Guardians of the Galaxy Mission Breakout announced for Disney California Adventure

sedati

Well-Known Member
I would like to point out, as I have said before, that the reason this is cheap is because they re overlaying an attraction that didn't need fixing instead of building a purpose built attraction to meet Chapeks Mandate/ deadline.

Overlay is cheaper than purpose built.

Wait to find out? What could we possibly find out during the ride that makes it ok to destroy harmony from so many vantage points in the park? How could one strong story/ attraction be worth sacrificing all that?

By your definition of cheaper meaning cheap, then yes, I have no argument there. An overlay is a cheaper and faster way of doing things. It is also possible that as they mapped out the future of DCA and Marvel that those plans would have seen the TOT as being out of place and needing to change or go. Think of all the complaints being made now, but in reverse. Then the overlay becomes an obvious choice. Why remove such a large and costly ride mechanism just because the theme clashes with it's surroundings? A re-theme helps plant that seed and get Marvel in not only sooner, but very close to the launch of a new film and another summer rush. Many are hung up on the idea of Hollywood in the park, and we've seen the plans for the redress. That those plans have never been put in effect could mean that they are no longer relevant to what they want to do in that part of the park. Again, we'll have to wait and see.

Was there harmony before? Or is it now just less harmonious? I never thought the tower sat well- it was sort of like the wallflower of the park, hiding off in the corner all plain and tall.

The new tower may be a keystone, but a keystone all on its own looks odd with nothing to support.
 

sedati

Well-Known Member
You don't need to overstate the position that people hold with respect to DCA's ToT in order to make your point.

My post was in response to a Mission Breakout defender being equated to a contortionist.
Did I overstate by claiming some thought it a masterpiece? There have been arguments by some here that DCA's tower was in some ways the superior to the original- a ride I consider a masterpiece. So maybe what I said was a stretch, but I did not have to stretch far.
 
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FigmentForver96

Well-Known Member
Indeed, why should anyone care is right. More importantly why should anyone care this much? The reaction to the TOT/MB transformation is a bit over the top, even for online Disney fans.
The entire legacy of Disney was built on care. The idea of care and being different is what set Disney apart from the others. It was that care for precise detail that gave us EPCOT Center. Little details mattered to the company even from outside the park. Just like how Tower in Orlando was designed with the idea it would be seen from Epcot. THAT'S care. Of course now we are expected to take change at face value and the theming around it can go to hell. And saying "Well Tower of Terror was not great either" is not a defense. It's a lost attempt at trying to sell a product that could have been given a new,from the ground up, ride. Adding to the ride count, increasing park capacity, enhancing the park experience and improving the park. Tower should have been improved in its story and quality to match the Orlando version the best to its ability. The overlay is "cheap" because they went the cheapest route and just threw a theme on an old ride. I have no doubt the ride experience will be fun and interesting. I'm sure Joe did a good job but it is very obvious just from his body expressions that he is nowhere near as excited for this as he is about almost anything at Animal Kingdom. It's ok though. Damage is done and the defenders will come full force to defend it to the grave. Saying DISNEYLAND MUST CHANGE and WALT WOULD HAVE WANTED CHANGE! To defend their position. Lucky for some of us we get to keep our better version in Orlando
 

mickEblu

Well-Known Member
By your definition of cheaper meaning cheap, then yes, I have no argument there. An overlay is a cheaper and faster way of doing things. It is also possible that as they mapped out the future of DCA and Marvel that those plans would have seen the TOT as being out of place and needing to change or go. Think of all the complaints being made now, but in reverse. Then the overlay becomes an obvious choice. Why remove such a large and costly ride mechanism just because the theme clashes with it's surroundings? A re-theme helps plant that seed and get Marvel in not only sooner, but very close to the launch of a new film and another summer rush. Many are hung up on the idea of Hollywood in the park, and we've seen the plans for the redress. That those plans have never been put in effect could mean that they are no longer relevant to what they want to do in that part of the park. Again, we'll have to wait and see.

Was there harmony before? Or is it now just less harmonious? I never thought the tower sat well- it was sort of like the wallflower of the park, hiding off in the corner all plain and tall.

The new tower may be a keystone, but a keystone all on its own looks odd with nothing to support.

I don't know how to do that multi quote thing so I'm just copying/ pasting your questions/ points here...

[It is also possible that as they mapped out the future of DCA and Marvel that those plans would have seen the TOT as being out of place and needing to change or go...]

