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The 7th Voyage of Sinbad

  • 1958
  • G
  • 1h 28m
IMDb RATING
7.0/10
16K
YOUR RATING
Richard Eyer, Dal McKennon, Kathryn Grant, Enzo Musumeci Greco, and Kerwin Mathews in The 7th Voyage of Sinbad (1958)
Theatrical Trailer from Columbia Tristar
Play trailer1:40
1 Video
99+ Photos
SwashbucklerActionAdventureFamilyFantasy

When a princess is shrunken by an evil wizard, Sinbad must undertake a quest to an island of monsters to cure her and prevent a war.When a princess is shrunken by an evil wizard, Sinbad must undertake a quest to an island of monsters to cure her and prevent a war.When a princess is shrunken by an evil wizard, Sinbad must undertake a quest to an island of monsters to cure her and prevent a war.

  • Director
    • Nathan Juran
  • Writers
    • Ken Kolb
    • Ray Harryhausen
  • Stars
    • Kerwin Mathews
    • Kathryn Grant
    • Richard Eyer
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.0/10
    16K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Nathan Juran
    • Writers
      • Ken Kolb
      • Ray Harryhausen
    • Stars
      • Kerwin Mathews
      • Kathryn Grant
      • Richard Eyer
    • 155User reviews
    • 101Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 2 nominations total

    Videos1

    The 7th Voyage of Sinbad
    Trailer 1:40
    The 7th Voyage of Sinbad

    Photos121

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    Top cast15

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    Kerwin Mathews
    Kerwin Mathews
    • Sinbad
    Kathryn Grant
    Kathryn Grant
    • Princess Parisa
    Richard Eyer
    Richard Eyer
    • The Genie…
    Torin Thatcher
    Torin Thatcher
    • Sokurah the Magician
    Alec Mango
    Alec Mango
    • Caliph
    Danny Green
    Danny Green
    • Karim
    Harold Kasket
    • Sultan
    Alfred Brown
    • Harufa
    Nana de Herrera
    • Sadi
    Nino Falanga
    • Gaunt Sailor
    Luis Guedes
    • Crewman
    Virgilio Teixeira
    Virgilio Teixeira
    • Ali
    Robert Barnete
    • Jafa
    • (uncredited)
    Enzo Musumeci Greco
    • Sokurah's Skeleton
    • (uncredited)
    Juan Olaguivel
    • Golar
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Nathan Juran
    • Writers
      • Ken Kolb
      • Ray Harryhausen
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews155

    7.015.5K
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    Featured reviews

    7bkoganbing

    Dragons, cyclopses, and genies, what more could you ask?

    I saw this film first when I was 11 years old and seeing it 59 years later hasn't diminished me enthusiasm. This is some of Ray Harryhausen's best work and first with classical characters as opposed to futuristic science fiction.

    Playing Sinbad is Kerwin Matthews who seemed to like doing these films, he was so often cast in them. He's getting ready to marry Princess Kathryn Crosby and that's something for even a sea captain to marry into the royal family.

    But when they're blown off course and come to an island where magician Torin Thatcher headquarters and shares it with a cyclops, a giant flying roc bird and a fire breathing dragon Thatcher keeps to protect his lair it's trouble. Thatcher has possession also of a magic lamp with a boy genie Richard Eyer who like Pinnochio wants to be a real live boy.

    Watching The 7th Voyage Of Sinbad really takes me back to when I was 11 years old. You can still thrill at my age to what Harryhausen does with those monsters. An 11 year old of any age can still thrill to the dragon and cyclops duking it out while our hero escapes with his lady love.

    Thatcher's a villain that will give you nightmares. He's pure evil, the kind you applaud when he gets his.

    After almost 60 years The 7th Voyage Of Sinbad is still a great family film with whole cloth heroes and the darkest of villains.
    uds3

    If you have forgotten what being a child was like, watch this and unlock some of that magic.

    Arguably, Harryhausen's finest moment. I can't off the top of my head nominate one that was better! It had it all, adventure, fantasy, heroics, monsters, and Harryhausen's stop-frame wizardry that puts half the CGI effects right out of business.

    I too, saw it as a child and along with JASON AND THE ARGONAUTS, THE GOLDEN VOYAGE OF SINBAD and CLASH OF THE TITANS, bought it years later and played it to standing room only, in our lounge throughout the kids childhood. Lucky aren't they?

    The cyclops was the ultimate magic and I only wish my children could have seen the original theatrical screening with which television cannot compete. The film is still there but the sense of impending wonder (sitting there in a blackened theater) cannot be replicated on the small screen.

    What a legacy to leave the world!
    chris_gaskin123

    One of Harryhausen's finest

    Most people have movies that they remember watching when they were infants and never forget them. This is one of mine, along with King Kong (1933) and One Million Years BC.

    The stars of this movie are of course Ray's stop-motion monsters. We get to see several cyclops, a dragon, a giant roc, a baby roc, a snake woman and, best of all, a skeleton.

    The movie's cast includes Kerwin Mathews as Sinbad and Torin Thatcher as the mad magician, Sokurah. These play great parts, as does Richard Eyer as the Genie. The theme music and score by Bernard Herrmann is magnificent. The movie was directed by Nathan Juran (The Deadly Mantis).

    This is the best of Harryhausen's Sinbad movies and one of his best movies overall, along with Jason and the Argonauts.

