On one hand, I do think this is a very fair point. But on the other, the fact that they used the Porshe Experience Center in Atlanta and a university building in England to film that location also underscores the comparisons about Irvine office park architecture. Why did the filmmakers stay so grounded? I suspect there's an element of "foil" in this where they ground enough in reality that the most fantastical aspects and climax scenes seem all the more amazing.
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Do theme parks work that way? I admit, sometimes. The exterior of Pirates of the Caribbean is not fantastical (not nearly as much as what happens inside) and doesn't "say pirate." It acts as a foil, keeping expectations low, then surprises guests inside. To me, that would be the argument for Avenger's Campus.
Most ride buildings though, I'd argue, have more vibey, thematic enticement on the outside. Haunted Mansion, all "the mountains," Fantasyland (the '83 version), it's a small world...even Jungle Cruise, especially since the 90s.
I think they should have just picked a more interesting place in the Marvel universe. I get the idea of a foil, a subtle entry, contrasting with a big wowser on the inside. But Avengers Campus hasn't offered that wowser inside yet. Maybe we'll get that six years after opening. But the reaction the land gets -- from many -- is because so far it's all been a foil...to nothing.
And I'm not just critical of Avenger's Campus. I also don't like the "soundstages" conceit -- cheap beige warehouses with attractions inside -- seen at movie studio parks. I get the explanation, I get the rationale, congrats to the designers on being "clever" and conveniently saving money. But I pay my money to go a theme park for the theming, and not just inside the rides.