Using a magic flying carpet and a handful of friends, the son of a murdered Caliph must fight the usurper in order to win the throne of the Caliphate.Using a magic flying carpet and a handful of friends, the son of a murdered Caliph must fight the usurper in order to win the throne of the Caliphate.Using a magic flying carpet and a handful of friends, the son of a murdered Caliph must fight the usurper in order to win the throne of the Caliphate.
Gary Klein
- Baby
- (as Gary Katzman)
Edward Colmans
- Caliph Ali's Wine Steward
- (uncredited)
Jimmy Dime
- Palace Guard
- (uncredited)
William Fawcett
- Ahkmid
- (uncredited)
Terry Frost
- Beggar
- (uncredited)
John George
- Vendor
- (uncredited)
Eileen Howe
- Vernah
- (uncredited)
Rodolfo Hoyos Jr.
- Sergeant
- (uncredited)
Doretta Johnson
- Queen Yashima
- (uncredited)
Aram Katcher
- Governor of Mecca
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
Considering "The Magic Carpet" is a costume drama starring John Agar, this film isn't nearly as bad as it could have been.
After the Caliph is murdered, his son (baby Agar) is placed on a magic carpet that spirits him away. It lands in an alley, where the baby and carpet are picked up by the guy who played Pete on the TV series "Fury." The grown boy (adult Agar) is now a physician's assistant. He pulls out a tongue depressor and tells one of his patients to open his mouth and say "Ali Baba." (I kid you not.) Meanwhile, the new Caliph, played by Gregory Gaye, aided by Raymond Burr as the Vizier, is taxing the populace to death.
It's time for a hero. Agar becomes (drum roll) the Scarlet Falcon!!
I must admit, Agar looks simply stunning in red. Apparently, he is the only clean-shaven man in the Middle East. He also displays feats of derring-do, with some nifty sword fighting and a few wrestling moves (he takes out a few dudes with a monkey flip and hip toss). Agar may have had a career doing some action flicks, instead of the 1950s-60s sci-fi crap in which he was saddled.
Agar manages to infiltrate the Caliph's lair by curing the old geezer's hiccups. We get a gratuitous shot of Agar in Arabian bathing trunks. Fortunately, the producer (Sam Katzman, who else?) spared us the sight of Burr in similar garb.
George Tobias is on hand for some comic relief. Patricia Medina plays Tobias' sister, and she has eyes for Agar. She also dances for the guys. She's pretty.
Did I mention Lucille Ball is in this? She plays the evil Caliph's sister. She discovers Agar is really the Scarlet Falcon, so it is off to the chopping block for Agar.
Can the Magic Carpet save him? Will Agar take his rightful place on the throne? Will Agar and Medina get to do a little nookie-nookie on the Magic Carpet?
After the Caliph is murdered, his son (baby Agar) is placed on a magic carpet that spirits him away. It lands in an alley, where the baby and carpet are picked up by the guy who played Pete on the TV series "Fury." The grown boy (adult Agar) is now a physician's assistant. He pulls out a tongue depressor and tells one of his patients to open his mouth and say "Ali Baba." (I kid you not.) Meanwhile, the new Caliph, played by Gregory Gaye, aided by Raymond Burr as the Vizier, is taxing the populace to death.
It's time for a hero. Agar becomes (drum roll) the Scarlet Falcon!!
I must admit, Agar looks simply stunning in red. Apparently, he is the only clean-shaven man in the Middle East. He also displays feats of derring-do, with some nifty sword fighting and a few wrestling moves (he takes out a few dudes with a monkey flip and hip toss). Agar may have had a career doing some action flicks, instead of the 1950s-60s sci-fi crap in which he was saddled.
Agar manages to infiltrate the Caliph's lair by curing the old geezer's hiccups. We get a gratuitous shot of Agar in Arabian bathing trunks. Fortunately, the producer (Sam Katzman, who else?) spared us the sight of Burr in similar garb.
