The Seventh voyage of Sinbad
See also: Sinbad
the Seventh voyage of Sinbad ( The 7th Voyage off Sinbad ) is an American film carried out by Nathan Juran, left in 1958.
Synopsis
Sinbad, young prince of Baghdad, fails with its crew on a populated island of monsters as fabulous as dangerous. After having saved the Sokura magician continued by a gigantic cyclops, it goes back to Baghdad in order to celebrate its union with the Parisa princess. This union will make it possible to seal a pact of friendship between their two respective kingdoms. At the time of the ceremony, the Sokura magician, requested to read the future with each one is severely gotten rid of after his ill omen. In secrecy, it decides to throw a fate with the young princess who awakes reduced with the size of a mouse. On the request of the magician, Sinbad decides to turn over on the island to the cyclops in order to find the remedy which will return him its liked well.
Data sheet
- Title: the Seventh voyage of Sinbad
- original Title: The 7th Voyage off Sinbad
- Realization: Nathan Juran
- Scenario: Ken Kolb
- Production: Charles H. Schneer and Ray Harryhausen
- Production company: Morningside Movies
- Budget: 650.000 dollars (493 000 euros)
- Music: Bernard Herrmann
- Photography: Wilkie Cooper
- Assembly: Edwin H. Bryant and Jerome Thoms
- Artistic director: Gil Parrondo
- Country of origin: the United States
- Format: Colors - 1,37:1 - Mono - 35 mm
- Kind: Fantastic,
- Durée ventures: 88 minutes
- Comings out date: December 5th 1958 (West Germany), December 23rd 1958 (the United States)
Distribution
- Kerwin Mathews : Sinbad
- Kathryn Grant : the princess Parisa
- Richard Eyer: Baronni, genius of the lamp
- Torin Thatcher: Sokurah, the magician
- Alec Mango: Caliph
- Danny Green : Karim
- Harold Kasket: Sultan
- Alfred Brown: Harufa
- Chick DeHerrera: Sadi
- Virgilio Teixeira : Ali
Around film
- turning was held with the Balearic Islands, Gérone, Grenade and Madrid, in Spain.
- Harufa, the character interpreted by Alfred Brown, was doubled.
- In front of the business success which the film gained, the producer Edward Small tried to reiterate the exploit, going even until engaging the same realizer (Nathan Juran), the same hero (Kerwin Mathews) and the same malicious one (Torin Thatcher), for its Jack the killer of giants (1962).
Rewards
- Nomination with the Price Hugo of the most spectacular film in 1959.
External bond
- the Seventh voyage of Sinbad on Internet Movie Database