Siegfried & Roy: The Magic Box

Siegfried & Roy: The Magic Box is a 1999 American biographical film about magicians Siegfried & Roy directed by Brett Leonard and starring Siegfried & Roy as themselves with narration by Anthony Hopkins.

Siegfried & Roy: The Magic Box
Theatrical release poster
Directed byBrett Leonard
Produced byMichael V. Lewis
Jini Dayaneni
Jon Ein
Lou Gonda
Robert Greenhut
Screenplay byBrett Leonard
Lyn Vaus
StarringSiegfried Fischbacher
Roy Horn
Narrated byAnthony Hopkins
Music byAlan Silvestri
CinematographySean MacLeod Phillips
Edited byJonathan P. Shaw
Production
company
Film Foundry Partners
L-Squared Entertainment
Lexington Road Productions
Magic Box Productions
Distributed byIMAX
Hannover House (DVD)
Janson Media (TV)
Release date
October 1, 1999
Running time
50 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Plot

The film tells the life story of Siegfried and Roy. Siegfried discovers a magic book in a merchant's window and desires it as a means to solve his problems with his father at home. Young Roy spends time at the Zoo Bremen and eventually liberates Chico the cheetah. He takes a cruise ship bound for New York where he meets Siegfried, the resident magician, and joins his act.[1]

Cast

  • Anthony Hopkins - narrator
  • Siegfried Fischbacher as himself
  • Roy Horn as himself
  • John Summers as Teen Siegfried
  • Dillon McEwin as Young Siegfied
  • Cameron Alexander as himself
  • Richie Solomon as himself
  • Steve Tom as Mr. Nagle
  • Kelly Van Halen as Mrs. Nagle
  • Chris Velvin as Dancer/Assistant

Production

Filming took place in Las Vegas, Nevada.

Release

The film was presented at IMAX locations and also had a limited release in educational locations such as the California Science Center as well in commercial locations such as Edwards cinemas starting October 1, 1999.[1] It was later presented at the San Francisco International Lesbian and Gay Film Festival on June 22, 2000.[2]

Reception

Lawrence Van Gelder of The New York Times wrote that the film "must be classified a disappointment" and was unimpressed with the 3D IMAX presentation, noting that "little seems wondrous" about the film.[3]

gollark: There are many meshy things using it, although seemingly generally for emergency stuff and not general use.
gollark: Also, have you heard of LoRa?
gollark: Software defined radio.
gollark: Aren't there already projects doing that with SDRs?
gollark: Others too.

References

  1. "Siegfried & Roy's Latest Is No Illusion". latimes. October 28, 1999. Retrieved October 23, 2017.
  2. "S.F. INTERNATIONAL LESBIAN & GAY FILM FESTIVAL SCHEDULE". SFGate. June 21, 2000. Retrieved October 23, 2017.
  3. "'Siegfried and Roy: The Magic Box' -- 3D Magic, With Smoke and Tigers". partners.nytimes.com. September 30, 1999. Retrieved October 23, 2017.
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