News Splash Mountain retheme to Princess and the Frog - Tiana's Bayou Adventure

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Brer Panther

Well-Known Member
So, basically, they could demolish the Tomorrowland Speedway, move Mickey's Philharmagic to Hollywood Studios, gut Princess Fairytale Hall, maybe find some space in Storybook Circus... you'd have some room for three or four more dark rides, which I personally feel the Magic Kingdom's Fantasyland needs.

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Made this for a Discord chat. Anything that needs to be fixed?
While it'd still suck to lose Disneyland's Splash Mountain, at least we'd still have the Magic Kingdom's and Tokyo's. And as I've said, if they DID retheme Disneyland's but kept the Magic Kingdom's, they could save some of the America Sings animatronics that don't already have clones in the Magic Kingdom's, ship them to Florida, and have them installed in the Magic Kingdom's Splash Mountain, if for no other reason than to save them from being trashed a la the Universe of Energy and Great Movie Ride animatronics.
 

TrainsOfDisney

Well-Known Member
I never realized Alice went over Toad in some areas, that’s really cool. I agree current imagineers wouldn’t be capable of anything like that.... but as you said there’s plenty of space for a large show building that could house 2 Disney dark rides.
 

yensidtlaw1969

Well-Known Member
I never realized Alice went over Toad in some areas, that’s really cool. I agree current imagineers wouldn’t be capable of anything like that.... but as you said there’s plenty of space for a large show building that could house 2 Disney dark rides.
Yep, those layouts are WILD - Alice even has a *teeny, tiny* bit of showspace that juts out over Peter Pan. Those early-day Imagineers did not have an inch of space to waste and they made sure they didn't.

Here's a layout with transparency for the 2 stories of Alice to see where it goes over itself and Toad (and the Restrooms around the corner) - a little confusing, but Alice's space is highlighted Pink, Toad's Orange, and Pan's Red:

Alice Toad Pan Layout Disneyland Transparency.jpg


Additionally, all of this fits in a space smaller than the plot for the Little Mermaid Dark Ride.
 

yensidtlaw1969

Well-Known Member
I’ll be studying that diagram for a while... thanks so much.

Don’t even get me started on comparing these classics to little mermaid!!!!!!! Lol.
Oh I feel you. Deeply.

Part of the reason things like this no longer happen is that they no longer need to - blessing of size, and all that. But it makes you wonder sometimes how many cool projects could grow out of using space creatively like this.

The original Mermaid Dark Ride concept made use of 2 stories in a very creative way - the whole building was essentially split horizontally by a "waterline", so you'd pass through the same scene twice in the ride but each time you'd either see what was happening below the surface or above it. Hard to explain, but the Simulated Ridethrough they released back in the day shows it well:



I don't think that version of a Mermaid ride would have been perfect either, but it's better than what we got for sure.

I *still* secretly wish we'd gotten a new Snow White dark ride tucked underneath the Mine Train, with certain points where the two rides could see into each other but still offer different takes on the story. The Dark Ride could focus on Snow and the Witch, the Mine Train would focus on the Dwarfs as it does, but there would still be a nice little Snow White Ride available for anyone who wasn't up for a Coaster.

But, you know. They didn't ask me.
 

Bocabear

Well-Known Member
Oh I feel you. Deeply.

Part of the reason things like this no longer happen is that they no longer need to - blessing of size, and all that. But it makes you wonder sometimes how many cool projects could grow out of using space creatively like this.

The original Mermaid Dark Ride concept made use of 2 stories in a very creative way - the whole building was essentially split horizontally by a "waterline", so you'd pass through the same scene twice in the ride but each time you'd either see what was happening below the surface or above it. Hard to explain, but the Simulated Ridethrough they released back in the day shows it well:



I don't think that version of a Mermaid ride would have been perfect either, but it's better than what we got for sure.

I *still* secretly wish we'd gotten a new Snow White dark ride tucked underneath the Mine Train, with certain points where the two rides could see into each other but still offer different takes on the story. The Dark Ride could focus on Snow and the Witch, the Mine Train would focus on the Dwarfs as it does, but there would still be a nice little Snow White Ride available for anyone who wasn't up for a Coaster.

But, you know. They didn't ask me.

the idea of two attractions intermingling is fascinating...and in the spirit of the old imagineering crew...That would have been wonderful! Imagine an Alice ride where the Teacups ride is actually indoors and becomes part of the Dark Ride's show scenes... So many things like that could be done...and would feel more like experiences than "drive by book reports"... Sad thing about Mermaid is they already built it once and knew it had a disappointing ending....so rather than fix it, they just cloned it and did it again...
 

Brer Panther

Well-Known Member
It's blatantly obvious in the Little Mermaid ride that they blew most of the budget on the facade and animatronics. They might as well just have a giant neon sign reading "THIS IS WHERE WE RAN OUT OF MONEY" as part of the scene with the cardboard cutout Ursula.
 

