Thor: Beyond the Bifrost
E-ticket boat dark ride
Join mighty Thor on a boat journey across the Nine Realms full of heroics and unexpected terrors
All throughout DisneySky, guests have constantly shattered new barriers and traveled to new horizons, from climbing a mountain to sailing the clouds to even reaching outer space. Now, as technology continues to progress, somehow even greater dimensions open up. Recent researches into astrophysics and quantum mechanics have revealed a way to travel beyond the speed of light, beyond our Solar System or even our galaxy, reaching out to realms which were once thought to be merely myth. Scientists such as Dr. Erik Selvig call this phenomenon an Einstein-Rosen Bridge. However, the medieval Norse people who knew of this anomaly called it by a different name…
The Bifrost!
Prepare to enter the mighty world of Thor Odinson! Prepare to travel via Rainbow Bridge from our realm and across the many Nine Realms. Get ready to witness the glistening spires of Asgard, the wintry halls of Jotunheim, and other dazzling universes. Get ready to ride alongside Thor as he battles terrible foes who seek to undo all that is good...with his half-brother Loki at the center of this mischief. Get ready for one of DisneySky’s most incredible dark ride experiences!
Thor: Beyond the Bifrost is only the second of two water rides in the entire park. For balance, both physical and thematic, it sits on DisneySky’s opposite end from Storm Mountain. This particular water ride repurposes the ride system (and heck, even the layout) from Shanghai Disneyland’s Pirates of the Caribbean: Battle of the Sunken Treasure. This is an incredibly high-capacity ride system, with magnetically-propelled Viking longboats able to magically turn and face any scenery. It is also a fantastically immersive storytelling device, one which can surely do the God of Thunder justice.
(Note that this is a major headliner, one that is likely to be added sometime in the years following DisneySky’s grand opening. Note too that this ride alone takes up square footage that is currently used by Anaheim’s Red Lion Hotel. This write-up assumes Disney will purchase and raze that building.)
Beyond the Bifrost is the headlining attraction of Avengers Airspace’s Goodman Park city area, centrally located in Goodman Plaza. The ride is facaded within the Museum of Norse History, which is realised in a Beaux Arts style similar to the New York Public Library Main Branch, albeit with additional medieval Scandinavian details. Chief among these is a pair of marble statues flanking the main entryway, depicting respectively the head and the tail of the Midgard Serpent (the mythical version, not the Marvel version) seemingly passing beneath the stairs. A banner spanning the entrance reads “Journey Into Mystery - Guest Lecturer Dr. Erik Selvig.”
An impact crater scars the city asphalt before the Museum of Norse History, blocked off by police barricades. In its center is Mjolnir, Thor’s enchanted hammer. Only one who is worthy may lift it...meaning that Mjolnir serves as a fun, interactive guest photo-op much like Fantasyland’s Sword in the Stone. Regularly throughout the day, there is a special lifting ceremony - Thor’s Uplifting Event - where a live Thor face performer tasks a group of guests to try picking up Mjolnir. Thor runs through the whole “Whosoever be worthy” spiel. Finally, a preselected child does succeed in lifting the hammer, to much applause. (Mjolnir is then returned to its perch in the crater.)
Entrance to Beyond the Bifrost is not up the museum’s grand central staircase, but rather off to one side through a side entrance under the main balustrade. Nearby to this queue entrance is FastPass distribution, done with monolithic Norse stones set on display in the museum gardens, their ancient runes glowing magically whenever a FastPass is reserved.
Queue - Museum of Norse History, Main Exhibition Hall
Passing through this side entrance, queued guests meander through twisting hallways past the museum’s staff offices, past doors with frosted glass windows indicating deliveries, acquisitions, and so forth.
But these hallways are brief, just a momentary contraction moment before guests reach the central museum exhibit space under marble arches. Relics on display are all from a recent archeological dig. These artifacts blend the worlds of real Norse history, and the more mythic/cosmic world of Marvel’s Thor…
There is a runestone depicting the legendary events of Ragnarok. There are assorted cases of helmets and weapons and hammers. An illuminated manuscript shows the cosmic tendrils of Yggdrasil. A woven textile map shows off the Nine Realms (plus the odd side-realm of Sakaar), predicting the ride’s upcoming sequence of events. There are relics on loan from Tonsberg’s restored Church of the Tesseract, as seen in the opening scene of The First Avenger. Here and there are Easter eggs from Epcot’s Maelstrom, such as a statuette of a three-headed troll.
Selvig’s Office
The queue travels upstairs, following a route similar to Shanghai’s Pirates of the Caribbean, in order to cross the ride’s waterways. Two queue lines form here, running in parallel towards two eventual loading docks.
For now, they continue upwards past another large exhibition hall on the left where a whole Viking longboat sits on display. Other assorted nautical Norse artifacts sit around its base. This exhibit is in disarray, tossed aside by Dr. Selvig’s hastily-deposited scientific equipment. There are thick electrical cables, buzzing battery cases, Jane Foster’s phase meter, and gravitational rods from Thor: The Dark World.
Dr. Selvig’s main office space is to the right of the queue, with windows overlooking the ride’s canals subterranean below. A television is haphazardly set up atop a desk, next to a radio which quietly plays Led Zeppelin's “Immigrant Song” (Thor’s unofficial theme). This TV provides our ride context. On a video loop, Dr. Erik Selvig (Stellan Skarsgard) describes his quantum observations into the Nine Realms and his search for Thor. Now is the time in between The Dark World and Ragnarok, the time when Thor when exploring the cosmos in search of Infinity Stones...while Loki secretly sat on the throne of Asgard disguised as Odin.
On his video, Selvig rambles about tracking Thor’s location using wormhole fluctuations. Selvig also describes a fleet of boats he has assembled, boats which combine traditional Nordic shipcraft and modern astrophysical knowledge. Boats that are able to travel both the Bifrost and the secret passageways of the Nine Realms. Setting forth from the freshwater canals beneath the museum, boats will follow Selvig’s pre-programmed route tracing Thor’s footsteps across the universe. Space maps taped over Norse tapestries depict our upcoming route in detail, charting a course over the starry tendrils of Yggdrasil, with special notes made of Asgard and Muspelheim.
Loading - Underground Aqueduct
The queue turns right towards stairs which lead down into the subterranean museum foundation. Two queue platforms sit along an aqueduct edge within this low-slung brick cellar. This is a long-abandoned New York subway station, built during the Gilded Age to coincide with the Museum of Norse History’s grand opening. The ceiling, hidden beneath generations of grime, bears an oil mural depicting the mythical events of Ragnarok.
This chamber, long forgotten by most, converted by the city into a storm drain decades ago, is most recently host to Selvig’s Bifrost experiments. Illumination comes from spotlights hooked directly into the city’s power grid. Scientific poles and grating serve as queue barriers and gates. Viking-style bateaux longboats, each able to seat 36 riders in six rows of six, are dispatched by a lab tech cast member behind an electrical console.
RIDE STATS
Ride type: Boat dark ride
Capacity per boat: 36 (6 rows of 6)
Hourly capacity: 3,240
Duration: 8:00
Height restriction: None
Ride type: Boat dark ride
Capacity per boat: 36 (6 rows of 6)
Hourly capacity: 3,240
Duration: 8:00
Height restriction: None
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