How does aladdin end




















That line is completely different from the one Robin Williams sings in the animated version. Once he enters the palace he heads over to the Sultan and sings the words, "Heard your princess was a sight. Lovely to see. The Bollywood-inspired dance scene is one of the remake's highlights. We even get to see Aladdin bust a move with a little help from the Genie. Aladdin makes it very clear he's not a dancer. The moment leads to Jafar getting crushed behind the door with Iago. Instead, Aladdin and the Genie simply appear inside the palace after the song's end to meet with the Sultan, Jasmine, and Jafar.

In the original movie, the Sultan rebukes, saying that Jafar is "so old. In 's "Aladdin," the topic is never brought up until the film's very end and it feels shoehorned into the movie. We don't get to see Aladdin give Jasmine a flower that the magic carpet plucks for her or see the two tumbling through the skies of Agrabah. Instead, Aladdin and Jasmine move side to side and up and down on a rather lifeless carpet.

According to press notes, the actors were tied in, kneeling on a foam mat, and were placed on a giant rig that was in front of a blue screen. It makes the entire scene sound a lot less magical. In the animated film, Jafar uses magic and a smoke bomb to make a quick escape before he can get arrested. In the live-action film, Jafar's not nearly as handy. He allows himself to be arrested and has his parrot Iago release him from his cell.

In the animated film, Iago humorously disguises himself as a flamingo and sneaks into a part of the palace to steal the lamp when Aladdin isn't looking. In the remake, Jafar walks past Aladdin discreetly on the street, and swipes the lamp in passing. The Sultan made it a habit to shove crackers down Iago's throat. It made for a few laughs in the original. That concept is ditched in this film. One of the most iconic moments of the original "Aladdin" is seeing the Sultan's majestic white robes transfer over from Jasmine's father to Jafar.

In the process, Iago gets his own little Sultan hat, too. Not only does Jafar get darker robes instead, but Iago remains hatless in the new movie.

Poor Iago. One of the best parts of the animated movie doesn't make it into the live-action adaptation. When Jafar becomes Sultan in the original film, he uses it as a chance to humiliate Aladdin in front of Jasmine and her father by singing a reprisal of "Prince Ali. It's not alluded to at all in the remake. Instead, Jafar simply tells Jasmine Ali is actually Aladdin, something she suspected.

It all makes for a very unsatisfying reveal. Jafar sends Aladdin packing in a palace tower to a wintry unnamed destination with Abu and the magic carpet in the animated movie.

Once there, Aladdin needs to find and save both Abu and the carpet while avoiding being crushed by the massive tower. It's thrilling and there's a moment where you're genuinely afraid for Aladdin's life. In the remake, Jafar simply sends Aladdin and Abu away to an unnamed location but not in a palace tower. The omission of the tower deflates the moment entirely. Aladdin merely needs to find Abu before he quickly gets rescued by the magic carpet sent by the Genie.

Sending Aladdin away was fruitless here. The scene merely seems to exist as a nod to the original film. After Jafar becomes the Sultan, he makes some dark changes to the palace interior. Among them are new red outfits for the Sultan and Jasmine.

In the movie, Jafar wishes for Jasmine to fall in love with him. He doesn't know that's beyond the Genie's powers, so Jasmine takes advantage of the moment and plays along to distract Jafar as Aladdin tries to take back the magic lamp. This never seemed like a scene that would appear in the live-action film. Jasmine was the third in a line of headstrong princesses that began with Ariel, was cemented by Belle and improved upon by the Sultan's willful, smart daughter.

Unfortunately, as much as the animated classic tried to introduce her as someone disdainful of arranged marriage and curious about the world outside the palace walls, its denouement erased all of that. Jasmine's nature in the original didn't go unnoticed by director Guy Ritchie, who, speaking at junket recently in Los Angeles, pointed out what many Disney fans already knew: " Genie had his hands full.

And the most conspicuous character thereafter was Jasmine, who was arguably a tad bit passive in the original. For one, it changes the narrative for a potential Aladdin sequel, considering Genie can't keep pulling off his Genie magic going forward. More importantly though, it brings Genie's story in this movie full circle, while also giving him a family.

Throughout the movie, Genie developed a flirtatious relationship with Jasmine's best friend and handmaiden, Dalia. It was clear they had feelings for one another, and that came around when Genie was turned to a human and he exclaimed that his goal was to marry her, have a couple of kids, and buy a boat to see the world. Then it was revealed that this was the family shown at the very beginning of the movie. After their time with Aladdin and Jasmine, Genie and Dalia did just as he suggested, and they went on to live happily ever after on their boat together.

However, there are a few key changes in the new live-action Aladdin , most notably, Jasmine is named Sultan of Agrabah by her father after he sees her leadership when standing up against Jafar. And while the law that forbids Jasmine from marrying anyone except a prince is abolished in both versions, in the new Aladdin , the law is abolished by Jasmine instead of her father.

This goes hand-in-hand with the movie making Jasmine a more empowered character than her animated counterpart, as she makes her desire to be a good leader to her people known throughout the film. The other main change is what the Genie does after he is freed by Aladdin. The two are then revealed to have started a family and sail the world on a boat. And in a classic story-within-a-story twist, it turns out that the whole movie was Genie telling the story to his children on their family boat this will not come as much of a surprise to most viewers, as Will Smith is a pretty recognizable figure and the movie opens with him on the boat.



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