We know the above is not true because Chapek issued this mandate due to Disney sleeping on Marvel at the parks for all these years. The Tower wasn't rethemed because it didn't fit some grand scheme for Marvel Land, it was done because it was the fastest way to get a Marvel E ticket in the park in the vicinity of the only expansion pads/ under utilized areas of the park. Personally I don't think tearing down the Tower would be smart. I think better planning such as making GOTG a temporary overlay until Marvel Land was ready would have been the ticket. IMO there's plenty of room for Marvel Land between the sleepy backlot, rumored bus area and expansion pad behind TOT. The whole overlay feels like a short sighted and rushed decision.


[Was there harmony before? ]

Less harmonious would be accurate. But I would say much less harmonious.
 

mickEblu

Well-Known Member
Indeed, why should anyone care is right. More importantly why should anyone care this much? The reaction to the TOT/MB transformation is a bit over the top, even for online Disney fans.

What's the difference between one that is for or against this overlay? Im here everyday explaining why I don't like the project and you are here everyday defending it. Why should you care so much to defend GOTG:MB every day?
 

yookeroo

Well-Known Member
Someone upthhread described it as Mary Blair on acid. Apt. And out of all the Disney artists, Mary Blair's art needed an infusion of psychedelic drugs the most. Something to take the edge off her overly cutesy style. She's the Margaret Keane of Disney artists.

I guess this is my way of saying that MB looks better than Mary Blair art.
 

flynnibus

Premium Member
View attachment 197947

Just came back from the UAE and I have to say that I saw quite a few buildings in Abu Dhabi and Dubai that the shape really had no purpose. Some of them were twisted and bent for no practical reason and the new building they are doing that will be larger than the Burj will be even more crazy and serves little purpose except to make the skyline interesting.

Just wanted to throw it out there

Flamboyant doesn't really apply to industrial applications the same. There is 'style' and then there is 'doesn't work for our application'. You can add style to a building to make it unique.. but it still has to serve it's purpose.
 

flynnibus

Premium Member
What's the difference between one that is for or against this overlay? Im here everyday explaining why I don't like the project and you are here everyday defending it. Why should you care so much to defend GOTG:MB every day?

Walmart thinking... don't care about the impact or where it takes you... just be happy you got your cheaper loaf of bread.
 

sedati

Well-Known Member
The entire legacy of Disney was built on care. The idea of care and being different is what set Disney apart from the others. It was that care for precise detail that gave us EPCOT Center. Little details mattered to the company even from outside the park. Just like how Tower in Orlando was designed with the idea it would be seen from Epcot. THAT'S care. Of course now we are expected to take change at face value and the theming around it can go to hell.

Yes, the Tower from World Showcase is a neat detail- but one I think was more happy accident that they use as a fun bit of trivia. Four years earlier we got the Swan and Dolphin hotels that annihilated the scale and theme of an entire vista of World Showcase. People complained and I think it was worth complaining about. Even the later hotels such as Yacht and Beach could be seen. But is this really any worse than seeing most of Future World from World Showcase? Is seeing the glass pyramids of Imagination looming over Canada really worse than seeing the Pyramid of the Dolphin Looming over the UK? If so, why? Seeing the colonial style American Adventure pavilion from Future World is also a contradiction, but also serves as a draw. Walk around the beloved Epcot Center and you'll see clashing juxtapositions at almost every turn.
Maybe that was the beginning of the end theming wise, so let's go back further. Another fun bit of trivia is how the Contemporary Resort was meant to be seen from Tomorrowland, as the both shared a futuristic look. But the original Tomorrowland was gleaming white with blue accents and gracious curves. How did an out-of-scale gray angular behemoth go with that? It looked like an enormous toaster looming over the park.
Please continue to tell us so bluntly how we are destroying the legacy of care. I'll listen and I'll usually credit you with being partially in the right. But most of these arguments seem to boil down to "it was perfect the way I remember it- why are they ruining my childhood and the company."
 
D

Deleted member 107043

What's the difference between one that is for or against this overlay? Im here everyday explaining why I don't like the project and you are here everyday defending it. Why should you care so much to defend GOTG:MB every day?

I'm not defending anything. I'm only saying that overall I'm impressed by what I've see so far. The placement of such a eye catching building is problematic though, and I agree with those who say it's incongruous with the immediate area surrounding it. At the end of the day though I really don't care that much, and there's no point in saying the same thing over and over. Which is why I've taken a break from this discussion over the past couple of days.
 

