(logo)
(navigation image)
Home Animation & Cartoons | Arts & Music | Computers & Technology | Cultural & Academic Films | Ephemeral Films | Home Movies | Movies | News & Public Affairs | Open Source Movies | Prelinger Archives | Spirituality & Religion | Sports Videos | Videogame Videos | Vlogs | Youth Media

Search: Advanced Search

Anonymous User (login or join us)Upload

View movie

[item image]
View thumbnails
Run time: 22 min

Play / Download (help[help])

(89 MB)Ogg Video
(91 MB)512Kb MPEG4
(503 MB)MPEG2


All Files: HTTP

Resources

Bookmark

Dave FleischerPopeye the Sailor Meets Aladdin and His Wonderful Lamp (1939)

Working in the story department of Surprise Pictures, Olive Oyl writes a script based on the story of Aladdin, casting Popeye as the thief and herself as the Princess.

For more details:
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0031025/

In the Public Domain according to The Public-Domain Movie Database:
http://www.pdmdb.org/content.asp?CatId=241&ContentType=&page_no=3&sortby=


This movie is part of the collection: Animation Shorts

Director: Dave Fleischer
Producer: Fleischer Studios
Production Company: Fleischer Studios
Audio/Visual: sound, color
Language: English
Keywords: cartoon; Popeye; Popeye the Sailor; Fleischer Studios


Individual Files

Movie FilesMPEG2Ogg Video512Kb MPEG4
Popeye - Aladdin and His Wonderful Lamp503 MB89 MB91 MB
ThumbnailsThumbnail
Popeye - Aladdin and His Wonderful Lamp10 KB
InformationFormatSize
Popeye_the_Sailor_Meets_Aladdin_and_His_Wonderful_Lamp_files.xmlMetadata9.77 KB
Popeye_the_Sailor_Meets_Aladdin_and_His_Wonderful_Lamp_meta.xmlMetadata1.44 KB
Popeye_the_Sailor_Meets_Aladdin_and_His_Wonderful_Lamp_reviews.xmlMetadata731 B
Other FilesAnimated GIF
Popeye - Aladdin and His Wonderful Lamp351 KB

Write a review
Downloaded 10,185 times
Reviews
Average Rating: [5.0 out of 5 stars]

Reviewer: jayessell - [5.0 out of 5 stars] - October 7, 2009
Subject: Among Popeye's best cartoons!
Is it me, or is this reverse plagiarized from Disney's Aladin???
Several points of similitude!

And at the end... Harryhousen-esque invisible
swordfighting!

No 3D landscape shots as in the later Fleischer cartoons.


Terms of Use (10 Mar 2001)