The Golden Voyage Of Sinbad
U.S.A. - U.K. / 1974
Directed by
 Gordon Hessler
Starring
John Philip Law
Caroline Munro
Tom Baker
Color / 105 Minutes / G
Format: DVD (R1 - NTSC)
Columbia TriStar Home Video
Caroline Munro as Margiana, the slave girl.
Hold your mouse pointer over an image for a pop-up caption
"I think I'll keep it."
Khoura is a most powerful sorcerer.
Shipboard battle.
Birth of the Homunculus.
Kali girds for combat.
Clash of the monsters.
There's still Khoura to face...
The Golden Voyage Of Sinbad
Action-packed
 
Movie Rating  
7
  DVD Rating   8   10 = Highest Rating  
Guest Review by Rod Barnett
As The Golden Voyage Of Sinbad begins, the fabled nautical adventurer (John Phillip Law) and his crew are sailing on the open sea when they spot a strange flying creature. Frightened by an arrow fired by one of the sailors, the creature drops a small golden tablet. After Sinbad ties the object around his neck he has several nightmare-like visions of a tall man dressed in black and a dancing girl with an eye tattooed on the palm of her hand. When a storm blows the ship off course, Sinbad is sure the land they come upon is connected to his dream somehow. Going ashore alone, he encounters the man in black from his vision. The dark man (Doctor Who's Tom Baker) identifies himself as Prince Koura, a sorcerer who claims the golden tablet as his own and demands its return. Escaping into a nearby city, Sinbad is met by the benevolent, golden-masked Grand Vizier (Douglas Wilmer), who explains Koura's bid to obtain ultimate power. To gain this power, the wizard must unite the three separate pieces of a magical sign. The golden tablet Sinbad wears about his neck is one of these pieces, while the Vizier controls another. When combining their two segments they discover a map that can lead them to the third; together they vow to foil Koura's evil scheme. A rich man's wastrel son and the slave girl Margiana (Captain Kronos—Vampire Hunter's Caroline Munro), whose tattooed hand may play a part in stopping the Prince, join Sinbad on the journey. They set sail for the legendary isle of Lemuria with Koura and his henchmen in close pursuit.
    Of the three Sinbad movies made by Ray Harryhausen, Golden Voyage has always been my favorite. Most people like 1958's The 7th Voyage Of Sinbad more and I can understand that, but I feel the story in Golden Voyage is better and I really like John Phillip Law (Danger: Diabolik) in the lead role. He seems much more suited to the character and even affects an accent to add to his performance. It also helps that Caroline Munro one of the most beautiful women to ever grace the silver screen is the only female on display here, giving us more time to stare longingly at her tanned body and lose ourselves in her lovely eyes. (And she's not even a special effect!) Although Jason And The Argonauts will always be Harryhausen's greatest film, this one gives him plenty of moments to shine; he capitalizes on all of them. Each creature brought to stop-motion life here is a wonder to behold with beautiful details and amazing, flowing movement. I'll never get over my original childhood fear of the prow of Sinbad's ship, which comes to life under Koura's power. It's a combination of the blank, unchanging face of the wooden woman and the creepy sounds of her moving that send chills down my spine. There are two showstoppers in Golden Voyage that rival the skeleton fight in 7th Voyage. One is the grotesque one-eyed centaur that battles a mighty griffin, the other the living, six-armed statue of Kali. The fight between Kali and Sinbad's crew is a masterful bit of action that bears repeated viewings. With all these pyrotechnics you might expect the film to be a bit too broad, but my favorite moment in the film is the quiet scene of Koura's new homunculus awakening to life. The detailed facial expressions and body language of the small winged beast is mesmerizing; this is one of the best animation sequences of Harryhausen's career. Moments like this make Golden Voyage a wonderful film that will go on entertaining audiences for generations to come.
    It's often said that 'They don't make 'em like they used to'. This film is a perfect example of that statement's truth. The clearness of purpose that can be felt behind Harryhausen's fantasy films is almost never evident in cinema today. Each of his movies simply feels as if it were crafted by people who cared very much about making the best possible film they could create. These stories weren't shaped by committees, vetted by a legal department or altered by businessmen looking for a good Happy Meal tie-in. These films were put together by people in love with the stories and in love with filmmaking. Any story changes were done for budgetary or time constraints, not because the vice-president of marketing thought his kids would like a blue monster instead of a green one.
    So much of what has been lost over the years in Hollywood is a plain unwillingness to admit that creativity needs both freedom and limits
the freedom to attempt new and untried things and the limits imposed by schedules and money. If a Sinbad movie were to be made today there would be more effort put into the toy and fast food tie-ins than on the script or pre-production. And you know what happens when that approach is used? The Mummy, The Mummy Returns, The Scorpion King, and the 1998 Godzilla film... Empty marketing tools camouflaged as entertainment. But you won't find the folks behind those bad movies agreeing with me each one made more than $100 million domestic. Who needs a good story, well told, when the audience seems perfectly happy with crap? Give the people what they want. Thank goodness that the Harryhausen films are still around to let us see the qualities we can hope for in a fantasy film.

Columbia's DVD of The Golden Voyage Of Sinbad is a great little package. It includes both a full-screen and widescreen version on opposite sides of the disc. The widescreen version is letterboxed at 1.85:1, cropping a small amount of extraneous picture information off the top and bottom of the image. Both versions look very good with solid mono soundtracks in English and Portuguese, along with subtitles in four additional languages.
    The nice extras are led by three short but fun featurettes (less than 10 minutes each) focusing on other Harryhausen films. Giving an interesting look at Mysterious Island, The 3 Worlds Of Gulliver and Earth Vs. The Flying Saucers, they're certainly enjoyable but I wish the trailers for those films had been included as well. The trailer for Golden Voyage has been included, along with a colorful gallery of advertising artwork for the movie and short Talent Bios of Harryhausen, director Gordon Hessler (The Oblong Box) and star John Phillip Law. 11/23/02
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