

Posing as Magoo's long-lost brother Ben, the Wazir promises to make Aladdin rich, asserting that once he has money, he can attain the princess. While spying on Aladdin, the Wazir realizes that the boy has fallen in love and decides to put the knowledge to use.

To procure the lamp, the Wazir must put Aladdin under his spell and eliminate the overly protective Magoo. Later, the flame tells the Wazir that to consolidate his power, he must obtain a magic lamp locked in a cave, but warns that Aladdin is the only person capable of unlocking the door to the cave. That afternoon, as the princess' procession winds through town, Aladdin spots Yasminda and falls in love. With no other choice, the princess agrees to marry the Wazir, who sets the wedding for the next day. To save her father's empire, Yasminda must marry the richest man in the land, who happens to be the Wazir. The Wazir has been pilfering money from the royal treasury, and as a result, the kingdom is teetering on bankruptcy. Yasminda is the daughter of the Sultan, whom the Wazir serves as treasurer. One day, the Wazir confers with his mentor, the evil flame, who advises him to marry the Princess Yasminda in his quest to obtain absolute power. Magoo's neighbor, Omar the Rug Maker, is weaving a magic carpet for the Wicked Wazir, but is having a hard time completing it because the magic yarn is smitten with Magoo and keeps following him. When Magoo summons the three unmarried daughters of an old friend and tells Aladdin to choose one as his bride, Aladdin runs away. She has postponed her killing and started telling 1000 stories which eventually changed the sultan mind to not to kill women.In Arabia, Abdul Azziz Magoo, a myopic lamp dealer, is concerned that his nephew and ward, Aladdin, lacks a sense of responsibility and so counsels the young man to wed. She said she can tell only one story a day. Her narration of storytelling was so interesting to the Sultan and asked her to tell another story. She marries the Sultan and tells a story on the night. An intelligent girl decides to stop this sultan from killing women. He starts marrying every day a new woman and kills them on the same night. A sultan kills her cheating wife and decided to take revenge on the females. The Arabian Nights has an interesting back round of how 1000 stories are told. Believed to have been written by various authors, the first English edition was published during the first decade of seventeenth century and was titled as The Arabian Nights' Entertainment. A collection of folk stories written during the time of Islamic Golden Age with roots from Persian, Indian and Egyptian literature.
