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Simbad y el ojo del tigre

Título original: Sinbad and the Eye of the Tiger
  • 1977
  • A
  • 1h 53min
PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
6,4/10
9,2 mil
TU PUNTUACIÓN
Simbad y el ojo del tigre (1977)
Trailer for this fantasy sci fi
Reproducir trailer2:13
1 vídeo
99+ imágenes
SwashbucklerActionAdventureFamilyFantasy

Simbad el marino navega para llevar a un príncipe maldito a una isla peligrosa frente a la oposición mortal de una poderosa bruja.Simbad el marino navega para llevar a un príncipe maldito a una isla peligrosa frente a la oposición mortal de una poderosa bruja.Simbad el marino navega para llevar a un príncipe maldito a una isla peligrosa frente a la oposición mortal de una poderosa bruja.

  • Dirección
    • Sam Wanamaker
  • Guión
    • Beverley Cross
    • Ray Harryhausen
  • Reparto principal
    • Patrick Wayne
    • Jane Seymour
    • Taryn Power
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
  • PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
    6,4/10
    9,2 mil
    TU PUNTUACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Sam Wanamaker
    • Guión
      • Beverley Cross
      • Ray Harryhausen
    • Reparto principal
      • Patrick Wayne
      • Jane Seymour
      • Taryn Power
    • 81Reseñas de usuarios
    • 64Reseñas de críticos
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
    • Premios
      • 1 premio y 4 nominaciones en total

    Vídeos1

    Sinbad and the Eye of the Tiger
    Trailer 2:13
    Sinbad and the Eye of the Tiger

    Imágenes141

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    + 136
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    Reparto principal14

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    Patrick Wayne
    Patrick Wayne
    • Sinbad
    Jane Seymour
    Jane Seymour
    • Farah
    Taryn Power
    Taryn Power
    • Dione
    Margaret Whiting
    • Zenobia
    Patrick Troughton
    Patrick Troughton
    • Melanthius
    Kurt Christian
    Kurt Christian
    • Rafi
    Nadim Sawalha
    Nadim Sawalha
    • Hassan
    Damien Thomas
    Damien Thomas
    • Kassim
    Bruno Barnabe
    • Balsora
    Bernard Kay
    Bernard Kay
    • Zabid
    Salami Coker
    • Maroof
    David Sterne
    • Aboo-Seer
    Pierre Mattocks
    • Prince Kassim the Baboon
    • (sin acreditar)
    Peter Mayhew
    Peter Mayhew
    • Minoton
    • (sin acreditar)
    • Dirección
      • Sam Wanamaker
    • Guión
      • Beverley Cross
      • Ray Harryhausen
    • Todo el reparto y equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Reseñas de usuarios81

    6,49.1K
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    Reseñas destacadas

    6ma-cortes

    Wonderful adventure filmed in Spain where Sinbad seeks to restore a prince from monkey spell to which an evil witch has reduced him

    Loose retelling of the ¨ 1001 Arabian nights¨ , based on ancient legends , deals with Sinbad The Sailor (Patrick Wayne) sails to deliver a cursed prince Kassin (Damien Thomas) to a dangerous island in the face of deadly opposition from a powerful witch (Margaret Whiting) . In the mysterious land Hyperboria Sinbad along with a sorcerer (Patrick Troughton) and his crew encounter magical and mystical creatures .

    This exciting picture contains swashbuckling , magic , fast-moving plot , thrills , impressive fights among monsters and lots of fun . It is an exciting fantasy-adventure full of special effects created by means of stop-motion technique by the magician Ray Harryhausen . The runtime is adequate with various incidents and sub-plots . Harryhausen works his animation magic around a passable-developed screenplay and engaging acting by the entire performers . The cast is enjoyable with sons of famous actors as Patrick Wayne and Taryn Power and a gorgeous and very young Jane Seymour . Agreeable film but hamhanded and confusing if you seek the hidden plot . Ray can once again claim credit for the unusual and marvelous mythical creatures springing to life , such as Smilodon , Troglodite , Mandril , an enormous mosquito , a giant Morse and many others . The picture belongs a trilogy , produced by Ray Harryhausen and Charles H. Schneer , along with ¨The seventh voyage of Simbad¨ (1958) by Nathan Juran with Kerwin Matthews and Kathryn Grant and ¨Golden voyage of Simbad¨ (1973) by Gordon Hessler with John Philip Law , Tom Baker and Caroline Munro . Great and rousing musical score by Roy Budd . Colorful cinematography by Ted Moore , filmed in Jordan (Petra) and Spain . Rating : Acceptable and passable . The motion picture was professionally directed by the usual actor Sam Wanamaker . Don't watch this one for the screenplay , which almost doesn't exist , otherwise , mildly fun .

