Aladdin and His Lamp (1952) Poster

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Important Life Lesson Given in Film
schweinhundt19673 March 2004
Every so often,one can find wisdom in the strangest places.To borrow a phrase from our friends in Alcoholics Anonymous,you get a message from the Higher Power.But,you also have to be aware that the message is being sent,and also have to be able to recognize that message.

It's been over 40 years since I've seen this picture.Consequently,my memories are not terribly clear.I believe that,for the most part, it is a run-of the mill Arabian nights movie. What I do remember,however,is the fact that the wishes granted by the Genie are accompanied by a dire price.The Genie openly states that, he is required to kill whoever casts the third wish in a series.This is,of course,quite different than the benign genies seen in many other films of this nature.

Now,there happens to be a price that we pay for whatever we get.And great gifts are almost always accompanied by great costs.Anything worth getting usually requires extreme effort,competition,and/or a tremendous cost.And the wishes the Genie grants in this film clearly illustrate this point.
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3/10
Cheap and kitchy. Who could ask for anything more?
mark.waltz20 March 2020
Warning: Spoilers
Absurdity follows this fantasy filmed in bland color schemes and filled with ridiculous performances and cliche's abound. The Aladdin saga has never looked so much like a comic strip, even in Disney's masterpiece which is currently a huge hit on Broadway and spawned a technically busy but fun live action remake. There's nothing to be said to defend the blatant miscasting of Johnny Sands and Patricia Medina, having no chemistry and lacking the camp quotient of Tony Curtis, playing a prince who was a thief over at Universal. A one dimensional villain (John Dehner) and comic relief Billy House can't help rise this above the Saturday matinee muck it is. Give me the Bowery Boys in Bagdad any day over this where the genie's lamp looks like a carnival prize and the magic carpet needs a good shaking.
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Very very rare item
searchanddestroy-126 March 2024
The fist big good surprise for me is that this little movie is not produced by the infamous Sam Katzman, because it is from Monogram Studios - and not Columbia. Yes, it is rare, very rare, hard to find and I purchased it thru a US retailer who himself got it from a 16mm print. Good little film that could be compared with the Universal Studios One Thousand and One Nights movies : VEILS OF BAGDAD, SON OF ALI BABA, PRINCE WHO WAS A THIEF. Lew Landers was a prolific director, and I am sure this movie wwas made in three days. For movie buffs in search for such fantasy adventures yarns from the fifties, it is worth watching.
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