The Carpet from Bagdad is a
film adaptation of
Harold MacGrath's 1911 novel of the same name. MacGrath was a well-traveled, successful author of over a dozen novels. Stories with Asian settings were in vogue at the time, and both
The Carpet from Bagdad and the
Selig Polyscope Company's previous adaptation of MacGrath's work, the popular serial
The Adventures of Kathlyn, are set in part in the
Near East. Director
Colin Campbell was concerned with the film's realism. He had sets constructed to represent the streets of Cairo,
Baghdad, and Damascus, and used animals from the
Selig Zoo. Scenes set in the Arabian and Sahara Deserts were filmed in the deserts of California. The Arab characters' clothing was genuine, and the actors portraying those roles were required to remain dressed in-character throughout the several days of desert filming to ensure they would appear more natural in the imported garments. Much of the film, including the desert scenes, was
hand tinted. Production costs exceeded $35,000, the equivalent of over $ in present-day terms.
William Selig aggressively promoted his studio and its films. One such promotion, a March 1915 media tour of the unfinished Selig Zoo, allowed reporters a visit to
The Carpet from Bagdad's bazaar set. This was the first film distributed by
V-L-S-E, a conglomerate created by
Vitagraph Studios,
Lubin Manufacturing Company, Selig Polyscope Company, and
Essanay Studios. The film was also
screened in a special invitation-only showing at the art gallery of the
Bobbs-Merrill Company, publisher of MacGrath's novel, an early example of a sponsored exhibition of a feature film in a location other than a theater. ==Reception==