The Thief of Bagdad — 1924
Douglas Fairbanks’ miracle film of the silent era is back in a new restoration from Photoplay Productions, with a bounty of extras; we can marvel that this 102 year-old masterpiece is in such good condition. The physical production was mounted on a massive scale, right in the middle of Hollywood: enormous sets, fantastic designs and wondrous special effects. Fairbanks was the silent screen’s first physical Adonis, too handsome and athletic to be believed. With a newly recorded music score. a commentary by Anthony Slide and reels of original outtakes and EFX tests.

The Thief of Bagdad
Blu-ray
Kino Classics / Photoplay Productions
1924 / B&W with Tints / 1:33 flat Silent Aperture / 154 min. / Street Date April 7, 2026 / Available from Kino Lorber / 29.95
Starring: Douglas Fairbanks, Snitz Edwards, Charles Belcher, Julanne Johnston, Sojin, Anna May Wong, Brandon Hurst, Tote Du Crow, Noble Johnson. Paul Malvern, .
Cinematography: Arthur Edeson
Production Designer and Art Director: William Cameron Menzies
Costume Design: Mitchell Leisen
Film Editor: William Nolan
Special Effects: Hampton Del Ruth, Howard c. Lydecker Sr., Coy Watson
Composer: Mortimer Wilson
Score performed by the Frankfurt Radio Symphony
Written by James T. Donohoe, Lotta Woods, Elton Thomas (Douglas Fairbanks)
Produced by Douglas Fairbanks
Directed by Raoul Walsh
With the coming of Blu-ray we started seeing parallel releases of some silent classics from different video companies, as with the films of Buster Keaton. Back in 2012 the TCMfest screened a fabulous restoration of Douglas Fairbanks’ The Thief of Bagdad for its closing night, and the next year an excellent Blu-ray appeared from The Cohen Film Collection. Another restoration of the Fairbanks epic was done a few years later, and now it’s on Blu-ray through Kino Classics.
Photoplay Productions’ restoration has some differences, including a different running time. What immediately grabbed our attention were the extras, which include rare vintage film associated with the production.
1924’s The Thief of Bagdad must have seemed the wonder of the ages. It had the biggest star of the era in a production that dwarfed anything Americans had ever seen: a towering Arab city, magical domains in dark grottoes under the sea and in the sky. Movies once convinced people that Hollywood could create entire environments out of nothing, and this picture tops all previous efforts. Its sets are bigger than those of Intolerance and its costumed crowd scenes rival the enormous Italian spectacles of the day. What’s more, the picture is packed with elaborate special effects, many of which still have the power to impress.
The credited director is the talented Raoul Walsh, but the wonder man behind everything was Douglas Fairbanks, a true superstar whose image of vigor, virtue and robust vitality was celebrated world-wide. Clearly running away with his own ambitions, Fairbanks poured unheard-of resources into his giant film. Its sets were constructed at Hollywood’s Pickford-Fairbanks Studios, where the Goldwyn Lot later stood; it’s now called ‘The Lot at Formosa.’ ↓ That enormous elevated ramp in the foreground is impressive … was it built as a platform for a moving camera? — the images enlarge —
The story takes its cues from several ideas in 1001 Arabian Knights. The happy Thief (Fairbanks) scoffs at a faithful, wise and kindly Holy Man (Charles Belcher), and amuses himself by stealing purses and food in Bagdad’s market. He hides his loot in a secret cave at the bottom of a well, where his ‘Evil Associate’ (Snitz Edwards) keeps watch. Taking up the dangerous challenge of burgling the enormous palace of The Caliph (Brandon Hurst), The Thief sneaks past the guards, only to be captivated by the sight of the Caliph’s beautiful daughter (Julianne Johnston). Three rich Princes have come to compete for the Princess’s hand, including a conniving Mongol (Sojin Kamiyama), whose spy-slave (Anna May Wong) has been embedded in the palace staff as the Princess’s handmaiden. The Thief disguises himself as a fourth Prince. Before he is captured, he gets close enough to the Princess to profess his love.
Stalling for time, The Princess asks her father to send her three suitors on a seven-moon search for treasure, with the one who brings back the most incredible gift to be her husband. The Thief has escaped with just a bad whipping, but his heart is even more deeply wounded. The Holy Man has the answer … if he is to win the Princess, he must become a Prince.
The Thief of Bagdad captures a storybook purity that today’s movies have lost. Its satisfying motto is Happiness must be earned, even though The Thief would more accurately state, I get by with a little help from my friends. What makes the difference is The Thief’s / Fairbanks boundless optimism and energy. He takes nothing seriously; he laughs at life until love makes him feel unworthy. With just a little Holy counseling, The Thief is dedicating himself to feats of daring and danger on a hunt to collect various magic items. Before you can say ‘Legend of Zelda’ the screen overflows with wonders: a magic carpet, a golden apple of the sun, an all-seeing eye, a cloak of invisibility, a winged horse. The topper is a magic item that can do just about anything its bearer desires, including conjure an entire army out of nothing.
The Princess is sweet, the various Arab muckety-mucks amusing (one is our fave actor Noble Johnson) and the villain quite interesting. The Mongol Prince’s aspiration to wed the Princess is but one step in his dastardly plan to conquer Bagdad. Anna May Wong’s treacherous spy feeds him inside information. She poisons the Princess at his command, and helps him sneak a commando force into the Caliph’s palace disguised as gift-bearers. The entire last act of The Thief of Bagdad is one exciting or miraculous scene after another.
Some critics prefer Douglas Fairbanks’ earlier modern-day adventures to his twenties’ costume epics, but this dazzler still takes people’s heads off. The production’s overall design and execution are coordinated so tightly that the illusion of grandeur is complete: sets, costumes, lighting, special effects. Even now, the impression is of being in a magical place, not some movie set. Fairbanks’ costume designer was the future director Mitchell Leisen, a perfectionist who insisted on the finest fabrics for his sophisticated costumes.

