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nimated feature about a street-smart young thief in
the mythical city of Agrabah who meets and falls in love with the
Sultan's beautiful daughter, Jasmine, a liberated young lady who
seeks to escape her present lifestyle. Help comes when the evil
vizier, Jafar, plots to get a magic lamp for his own rise to power,
and decides he needs Aladdin, a true "diamond in the rough," to
seek the lamp in the Cave of Wonders. Aladdin and his friend, the
monkey Abu, gain the lamp and the wisecracking Genie inside for
themselves. The Genie changes Aladdin into a prince so he can woo
the princess, but the deception fails to impress Jasmine. As his
true self, however, he uses his cunning and courage, with the help
of the Genie, to defeat Jafar and his evil plans, in the end
earning a princely title and the princess. |
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Computer-generated imagery enabled the filmmakers to create the
amazing magic carpet ride through the Cave of Wonders, the
intricately patterned carpet itself, and the stunning tiger head
cave. |
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The idea of adapting the Aladdin story as a Disney animated
musical was first proposed by Howard Ashman in 1988 when he and
Alan Menken were still working on "The Little Mermaid." He wrote an
initial treatment and collaborated on six songs with Menken,
including "Arabian Nights," "Friend Like Me," and "Prince Ali."
After Ashman's death in 1991, Tim Rice came on board to write some
additional songs, notably "One Jump Ahead" and "A Whole New World."
The art directors were influenced by Persian miniatures and Arabian
calligraphy. Supervising animator Eric Goldberg, who created the
Genie, was the first animator to work on the project. He was
heavily influenced by the curved, fluid caricature style of artist
Al Hirschfeld. |
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The film became the highest-grossing animated film up to that
time, earning over $200 million internationally. The film also won
Academy Awards® for Best Song ("A Whole New World") and Best
Original Score. The video release in 1993 also set records. |
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Directed by John Musker and Ron Clements. Starring: the voices of
Scott Weinger (Aladdin), Robin Williams (Genie), Jonathan Freeman
(Jafar), Linda Larkin (Jasmine speaking), Lea Salonga (Jasmine
singing), and Gilbert Gottfried (Iago). 90 min. There were two
made-for-video sequels: "The Return of Jafar" and "Aladdin and the
King of Thieves." |
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