    Other pictures about the great hero Simbad are the following : ¨Sinbad the sailor¨ (1947) with Douglas Fairbanks Jr , Maureen O'Hara and Anthony Quinn ; ¨Sinbad of the seven seas¨ by Enzo G Castellari with Lou Ferrigno and John Steiner and the cartoon movie ¨Simbad the legend of seven seas¨ (2003) produced by Dreamworks , a combo of computer generator and hand-drawn animation by Patrick Gilmore and Tim Johnson with voices from Brad Pitt and Catherine Zeta Jones.
    G.Spider

    A weak Sinbad, but still a first-rate tale.

    A film with animation by Ray Harryhausen. It's a pity he couldn't have animated Patrick Wayne, who's bland performance means he comes across as the least interesting Sinbad. It is Patrick Troughton's excellently enigmatic Melanthius and Margaret Whiting's icy Zenobia who are the real stars of this show.

    Sinbad travels to find a way to break the spell which has turned a prince into a baboon, but Zenobia, who has plans to ensure her son is crowned king in the prince's place, calls upon the help of various mythical creatures. The minotaur is by far the best of these and ought to have faced Sinbad and his crew rather than just being crushed in an ignoble exit. Other memorable creatures include a giant walrus, insectoid-faced demons and a sabre-toothed cat. Though the central character of the title is somewhat lacking, this is still first-rate entertainment and genuine escapism, two things somewhat lacking in more recent films.
    7Apollo_Tweed

    Still holds up pretty well after 26 years

    After having re-visited Harryhausen's Sinbad trilogy recently, I have decided that this one, overall, compares very favourably with the other two. It is the most epic of the trilogy and has the most ambitious storyline (POSSIBLE SPOILER) involving a voyage into a lost world hidden behind the ice sheets at the North Pole (no doubt an idea partly influenced by Disney's 1974 'The Island at the Top of the World').

    The creatures in this one are the least spectacular of the trilogy (THE SEVENTH VOYAGE & THE GOLDEN VOYAGE have better and more spectacular ones) but Harryhausen's artistry is as great as ever and he really should have been given a special accolade for imbuing Kassim the Baboon and the Troglodyte with so much character. It really is remarkable watching them 'act'. Demanding kids may find the creatures disappointing but now that I am older I can appreciate the fine work that went into realising them. Harryhausen's puppet work possesses a tangibility that CGI is only just now coming close to emulating.

    I also find that I care about the characters in this film and what happens to them. The woodenness of the acting and the dialogue of the previous 2 films in some way stopped me from caring very much. This picture does not suffer in the same way, as both acting and dialogue, while nothing special, are better here. Jane Seymour is also very easy on the eye and is the best looking Sinbad girl of them all.

    Overall, highly recommended for young (but not very young) children and for adults who were kids when it first came out and want to recapture some nostalgic vibes. I feel that this one is best for a sense of epic adventure and empathetic characters, THE SEVENTH VOYAGE OF SINBAD is best for the monsters and THE GOLDEN VOYAGE OF SINBAD is quite possibly the best of the trilogy overall.
    7lambiepie-2

    For children when wonder and Imagination were still in vogue!

    (Minor Spoilers)

    Let's be honest and a tad realistic about this film, shall we?

    By TODAY'S standards, this is a "cheesy" kinda film compared to what technology we've got. And I think at the time of this release we had gotten "Close Encounters of the Third Kind" and "Star Wars" so our expectation levels were running higher for "special effects" and "whimsy" than this.

    But I still can get entertainment out of this film.

    How?

    By remembering how old I was when I saw it and WHOM I was with when I saw it. My family.

    I was a child. This film wasn't in my all time top ten, but it was...fun. It was one of those movies local channels threw on Sunday afternoon before or after a televised ball game..or when a ball game was rained out. Come on, admit it..you remember!

    And that's the point. This film's special effects were nice..not spectacular..not even up to Ray Harryhausen's standards, but the Harryhausen mark was there which made it entertaining (Admit it, you LOVED the walrus scene!! How 'bout that Cyclops?!?! As a child this was all good! You remember!!).

