I know this is revolutionary and expensive, but suppose they actually resumed using the Studios as an ACTUAL MOVIE STUDIO again. You think Disney makes enough movies to throw some down to the area and really give the people a thrill to see these things in action. Unreasonable, I know. But it would be an idea with a theme...
With the new regime and the acquisition of Pixar there's always the possibility that the Traditional Animation Department might be revitalized.
That could breath more life into the park, as long as they actually move the animators back to Orlando.
I totally agree. When i was there last year I had no idea it was shortened. It was kind of cool to see all the old homes of famous TV shows and the canyon thing was just lame. Now it's basically a few radom props, a ride through clothing design and the canyon. I'll never ride it again.Oh yer, it's much worse since Lights, Motors, Action! came. It was really shortened. Now it's just not worth the wait.
As for there not being any Studios at Disney-MGM Studios... why don't they shoot some of their Disney Channel shows at the Studios? Seems like an easy-enough fix to me. Not as cool as visiting the sets of network shows like Golden Girls, but still, it's better than nothing.
I say Improve or remove.
TP2000 said:Bob Iger and Studio chief D. Cook have actually scaled back the live action movies the Studios is doing out of Burbank, and they've gone on record as saying that is their plan for at least the rest of the decade. There's work for Burbank, but certainly not enough to farm any of it out anywhere.
There is no amount of improving that can fix the Backlot Tour. First, the decade old Pearl harbor spiel has to go, and I wouldn't mind if that was demolished as opposed to updated or replaced with something similar. My reason for this is that after most people have seen it once, they no longer care to see other people get splashed with water or anything of that like, and with the way Disney refuses to update things, no one wants to see people get splashed so many times that they actually know the entire script for the bit. If this was something more interactive, it might be salvageable, but the fact is that the audience participation is so limited in scope that you can't even hope that the people on the stage do something funny or by accident, as their movements are severely restricted by someone who is later going to try to push their acting on you as real film footage, along with some severely outdated and awful looking computer graphics and some really hasty editing. After that, everyone is quickly wisked through a warehouse with real film props, the type of stuff that Universal would spread out over a tour and describe one by one, as the stuff is actually interesting. Everyone is pushed along so that they can board a tram that talks more about the car stunt show that took up a good chunk of its route than about actual movies, which by this point everyone is starting to wonder what type of tour they are going on. Catastrophe Canyon is exactly that, a catastrophe, though in an age where almost all special effects are now donw digitally, it stands as a testament to doing stunts live with real explosions and everything else, yet it still pales in comparison to the special effects sets on Universal's tour, not to mention that they have 6 or 7 to this Backlot Tour's one. There is not one facet of this tour that does not need fixing, and at some point alternative uses for the land will have to be looked into.
Even with the outdatedness and failures of the tour, there is one overwhelming reason that the tour doesn't work, and it is the props and sets on the tour. Universal shows sets from Psycho, How the Grinch Stole Christmas, War of the Worlds, Jaws, and Desperate Housewives to name a few. These are movies and shows that are easily recognizable in almost any household. Universal also has attractions on the tour set up to put the tram itself into movies like King Kong, Jaws, The Mummy, The Fast and the Furious, Earthquake and The Ten Commandments. Even if some of these are outdated, people still enjoy them because they are linked to movies they have seen, movies that were blockbusters. Universal also has a plain Southwestern-looking set that then gets flooded and has some chaos unfold much like MGM's Catastrophe Canyon, but instead of having to say "sets like this one are used in major motion pictures" like the MGM tour guide has to do with Catastrophe Canyon, the Universal tour guide can name quickly 5 or 6 major motion pictures that have actually used that very stage. Even the props Disney does have are all from lame or little seen movies. The movie prop with the greatest name recognition on the entire tour is probably the car from Herbie Fuly Loaded, and that is only there because it gets used in the LMAX stunt show that now runs the Backlot Tour area. The fact is that no one raelly cares to see the little submarine from The Life Aquatic with Steve Zassou, especially since most people don't even remember it, and it was only out a year or two ago. Without the quality movies, especially blockbusters, the sets and props on the Backlot Tour can't be impressive, forget the fact that there aren't sets in the first place. The best Disney could do was find a way to use Pearl Harbor, which was a blockbuster even though it was widely panned by critics. Disney just doesn't have a history of great live-action movies the way Universal does, and so it's Backlot Tour will never compare. The best thing for Disney is that Universal Orlando doesn't have a Backlot Tour, as that would really show how sad and pathetic MGM's is, especially to those who haven't had a chance to see the California version. Maybe that's actually a negative for Disney, as maybe if Universal had one in Orlando it would prompt Disney to just get rid of theirs. It's obvious that MGM no longer is, if it ever was, a true movie studio, so right now the focus should be on making sure MGM remains a true amusement park, and with that the Backlot Tour just needs to go.
Too bad Ten Commandments is gone and the Mummy and Fast & the Furious are a 10 on the lame scale. Throw in a very outdated Back to the Future Ride, a scaled back Mummy Ride(that replaced the only good family ride, ET), a marginal Jurassic Park ride needing lots of love you end up with a few good shows like Shrek and T3 and not much else.These are movies and shows that are easily recognizable in almost any household. Universal also has attractions on the tour set up to put the tram itself into movies like King Kong, Jaws, The Mummy, The Fast and the Furious, Earthquake and The Ten Commandments.
Too bad Ten Commandments is gone and the Mummy and Fast & the Furious are a 10 on the lame scale. Throw in a very outdated Back to the Future Ride, a scaled back Mummy Ride(that replaced the only good family ride, ET), a marginal Jurassic Park ride needing lots of love you end up with a few good shows like Shrek and T3 and not much else.
DMGM should get rid of the tram ride(or major updating).
I'd call the new ride Movie Mania and just keep the studios name as Disney Studios. Trust me there are many other Studios out there that aren't making movies either(or at least quality ones )
I seem to recall (from my childhood) a part of the tour where some kids got to emulate the 'bees' part of Honey I Shrunk the Kids in front of a blue screen. Does anybody have any facts about this? When it was put in or taken out? What tour stop was it before or after?
Register on WDWMAGIC. This sidebar will go away, and you'll see fewer ads.