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When Disney was publishing its own comics in the mid-90s, it produced a two-issue Aladdin comic presenting an alternate version of The Return of Jafar. It was titled The Return of Aladdin. The comic is introduced by the Peddler from the first film. The story starts off showing that Aladdin has been particularly bored of palace life.
An inspiration to the character is the villain Jaffar, played by Conrad Veidt in The Thief of Bagdad, from which Aladdin borrows several character ideas and plot elements. The Jafar of Disney's Aladdin plays essentially the same part as the character from the 1940 film, and is drawn with notable similarity to Veidt's looks. [1]
This is an accepted version of this page This is the latest accepted revision, reviewed on 18 February 2025. American animated musical fantasy film Aladdin Theatrical release poster by John Alvin Directed by John Musker Ron Clements Screenplay by Ron Clements John Musker Ted Elliott Terry Rossio Story by Burny Mattinson Roger Allers Daan Jippes Kevin Harkey Sue Nichols Francis Glebas Darrell ...
Twenty-five years ago -- November 25, 1992, to be exact -- Disney's animated classic 'Aladdin' premiered.
Growing up in the '90s, one thing we always had was our collection of VHS tapes. Whether it was your treasured " Rugrats in Paris ," tape that you clutched to your heart, or perhaps the box set of ...
An iconic Disney character came out of the closet on Saturday Night Live, with a little help from Bowen Yang. Florida governor Ron DeSantis suffered a humiliating defeat at the hands of Disney ...
Coming on the heels of the direct-to-video sequel The Return of Jafar, the series picked up where that installment left off, with Aladdin still living on the streets of Agrabah but now engaged to the beautiful and fearless Princess Jasmine. "Al" and Jasmine go together into peril among sorcerers, monsters, thieves, and more.
Shortly after its appearance as a VHS by GoodTimes, the Disney Company brought an unfair competition and infringement lawsuit, claiming that the GoodTimes packaging deliberately imitated the style of the images used by Disney to promote its own Aladdin theatrical film thereby deceiving consumers into thinking they were buying the Disney film (which had not yet been issued on VHS).