RANDOM REACTIONS:
Immediately before and upon entering Disneyland Park, we noticed buildings with large areas of chipped off paint that was very obvious. Throughout the day in the park we did see some areas of "WET PAINT" but not nearly enough.
They certainly have upkeep issues at DLP, some that are the worst of any Disney park I've seen.
Although the difference between 2006 and 2007 when the 15th Anniversary began was like night and day. And I've heard work is being done on major facilities now, including Treehouse, which had wood rotting through that was such a safety issue I couldn't comprehend how it wasn't immediately closed yet went year by year getting worse.
Main Street was very nice and I especially enjoyed the arcades with the museum elements and the Victorian-era futuristic posters of American cities in the year 1999 or 2000. I agree with Eddie that it was a missed opportunity to make it into a Jazz-Age Main Street (sorry to reopen any old wounds!).
After some consideration, Frontierland was the most successful land of the whole park in terms of design. Phantom Manor and Big Thunder were quality attractions.
Adventureland was neat, but a bit muddled. I couldn't believe how short the Indiana Jones ride was and thought it a bit odd that there was no imagery of Indiana Jones anywhere (save a few small elements of Dr. Jones in the queue). Pirates was excellent but my sole ride was marred by an absolute idiotic person two rows ahead who took multiple flash pictures of each show element.
I believe almost any attraction that was replicated at DLP was by far the best version in the world when it opened. Most have remained that way, although some are showing age themselves.
Indy was tossed in very quickly because the park lacked thrill rides and needed capacity. It isn't a must do by any sense, although you do get great views of the green French countryside from it!
And that's terrible about the photomoron on PoC, but I've dealt with that in Orlando, Anaheim and Hong Kong. Stupidity and lack of decency are universal human traits.
Fantasyland is huge and the buildings are excellently themed. Small World was an unexpected "plus". It seemed better than WDW, but I couldn't place a finger on the specific reason why. On the Storybook Land ride, I counted multiple cobwebs on the miniature buildings. Why isn't this being taken care of during the morning opening walk-though-- assuming there is one? Since this is an outdoor attraction, five minutes with a duster should do it on a daily basis. I was disappointed by Pinocchio, but that is just the elitist snob in me. I was hoping for a dark ride with 3-D characters, not cardboard cutouts, but I realize it probably fit a niche in the park-- not every ride can be fancy.
Unless the cobwebs were covering everything, I can't fault them on that. I doubt the attraction gets the type of walk-thru that we'd all like. And Pinocchio is a nice (better than any MK) dark ride. It isn't really all that different from DL or TDL versions. I think it just has higher capacity and larger queue.
Sleeping Beauty's castle is my personal favorite, because it's much more whimsical than the others. The walkthrough was short and I thought the dragon was kind of thrown in at the end, but a neat element to discover.
Thrown in? I think it's detail like that which makes DLP stand head and shoulders above the other MK parks. Every storybook castle had a dragon in a dungeon ... only at DLP do you actually get one.
This park is covered ... it oozes details like this ... layer upon layer, and that's after the same WalMarting that has affected WDW and DL.
Space Mountain was fun in Discoveryland, but why, oh why, is the track so rough? We rode it multiple times but didn't enjoy the concussions. The Nautilus walk-through was really detailed and I enjoyed lingering in each room.
So true on all counts.
The costumes wore by the cast members in the park were much better than WDW. Most of the costumes in WDW are embarrassing.
Well, first the average DLP CM doesn't weigh 311 pounds like at WDW. That helps. But while WDW costuming has been dumbed down, no expense was spared (I am sure Eddie can speak to specifics) on costuming there. I recall reading a story in Disney News back when the park was being developed about just how intricate and detailed they were going in that direction. Every location had a different costume for instance ... none of this generic land stuff.
I have railed against the merchandise offered in WDW before, but I am sad to report the merchandise at DLP was not much better. In many cases, it was worse. Even visiting the Disney Village, an "interesting" arrangement of buildings, the premiere shops are a joke. There was an interesting line exclusive to DLP, of eco-friendly baby clothing, but everything else made me want to raise a clenched fist to the heavens and sob, "Why?"
There was so much inappropriately placed "Nightmare Before Christmas" merchandise. Frontierland? Yep, lets put Jack there. Discoveryland? Why, yes, Jack. Pirates? Sure, Jack has a skull, which is pirate-y, right? Just make a ride already and be done with it.
Sadly, they are just following WDW's lead. The No. 2 exec is a longtime WDW guy and known for caring only about the bottom line.
Things were better in my prior visits than my last (2007), although some nice 15th Anniversary items made up for it.
I was also impressed that you could still find western-themed merchandise in Frontierland. But it has gone downhill.
The cultural differences in DLP were interesting and I am interested to see if Eddie and the others addressed those in their designs. Multiple times we saw guests on the grass behind the thigh-high fences with no consequences and even saw people dangling off of signs in Discoveryland. Another member of our party spotted a boy peeing in the Discoveryland fountain. And are there no backstage areas? Many, many times, we saw off duty cast members in full costume with nametags walking through the parks with their purses and talking on cell phones. Ol' Walt would've had a fit. To be fair, without venturing too much into a sticky topic and speaking from an American point of view, some of the guests may have merely been reflecting the societal values of their culture or home.
None of those things are allowed, but you do see them happening all the time. I take that as a management issue. Sure, it's cultural. But people aren't idiots either. If they're told to not do something or they'll be asked to leave the park, most won't.
The Walt Disney Studios Park is an ABYSSAL FAILURE. My wife and I were embarrassed to be associated with Disney in anyway after walking through that "park". Poorly themed, laughably laid out, indifferent "performers", it was just awful, awful. We left after one hour without doing anything, because we felt dirty just being there. Perhaps to the casual observer, there isn't much of an difference in the two parks, but to my own eye, all I could see were the missed opportunities. I will say that the stained glass gates at the entrance were nice, but, yikes. It felt like a local theme park that had been bought by Disney and all Disney had bothered to do was replace the signing with their own. Just embarrassing.
It certainly is the most soulless,cold Disney park ever built. And makes DCA look like a masterpiece by comparison. But you did yourself a great disservice by leaving and not doing anything. And they are working on making it better ... even painting things blue instead of the industrial biege backlot look makes things better.
They have some great attractions that can't be found at other parks. Things like Cinemagique, Animagique, Armaggeddon to me are can't misses. And others, like ToT (haven't been on it yet, but it is DCA version) and RnRC (better than Orlando's) are quality. Also, have heard good things about Crush's Coaster (another unique attraction that opened days after my last visit).
I would have given it a chance. Walking in and saying 'I don't like the look of the place' and leaving left you missing some great attractions.
Does Disney own the property between the parks and the Disney Village? I saw many illegal vendors hawking Eiffel Tower kitsch in the area leading up to the railroad station. Very out of place and not family-friendly in the Disney sense.
I know Disney doesn't own the RER area, so I'm sure that's why the vendors are out there. I certainly didn't need to see them, but they didn't destroy the magic for me anymore than all the DVC booths at WDW does.
CONCLUSION:
Disneyland Park is highly themed and one of the premiere parks in the world. Upkeep is lacking in some areas. Management of cast members and guest control is not good. Overall grade: A-/B+.
Walt Disney Studios . . . Overall grade: F.
Disney Village is a small shopping area with a questionable theme. Overall grade: C-/D+.
The only thing I can disagree with is DSP. You should have given it a chance. You can't fail a place you didn't visit.