    If you haven't seen this, you are missing out. Fantastic.

    Rating: 5 stars out of 5.
    8claudio_carvalho

    A Delightful Adventure with Cyclops, Dragon, Magician, Magic Lamp and Jinni

    While sailing with Princess Parisa (Kathryn Grant) to Baghdad to their wedding, Sinbad (Kerwin Mathews) finds the Colossa Island and anchors his vessel to get supplies for the starving crew. Sinbad and his men help the magician Sokurah (Torin Thatcher) to escape from a Cyclops that attacks them, and Sokurah uses a magic lamp with a boy jinni to help them; however, their boat sinks and he loses the lamp. Sokurah offers a small fortune to Sinbad to return to Colossa, but he does not accept and heads to Baghdad. The citizens and the Caliph of Baghdad (Alec Mango) are celebrating the peace with Chandra, and they offer a feast to the Sultan of Chandra (Harold Kasket). Sakurah requests a ship and crew to return to Colossa but the Caliph refuses to jeopardize his countrymen. However, the treacherous magician shrinks the princess and when the desperate Sinbad seeks him out, he tells that he needs to return to Colossa to get the ingredient necessary for the magic potion. But Sinbad has only his friend Harufa (Alfred Brown) to travel with him, and he decides to enlist a doubtful crew in the prison of Baghdad, in the beginning of his dangerous voyage to Colossa to save the princess and avoid the eminent war between Chandra and Baghdad.

    This is the first time that I have watched "The 7th Voyage of Sinbad", a delightful adventure with Cyclops, dragon, magician, magic lamp and jinni. The special effects are fantastic for a 1958 film and I have really loved this movie. It is intriguing to see the magician foresee the destruction of Baghdad, with wrecked buildings and women and children murdered. In the end, I have had the sensation that I have lost something in my childhood missing this pleasant and entertaining movie when I was a child. My vote is eight.

    Title (Brazil): "Simbad e a Princesa" ("Sinbad and the Princess")
    7JamesHitchcock

    A Soft Spot for a Childhood Favourite

    I have long had a soft spot for "The Seventh Voyage of Sinbad", and Ray Harryhausen's work in general, ever since I was taken, as a child, as part of a friend's birthday treat, to see the film on a double bill with "Jason and the Argonauts". This would have been in the early seventies, nearly a decade and a half after it was first released in 1958, but in those days children's films seemed to have a longer shelf-life than they do today, and it was quite common for cinemas to wheel out the familiar old classics every school holiday. (My friend's birthday fell in July, so his parties normally included a trip to the movies).

    The plot concerns a beautiful princess who has been shrunk to a height of only a few inches by an evil magician. She can only be restored to normal by a magic potion, the ingredients for which can only be obtained by a hazardous voyage to a distant island. Step forward the heroic Sinbad, who has fallen in love with the princess. Once on the island he and his crew must face many dangers, including a cyclops, a dragon and a roc, a gigantic two-headed predatory bird.

    This isn't really the sort of film you go to for the acting, so it doesn't really matter that neither the handsome Kerwin Mathews as Sinbad nor the lovely Kathryn Grant (aka Mrs Bing Crosby) as Princess Parisa were the sort of actors who were ever likely to receive Oscar nominations. What matters is that both looked and sounded right in an Arabian Nights fantasy movie.

    Monsters were Harryhausen's stock-in-trade, and the monster scenes were filmed using Dynamation, the widescreen stop-motion animation technique which he created. He later worked on two more Sinbad films using the same technique, "The Golden Voyage of Sinbad" from 1973 and "Sinbad and the Eye of the Tiger" from 1977. I have never seen "The Golden Voyage", but by 1977 (the same year as the original "Star Wars") Harryhausen's work, and stop-motion animation in general, was starting to look a bit retro in the age of CGI.

    For me, however, the retro look is part of the charm of this sort of film, and we have to remember that in 1958 it was not retro at all, but cutting-edge film technology. It may look old-fashioned today, but "The Seventh Voyage of Sinbad" still retains its ability to transport the audience into a world full of wonders. And that is the whole point of films like this. 7/10

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The cyclops was given satyr-like legs so audiences would know it was not a man in a costume.
    • Goofs
      On their first encounter with the cyclops, they are rowing out to their boat when the cyclops hurls a boulder at them. The boulder hits the water, makes a splash, but then it starts to float rather than sink like a rock.
    • Quotes

      Sokurah the Magician: From the land beyond beyond... from the world past hope and fear... I bid you Genie, now appear.

    • Alternate versions
      There were, in fact, actually four 8mm reels released (which could be purchased in color or black & white, sound or silent), serializing the feature. This digest, when the reels were combined, runs about 36-40 minutes, depending on whether you were using the silent or sound versions. A well-edited condensation of the feature film. (The four reels were 1. "The Cyclops," 2. "The Strange Voyage," 3. "The Evil Magician" and 4. "The Dragon's Lair.")
    • Connections
      Edited into Attack of the 50 Foot Monster Mania (1999)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • December 23, 1958 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official site
      • Wikipedia
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Sindbads 7. Reise
    • Filming locations
      • Caves of Arta, Mallorca, Balearic Islands, Spain(Temple of the Oracle; interior)
    • Production companies
      • Columbia Pictures
      • Morningside Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $650,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 28 minutes

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