Who is aladdins father




















The animation was really great and I loved seeing the action sequences between Aladdin and his father. The effects that the animators put into this movie was great and very entertaining. Then on top of that, Aladdin and Jasmine are finally getting married! They invited you to come along as well! Well over all I do recommend that if you're looking for a cute family film, this is a good one, I just preferred Return of Jafar a little more, but it's all good, this was still a worthy sequel and a good finish to the story of Aladdin.

OllieSuave 20 July I was never a fan of the original Aladdin movie and I just happen to catch this movie on TV on a slow night. I wasn't expecting too much from the film, but did find the story about Aladdin finally getting to marry Princess Jasmine only to find the wedding being disrupted by the 40 Thieves a bit intriguing.

The animation wasn't the best, but was serviceable. The songs were OK, not as catchy as the ones in the first film. But, the plot was a tad more exciting due to more exciting sequences and the incorporation of the Midas storyline. Other than that, however, it's not one of the better Disney movies out there and if I would randomly select a Disney movie to put on for guests, it wouldn't be this one.

I just find the movie to be a tad boring and find it better suited for little kids. Grade C. In a time where animation means animals, it's great to see a coming back to roots with human characters. It's all the more enjoyable that the Arabic culture isn't very exposed today. The Midas Hand is really based on a myth. I am delightfully surprised to see that there's no time-out, except the silly songs parts: it's always based on jazzy tunes, so if you heard one, you heard them all!

Though a bit better than its immediate predecessor the second sequel to Disney's animated "Aladdin" movie is still rather a disappointing affair relative to the original. One the day of the royal wedding, the court is raided by the 40 thieves, led by Cassim John Rhys-Davies. After Aladdin Scott Weinger and the Genie Robin Williams fight them off, an oracle tells Aladdin that his father, long thought dead, is with the gang. When it's revealed that Cassim is actually Aladdins father, a reconciliation is on the cards, until Cassim steals the Oracle and hunts a famed treasure.

Better, but not good, is the four-word version of this review. And it's only really better written than "The Return of Jafar". It maintains that cheap, made for television, animation style but at least it's a different story and not just a redux of the first one again. To link the story to a different Arabian nights story was the right choice.

The big change, and it is a vitally important one, is that the issues with Robin Williams were worked out and he returned to play the Genie again, which he does with aplomb. Admittedly, the Woody Allen impression hasn't aged particularly well, but away from that it's another tour-de-force of improvised hilarity.

He also has some songs again this time and in general the songs are better than they were in "Jafar". Better than the second, but still not really worth investing your time in. RosanaBotafogo 31 August Definitely I don't have much patience with Aladdin's animations, but it's better than the previous "Return of Jafar" Aladdin's dad was the highlight, actually the plot involving father and son and their late complicity The film chronicles on Aladdin's big day with Jasmine,but problems arise when Aladdin's long lost father returns and he is working for the King Of Thieves hence the title.

So its up to Aladdin to track him down and help him retrive this golden hand that he is looking for. Overall if you liked the first Aladdin then sit back,relax and enjoy the epic finally of Aladdin which is one of my all time favourite movies ever. And even at the age of 22 I still love this movie. Can you imagine it took me 22 years to see this film even though it was made in and I was 6 years old at the time and it took me till now to see it.

Definitely an improvement on 'The Return of Jafar', but 'Aladdin and the King of Thieves' still lacks that certain something which stops me from classing it as any good. It's great to see Robin Williams back as Genie, he is as funny as you'd expect and I enjoyed his performance; despite it arguably featuring too many parodies of pop culture, though some are rather amusing to be fair.

The rest of the cast, aside from Aladdin, take a backseat which is disappointing. That is largely due to John Rhys-Davies' Cassim. I like Davies, but I didn't feel any connection with his character; likewise the rest of the villains. The premise is alright, more creative than in the preceding film. All that, along with the fact that the songs are pretty dull for the second time running, means this is a film that is very forgettable unfortunately. It has the many songs, the good guy-bad guy theme, and the guy gets the girl scenario but it obviously has less heart and funds to pull it off.

It was made by the TV animation studio and it kind of has that look and feel to it with it's incomplete, un-realistic backgrounds but otherwise looks OK. Robin Williams as the Genie is funny at times but overbearing at others and some of the other minor characters brings some laughs but the movie tries to be too grand and too good even though it wasn't meant to be.

The story is about Aladdin and Jasmine getting married but is interrupted by the forty thieves. We later find out that Aladdin's father is the king of thieves and he goes on a quest to bring him back and reform him. There is a bad leader of the thieves who keeps fighting with Aladdin's father over the kingship of the thieves, who amazingly is voiced by Jerry Orbach, in a very different role for him.

They are then lured to the ultimate treasure of Midas's hand by an oracle and they eventually have to decide what's really important the treasure or the people.

As most Disney films, it all works itself out in the end but the movie overall doesn't deliver the kind of craftsmanship in the story that usually keeps us interested in a Disney movie. A good try by the TV animators but it's not quite what it could have been. Given a little more money and time it could have been a worthwhile effort but instead it's pretty mediocre.

The romance in the film really touched me. However, if you ask me, the Genie voice of Robin Williams gave the funniest performance of everyone who acted in this film. I really enjoyed the music. Cassim and Aladdin then escape out of the Isle.

He throws the Hand of Midas into the sea realizing that he has not lost his ultimate treasure: his son, and apologizes for taking so long to realize it. Cassim attends Aladdin and Jasmine's wedding later, watching from the shadows, as he is still a wanted man for his past crimes. He accepts Iago, who feels he no longer has a place with Aladdin and the others as they prepare for a new life of responsibility, as a travelling companion, and goes off to venture the world.

As the film ends, Cassim is last seen with Iago waving farewell to his son and daughter-in-law before riding off to the night. In this darker retelling of the first film , Cassim is mentioned by name in Aladdin's backstory of his parents which follows what is known in Aladdin and the King of Thieves , however instead of giving Aladdin a dagger, he instead gives him Abu in this continuity.

When Jasmine asks Aladdin about his parents, he makes it clear that his mother is dead, but after being asked about his father, Aladdin responds that he lost both of his parents long ago, making it ambiguous as to whether or not Aladdin's father is alive in the continuity of the remake.

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In United States copyright law, fair use is a doctrine that permits limited use of copyrighted material without acquiring permission from the rights holders. The two reconcile and recover the Hand of Midas. Refusing to sacrifice his son for the treasure he sought, Cassim tosses the Hand to Sa'Luk, who catches it by the golden hand itself instead of the bronze handle and is instantly transformed into a permanent golden statue and falls into the sea below. The more athletic Aladdin jumps to recover the Hand using a cloth to protect his skin to avoid the same fate that befell Sa'Luk , then returns it to Cassim, remarking to his father that it pays to have a junior partner.

After escaping, Cassim has a change of heart and chooses to throw the Hand away, having realized the pain his obsession brought and that Aladdin was more precious to him the whole time. Although Cassim did not seek revenge against the Forty Thieves for their betrayal, he unintentionally causes their demises as the Hand accidentally lands on their ship, turning it to gold.

The solid gold ship proves unseaworthy, and it sinks to the bottom of the sea. Cassim returns to Agrabah with Aladdin, and witnesses Aladdin's wedding from the shadows, as he is still a wanted criminal. Cassim then accepts Iago as a traveling partner, and the pair travel to see the world, but not before waving goodbye to his son and a new daughter-in-law who were flying on their Magic Carpet.

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