Exotic film costumes in the 1920’s often looked more suitable for Minsky’s runway. The Princess and her court wear neither robes atop robes nor ersatz lingerie, but fine attire that might make a woman feel like a princess. Every serf and soldier has something interesting to wear. The Mongol Prince’s commandos sport impressive battle helmets, and halberds appropriate for harvesting cocoanuts.
For most of the picture The Thief goes about in patterned pants and a headband, showcasing the dazzling smile and incredible physique that had made Douglas Fairbanks a dream lover for a generation of women. The ‘prince of Hollywood’ had just turned 40, and looked like someone who would be forever young.
The film’s visual genius is William Cameron Menzies, classic Hollywood’s most famous Production Designer — a job title that was invented for him. His design work ‘directed the camera’ for the classics Gone With The Wind and Kings Row, and when he became a director, his designs were the most important element in the movies Things to Come, Address Unknown and Invaders from Mars. For Fairbanks’ outsized epic Menzies constructed gigantic structures on the West Hollywood film lot, and then augmented them with expert glass paintings. The palace wall (a giant row of curious panels) and the palace interiors are architectural wonders that glow with light and have enough shiny floors to employ a squadron of wax & polishers. Filmed dry-for wet, an undersea kingdom is all curves and flourishes; other structures look vaguely Moderne, but not quite Art Deco.
Most importantly, Menzies gives The Thief of Bagdad a sense of enormous scale. The Thief enters the palace by climbing a vast web of ivy snaking up a wall that must be forty feet high. Many shots hold wide to show characters moving like ants amid structures too big for Mount Olympus.
Old ‘flat and square’ standard movie screens could look enormous in old movie palaces; audiences had to tilt their heads up and down as well as left and right. Menzies’s designs make the screen look even bigger, playing spatial games with the relative sizes of objects. An ivy-covered wall is several stories tall, and Menzies makes it feel even taller. We saw Thief on the extra-tall screen of The Egyptian Theater. On an appropriate screen, a vintage flat film like Metropolis or King Kong can look truly colossal.
The effects are of course very old-school. The wires on the fabled Flying Carpet are visible, but it helps to know the main actors rode that thing when suspended from a high crane, with no safety net. Even more impressive are the optical effects for the cloak of invisibility. We see parts of people not covered by the cloak, and sometimes a whirring blur indicates where the ‘invisible’ Thief is. There is no degradation of the image, no telltale matte fringe, nothing. Many flawless effects are apparently perfect in-camera multiple exposures.
The Thief of Bagdad is a long movie but never a boring one. We never tire of watching Douglas Fairbanks bounce across a row of oversized cisterns, scale tall walls or drop three times his height and land on his feet. At age forty. His one ‘stylized’ acting gimmick is to mime an odd grabbing motion whenever he sees something he wants to steal. The storybook characters hold up quite well despite not being multi-dimensional. Anna May Wong’s spy never reveals a conscience, and neither does her master The Mongol Prince, who has a beggar killed just to see if the Golden Apple will revive him (shades of Jay Robinson, thirty years later). A favorite moment shows the Mongol villain, realizing he’s beaten, calmly ordering his own decapitation. But his Number One interrupts — Wait! there’s still hope! In The Thief of Bagdad even the bad guys can hope for the best.
And don’t forget the fire-breathing dragon and the huge aquatic spider monster!
Kino Classics / Photoplay Productions’ Blu-ray of The Thief of Bagdad is a masterful restoration. It is listed as a full 5 minutes longer than an earlier disc from the Cohen Collection. The extra minutes are not offset by a a six-minute musical prelude. Unless some trick with film speed is in play, this encoding would seem to have more footage, more scenes — ?

Instead of a new score, Photoplay has revived the original 1924 orchestral score by Mortimer Wilson, and recorded it with the Frankfurt Radio Symphony.
Film authority Anthony Slide takes charge of the disc’s audio commentary, which in itself is a major lesson in silent film lore. The track carries an enormous amount of hard research information. The descriptions of the work that went into the show are fascinating. Douglas Fairbanks was genuinely bigger than life, and committed to the grandeur of movies.
Orson Welles appears in a filmed introduction from the 1960s. His four-minute speech took some effort — Welles praises Badgad as a successful fantasy, something he thought wasn’t very common in Hollywood productions. Slide knew and befriended film folk of this era in their waning days, and has plenty of personal anecdotes to relate.
Fans will be interested in seeing rare film dating from the production of The Thief of Bagdad. Two reels of raw outtakes demonstrate the scale of the sets. Some shots are stricken with film decomposition but others are in perfect shape. We see some abandoned business in an underwater grotto with mermaids, a selection of raw takes from the dragon battle and some in-camera appearance-disappearance tricks. A second short reel explains a matte used for one particular effect, and is less impressive.
Reviewed by Glenn Erickson

The Thief of Bagdad
Blu-ray rates:
Movie: Excellent
Video: Excellent
Sound: Excellent — The 1924 Mortimer Wilson score performed by the Frankfurt Radio Symphony, in 5.1 Surround and 2.0 Stereo
Supplements:
Audio commentary by Anthony Slide
Video introduction by Orson Welles
Original outtake footage (19 min)
Special Effects Test sample
Optional Six-Minute Musical Prelude.
Deaf and Hearing-impaired Friendly? YES; Subtitles: English (feature only)
Packaging: One Blu-ray in Keep case
Reviewed: May 23, 2026
(7519bagd)
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