FigmentForver96

Well-Known Member
Yes, the Tower from World Showcase is a neat detail- but one I think was more happy accident that they use as a fun bit of trivia. Four years earlier we got the Swan and Dolphin hotels that annihilated the scale and theme of an entire vista of World Showcase. People complained and I think it was worth complaining about. Even the later hotels such as Yacht and Beach could be seen. But is this really any worse than seeing most of Future World from World Showcase? Is seeing the glass pyramids of Imagination looming over Canada really worse than seeing the Pyramid of the Dolphin Looming over the UK? If so, why? Seeing the colonial style American Adventure pavilion from Future World is also a contradiction, but also serves as a draw. Walk around the beloved Epcot Center and you'll see clashing juxtapositions at almost every turn.
Maybe that was the beginning of the end theming wise, so let's go back further. Another fun bit of trivia is how the Contemporary Resort was meant to be seen from Tomorrowland, as the both shared a futuristic look. But the original Tomorrowland was gleaming white with blue accents and gracious curves. How did an out-of-scale gray angular behemoth go with that? It looked like an enormous toaster looming over the park.
Please continue to tell us so bluntly how we are destroying the legacy of care. I'll listen and I'll usually credit you with being partially in the right. But most of these arguments seem to boil down to "it was perfect the way I remember it- why are they ruining my childhood and the company."
No the tower was done with purpose. They cared and Eisner even cared at that point, and yes just a bit later the towers would look over the park. Of course anyone who reads into that story can see why Eisner let it happen. Now as far as seeing American Adventure from Future World, there is no point of place before reaching those places. I'm not in America until I reach that point where my back is turned and I'm in that area. I'm not meant to look towards the water but be IN the pavilion so yes the design was done on purpose and with purpose. So that was not the beginning of the end. Each pavilion drew you to the other and I'm sure we can bring Marni into this and he would be happy to tell you how the literal shape and style of the pavilions served a point. The contemporary was just that, a modern looking building that worked for the temp look they were going for in the park. They knew Space Mountain was coming.

DCA Tower of Terror is not perfect by no means. The Orlando version is far more superior in almost every way. The problem is the park already has issues with detail and design and this will not help. The ride itself can be awesome. Frozen is a decent ride but in doesn't belong in Epcot for the reason it didn't even take place in Norway. Why is the collectors tower in Hollywood California?

The truth of the matter is the ride is here and it's ugly and I'm willing to accept that. That Disney cares about saving a buck, making merch sales and theming be darned.

What's laughable is when people try, with a straight face, try to explain the deep and mysterious secrets of the tower as if it will ever be as detailed as the original ride. That's what's funny.
 

DDLand

Well-Known Member
What's laughable is when people try, with a straight face, try to explain the deep and mysterious secrets of the tower as if it will ever be as detailed as the original ride. That's what's funny.
This ride system is a compelling experience.

When The Twilight Zone Tower of Terror first burst onto the scene, it completely redefined the drop ride experience. Instead of being an attraction that relied on physical sensation alone, it was suddenly equipped to be a storytelling device. Instead of the drop being the experience, the drop became part of an experience. Part of a story.

This whole ride system followed the same path roller coasters did before it. Before Matterhorn, roller coaster attractions relied on the most basic sensations to create an experience. After Matterhorn (and especially after Walt's Space Mountain) roller coasters were empowered. They could tell amazing stories.

Splash Mountain did much the same with flumes. Though I'd be remiss if not to mention there was Story in some flumes before Splash Mountain, but the scale and complexity pushed boundaries.

All of this to say, what limit is there on a certain ride system? Why must a storytelling drop Tower be constrained into a narrow box? Why can't a new team come in using an existing ride concept and create a story just as compelling or even better than the first? Why isn't it possible for Joe and his team to push boundaries within an existing structure?

What would be different if Joe and his team were building a drop tower from scratch? Maybe some of the architectural forms on exterior, but largely it would be similiar. A drop Tower.

Now it is conceivable that they wouldn't have chosen a drop Tower as the preferred medium, which is reasonable. That is what they were dealt though. They're now working with this framework and are completely rethinking the core ideas. They're telling the most radically different Disney drop Tower story yet.

This ride very well could be as detailed as the original. Why can't it? Why can't the same level of thought and care be put into this project?

What makes this different?

I know a lot of people don't adore Guardians of the Galaxy, myself included, but Joe Rohde and his team absolutely can knock this out of the park. They absolutely are putting the same level of care and thought into this project as any other project.

There's a certain irony that many of the most ardent Avatar defenders (and I would describe myself as one of the fiercest of the Avatar opposition) are decrying this move, even as these two projects bear a surprising resemblance. Sci-fi where there should be more fantasy (fantasy of Hollywood no less). Aliens where it should be about people. Hottest IP when it should have been more about originality.

I'll be the first to say that this project's placement stinks. This is not optimal. Just like Avatar's placement still upsets me. I'll still appreciate the level of care and detail put into these projects though. I still will enjoy myself in the two areas.

This ride has been extensively thought out. It will absolutely push storytelling boundaries at Disney California Adventure. It may be the most meaningful attraction at DCA.

They've infused it with meaning. Everyone's laughed at this notion, but no one has rebutted it.

That's because it's actually the message.

