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Context Film / TheThiefOfBagdad1924

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1[[quoteright:280:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/theifbagdad_8526.jpg]]
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3''The Thief of Baghdad'' is a SilentMovie from 1924 loosely based on stories from ''Literature/OneThousandAndOneNights.''
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5It is about a [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin thief from Bagdad]] who falls in love with the daughter of the Caliph, and pretends to be a prince in order to marry her. He subsequently goes on adventures to find a treasure in order to prove his worthiness. Meanwhile, one of the princess's other suitors is an evil Mongol Khan, who is actually planning to take over the city and is sneaking his soldiers inside the walls. The soldiers are disguised as porters bringing presents for the princess.
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7It starred Creator/DouglasFairbanks (who also produced the movie and co-wrote the script), and was directed by [[EyepatchOfPower Raoul Walsh]]. Creator/AnnaMayWong, the first Chinese movie star in Hollywood, plays the slave who's acting as a spy for the Mongol khan.
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9Not to be confused with the [[Film/TheThiefOfBagdad1940 1940 remake]].
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11----
12!!This film provides examples of:
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14* AbhorrentAdmirer: The princess is pretty freaked out by her other three suitors--the fat one, the ugly one, and the ObviouslyEvil Mongol one.
15* AnAesop: "Happiness must be earned." The Thief has an attack of conscience and can't bring himself to steal the princess. Instead, he goes on a long journey to eventually find the magic powder that allows him to liberate the city from the Mongols.
16* ArabianNightsDays: Baghdad, camels, sultans, magic carpets. The opening title card proclaims the film to be "An Arabian Nights Fantasy". The story isn't directly taken from any of the stories in the ''Literature/ArabianNights'', but the idea of a commoner falling in love with a princess was a common plot element in the original story collection, and things like flying horses and magic carpets do pop up in the stories from time to time.
17* BeautifulSlaveGirl: The Mongol Slave, who is played by screen beauty Anna May Wong.
18* BrandishmentBluff: The thief gets the drop on the Mongol slave by holding a knife to her back. He then walks her into a corner, and braces the knife against her back with a pillow to make her think he's still there as he makes his escape.
19* CatapultToGlory: How Fairbanks gains entry to the palace in the final action scene.
20* CrystalBall: The three princes are charged with finding rare treasures, the rarest one winning the heart of the princess. One of them finds a crystal ball, which reveals that the princess has been poisoned.
21* DamselInDistress: The princess, who is poisoned or threatened by evil Mongols from time to time.
22* DragonLady: The female slave, who turns out to be a mole and spy. This led to her actress Anna May Wong being typecast as such for several years.
23* EarnYourHappyEnding: "Happiness must be earned" is directly stated to be the moral of the story.
24* EpicMovie: Runs 2 1/2 hours. Cost $1.1 million dollars to make, which in 1924 was a ton of money to spend on a movie. It shows onscreen, with elaborate sets and costumes, innumerable extras, and special effects that were cutting-edge for TheRoaringTwenties.
25* EstablishingCharacterMoment: In his first scene, the thief appears to be sleeping on top of a stone platform above a water fountain. When a traveler stops to drink, the thief steals his purse.
26* FlyingCarpet: One of the other princes finds one, and the three princes use it to fly back to Bagdad. In the end, the thief and the princess fly away on one.
27* HeelFaithTurn: The hero eventually realises what an asshole he's been halfway through the movie, and goes to the city mosque for guidance from the imam he had scorned earlier in the film. Fortunately for him, the imam is a GoodShepherd (okay, maybe not ''quite'' in the modern sense, but he still counts!)
28* HermitGuru: The thief finds one, who gives him advice on how to find his way to the magic box.
29* TheHerosJourney: The thief leaves Bagdad and goes on a long, dangerous journey in which he fights many monsters, before finding the magic powder that allows him to free Bagdad.
30* TheInfiltration: Used both by the thief, to get into the palace (and the competition for the princess' hand) disguised as a prince, and by the villainous Mongols, to sneak twenty thousand troops into the city disguised as porters bearing gifts. Given how easily both schemes work, a good example of TheGuardsMustBeCrazy.
31* InvisibilityCloak: One of two magic weapons found by the thief on his journey, along with the box of magic powder. He uses the cloak to sneak past the guards and save the princess.
32* KillerGorilla: One of the beasts guarding the palace is a monstrous ape, played by a live chimpanzee that looks taller than a human thanks to forced perspective. Ahmed is nearly executed by [[FedToTheBeast getting thrown to the ape]].
33* LoveableRogue: Well, he doesn't seem much like this at the very beginning; he uses one of the daily [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salah salah]] to steal a merchant's wares, pops into a mosque specifically to tell the imam that he - the thief, that is - is better than Allah. Luckily, he sees the Princess soon after, and [[LoveRedeems when he realises that she's not another item to be stolen away]] [[TookALevelInKindness he becomes a better person for it]].
34* LoveRedeems: The thief isn't evil, exactly, but he certainly isn't good, and his plan to drug the princess and steal her away when she's unconscious definitely isn't good. But he falls in love with her for real, and can't bring himself to do it.
35* MeaningfulEcho: The thief boasts to the worshippers at the mosque: "What I want - I take." Later, the Mongol Khan reviews a model of the Caliph's palace and says the same thing, inviting the audience to compare their morality.
36* TheMole: The princess's Mongol slave is a spy for the Mongol Khan.
37* NamelessNarrative: Almost, as no names are given except for the Mongol Khan, who is introduced in a single title card as "Cham Shang the Great." The thief goes by "Ahmed" when disguised as a prince.
38* OurSirensAreDifferent: The hero comes across a few sirens in one of the trials he has to face. He's tempted... but then he looks at his beloved's ring, and snaps out of it.
39* {{Pegasus}}: The winged horse who carries the thief to the Citadel of the Moon.
40* SecretUndergroundPassage: Access via a well. Given how easily the thief and his associate get in and out of the palace, it exhibits SwissCheeseSecurity.
41* ATasteOfTheLash: The thief watches in disgust as another thief is punished this way. Later he himself is flogged after he is discovered to be a thief and not a prince.
42* WalkingShirtlessScene: Douglas Fairbanks is shirtless for most of the movie.
43* YellowPeril: The "Mongol" characters, [[AlwaysChaoticEvil all of which are villains]].

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