    For very young girls, this Sinbad was REALLY nice to look at back then. For the very young guys, so was Miss Jane Seymour and Miss Taryn Power. Then there was the story which was kinda fun, the adventure which was kinda whimsical and the happy ending where the bad guys got theirs'.

    This was done at a time of assuming children would love this kinda stuff. Back then, more would have. Now, most children don't even think "Spy Kids" can give them a buzz.

    This movie is about childhood and remembering what it was like to have an imagination and watch a story unfold for nothing but the sheer enjoyment of it...the fun of eating "Good 'n' Plenty", "Snowcaps", "Malted Milk Balls" and Popcorn without thinking about calorie content to make this even more fun to watch...and the "eye candy" of Wayne, Seymour and Power help a so-so story that's really better than a lot of stuff I've seen today that they charge ya $10 a ticket for! Parents may not have liked it as much as the children but that too is part of the fun!

    Have a heart when watching this. Watch this as a "fun" romp....as remembering when families watched shows together (..or in my case my dad mumbling under his breath about how the game was due on and he had to sit through this 'crap' first!), the pre-teen tingles of watching a handsome Wayne, young Seymour and/or Power (...ya know...before having breast implants and weighing 95 pounds was mandatory in Hollywood for women to do this kind of film work?!?) and telling your parents you were REALLY interested in the story...really.

    Maybe I've got a more "nostalgic" view about this film..its because I'm not looking for academy award winning material with this kind of film, but it does its job of...entertaining...and if you have children and want them to be children for a tad longer, this may be the film fare for them. Or just for you, if you want to curl up with some popcorn and remember "the good old movie fluff days" where special effects were done by hand and stop motion photography by the "grand-daddy" of the genre and a Sinbad movie where Sinbad actually looked like you might imagined him to look like back then and evil characters who were evil and got theirs....pretty much simplified.

    Open your mind and when you have a moment...enjoy. Don't take it seriously just sit back... watch...and HAVE FUN..with your children, as a family.
    7GOWBTW

    I liked this Sinbad movie!

    I haven't seen many Sinbad movies, but this one I liked very much. I remember seeing the preview when I was younger. And I said to myself, "This movie looks like fun!" The animation in the movie gave it plenty of character. And Sinbad(Patrick Wayne) was a fine man as well. The witch(Margaret Whiting) was a very fiendish woman. She makes all other witches look like amateurs, especially when she used her sorcery. Her only flaw is when her re-transformation from a bird didn't complete itself. It's when her right foot is still a bird's. The growth formula was something when one of the bees drank it. and was later killed by Sinbad. Jane Seymour does a great job playing Princess Farah. She really knows how to control, and tame things that Sinbad couldn't do. The giant walrus, the golden minotaur, and a the vicious saber-tooth tiger gives the movie something to see. I think this movie is very watchable, and very entertaining. I wished it had gotten better reviews than it did. 3 out of 5 stars!

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    Argumento

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    • Curiosidades
      An uncredited Peter Mayhew is the live suit actor stand-in for the stop-motion Minaton (the bronze mechanical minotaur), whose name is a portmanteau of "minotaur" and "automaton." Before filming, Mayhew was a hospital attendant at King's College Hospital in London. Producer Charles H. Schneer saw Mayhew's photo, in which he was literally standing above the crowd around him. This was Mayhew's very first role, right before his more famous role of Chewbacca in La guerra de las galaxias (1977). Both films were released in 1977, and "Star Wars" was released three months before this film.
    • Pifias
      When Zenobia's son is killed and she goes down the steps to see him at the end of the film, you clearly see she is wearing two shoes and no longer has the bird's claw on her right foot.
    • Citas

      Hassan: I've never seen a black man turn white before

    • Créditos adicionales
      The opening and closing titles appear over the crowning ceremony of Prince Kassim.
    • Conexiones
      Featured in Science Fiction Film Awards (1978)

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    • How long is Sinbad and the Eye of the Tiger?Con tecnología de Alexa

    Detalles

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    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 23 de junio de 1978 (España)
    • País de origen
      • Reino Unido
    • Idiomas
      • Inglés
      • Árabe
    • Títulos en diferentes países
      • Simbad i l'ull del tigre
    • Localizaciones del rodaje
      • Petra, Jordan(Melanthius' castle)
    • Empresas productoras
      • Columbia Pictures
      • Charles H. Schneer Productions
      • Andor Films
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    • Presupuesto
      • 3.500.000 US$ (estimación)
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    Especificaciones técnicas

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    • Duración
      1 hora 53 minutos
    • Mezcla de sonido
      • Mono
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.66 : 1

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