A towering figure both because of his impressive height and because of his unique screen presence, the British actor Christopher Lee—best known for playing Count Dracula in myriad pictures from Hammer and other companies, and whose massive presence in fantasy and science fiction films spans The Wicker Man to the 007, Lord of the Rings, and Star Wars franchises and beyond—has died at the age of 93. His melodious voice and his stately manner of personifying menace rightfully earned Lee generations of fans. RIP.
Made in the UK by the same folks responsible for At the Earth’s Core (1976) and other
such Saturday-matinee silliness, Arabian
Adventure is as generic as its title, providing little more than 98 minutes
of brainless distraction. The story is a shameless pastiche of elements from
myriad sources—The Prince and the Pauper,
Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, The Thief of Bagdad, The Wizard of Ox, and the adventures of
King Arthur and Sinbad the Sailor, to name but a few—while the casting of
American and English actors as Arabs is ridiculous. That said, credibility and
originality aren’t generally the qualities that viewers seek in kiddie-cinema
escapism, and Arabian Adventure
delivers the goods with archetypal characters, elaborate special effects, and
robust adventure. Hell, the movie’s got Christopher Lee as a moustache-twirling
villain and the climax involves a mid-air dogfight between combatants on magic
carpets, so why complain?
Set in some vague mythical version of the Middle East
circa the Middle Ages, Arabian Adventure
revolves around the evil caliph Alquazar (Lee), who needs a magical object
called “The Rose of Ilyl” to consolidate his power. Various clichéd characters
orbit the caliph. The virginal Princess Zuleira (Emma Samms) lives in
Alquazar’s castle, unaware of his insidious nature. The heroic Prince Hasan
(Oliver Tobias) wanders in exile, unable to claim his throne. The innocent
street urchin Majeed (Puneet Sira) lives off scraps, waiting to discover his
destiny. Eventually, Hasan agrees to find the Rose of Ilyl for Alquazar, in
exchange for Zuleira’s hand in marriage, and he begins a quest accompanied by Majeed
and by Alquazar’s evil henchman, Khasim (Milo O’Shea). Encounters with genies
and monsters and other such things soon follow, with one of the goofiest
episodes featuring Mickey Rooney (!) as the keeper of a mechanical dragon’s
lair. The whole affair culminates, predictably, with Hasan leading a revolution
against Alquazar, hence the aforementioned magic-carpet dogfight.
Costumes and
sets in Arabian Adventure are fairly
opulent, the special effects are okay (some of the flying-carpet scenes are
quite persuasive), and the pacing is fairly strong. The acting is not as
impressive, though it’s a hoot to see Lee’s frequent costar, Peter Cushing,
turn up for two quick scenes, and it’s strange to watch future Cheers regular John Ratzenberger play a
thug named Achmed. The leads deliver forgettable work, though Lee, as always,
strikes a great figure and Samms—well, if nothing else, she has a great figure.
Pulling the whole thing together is a characteristically rousing score by the
reliable UK composer Ken Thorne.
Arabian
Adventure: FUNKY
2 comments:
The UK quad poster, illustrated by Mike Vaughan, was blessed with the memorable tagline "STAR WARS with flying carpets..."
RIP Sir Christopher.
Ratzenberger also has fairly substantial character part in Warlords of Atlantis!
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