No Name
Well-Known Member
Michael Eisner wanted you to "ride the movies"
Perhaps, but with a healthy balance. He approved a ton of rides that weren't tied to a movie. Bob Iger has not.
Michael Eisner wanted you to "ride the movies"
but..but.. my buybacks! is heard faintly in the background at Disney's CEO offices.So just to put this all in perspective, Epcot Center took 3 years to build. On opening day that included: Spaceship Earth, UoE, WoM, LwtL, all of Communicore, Mexico, China, Germany,Italy, AA, Japan, France, England, and Canada and a completely new Monorail line plus all the relevant supporting infrastructure. Disney made $242m(2017 dollars) in 1982. They made $2.9billion in 2016. From where I sit it clearly feels like they have a heck of a lot more money now to support the man power to design, engineer and build all of these additions in a much narrower window. But then again, I am no finance expert, so with all the extra parks as well as the other business units, I may not be looking at all the key indicators correctly.
The thing that really sticks out to me here is that the quality feels light years ahead of where it is today, adjusting for the technology constraints they had in the late 70s early 80s. (example: Horizons had over 100 AAs and props, M:S has some video screens and two motion simulators). Disney is so much more "off the shelf" then customizing it for the ride these days. Just sad!
For some,Ladder spotting is the most true measurement.I'm on the side that doesn't start the timer until ground is broken.
This has got to stop right now. It's a 'tiara', not a 'crown.'
That is all.
I particularly recommend the Ken Burns one.That is why attractions like star tours were built. Look up any star Tours history documentary to see for yourself.
The memories!For those of us missing UOE, here's the website they mention at the end of the film. It's a real game! http://energynightmare.game/
For many, the use of the IP in this particular park, the fact it's a replacement and not an addition, and what it replaces is the issue.
Regardless of thoughts about the IP and it's movie. Or thoughts about corporate orders.
I'm sure they'll make this ride family friendly, but does anyone else feel it's odd to have a Disney ride based on this *particular* movie? There's language, violence, some sexual suggestion, etc. I wouldn't let my kids see it until 13 or 14. I know there are other Disney rides based on PG-13 type movies (Indiana Jones, Avatar) but the fact that this movie can be crude makes it somehow even more offensive to me at Epcot, which always seemed to be the "civilized" park where you could explore big ideas for the future and eat crumpets with tea.
Btw, I enjoyed the movie well enough personally, so it's not about that. More that it seems kind of un-Disneylike and *very* un-Epcotlike.
In recent history, they typically, sadly, don't learn the right lesson.You mention another thing that makes Avatar in DAK a poor business decision... the "synergy" (it's actually not synergy) only goes one way for Disney. The rest helps competitor Lightstorm Entertainment.
Apparently Mission Breakout and the summer of heroes bannerfest isn't bringing in the numbers Disney hoped for. Frozen Ever After didn't really boost attendance. I have many guesses as to why, but I think there will be a big lesson or two to be learned in the coming years. I just hope Disney learns them correctly.
Investment is good, they just have to invest in the right things.
Process. A creative person saying "I have a great idea for a new [property] ride/show/sequel/whatever!" is completely different than a non-creative saying "I don't want to hear the best ideas. [Property] did well at the box office, so you must make a new ride/show/sequel/whatever."I fail to understand the argument that putting IP in a ride automatically makes it less original. An IP does not constitute an attraction - they still have to decide how to convert the concept into a ride. Would anyone suggest that rides like Spider-Man or FJ at IOA, IJA at DL, or splash mountain at MK are unoriginal because they are based off IPs? Rather, they are extremely original because they were able to convert the concepts into a unique ride experience.
And why is it any less original to use an "IP" than any other preexising concept that just so happens to not be owned by anyone? Basing a ride on a mystical creature like the yeti is "original", but if Disney had created a movie about the yeti first, EE would've been considered a cop out? Is triceratop spin more original than dumbo because it is based off a generic dinosaur rather than an elephant from a movie?
We know very little about the GotG ride, and we have no idea how they will use the IP to facilitate the ride experience. Like with any new attraction, there is potential for this to be a dud, but let's not rule out the possibility that this could be an instant classic, just because it utilizes characters from a movie.
I'm sure they'll make this ride family friendly, but does anyone else feel it's odd to have a Disney ride based on this *particular* movie? There's language, violence, some sexual suggestion, etc. I wouldn't let my kids see it until 13 or 14. I know there are other Disney rides based on PG-13 type movies (Indiana Jones, Avatar) but the fact that this movie can be crude makes it somehow even more offensive to me at Epcot, which always seemed to be the "civilized" park where you could explore big ideas for the future and eat crumpets with tea.
Btw, I enjoyed the movie well enough personally, so it's not about that. More that it seems kind of un-Disneylike and *very* un-Epcotlike.
Or TomorrowlandHey, maybe they can make that side of Future World a mini-land dedicated to the films of James Gunn. Lets see, we could have rides based on.... ummmmmm... OK, maybe this isn't the best idea.
GotG deserves a ride (I'd give it a land) but it can't go into MGM because it's redundant with SWL and doesn't really fit anywhere else.
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