If you've seen Lou Ferrigno's Hercules movies and thought, "Wow, this is some of the most amazing crap I've ever seen..." just wait til you see what a Lou Ferrigno fantasy/adventure movie is like when it DOESN'T go as planned and the wheels fall off completely. Needless to say, its quite an experience.From what I've read about this movie, it sat uncompleted for a while when Cannon went bankrupt then was finished later on, but Enzo Castellari (the original director) wasn't avialable to finish the movie, so they got Luigi Cozzi (who helmed both of Ferrigno's Hercules pics plus the completely ridiculous StarCrash) to come in and finish it. Unfortunately they had lost a good chunk of the sound so they use a narrator (a mom telling her kid a bedtime story a la The Princess Bride) who incessantly drones on to patch the story together (she even talks over scenes where the characters are clearly talking to each other, just like in The Creeping Terror).So... to say this movie is a disjointed, terrible mess is being too kind. It is however, the kind of happy accident that produces a film that is insanely, hilariously entertaining for anyone who likes bad movies (in fact, this is my wife's absolute favorite bad movie).Things to watch for:-The pre-credits screen crawl that claims this SINBAD movie is based off a short story by Edgar Allen Poe (complete with Poe's picture behind the text).-Sinbad's heart to heart chat with a bunch of rubber snakes. Its literally an "I know how you feel girlfriend" type of talk that includes "Don't worry, I'm not gonna hurt you" only to follow with Sinbad tying them together and using them to climb out of a pit.-Jaffar the evil wizard. OMG, this guy overacts with the strength of ten Shatners! Everythings is wide eyes, flared nostrils, dramatic pauses... all in the service of such great lines as: "In the name of all that is evil... BUDGE! BUDGE!!!!!"-Sinbad constantly drawing his sword, then throwing it away (he does this at least three times). One of the only times he actually uses his sword is when fighting a rock monster. That doesn't work so he throws a rock at it instead (which does work).-Sinbad punching the head off a ghost (my wife almost pees her pants each time she sees this scene, its her favorite scene in any movie ever made).-The scene where the true identity of the Amazon princess is revealed. She's not a young African beauty but a *gasp* old Italian woman in blackface!-Kantu, the "Chinese Soldier of Fortune" as he's called by the narrator. He's in sneakers and a rainbow skirt, he spouts "Confucius say" proverbs, he fights in slow motion (always helpful to draw attention to the fact that no one is coming within a foot of striking their enemies) to horrendously stereotypical Asian music (think a Chinese buffet in the 70's), he gets called "slant-eyes" by a villian, and he's listed as "Samurai" in the end credits!-A myriad of continuity errors! Sinbad's clothes change at random, Jaffar's lair is in the "highest, darkest tower" of a castle yet is several thousand square feet and set over lava, two characters are told to "take care of the monster" and are never seen or heard from again (not to mention there's no monster), Jaffar has one or two or no accomplices in any given shot of any given scene he's in, a knight has feathers in his helmet, then doesn't, then does, etc. etc. etc. you get the idea.That's the tip of the iceberg, too, I didn't mention the laser shooting swamp thing, the piranah hand puppets, the good "wacky" wizard who acts like a prototype of Charlie Day, or the Captain Crunch pirate ship Sinbad sails in. Grab this movie, some friends and some drinks and you have the makings for a perfect bad movie night.If the rating seems too generous, keep in mind that I rate films on entertainment value alone. By that criteria, this is absoultely a 5 star movie!