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National Features >

The 7th Voyage of Sinbad

By Jim Ridley

Published on August 07, 2008

This enormously enjoyable 1958 fantasy may be the crowning achievement of one of the movies' great magicians, Ray Harryhausen, the stop-motion animation wizard whose fabulous creatures peopled the imagination of seemingly every kid I grew up with. The Technicolor epic dispatches Sinbad (Kerwin Matthews) on a quest to save a shrunken princess, accompanied by a treacherous sorcerer (Torin Thatcher) and a swashbuckling Bernard Herrmann score. Nathan Juran directed, but the movie's marvels all stem from Harryhausen, the American Mélies, who granted life to every wondrous beast one meticulously posed frame at a time (and composed almost all his special effects in multiple camera exposures). Here's all your kids need to know: This is the one with the cobra woman, the sword-fighting skeleton, the two-headed rock and its giant hatchling, the fire-breathing dragon, and best of all, that cloven-hooved Cyclops who roasts Sinbad's men on a makeshift rotisserie. To be shown at dusk, free and drive-in style, on the Belcourt's outside wall.
Sat., Aug. 9, 7:45 p.m., 2008



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