Why does the Dune worm look like that?

Those, per our source, are modeled off the teeth of baleen whales, which are bendy so they can sift through water to pull out tiny krill — much like how the worm sifts through sand for its food. Those whales' mouths certainly don't look like buttholes, but I think we're getting somewhere.
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What does the Dune worm look like?

In a planet sufficiently dry, they could move to their sandworm phase. The sandtrout are described as "flat and leathery" in Children of Dune, with Leto II noting that they are "roughly diamond-shaped" with "no head, no extremities, no eyes" and "coarse interlacings of extruded cilia".
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What is the worm thing in Dune?

The sandworms in Dune are giant animal worms known by their indigenous name as “Shai-Hulud.” To the Fremen, the deep desert dwellers of Arrakis, Shai-Hulud is considered a quasi-diety and sometimes called “Old Man of the Desert.” (When you see the new film, this last designation is important in one particular scene.)
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Why are there sandworms in Dune?

Creation of Sandworms

The process of sandworm creation began when sandtrout banded together after converging on a store of water deep beneath the surface of Arrakis. Indeed, water did occur naturally on Arrakis. However, due to the aforementioned process, it was always destroyed.
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Where did the worms come from in Dune?

The sandworms are native to the desert planet Arrakis, the only location in the known universe where they are found. They are created when their larval form, known as sandtrout (or Little Makers), band together in stores of water beneath the surface of Arrakis.
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The Sandworms Of Dune Explained



Is the spice in Dune worm poop?

As part of the sandworm life cycle, the creatures' larvae produce a substance known as melange. Also called spice, it just happens to be the most important substance in the galaxy.
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What do worms in Dune eat?

Ordinarily, sandworms on Arrakis spend most of their time gobbling up sand that comprises the nearly endless dunes covering the planet. In doing so, they are able to feast on creatures known as sand plankton, microscopic creatures that devour leftover traces of the spice scattered across the Arrakeen sands.
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Why do Dune worms eat people?

Humans, being roughly 60% water, actually present a huge risk to the worms and at best severely agitate their systems when consumed. The only reason sandworms pursue humans is that the rhythmic vibrations caused by their movement simulates those of native Arrakis prey that would be more suitable.
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How does Paul turn into a sandworm?

During an assassination attempt, he appears to transform into a small sandworm and defends himself before reverting to an innocent one-year-old. Genetically, he is noted to be very unusual; as he grows older, he displays an uncanny intelligence, but is very withdrawn.
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Who brought worms to Dune?

Leto Atreides II

Leto managed to live through the metamorphosis because his blood was spice-concentrated, leading the sandtrout to think it was water. Over time, Leto's body gradually changed into that of a sandworm, a process that took 3500 years.
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Is spice in Dune a drug?

Melange (/meɪˈlɑːnʒ/), often referred to as "the spice", is the fictional psychedelic drug central to the Dune series of science fiction novels by Frank Herbert and derivative works.
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Are giant sandworms real?

Researchers have discovered that giant sandworms, previously known only in fiction, actually roamed the seafloor near Taiwan millions of years ago. The predatory creatures were identified based on the reconstruction of an ancient trace fossil that turned out to be a burrow used by the worms.
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Why does the spice turn eyes blue?

Herbert's novel states that blue eyes are a result of being addicted to spice. Perhaps not wanting to imply that an entire race is addicted to drugs, Villeneuve includes a scene explaining that the Fremen's eyes have turned blue simply because of their constant exposure to spice in the sands of Arrakis.
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How much did Zendaya make from Dune?

Most recently, Zendaya appeared in the film adaptation of the science fiction series Dune. According to ShowBizGalore.com, Zendaya was paid $300,000 for her brief but meaningful role in the movie. She's rumored to have a much larger role in the film's follow-up, which was greenlit by Warner Bros.
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Why are there no guns in Dune?

Also some knives, like the Fremen's crysknife, is a sacred object. Crysknives are taked from the teeth of the great sandworm, giving them an extra oomph of honor and religious prestige. So that's why there are “no” guns in Dune. It's because it's smarter, and objectively cooler, to fight in close quarters.
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Is Paul Atreides the villain?

Paul Atreides is pitched as the hero of Dune, but there are several hints throughout the film that he could become the villain later on. The storyline of Frank Herbert's Dune novels is a sweeping epic that spans thousands of years, twisting the traditional hero's journey narrative in some interesting ways.
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How does Leto Atreides become a worm?

Thus, after spending time amongst a variety of fringe Fremen elements, including The Preacher, Leto accepted sand trout upon his body and began the conversion into a human-sandworm hybrid.
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What's in their noses in Dune?

Filt-Plug by Frank Herbert from Dune. A nose plug worn to collect moisture from exhaled air. On parched Arrakis, the wise traveler wears filt-plugs and a breathing mask over the mouth, to conserve moisture.
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How do the worms make spice in Dune?

How is spice made? Spice melange is formed deep beneath the sands of Arrakis, where the fungal excretions of sandworm larva mixes with water to form a mass that eventually explodes to the surface due to the planet's extreme heat.
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Who has blue eyes in Dune?

Ever since the first Dune trailer debuted, moviegoers unfamiliar with Frank Herbert's acclaimed science-fiction novel Dune may have been confused as to why, in Denis Villeneuve's Dune, Zendaya's eyes are blue. She's not alone, of course.
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Can you eat sandworms?

The Dune Encyclopedia strongly implies that sandworm flesh is inedible and almost certainly poisonous. The resulting electrons passed to an electron acceptor believed to be a cupri-cyanide compound, the reduced form of which accumulated in the worm body.
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Is Drum sand real?

Drum sand is a phenomenon of sound-emitting sands which have been found on many Neta-type planets, particularly those of the C and 50 to 60 subclassifications. This name is used only on Arrakis and local nomenclature depends upon the nature of the sound emitted, e.g. that of an indigenous musical instrument.
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Can Paul Atreides control the worms?

Sandworms are one of the most terrifying aspects of Dune, as their sheer size makes their presence incredibly intimidating. The fact that Paul is an outsider to Arrakis only makes the threat more sinister, as only Fremen can handle them.
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Who controls the spice?

Spice serves various purposes in Dune, but in both movie adaptations of the novel, Baron Harkonnen, former ruler of Arrakis, summarises its importance with the line: “He who controls the spice, controls the universe.”
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Are Dune worms real?

Sandworms are covered in armoured plates. They can live for millennia. Earthworms aren't very durable at all (“They're mostly water”), capable of living for seven or eight years, though most don't make it anywhere near that long. “They just have too many predators.” But both sandworms and earthworms don't have eyes!
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