George Tobias is on hand for some comic relief. Patricia Medina plays Tobias' sister, and she has eyes for Agar. She also dances for the guys. She's pretty.
Did I mention Lucille Ball is in this? She plays the evil Caliph's sister. She discovers Agar is really the Scarlet Falcon, so it is off to the chopping block for Agar.
Can the Magic Carpet save him? Will Agar take his rightful place on the throne? Will Agar and Medina get to do a little nookie-nookie on the Magic Carpet?
Arabian Nights romps are popular around the house especially during this time of year for their exotic flavor, fantasy elements, action outbursts and general mindlessness. This film is best-known, if at all, for the presence of Lucille Ball; interestingly, she does not play the heroine but rather a sultry semi-villainess (the ambitious sister of the current Caliph, naturally a usurper). Equally predictably, the true heir to the throne (blandly played by John Agar) has survived an attack upon his life as an infant and, unaware of his heritage, has taken to living a life of poverty as a physician. The heroine, then, is a feisty (but who effortlessly works her feminine charms when the need arises) Patricia Medina – a regular in this type of film – who not only gets off with Agar on the wrong foot (by wanting to join the all-male band of rebels he secretly and all-too-suddenly finds himself leading under the guise of "The Scarlet Falcon"!), resents Ball (obviously over her attentions to Agar, eventually in the Caliph's employ when he cures a case of hiccups he had brought about in the first place) but has a brother of her own (Agar's sidekick and the film's obligatory supplier of comedy relief, George Tobias). As for the chief villain, we get no less than Raymond Burr: needless to say, he craves Ball's favors but she only has eyes for the dashing hero. The titular fabric comes in handy many a time during the course of the film, usually to allow Agar to make a nick-of-time escape or to meet up with his rabble and give them the low-down on the Caliph's movements so that they can finally storm the palace, rid the country of a tyrant and put Agar himself in his rightful place. As can be expected, the film is instantly forgettable and hardly great cinema but certainly makes for colorful fare and fun viewing to boot i.e. it provides perfect relaxation after a hard day at work.
I totally disagree with some previous comments. It seems as though everyone wants message films, or biting dialog for a picture to be great. Whatever happened to films being made strictly for entertainment sake. If you are looking for academy award performances forget it, but for a rainy afternoon and you just want some simple escapism then this is just the thing. The interesting thing about the whole movie was how Lucille Ball foiled all of the bigwigs who tried to put the screws to her by offering her this movie to fulfill her contract obligation. they all thought she would turn them down but she fooled them and accepted and as soon as the film wrapped she was gone.
I expected far worse from this Sam Katzman production. Far far worse. But it is actually an excellent little Arabian Nights programmer, in the right line of the Universal Studios movies from the forties and fifties, directed by the likes of John Rawlins, Arthur Lubin, George Waggner or George Sherman, starring Maria Montez or later Maureen O'Hara and Piper Laurie. I was very enjoying this One Thousand and One Nights programer. Maybe because of the Lew Landers influence as a director on Katzman, I quite don't know. It is colorful, splendid photography for this kind of grade B stuff. Yes, very good and entertaining movie.
The leads are the main guy, the funny guy assistant kinda dopey amusement, the good girl, and the evil girl played by the famous lady, so basically I think they have a good fun thing here. The script is actually just routine, however this is even made up for the dir. wisely somehow understanding this and filling the movie with just action scenes after another which is a success, also the magic carpet itself is nifty. I think this is a fun movie.
Did you know
- TriviaLucille Ball was pregnant during filming.
- GoofsJohn Agar's character is decapitated twice at about the 1:10 mark when he rides on horseback behind the matte line that applies a painted desert backdrop to the sand-covered soundstage floor.
- Quotes
Princess Narah: You would not put a princess in the dungeon?
Abdullah al Husan: I wouldn't if she were a princess.
- ConnectionsFeatured in The Lady with the Torch (1999)
- How long is The Magic Carpet?Powered by Alexa
Details
Box office
- Budget
- $170,000 (estimated)
- Runtime
- 1h 24m(84 min)
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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