I'm seeing a smaller-scale version of this with less screens and more darkness.
I dunno. Maybe people thought Guardians of the Galaxy already violates the "timeless" bit so it could potentially violate the "family friendly" bit too.
I'm still struggling with how a Guardians of the Galaxy roller coaster replacing Universe of Energy is "relevant" to Epcot. Maybe we just don't understand the modern Disney corporate-babble of Bob Chapek, kind of like the scene in "Goldmember" where Austin and Nigel Powers start speaking "English English".
I'm still struggling with how a Guardians of the Galaxy roller coaster replacing Universe of Energy is "relevant" to Epcot.
The answer could be: It's not relevant to Epcot's Future World because Future World won't be a thing in the future.
The GotG, in their current line-up, will have been in five blockbuster movies spanning a decade being part of an even bigger franchise. The same kinda legs Indiana Jones had. It appropriated 70's and 80's culture with a 2010's vibe set in a futuristic non-Earthbound space setting. The same kind of milieu as Star Wars or Star Trek but with a different tongue in cheek point of view. If anything is set up to be timeless, it's GotG.
I don't know anyone who's been harping on GotG not being 'timeless'. Not being appropriate for Epcot, yes. But not failing to be timeless.
Martin, is the new technology you mentioned that would be used for the attraction still part of the plan? It’s just a Space Mountain type system doesn’t feel like a new and innovative coaster systemNope.
It can still be “teen friendly”.Right - although I wouldn't blame someone for assuming an attraction based on PG-13 characters was going to be more teen friendly than family friendly.
Me too.So what I'm wondering is why two such similar attractions are opening at WDW at essentially the same time, when the world of possibilities in themed entertainment are now so boundless. And yet, WDW thinks that two show-scene free launch coasters is the right way to light $300 million on fire.
An indoor, non-inverted launch coaster with no real show scenes, just projections and lighting effects.
Me too.
But the cost for both is waaaay more.
How can a Shanghai exact clone and a scene-free indoor coaster cost more than $500 million???
Does any of that budget account for paying the actors for their on-screen presence?I cannot convey just how indignant I would be if I was running WDPR and WDI came to me with a $200 million+ indoor coaster with no scenes. For pete's sake, the queue building already exists!
It's incredible. It's been I don't know how long since this much money has been spent on WDW, and not a bit of it interests me in the slightest (I live down the street from DLR and have been to DLP/SDL so Star Wars, Rat, and TRON are not selling points for me).
The theme of the pavilion is energy, so for this ride to be "relevant," it must relate to energy. The fact that the GotG IP is incorporated into the attraction doesn't determine whether that goal will be met. In fact, given that we have very few details about the actual content of the ride, there is currently no way for us to fairly assess whether that goal will be met. The article by the site that shall not be named did predict, based off internal documents, that the first pre-show will center around Infinity Stones, which are apparently a source of energy (I'm not familiar with the GotG movie plots FWIW), so that's at least a minor indication that energy will be referenced, though, again, it's too early to draw conclusions.I'm still struggling with how a Guardians of the Galaxy roller coaster replacing Universe of Energy is "relevant" to Epcot. Maybe we just don't understand the modern Disney corporate-babble of Bob Chapek, kind of like the scene in "Goldmember" where Austin and Nigel Powers start speaking "English English".
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