[1] It was nominated for two Academy Awards, for Best Art Direction, Color (Stephen Goosson, Rudolph Sternad, Frank Tuttle) and Best Special Effects (Ray Bomba and Lawrence W.
Abdullah is thought mad as he claims to have been born 1200 years too early, speaks in 1940s slang and knows about television.
A distraught Armina has her trusted servant Novira steal the key to the cell from the jailer and slip it to Aladdin.
He then decides to go back for the princess, much to the genie's disappointment (as she has fallen in love with him), and has her conjure up a retinue of servants, clothes and rich gifts.
Hadji is aided by the treacherous Grand Wazir Abu-Hassan, who is promised Armina's hand in marriage as a reward.
Once Kofir becomes the genie's master, everything that Aladdin wished for disappears, including the gift robe the false Sultan is wearing for the wedding.
At the end of a sword fight (in which Wilde gets to display his fencing skills), Hadji dies, and the grateful Sultan agrees to Aladdin and Armina's marriage.
Uncredited Cast Dennis Schwartz described the film as "an attractive looking but buffoonish satire on the Arabian Nights" and stated "the laughs are hard to come by and are more unintentional than intentional.