Oh, and while I'm posting, @MonkeyHead next time you share my content link me to it so I can see your delightful commentary!:p:cool: ;)
 
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sedati

Well-Known Member
No the tower was done with purpose. They cared and Eisner even cared at that point, and yes just a bit later the towers would look over the park.
As I said, the Hotels came four years before the Tower of Terror. If it was more than a happy accident that it aligned with Morocco, than that was a nice bit of attention after throwing scale and view out the window for that entire side of World Showcase.
 

Ismael Flores

Well-Known Member
You don't think it's possible for someone to find Mary Blair's art a tad saccharine? Really? I promise I'm 100% sincere. Mary Blair makes my teeth hurt.
You are not the only one that feels that way. I have a few friends that hated the Mary Blair art and were glad when the mosaics in tomorrowland were covered.
 

Phroobar

Well-Known Member
This ride system is a compelling experience.

When The Twilight Zone Tower of Terror first burst onto the scene, it completely redefined the drop ride experience. Instead of being an attraction that relied on physical sensation alone, it was suddenly equipped to be a storytelling device. Instead of the drop being the experience, the drop became part of an experience. Part of a story.

This whole ride system followed the same path roller coasters did before it. Before Matterhorn, roller coaster attractions relied on the most basic sensations to create an experience. After Matterhorn (and especially after Walt's Space Mountain) roller coasters were empowered. They could tell amazing stories.

Splash Mountain did much the same with flumes. Though I'd be remiss if not to mention there was Story in some flumes before Splash Mountain, but the scale and complexity pushed boundaries.

All of this to say, what limit is there on a certain ride system? Why must a storytelling drop Tower be constrained into a narrow box? Why can't a new team come in using an existing ride concept and create a story just as compelling or even better than the first? Why isn't it possible for Joe and his team to push boundaries within an existing structure?

What would be different if Joe and his team were building a drop tower from scratch? Maybe some of the architectural forms on exterior, but largely it would be similiar. A drop Tower.

Now it is conceivable that they wouldn't have chosen a drop Tower as the preferred medium, which is reasonable. That is what they were dealt though. They're now working with this framework and are completely rethinking the core ideas. They're telling the most radically different Disney drop Tower story yet.

This ride very well could be as detailed as the original. Why can't it? Why can't the same level of thought and care be put into this project?

What makes this different?

I know a lot of people don't adore Guardians of the Galaxy, myself included, but Joe Rohde and his team absolutely can knock this out of the park. They absolutely are putting the same level of care and thought into this project as any other project.

There's a certain irony that many of the most ardent Avatar defenders (and I would describe myself as one of the fiercest of the Avatar opposition) are decrying this move, even as these two projects bear a surprising resemblance. Sci-fi where there should be more fantasy (fantasy of Hollywood no less). Aliens where it should be about people. Hottest IP when it should have been more about originality.

I'll be the first to say that this project's placement stinks. This is not optimal. Just like Avatar's placement still upsets me. I'll still appreciate the level of care and detail put into these projects though. I still will enjoy myself in the two areas.

This ride has been extensively thought out. It will absolutely push storytelling boundaries at Disney California Adventure. It may be the most meaningful attraction at DCA.

They've infused it with meaning. Everyone's laughed at this notion, but no one has rebutted it.

That's because it's actually the message.

Oh, and while I'm posting, @MonkeyHead next time you share my content link me to it so I can see your delightful commentary!:p:cool: ;)

Your on your last pill aren't you?
 

No Name

Well-Known Member
Your on your last pill aren't you?

Then I'll gladly refill his prescription.

Because in a thread that's almost reached 4000 posts, DDLand's are more in-depth and through-provoking than at least 99% of those. Look, I too am not a fan of the change at its core. Neither is DDLand. But rather than blowing the whole thing off with short snarky comments, he's thinking about it and explaining his thoughts. And I have to appreciate that.

I can't appreciate people who constantly exclaim "ewww my eyes are bleeding!" or "OMG I love this to the moon and back!" without ever once explaining why they love it or what they would've done differently.
EDIT: I'm not talking about you in particular.
 
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Californian Elitist

Well-Known Member
I can't appreciate people who constantly exclaim "ewww my eyes are bleeding!" or "OMG I love this to the moon and back!" without ever once explaining why they love it or what they would've done differently.

Everyone in this thread has gone into detail as to why they're for or against this project.
 

No Name

Well-Known Member
Everyone in this thread has gone into detail as to why they're for or against this project.

For or against the project in general, sure. "Everyone" is an exaggeration, but you are right that most have. But for or against the look of the exterior, not as many. I've read through this whole thing and I honestly don't know what certain people would rather.

For starters, what would you rather the exterior look like?
 

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