MerlinTheGoat

Well-Known Member
It's blatantly obvious in the Little Mermaid ride that they blew most of the budget on the facade and animatronics. They might as well just have a giant neon sign reading "THIS IS WHERE WE RAN OUT OF MONEY" as part of the scene with the cardboard cutout Ursula.
Mermaid's budget was reportedly $100 million, and that's the California version which has a very simplistic queue/facade by comparison (no elaborate rockwork). As I understand it, the fancy facade at WDW was not a part of the ride's budget either (you can also tell that it was designed by a different and much more talented group of artists). $100 million should have been enough to blow everyone away. The ride's flaws are not only related to WDI's budgeting bloat, but a clear lack of artistic talent and design. A talented artist can do a LOT with relatively little money. And besides Ursula, the animatronics aren't even anything special movement wise.

For comparison, Harry Potter and the Forbidden Journey opened the year before Mermaid (DCA) and is cited to have cost $131 million.
 

yensidtlaw1969

Well-Known Member
It's blatantly obvious in the Little Mermaid ride that they blew most of the budget on the facade and animatronics. They might as well just have a giant neon sign reading "THIS IS WHERE WE RAN OUT OF MONEY" as part of the scene with the cardboard cutout Ursula.
The amount of Rockwork within showscenes is a culprit too - part of why it was so expensive on both coasts. The way they do it these days costs a real buck, and there's a ton of it inside the ride.

If they'd committed to making it a Blacklight ride from the beginning instead of choosing weirdly to make it a White Light ride they could have gotten away with suggesting more rather than having to carve it all. Some strategic carving would have been sufficient. Of course much of the ride ended up being converted to Blacklight anyway, making at least some of that rockwork a waste.

As the DL Fantasyland Dark Rides prove, they could have done a lot more with a lot less. I personally think there's something to strategic use of cutouts within them - if your source material is a 2D, Hand-drawn animated film, blacklight cutouts suit that aesthetic. Part of the charm is making you feel like you've stepped into the hand-painted spaces of the movie. Balance that out with some nice, dimensional figures and you can completely evoke the animated film without breaking the bank.

Though, to bring this thread somewhat back around, Splash Mountain does a great job of literalizing its animated environments with hand-carved rockwork, so there's more than one way to do it. But there's the problem - the Exterior of Mermaid suggests to the guest that the ride will be taking that approach, but it fizzles out by the time you get to "Under the Sea" in favor of some sort of confused hybrid of expensive rockwork literality and some simple, shiny, plastic Window-Display theatrics. It feels like the Backgrounds got more attention than the Subjects.

Until the final 3rd of the ride, when all of it starts to just falter.

Splash is at least consistent in its visual language throughout.
 

the.dreamfinder

Well-Known Member
It's blatantly obvious in the Little Mermaid ride that they blew most of the budget on the facade and animatronics. They might as well just have a giant neon sign reading "THIS IS WHERE WE RAN OUT OF MONEY" as part of the scene with the cardboard cutout Ursula.
The issue with Mermaid is that they got stuck with a restricted plot (DCA) that was to be cloned and managed to waste considerable space on a mediocre “Under the Sea” room, to the diminishment of the rest of the attraction.
 

Animaniac93-98

Well-Known Member
Is it true that Tokyo DL is opposed to retheming their Splash to PatF? I thought they were opposed to paying for a retheme.

We don't really know what's happening with Tokyo. The original announcement said nothing about that version of the ride. We do know that it's not Disney's call, but it's all rumors and speculation as to what's specifically happening behind the scenes. The ride has continued to operate since TDL opened back in July.

I also can't get the original Parks blog post to load now, either by searching or trying the link on WDW Splash's Mountain's official page, but any other one on the blog works for me.
 

EagleScout610

Owner of a RKF - Resting Kermit Face
Premium Member
Is it true that Tokyo DL is opposed to retheming their Splash to PatF? I thought they were opposed to paying for a retheme.
TDO wants Tokyo to partially pay for the Orlando retheme, since the 2 are mirror images it would just be cloned over to MK. Tokyo doesn't want to retheme theirs so they don't wanna foot the bill
 

Touchdown

Well-Known Member
I got evaced out of Alice once, the ride stopped at the Tweedles. To evac, I went through a door on the outside (left, Main Street USA direction) and was taken through Peter Pans Maintenance Bay and dumped out by the Alice Bathroom it I really is amazing how close things are at DL.
 

_caleb

Well-Known Member
TDO wants Tokyo to partially pay for the Orlando retheme, since the 2 are mirror images it would just be cloned over to MK. Tokyo doesn't want to retheme theirs so they don't wanna foot the bill
Not to be obtuse—are you certain OLC doesn’t want to retheme, or that OLC doesn’t want to pay for a retheme? I know these were private conversations, but I’m curious because there is a huge difference between the two.

I’m especially interested because there is a cultural dynamic to these conversations. If TWDC approached OLC with an offer to cover all costs to retheme an attraction that has brought shame on the Company, I don’t see them objecting.

But again, these all seem to be third-hand information.
 
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