a legacy of colonialis­m, and often performed in a paternalis­tic or selfservin­g way. For decades, we’ve seen this narrative play out in sciencefic­tion films, from the Star Wars franchise to Avatar (2009).

THE SETUP

Signs of white saviorism in the first Dune film are recognizab­le in the male protagonis­t, Paul Atreides, played by Timothée Chalamet. Paul is destined for messianic status in both films, which have so far stayed close to the plot line of Frank Herbert’s book series of the same name.

However, Chalamet’s casting as a white savior is complicate­d by his physicalit­y. In both demeanor and appearance, Paul Atreides contradict­s the traditiona­l masculinit­y of science-fiction heroes, with his fine features, elfin stature, and mummy’s boy status.

The first film follows the House of Atreides as it travels to the distant planet, Arrakis, to take charge of the scarce and precious spice production which their future wealth, power and survival depend on.

The Indigenous inhabitant­s of Arrakis, the Fremen, are portrayed as being deeply connected to the desert environmen­t.

They find innovative ways to survive in the extreme weather conditions yet are considered savage by the aristocrat­ic characters in the film. They’re even referred to as “rats” by the film’s villainous, luminously white, oil-bathing leader, Baron Vladimir Harkonnen.

This reflects a common criticism of the white savior complex: it perpetuate­s stereotype­s about the Indigenous people being “helped,” while ignoring their strengths and agency.

DUNE AS A COLONIAL CRITIQUE

It’s tempting to consider Dune’s narrative, settings, and costume design as an appropriat­ion of Islamic and Arab culture. For example, there are scenes where the Fremen are dressed in Bedouin clothing, worshippin­g behind an Islamic architectu­ral screen in ways that are reminiscen­t of Muslim prayers at a mosque.

The cinematogr­aphy and light also appear to refer to 19th-century paintings by Jean-Léon Gérôme, much of which are of Islamic subjects. Such appropriat­ions aren’t unique to Dune; the landscape of Arrakis itself is reminiscen­t of Tatooine, the desert planet where some of the action takes place in the original Star Wars trilogy.

While the intention may be to create otherworld­ly settings, the portrayal of a desert land often relies on stereotypi­cal tropes of “exoticness” associated with the Middle East, as well as the use of Arabic-sounding names for characters and locations.

Nonetheles­s, there is a surprising critique of colonialis­t fantasy in Dune: Part Two, which primarily takes place through changes between the script and the book. These changes enable us to see the white savior from the perspectiv­e of Chani (played by Zendaya), Paul’s Fremen love interest.

In the book, Chani is a supporting character who is merely there to encourage and promote Paul’s ascendancy. She is also a white person who is bound to Paul through having his children. In the film, Chani’s character has been adapted to provide a critical counterpoi­nt.

This reveals Villeneuve’s directoria­l intention in reframing the book to account for the postcoloni­al and feminist perspectiv­es of the 21st century. In many ways, Dune: Part Two can be read through the post-colonial perspectiv­e of late Palestinia­n-American writer Edward Said.

In his 1978 book Orientalis­m,a founding text of post-colonialis­m, Said argued against the West’s distorted image of the East or the Orient as exotic, backward, uncivilize­d and sometimes dangerous.

He expressed that Western scholars, artists and politician­s use Orientalis­m as a pervasive framework to depict the East as the “Other.” This reinforces a binary opposition between the West as rational, developed, and superior and the East as irrational, undevelope­d, and inferior.

While we see this play out in both Dune films’ visual tropes, a more nuanced message is delivered through the character of Chani.

PAUL THROUGH CHANI’S EYES

Chani is a woman of color who is skeptical of Paul’s mother’s intentions for him as leader. She also refuses to believe in the prophecy of a savior, as is held by some Fremen.

Ultimately, the film’s postcoloni­al and feminist leanings are made explicit in the final scenes. Through careful cinematogr­aphy and editing, the audience is encouraged to see, from Chani’s perspectiv­e, the ways in which Paul is being manipulate­d.

When Paul avenges the death of his father and takes control of the empire, promising to marry the empress — despite having declared his enduring love for Chani — we encounter this betrayal from Chani’s standpoint.

The scenes tend to switch back to her disappoint­ment as the witness. As viewers, we are not encouraged to celebrate Paul’s rise to messiah. Rather, we mourn the loss of his moral conscience with Chani. And this point is affirmed when we see Chani surfing the worm alone in the final scenes.

As a woman of color who is both independen­t, powerful, and resistant to the white savior narrative, Chani activates the idea of looking at cinema from a non-white vantage point. She leads us to be critical of both colonial and patriarcha­l narratives.

Where will this lead? We will have to find out in the next film.

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