matt9112
Well-Known Member
Recall how awful Space Mountain is due to the lack of AAs.
I mean sure if that's your standard...if your standard for modern Disney is 70s disney bravo.
Recall how awful Space Mountain is due to the lack of AAs.
Also no AAs in Tron but no one seems to mind there either...
To borrow from Walt, there is no imagination left in the world. The parks are complete so anything new must be derivative of (and must replace) previous work. Otherwise, we get creperies.I mean sure if that's your standard...if your standard for modern Disney is 70s disney bravo.
Honestly the 1970s Space mountain had many AAs in the speedramp exit scenes... And the 1975 version of Space Mountain was far superior to what we have today. It felt like an epic journey from the star tunnels and information portals to the Home of Future Living finale back on Earth...A fun ride, a lot of eye candy and a very long commercial all rolled into one.I mean sure if that's your standard...if your standard for modern Disney is 70s disney bravo.
Honestly the 1970s Space mountain had many AAs in the speedramp exit scenes... And the 1975 version of Space Mountain was far superior to what we have today. It felt like an epic journey from the star tunnels and information portals to the Home of Future Living finale back on Earth...A fun ride, a lot of eye candy and a very long commercial all rolled into one.
but most importantly fun.... remember fun?
But people are complaining that they think there'll be no AA's in the ride and just AA's in the pre-show. Not that you claim to be speaking for them all, however the general consensus on here appears that AA's don't count if they're not in the ride itself so Space Mountain would fail on that count as would many rides. I'm not sure on the fun side of things how any ride would fare before it's even been ridden or experienced by those 'judging it', seems strange even throwing that into the equation? It would be like having a blind date arranged and complaining before it that the person isn't sexy enough, despite having zero idea of how sexy that person is?Honestly the 1970s Space mountain had many AAs in the speedramp exit scenes... And the 1975 version of Space Mountain was far superior to what we have today. It felt like an epic journey from the star tunnels and information portals to the Home of Future Living finale back on Earth...A fun ride, a lot of eye candy and a very long commercial all rolled into one.
but most importantly fun.... remember fun?
Yes, the ad portion (RCA) had animatronics.Honestly the 1970s Space mountain had many AAs in the speedramp exit scenes... And the 1975 version of Space Mountain was far superior to what we have today. It felt like an epic journey from the star tunnels and information portals to the Home of Future Living finale back on Earth...A fun ride, a lot of eye candy and a very long commercial all rolled into one.
but most importantly fun.... remember fun?
It's too bad the Pandoran panthers couldn't have been AAs, standing still, blinking, and moving their head back and forth. That would've been amazing.
Reminds me of WestWorld, where stories from the back were simple and good to follow for the sake of "immersing yourself and you enroll in the story".It would have if it were built today.
Space Mountain doesn't have the tech, because the tech didn't exist when it was designed and built.
It still has some physical props on the lift hill, and those displays of the cars whirling by in the queue.
It didn't feel like an ad....which was the brilliance of the design... It was optimistic and beautiful... Horizon's felt like an extension of the original thoughts....Yes, the ad portion (RCA) had animatronics.
I loved seeing the animatronic dog. But it was the RCA mascot cleverly done. If the Guardians ride ends with a post show cleverly selling me on Huggies diapers, I'd be miffed.It didn't feel like an ad....which was the brilliance of the design... It was optimistic and beautiful... Horizon's felt like an extension of the original thoughts....
No one seems miffed about the auto showroom at the end of Test Track... So yeah if it were for Diapers or Paper Towels I might be miffed...But if it was presented by a tech company and it was soft pedaled the way the Home Of Future Living was, then I sure wouldn't have a problem with it...I loved seeing the animatronic dog. But it was the RCA mascot cleverly done. If the Guardians ride ends with a post show cleverly selling me on Huggies diapers, I'd be miffed.
Yes, it's unfortunate that paying customers are accustomed to the theme park equivalent of infomercials. It's forgivable whereas the idea that the company you paid to get in would promote it's own stuff is a heinous crime.No one seems miffed about the auto showroom at the end of Test Track... So yeah if it were for Diapers or Paper Towels I might be miffed...But if it was presented by a tech company and it was soft pedaled the way the Home Of Future Living was, then I sure wouldn't have a problem with it...
Yes, it's unfortunate that paying customers are accustomed to the theme park equivalent of infomercials. It's forgivable whereas the idea that the company you paid to get in would promote it's own stuff is a heinous crime.
The multiverse is real then because I remember half a decade of outrage over that project's existence.Nobody complains that they used IP for Flight of Passage
It's the magic of the soft sell. Not all ads bash you over the head with the product. Some of the best revolve around a genuine piece of entertainment. Memorable visuals, heartwarming drama, a funny joke. The product often seems inconsequential. But is it less of an ad because the product is barely in it? What's the point in that? Many ads are just about giving you a good feeling about the company or associating it with things you like.None of the corporate sponsored attractions were infomercials or even close to it -- even the areas that did have some sort of corporate advertising were generally exceptionally well done and much more than a simple advertisement.
The multiverse is real then because I remember half a decade of outrage over that project's existence.
Or the pre-show could have purely entertained and not sold any film or cameras. It could have set up the story, expanded the experience we were about to see. It could have acted as a transition from the main attraction to better render the pavilion a cohesive whole.Makin' Memories was maybe the most obvious advertisement, and even it didn't really have much to do with Kodak products; you could have subbed in any film or camera maker and it would have worked just as well.
Well then, lets not talk about any project until complete.Which proves my point.
People were unhappy about Pandora going into AK because it didn't fit the theme of the park, not because it was IP. Once it was actually built and it turned out that Rohde et al. actually managed to build something that did fit the park, people stopped complaining.
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