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Tomorrow Morning (Serbian: Sutra ujutru) is a 2006 Serbian drama film directed by Oleg Novković. [1] It was Serbia 's submission to the 79th Academy Awards for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film , but was not accepted as a nominee.
The New Adventures of Aladdin (original title: Les Nouvelles Aventures d'Aladin) is a 2015 French comedy film directed by Arthur Benzaquen and starring Kev Adams. A sequel, Alad'2, was released on October 3, 2018. [3]
Alad'2, also known as The Brand New Adventures of Aladin, is a 2018 French comedy film [3] [4] [5] directed by Lionel Steketee and produced by 74 Films, Pathé, and M6 Films. [6] [7] It stars Kev Adams, Jamel Debbouze, Vanessa Guide, Éric Judor, and Ramzy Bedia. It is a sequel to the 2015 film The New Adventures of Aladdin.
Twenty-five years ago -- November 25, 1992, to be exact -- Disney's animated classic 'Aladdin' premiered. ‘Aladdin’: 25 things you didn’t know about the 1992 animated classic! Skip to main ...
Aladdin and the Wonderful Lamp (世界名作童話 アラジンと魔法のランプ, Sekai Meisaku Dōwa: Arajin to mahō no ranpu, lit. ' World Masterpiece Fairy Tales: Aladdin and the Magic Lamp ') is a 1982 Japanese anime fantasy film produced by Toei Animation, based on the Middle Eastern folk tale of Aladdin.
The film stars Akkineni Nageswara Rao, Anjali Devi. It is an adaptation of the story of Aladdin from One Thousand and One Nights and a trilingual, filmed simultaneously in three different languages. Allavudeenum Arputha Vilakkum was released on 29 March 1957, and Allavuddin Adbhuta Deepam followed on 13 April. Alladin Ka Chirag too, came in the ...
Later, the Dark Wizard contacts Aladdin's family and pretends to be Ali al Maruf's brother. He persuades Aladdin to get an old copper lamp for him from the "Sunken City". When Aladdin wants to hand over the found lamp to his supposed uncle, he attacks him. Fighting, Aladdin falls back into the "Sunken City" with the coveted vessel.
Aladdin is a 1958 musical fantasy television film, with a book by S.J. Perelman and music and lyrics by Cole Porter, telecast in color on the DuPont Show of the Month by CBS. It was Porter's last musical score.