A Thousand and One Nights

THE TECHNICOLOR STORY OF ALADDIN and his wonderful VAMP!

5.8
19451h 33m

On the run after being found sweet-talking the Sultan's daughter, Aladdin comes upon a lamp which, when rubbed, summons up Babs the genie. He uses it to return as a visiting prince asking for the princess's hand. Unfortunately for him, the sultan's wicked twin brother has secretly usurped the throne, someone else is after the lamp for his own ends, and Babs has taken a shine to Aladdin herself and is bent on wrecking his endeavours.

Production

Logo for Columbia Pictures

Cast

Photo of Evelyn Keyes

Evelyn Keyes

Babs The Genie

Photo of Phil Silvers

Phil Silvers

Abdullah

Photo of Adele Jergens

Adele Jergens

Princess Armina

Photo of Dennis Hoey

Dennis Hoey

Sultan Kamar Al-Kir / Prince Hadji

Photo of Philip Van Zandt

Philip Van Zandt

Grand Wazir AbuHassan

Photo of Janis Carter

Janis Carter

Harem Girl

Photo of Jeff Donnell

Jeff Donnell

Harem Girl

Photo of Nina Foch

Nina Foch

Harem Girl

Photo of John George

John George

Dwarf at Table in Inn

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Reviews

G

CinemaSerf

6/10

“Oh, if only I had a gun… No, wait, they haven’t been invented yet!”. Phil Silvers brings a distinctly pantomime effect to this retelling of the Sinbad meets Arabian Nights story. To keep up the swash and the buckle, we have the dashingly mischievous “Aladdin” (Cornel Wilde) who falls in love with the ultimate in forbidden fruit, the princess “Armina” (Adele Jergens). She is the daughter of the caliph Dennis Hoey who also doubles up as his own dastardly twin with designs on both the throne and his neice. “Aladdin” and his sidekick “Abdullah” (Silvers) have a wheeze going on that sees the former entertain the crowds whilst his pal surreptitiously relieves them of their valuables. When he spots his forbidden love and faces years in the dungeon, they abscond into the mountains where he finds a lamp. Of course he rubs it, and out pops “Babs” (Evelyn Keyes) to hear and to obey. Sure, she accommodates his wishes to impress at the court, but she also has taken a little bit of a shine to her new master and she is not averse to a little mischief of her own to get her man. Fans of Silvers and his screwball, bespectacled, humour might enjoy this but I’m more a fan of the Korda-style telling of these stories (indeed Rex Ingram appears in the same red costume here from “The Thief of Bagdad” from 1940) and I found the comedic antics and the breaks for obviously dubbed musical numbers spoiled the adventure element. That really only comes to the fore in the last ten minutes and isn’t up to very much. Wilde’s in his element and Keyes in clearly enjoying her role here, but if there is such a thing as a fantasy purist, that is me - and this just fell between too many stools. It does look great, though, and there are a few clever visual effects, but original is usually best and this is neither.

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