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Sinbad the Sailor Poster

Sinbad the Sailor

BRAVE in Adventure! BOLD in Love!
1947 | 116m | English

(2501 votes)

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Popularity: 2 (history)

Details

Daredevil sailor Sinbad embarks on a voyage across the Seven Seas to find the lost riches of Alexander the Great. His first stop is the port of Basra, where his ship is seized and scheduled for auction. In his attempt to win it back, he befriends beautiful concubine Shireen. But when her master, the nefarious Emir, calls her back to duty, Sinbad must interrupt his adventure to save the "Jewel of Persia."
Release Date: Jan 13, 1947
Director: Richard Wallace
Writer: John Twist, George Worthing Yates
Genres: Adventure
Keywords sinbad / sindbad, treasure map, pirate, gold digger, hidden treasure
Production Companies RKO Radio Pictures
Box Office Revenue: $0
Budget: $3,000,000
Updates Updated: Feb 05, 2026
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
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Full Credits

Name Character
Douglas Fairbanks Jr. Sinbad
Maureen O'Hara Shireen
Walter Slezak Melik
Anthony Quinn Emir
George Tobias Abbu
Jane Greer Pirouze
Mike Mazurki Yusuf
Sheldon Leonard Auctioneer
Alan Napier Aga
John Miljan Moga
Brad Dexter Muallin
Ann Cameron Wife
Charles Stevens Ruri
Dave Kashner Overseer (uncredited)
Cy Kendall Hassan-Ben-Hassan (uncredited)
George Lloyd Lancer Guard (uncredited)
Hugh Prosser Captain of Guard (uncredited)
Milly Reauclaire Wife (uncredited)
Norbert Schiller Timekeeper (uncredited)
Charles Soldani Merchant (uncredited)
Glenn Strange Chief Galley Overseer (uncredited)
Max Wagner Assistant Overseer (uncredited)
Ben Welden Commoner (uncredited)
Name Job
Richard Wallace Director
John Twist Story, Screenplay
George Worthing Yates Story
George Barnes Director of Photography
Roy Webb Original Music Composer
Frank Doyle Editor
Carroll Clark Art Direction
Albert S. D'Agostino Art Direction
Claude E. Carpenter Set Decoration
Darrell Silvera Set Decoration
Edward Stevenson Costume Designer
Bill Phillips Makeup Artist
Gordon Bau Makeup Supervisor
Lloyd Richards Assistant Director
Clem Portman Sound
John E. Tribby Sound
George Big Jim Saunders Special Effects
Vernon L. Walker Special Effects
Harold E. Wellman Special Effects
Jimmy Dime Stunts
Mary Jane French Stunts
David Sharpe Stunt Coordinator
Name Title
Stephen Ames Producer
Organization Category Person
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Popularity History


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Reviews

John Chard
6.0

Who, more than all other sons of Allah, spread glory to the name of Sinbad? Sinbad the Sailor is directed by Richard Wallace and written by John Twist and George Worthing Yates. It stars Douglas Fairbanks Junior, Maureen O'Hara, Walter Slezak, Anthony Quinn, George Tobias and Jane Greer. Music is ... scored by Roy Webb and Technicolor cinematography by George Barnes. Sinbad (Fairbanks Jr.) regales all about his Eighth Voyage, where he went to the fabled island of Deryabar in search of the lost treasure of Alexander the Great. There's so much good about Sinbad the Sailor, the lush colour photography, the skilfully constructed sets and paintings, Roy Webb's evocative score, costuming to dazzle the eyes and Fairbanks Junior with energy and athleticism to burn. The trouble is that RKO only push the boat out half way, for they have let the writers come up with a very verbose screenplay, one which is painfully stretched to nearly two hours of film! For a family fantasy adventure film there is a surprisingly small amount of action to entertain the masses. When it comes, in dribs and drabs, it's well put together and a merciful relief, but alas, more elongated passages of barely worthwhile dialogue is just around the corner. Still, the good points in the production are reason enough to sit through the two hours. Even the casting decisions, that sees American, Irish, Austrian & Mexican actors playing Asians, are forgiven given the gusto and charm they put into their respective roles. But don't be fooled, the poster proclaimed it as "One Of The Greatest Adventures Of All Times", that would be true, if only they had shaved about 30 minutes off of the first hour! 6/10

May 16, 2024
Geronimo1967
7.0

First thing's first, this is seriously verbose. The dialogue is mostly second rate and boy, is there a lot of it... That said, though, Douglas Fairbanks is charming in the title role. Here, armed with a medallion/map, he sets out to track down an enormous treasure hidden by Alexander the Great. The ... supporting characters are fun - the evil "Melik" (Walter Slezak), the gorgeous "Shireen" (Maureen O'Hara) and the avaricious Emir (Anthony Quinn) and the compendium style construction of the film pulls together the adventurous streams into a final quest for the loot in an agreeable manner. It's bright and colourful, there is enough swash and buckle to keep it interesting and Slezak is particularly effective as the scheming plotter. It's a bit too long, to be fair, and is a bit too stage bound at times - but Roy Webb creates a suitably grand Arabian score and the cinematography provides for an enjoyable enough costume adventure that I really quite liked.

Jul 07, 2022