Eddie Sotto
Premium Member
It would be fun to see the rat's eye view in the ride..
The "you're being shrunk down to the size of [x]" concept seems to be a little overplayed for my tastes. A Ratatouille based attraction may be where it could be interesting as hopefully the attraction will not be aimed solely at the younger set. I think part of the problem is that the "big" environments tend to lack texture. Overall they feel plastic. I am not sure if it is because of the intended audience being so young or possibly that the unfamiliar nature of the true texture at such a level of detail is so foreign that it becomes uncomfortable.It would be fun to see the rat's eye view in the ride..
The "you're being shrunk down to the size of [x]" concept seems to be a little overplayed for my tastes. A Ratatouille based attraction may be where it could be interesting as hopefully the attraction will not be aimed solely at the younger set. I think part of the problem is that the "big" environments tend to lack texture. Overall they feel plastic. I am not sure if it is because of the intended audience being so young or possibly that the unfamiliar nature of the true texture at such a level of detail is so foreign that it becomes uncomfortable.
... You can either be the character in the ride, or a third person experiencing the story as they did. It does not have to retell the movie. Ask yourself what part of Rat do I wish I could experience, and do that first. In TDl Pooh, it was bouncing with Tigger. We made that top priority.
The execution of that world is another factor. As you point out, when you supersize things they often need to be built out of materials other than what they are supposed to be and you can end up in a fiberglas reality. As you point out, textures at a huge scale (like woodgrain) can be a challenge to do convincingly. Toontown in a cumulative sense has this effect, but that's the style of the land. So that's a bit of "food for thought" in dark ride planning.
I asked myself this, and couldn't come up with much from that movie. That isn't to say I didn't enjoy the movie, but really, the thing I'd most like to experience from it was the Ratatouille cafe at the end. I'd eat there. Even Gusteau's didn't do that much for me. (I'd rather eat in Rivera, I think!!!:animwink: Next time in LA...) The raft ride...'S ok I guess, but the rest I'd probably pass on.
I think they could come up with a better theme for a coaster, no?
I think this is sort of an interesting thought experiment if nothing else. Doesn't matter if it's Disney or someone else. I'd love to see something like this in the north. We used to have a mall/amusement park called "Old Chicago" not far from my house, and it was fun in the middle of winter to go on log flumes and coasters with inversions, but the place didn't make it long term. Cool idea though.
There is, its the Mall of America in Minneapolis. I liked it much better before it became all Nickelodeon themed however.
Rat for the Studios. Splash seems too wet for that climate.
I know that Sheikra in Busch Gardens Tampa uses differently shaped cones on the back of its cars to decide how wet the people watching (and sometimes riding) will get. Maybe its something like that.I read something (it very well may have been somewhere in this thread) about a new log design that would limit how much guests would get wet for a Paris Splash Mountain.
I read something (it very well may have been somewhere in this thread) about a new log design that would limit how much guests would get wet for a Paris Splash Mountain.
I read something (it very well may have been somewhere in this thread) about a new log design that would limit how much guests would get wet for a Paris Splash Mountain.
I think there is, but to me, the Splashless Splash Mountain seems counter to the whole idea. Like when I order a Jack Daniels and Diet Coke. I'm not a big fan of that show so i'm prejudiced.
Haha. Nice.
That's interesting you're not a big fan of Splash Mountain, if I'm reading that right. I remember reading once that Splash Mountain took the place of a really big attraction planned for Adventureland. Is that true?
I think there is, but to me, the Splashless Splash Mountain seems counter to the whole idea. Like when I order a Jack Daniels and Diet Coke. I'm not a big fan of that show so i'm prejudiced.
I get that, but at the same time it is warm in France occasionally. Being able to regulate the splash, much like they do in Florida is something that could work. It would just be that much more regulated than in Florida because the temperature range will be larger.
I'm curious, Eddie, what's your criticism with Splash Mountain?
I think that big Adventureland attraction was the first (multiple ride) version of Indiana Jones. Apparently there was a drawing an Imagineer made of Indiana Jones and Brer Fox standing at the top of Chickapin Hill fighting over a golden Brer Rabbit idol, representing the budget!I remember reading once that Splash Mountain took the place of a really big attraction planned for Adventureland. Is that true?
That's really interesting. I certainly see your point about the target audience being mismatched to the ride system. As for it being based on a 'banned' film, I don't really mind that too much; to most people, they just think its an original (non-source based) attraction, and that's not a bad thing. (But I see your point - if you're going to do a sourced film, at least make it a film that can benefit from it).
I always interpreted the outdoor scenes as a teaser for the inside attraction. You get the build up to a drop right at the start, but the drop's tiny and instead you weave about the main drop, building the excitement for the finale. The outdoor music and prop pieces start to give you hints you're entering a different world, building the fantasy before the first proper drop into the showbuilding, where the all-singing all-dancing critters come alive. As such, the outdoor section is kind of the preshow.
A Frontierland flume would have been interesting. I heard something like that was considered for Disneyland Paris, tying into the Big Thunder Mountain storyline. Interestingly, my first thought was that it was too generic, but then Big Thunder Mountain is essentially a generic minetrain coaster, what makes it so good is the level at which the theme and setting is pulled off, and I'm sure the same could be done for a Frontierland flume, as long as it was different enough from Thunder.
I think that big Adventureland attraction was the first (multiple ride) version of Indiana Jones. Apparently there was a drawing an Imagineer made of Indiana Jones and Brer Fox standing at the top of Chickapin Hill fighting over a golden Brer Rabbit idol, representing the budget!
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