 |  |  | |  |  |  | Arthouse |  |  |  | Classic Films |  |  |  | Cult Films |  |  |  | Erotic Films |  |  |  | Euro-Westerns |  |  |  | Kids and Family |  |  |  | Jewish Themes |  |  |  | Spain, Portugal |  |  |  | Italy, Greece |  |  |  | France, Benelux |  |  |  | Scandinavia, Iceland |  |  |  | Latin America, Mexico |  |  |  | Germany, Central Europe |  |  |  | Russia, Eastern Europe |  |  |  | Australia, New Zealand |  |  |  | Great Britain, Ireland |  |  |  | India, Eastern Asia |  |  |  | Africa, Middle East |  |  |  | USA, Canada |  | |  |
|  |
|  |  |  |  | Brand new, official studio-released DVD of this great film, imported from Spain This is a PAL, Region 2 DVD. This DVD will play on standard DVD players in Europe, South Africa, Middle East.
This DVD (and any other DVD released anywhere in the world) will play just fine on any multi-region DVD player, bought in USA or elsewhere. It will also play on most computers' DVD drives. Some consumers actually own a multi-region DVD player, without knowing it. All you need to do if you own such Philips, Akai, CyberHome or other DVD player is to use your remote control to switch it to multi-region mode. As such features are almost always not documented by the DVD player's manufacturer, we'd recommend you check your DVD player's capabilities at www.videohelp.com/dvdhacks. For our USA customers, if you need an advise for a inexpensive ($30-$40) US DVD player, please feel free to contact us or to read our recommenations here: Our DVD player recommendations. Please keep in mind that we do not sell DVD players.
This DVD does not contain pornographic material and may be lawfully sold to and viewed by minors.
| | o If you found this DVD to your liking, you will probably find one or more other rare DVDs that we sell to your tastes. Click on the links below, in the description sections to see all our DVDs from the same director/actor/country. o To search and browse our DVDs arranged by Country, Actor, Director, Awards, and Other Categories, to read about our policies, to learn more about PAL/NTSC/Region coding, to see which DVDs had been added to our catalog during the last 10 days, to view our recommendation for the inexpensive brand name PAL/NTSC Multi-region DVD player, please click on our links above and to the left. o We now offer FREE SHIPPING to anywhere in the world!
| | | | Movie filmed in 1944 and produced in: | Country: United States ( Region: USA, Canada )
| | Directed By: | Arthur Lubin
| | Written By: | Edmund L. Hartmann
| | Actors: | Maria Montez ..... Amara Jon Hall ..... Ali Baba Turhan Bey ..... Jamiel Andy Devine ..... Abdullah Kurt Katch ..... Hulagu Khan Frank Puglia ..... Prince Cassim Fortunio Bonanova ..... Old Baba Moroni Olsen ..... Caliph Hassan Ramsay Ames ..... Nalu Chris-Pin Martin ..... Fat Thief Scotty Beckett ..... Ali Baba as a Child Yvette Duguay ..... Amara as a Girl Noel Cravat ..... Mongol Captain Jimmy Conlin ..... Little Thief Harry Cording ..... Mahmoud
|
| | Synopsis: | The general perception of the Technicolor costume adventure movies that Maria Montez and Jon Hall made for Universal in the early 1940's is that they were pure escapist entertainment, intended to make people forget for an hour or so about the Second World War and the general world situation. And generally that is true about them -- they were mostly no 'about' much more than having fun for 90 minutes or so amid pretty sets with lots of action and some pretty women in exotic outfits. But watching Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves, one has to wonder if even here the screenwriter, Edmund L. Hartmann, was able to totally get away from the day-to-day reality around him. The opening Mongol invasion of Bagdad and the murder of the old Caliph (Moroni Olsen) while trying to set up a government-in-exile without thinking of the German and Japanese conquests and occupations of various nations that would have been going on at the time; additionally, the fact that the old Caliph is murdered with the help of a traitor in his own noble ranks -- a 'quisling' in the term coined during World War II -- wouldn't have been missed by audiences at the time. Further, the screenplay very specifically paints the forty thieves as heroes who have gone from being criminals to an active resistance force against the occupying Mongols -- indeed, at the denouement, their invasion of the palace is greeted as a day of liberation by the people of Bagdad. The movie walks a strange tightrope, casting about veiled topical references of that sort, even as is otherwise sufficiently tongue-in-cheek to cast Andy Devine as a desert bandit. Obviously, Ali Baba And The Forty Thieves was sold as -- and mostly intended as -- light entertainment, but just below that glitzy Technicolor surface were some fascinating allusions to the real world. None of this stops Ali Baba And The Forty Thieves from being immense fun -- it is, even if the 'fun' isn't totally escapist in nature -- and it's great to look at as well, even 60 years on; Universal has apparently kept preservation-quality source materials on this and Hall and Montez's other Technicolor costume romps. And this particular entry in that group of movies also contains one very instructive clue to the morays and censorship of the time in one scene, in which the hero meets the heroine bathing at an oasis -- the makers seem to have been forced to insert a particular shot that is there for no other reason then to make it clear that she is not totally naked when he sees her.
Ali Baba, son of the Kalif of Bagdad is brought up by the 40 Thieves after his father is killed by the soldiers of Hugalu Khan, who received the necessary information by traitor Cassim. Ali becomes the leader of the thieves and they are fighting for the freedom of his land. Per chance Ali captures the fiancée of Hugalu Khan, who turns out to be his girl friend Amara. After a few misunderstandings Ali uses her wedding day with Hugalu Khan as the day for the liberation of Bagdad.
|
| | o Please note that we sell NTSC/Region 1 DVDs from USA and PAL/Region 2&4 DVDs from other countries. If you have a standard DVD player bought in USA/Canada, and you have not specifically selected it to be able to play multi- region DVDs, please don't bid on PAL Region 2 & Region 4 DVDs - your player will not be able to play them. Only NTSC, Region 1 DVDs are playable on a standard US/Canadian DVD player. o For our recommendations for the inexpensive, quality Multi-Region DVD player available in USA stores, or to check if your DVD player is PAL/NTSC and multi-Region compatible, please click here. o We regret that NO REFUNDS will be given to buyers of PAL Region 2/4 DVDs due to incompatibility; thank you for checking the compatibility of your DVD player before placing your welcome bid.
| | | o All our movies are official releases from Europe, Australia and the USA o We do not sell bootlegs, fakes, or knockoffs typically found in Asia or Russia o We do not sell 'official' DVDs from countries that don't respect or enforce copyright laws (Asia,Russia,etc) o Read our competitor's description carefully; stay away from any listing that contains the phrase 'US copyrights laws do not apply' o Buy the real thing -- from us!
| |