6 rejected Disney theme park rides

Computer Magic

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6 rejected Disney theme park rides

By Danny Gallagher | The Week – 5 hrs ago

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Dick Tracy, the Muppets, and Mel Brooksall almost had their very own rides
The Walt Disney Company is reportedly considering a plan to build an entire world dedicated to Star Wars at Disneyland. But sci-fi fans and Disney aficionados shouldn't get too excited. The history of Disney's theme park development is full of unfinished rides that were once high on the engineering team's "to-build" list. Here, 6 rejected Disney theme-park rides:
1. Hotel MelWhen it opened in 1989, Walt Disney World's Disney-MGM Studios, now known as Hollywood Studios, in Orlando, Fla., was meant to compete head-to-head with the Universal Studios theme park. Disney's new park needed a star attraction, and the "Imagineers" thought a ride based on horror movies would bring in the crowds. However, Disney prided itself on being family-friendly, so the company concocted a less frightening theme that starred comedy actor, writer, and director Mel Brooks. The ride would have taken guests through an old hotel that Brooks had supposedly taken over to shoot his next picture. They would then discover that the hotel was crowded with ghosts, ghouls, and monsters. Riders would board golf carts that took them through various rooms that showcased comedic set-ups. One room contained a vampire who keeps cutting himself as he shaves because he can't see himself in the mirror. Another featured a closed bathroom stall with Frankenstein reaching for some toilet paper, only to grab one of the Mummy's bandages instead. The project ran into problems when developers couldn't come up with a cohesive story for the ride, and Brooks left the project to star in and direct the movie Life Stinks. The hotel, however, was revamped and turned into the wildly popular elevator drop ride "The Twilight Zone Tower of Terror."
2. The Great Muppet Movie Ride
Disney also wanted a Muppet attraction for its new park, and developers brainstormed an entire Muppet-themed ride. It would have taken riders through movie sets for Frankenstein and Peter Pan with Muppets characters comprising the cast. The Frankstein section featured a mad scientist's laboratory, with Dr. Bunsen Honeydew conducting an experiment gone awry on his long-suffering apprentice Beaker. The Peter Pan remake had the Muppets knocking over set pieces and scenery as they are suspended from cables and tossed around the room. The ride was to have been part of a special Muppets-themed area of the park, replete with a Muppetvision 3D show. But only the 3D attraction came to fruition.
3. Beastly KingdomWDW's Animal Kingdom park brought wildlife into Disney's vast array of attractions. But one planned section that was scrapped would have taken visitors on rides populated by wildlife that didn't actually exist. The canceled Beastly Kingdom was to have explored "animals of myth and legend," such as dragons and unicorns. Some of the proposed rides included a Fantasia-themed boat ride with characters from the iconic film, a suspended roller coaster called "Dragon's Tower" that brought riders face to face with a massive, fire-breathing dragon, and a medieval labyrinth called "Quest of the Unicorn." However, money problems prevented Disney from building such a massive attraction. Instead, the company built the mountain roller coaster Expedition Everest, in which riders are chased and almost captured by a massive, snarling Yeti.
4. Museum of the WeirdThe original Haunted Mansion at Disneyland in Anaheim, Calif., is one of the most beloved and hallowed of all the Disney rides. And it almost had an adjoining attraction. Imagineer Rolly Crump came up with a novel way of keeping the guests entertained while they waited in one of Disneyland's notoriously long lines, devising several props and sketches for a Museum of the Weird that would have served as a pre-show to the main attraction. It was to have been filled with strange collectibles, such as wallpaper that seemed to stare back at guests, a grandfather clock decorated with human bones, and a haunted organ played by a ghostly skeleton. The project folded after Walt Disney's death, and several of the Museum's ideas became part of the Haunted Mansion instead.
5. The Enchanted Snow PalaceOne of Disneyland's original rides would have taken its guests out of the hot California sun and into a cold, snowy wonderland. Guests would have boarded boats, and sailed through an "arctic Jungle Cruise" teeming with robotic animals, such as giant walruses, polar bears, and wolves. Then, as the boats traveled under the Northern Lights, they would enter the more fantastic part of the ride: The lair of the Snow Queen, complete with mythical arctic creatures like fairies and giants. The Queen would proceed to greet the guests, and thank them for visiting by making it snow. The plans were scrapped after park planners learned that guests wanted rides that had more thrills and less chills.
6. Dick Tracy's CrimestoppersIn what would have become one of the park's first interactive rides, Disney-MGM Studios based an attraction on the film adaptation of the comic strip Dick Tracy. Guests would have been taken through the gritty, crime-riddled streets of Chicago, where they would shoot it out with gangsters and members of Big Boy Caprice's oddball collection of henchmen. Unfortunately, Dick Tracy performed poorly at the box office, and a planned sequel never materialized, so Disney had no real reason to build the ride.
 

