Alakazam the Great
Original title: Saiyûki
- 1h 24m
IMDb RATING
6.0/10
560
YOUR RATING
An arrogant monkey is forced to go on a journey where he learns about gluttony, greed, love and humility.An arrogant monkey is forced to go on a journey where he learns about gluttony, greed, love and humility.An arrogant monkey is forced to go on a journey where he learns about gluttony, greed, love and humility.
Kiyoshi Komiyama
- Son Gokû
- (voice)
Noriko Shindô
- RinRin
- (voice)
Hideo Kinoshita
- Cho Hakkai
- (voice)
Setsuo Shinoda
- Sa Gojô
- (voice)
Nobuaki Sekine
- Sanzô hôshi
- (voice)
Kunihisa Takeda
- Shaka-nyorai
- (voice)
Katsuko Ozaki
- Kanzeon-bosatsu
- (voice)
Michiko Shirasaka
- Shoryo
- (voice)
Kinshirô Iwao
- Gyûmaô
- (voice)
Tamae Katô
- Rasetsu-jo
- (voice)
Kiyoshi Kawakubo
- Kinkaku daiô
- (voice)
Frankie Avalon
- Alakazam
- (singing voice, voice: English version)
Dodie Stevens
- DeeDee the Monkey
- (singing voice, voice: English version)
Jonathan Winters
- Sir Quigley Broken Bottom
- (voice: English version)
Arnold Stang
- Lulipopo
- (voice: English version)
Sterling Holloway
- Narrator
- (voice: English version)
Jack Curtis
- King Amo
- (voice: English version)
- …
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Featured reviews
China's Monkey King makes it to the West
This excellent Japanese animated fantasy is an adaptation of the old Chinese Legend of the Monkey King. Having seen the original Japanese version of this film, I don't have any problems with what American International did with this film, they have removed most of the religious references, but the story is still more or less intact, and AIP hired good talent for the voices.
The American score is by film music great Les Baxter, and this is probably the most symphonic score written for an animated film at the time of its U.S. release as Alakazam The Great. Gorgeous stuff, and the movie is lots of fun for both children and adults, who will enjoy a lot of humor added to keep parents awake.
The American score is by film music great Les Baxter, and this is probably the most symphonic score written for an animated film at the time of its U.S. release as Alakazam The Great. Gorgeous stuff, and the movie is lots of fun for both children and adults, who will enjoy a lot of humor added to keep parents awake.
Me Too!!
I really did not want to vote on the movie, since I have not seen it since I was a kid. But, this movie was such a great movie to me as a kid, that almost 40 years later, I am trying to find it. If this was such a bad movie (according to the critic), there needs to be more of them made. The movie had classic good versus evil situations, was able to teach morals in a very entertaining manner, and was light and dark all at the same time. I can go so far as to say that it was the loyalty, friendship, and mercy exhibited by the lead character and his friends that indelibly burned this cartoon in my psyche all of these years. I too find that I had no idea that all of these famous stars were in the movie, but now that I know, when I finally get the movie again, I will have another reason to love it.
RAW IMAGINATION IN AN EARLY JAPANESE-ANIMATED IMPORT
Over the years, I have seen many reviews that have mercilessly slagged ALAKAZAM THE GREAT as a bad movie, and it even made it into the highly questionable book THE 50 WORST FILMS OF ALL TIME. The question I have is: did all of you who hate this movie see the same film that I did when I was a youngster? I have shown many children this film over the years and not one of them failed to enjoy it.
ALAKAZAM THE GREAT is loosely based on the Wu Cheng-En classic JOURNEY TO THE WEST, a landmark of Chinese epic literature, and tells the story of an arrogant monkey king who learns the secrets of magic and becomes a cosmic pain in the ass. After a brief rampage through the heavens, he is imprisoned by the gods and eventually sent on a pilgrimage to atone for his sins and learn humility. The monkey must escort a young prince (who is the son of the gods) through a series of insanely lethal adventures in a land teeming with demons and monsters of every description, picking up a couple of unusual traveling companions along the way (an anthropomorphic pig-man and a burrowing cannibal). Much magic and cartoon ass-whuppin' ensues, and despite the (mercifully brief) musical numbers, this film has raw imagination to spare. Fast-paced and fun, this is not the dud that some would lead you to believe. Give it a chance!
ALAKAZAM THE GREAT is loosely based on the Wu Cheng-En classic JOURNEY TO THE WEST, a landmark of Chinese epic literature, and tells the story of an arrogant monkey king who learns the secrets of magic and becomes a cosmic pain in the ass. After a brief rampage through the heavens, he is imprisoned by the gods and eventually sent on a pilgrimage to atone for his sins and learn humility. The monkey must escort a young prince (who is the son of the gods) through a series of insanely lethal adventures in a land teeming with demons and monsters of every description, picking up a couple of unusual traveling companions along the way (an anthropomorphic pig-man and a burrowing cannibal). Much magic and cartoon ass-whuppin' ensues, and despite the (mercifully brief) musical numbers, this film has raw imagination to spare. Fast-paced and fun, this is not the dud that some would lead you to believe. Give it a chance!
A good review
I saw Alakazam first when I was quite young. I thought it was a good cartoon then and like it more now. It has a good moral to it and it's not made to sell toys like most cartoons are made to do now. Comparing it to todays cartoons is a bit silly since it was made over 40 years ago, the themes and characters are much different then the standard anime fluff we see now. I can't see anyone going wrong renting it and watching it with their family.
It may be lame, but it sticks with you
I was stunned to see this listing; I have been trying to find this movie for years. It may be lame, a terrible dubbed version of a chopped up hack job, but I still have dreams based on this film 30 years later. It would show up on the afternoon movie program and I would always greet it like an old friend; I would love to see it again.
Did you know
- TriviaThis movie is based on the epic Chinese novel A Journey to the West written by Wu Cheng-En in the 16th Century China about the adventures of the Monkey King accompanying a Buddhist monk traveling to India to collect rare scrolls to bring home to China. This story has been the basis of many movies, television shows and plays.
- Crazy credits[U.S. poster] COLOR and MAGISCOPE
- Alternate versionsA version now exists using Toei's restoration (including the original Japanese title and credits) that is synced with American International's English dubbed track.
- ConnectionsReferenced in Legends Summarized: The Monkey King (Journey to the West Part 1) (2015)
- How long is Alakazam the Great?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Languages
- Also known as
- Alakazam the Great!
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 24m(84 min)
- Aspect ratio
- 2.39 : 1
- 2.35 : 1
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