
A street kid with a monkey, a magic carpet, a lamp with an improbable amount of personality, and the firm conviction that he was worth more than the world had decided.
Disney's Aladdin arrived in 1992 and gave us one of the studio's most joyful films — a story set in the golden domes and winding markets of Agrabah, built around a hero whose greatest obstacle was not the villain but his own belief that he had to be someone else to deserve what he wanted. Aladdin is, at its heart, a film about authenticity: about the cost of pretending, the relief of being seen, and the discovery that the person you actually are was always enough.
Robin Williams' Genie — improvised, electric, entirely unlike anything animation had seen before — elevated the film into something genuinely extraordinary. Friend like me is not an overstatement. And Jasmine, who refused to be a prize and said so clearly decades before anyone was ready to hear it, remains one of Disney's most quietly radical characters.
A Whole New World. The magic carpet. The lamp. The Cave of Wonders, and everything inside it.
Our Aladdin collection brings together officially licensed gifts, figures, accessories and keepsakes for fans of Agrabah, the Genie, and the diamond in the rough.
You ain't never had a friend like me.

