Sped2424

Well-Known Member
beautyandthebeastride1.jpg

Beauty and the beast Show for Disneyland Paris

Planned for Fantasyland, the Beauty and the Beast attraction would have gone on the hillside across from where Pizzeria Bella Notte stands now. It would have had two contrasting sides; one side, the entrance to the ride, would have been dark, foreboding and mysterious, surrounded by crooked black trees - just like the Beast's castle during the curse, whilst the other side, the exit, would be light, ornate and fairytale-esque, showing the castle after the curse is lifted.
The Imagineers took their inspiration for the attraction from the popular Enchanted Tiki Room, which was not built at Disneyland Paris. After a preshow viewed as animated stain glass windows, a technology that would later be used at Tokyo DisneySea's Tower of Terror, guests would have entered a similarly round room, albeit larger than the Tiki Room. Themed as a room in the Beast's castle, guests would have sat on three sides of the room looking onto a grand staircase, doorway, fireplace and table.
From here, the guests would witness Belle's experience in her prison castle, with a real life performer portraying Belle as she interacts with animatronic recreations of Lumiere, Cogsworth and Mrs. Potts.
The most spectacular of the scenes would of course have been the 'Be Our Guest' segment. As the catchy music played and the dazzling lights lit up the room, guests would be surrounded by action in the same way as the Enchanted Tiki Room - only instead of tiki heads and flowers, it would be twirling plates, singing candlesticks and dancing cutlery that would have surrounded the guests. Mrs. Potts would have whirled her way around the floorspace on a trolley, whilst a spinning chandelier would descend from the ceiling and a giant, delicious looking cake would rise from the floor.
The finale of the show would involve the appearance of a giant animatronic recreation of the Beast - to have been the largest animatronic Imagineering had constructed (although it has since been surpassed). Belle would have chosen a lucky child from the audience to present a rose to the Beast, who, with a single tear falling from his eye, would remember to love again, lifting the curse. With flashing lights, the Beast would descend beneath the stage (just like the fountain at the Tiki Room), to be replaced by a live actor portraying the Prince.
Why Wasn't It Built?
The Beauty and the Beast show was one of the ill-fated second phase projects planned for Disneyland Paris. When the park began to experience financial problems, all of the expansion plans were dropped and replaced with cheaper additions like Le Pays des Contes de Fées and Le Passage Enchanté d'Aladdin, which could provide a larger capacity at a cheaper cost.
Legacy
There has yet to be a Beauty and the Beast ride at the Disney parks, only the Beauty and the Beast show at Disney's Hollywood Studios. With so much time having passed since the attraction was released, it is hit or miss whether it will ever be built - although the greenlighting of the Little Mermaid dark ride certainly adds hope.
All thanks to the never files.
 

stevehousse

Well-Known Member
There is a whole listing on Wikipedia that has all of these an tons more! Check it out if you have time! It's amazing how many attractions and lands they had in development that never made it past te imagineering stage!
 

disneyfan1995

Well-Known Member
I really would have liked to see the entire Muppet area become a reality! The Muppets are quite comical so I think it would have worked well.
 

FettFan

Well-Known Member
Roger Rabbit's Toontown.

One "land" in DHS would have been dedicated as Toontown
Toon_Town_Street.jpg

and would have hosted Roger Rabbit's Car Toon Spin (which was built at Disneyland), Baby Herman's Runaway Baby Buggy, and a motion simulator called Toontown Trolley.
Toontown%2BTrolley.jpg


The idea eventually was scrapped, with only the Acme Warehouse being built as a gift shop (which stands today in truncated form outside, pretty much selling Pirates of the Caribbean and Star Wars crap), but was then regenerated Dr. Who style into the more comfy, cuddly Mickey's Toontown Fair.
 

FettFan

Well-Known Member
4. Museum of the WeirdThe original Haunted Mansion at Disneyland in Anaheim, Calif., is one of the most beloved and hallowed of all the Disney rides. And it almost had an adjoining attraction. Imagineer Rolly Crump came up with a novel way of keeping the guests entertained while they waited in one of Disneyland's notoriously long lines, devising several props and sketches for a Museum of the Weird that would have served as a pre-show to the main attraction. It was to have been filled with strange collectibles, such as wallpaper that seemed to stare back at guests, a grandfather clock decorated with human bones, and a haunted organ played by a ghostly skeleton. The project folded after Walt Disney's death, and several of the Museum's ideas became part of the Haunted Mansion instead.

The sad thing is that had Walt Disney not died, the MotW would have been included as a postshow for the Mansion. Walt was the major proponent of the museum...but once he was gone, Dick Ivine scrapped it.

Source: It's Kind of a Cute Story by Rolly Crump.
 

cynic710

Well-Known Member
I too would've love to have seen this a reality..While Muppet*Vision was made. You can clearly see that there was to be a Swedish Chef Restaurant where Pizza Planet is and although you can't see it but, Mama Melrose was to be The Great Gonzo Pandemonium Pizza Parlor..
Muppet%2BStudios1.jpg
oh man, what could have been...thanks for posting this! it looks like gonzo had something going over to the left as well. many possibilities here.
 

bubbles1812

Well-Known Member
I believe there was once some concept art floating around for "Villain Mountain." That is my all time favorite "Wish it would have, should have been built" ride. Sigh. I would have taken that ride over all of NFE.
 

Californian Elitist

Well-Known Member
The sad thing is that had Walt Disney not died, the MotW would have been included as a postshow for the Mansion. Walt was the major proponent of the museum...but once he was gone, Dick Ivine scrapped it.

Source: It's Kind of a Cute Story by Rolly Crump.

Well, some of the concept of Museum of the Weird made it into the attraction. The walk through part (in the actual ride in Florida) was supposed to be the musesum, which explains why it's not in the ride in California.

1249929043_MaeZN-755x755-2.jpg
 

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