Indiana Jones Land?

SpectreJordan

Well-Known Member
Whether people like the new Indy movie or not, DHS park goers would LOVE an engaging, beautifully designed Indy land with a few new attractions... That is the fact. Make some great merch and sell it in the gift shops there... A beautifully themed restaurant in the temple ruins... As long as it is beautiful and immersive, people will come, people will love it....regardless of if the movie tie in is a hit or not... as a matter of fact, the attraction could bolster the movie's popularity...
Splash Mountain's extreme popularity in the parks is because it is a great attraction...not because the film was relevant...
It's absolutely something people would love. But do the dumb execs see it that way? Probably not, sadly. If they did, we'd have gotten an Indy land like that at the same time as Galaxy's Edge.

Disney, in general, has been failing the Indiana Jones series. Indiana Jones 5 should've came out in 2016; a final Indy movie with Harrison Ford riding the success of the Force Awakens would've been a huge hit. I know they were trying to wait for Spielberg, but they ended up giving up on that anyway so they should've just gone ahead without him back then.

Then they could've been preparing to do a new series of Indy movies with a recasted actor during the 2020s. I love Ford & his performance as Indy, but if Bond/Batman/Spidey can be recast after their initial, beloved actors then so can Indy. Indy's my favorite movie character, so I'd like to see them atleast attempt to continue his stories; if it doesn't work out, then maybe only Ford can play him but let's atleast try first.
Like what exactly? Marvel is out for WDW, Star wars is being done to death, Toy Story Land has also been played out as far as theme park use at WDW...Jungle Cruise didn't hit their mark, Elemental came and went, Clearly Indy did not do as expected...So what is new and hip?...I mean, aside from Olivia Rodrigo...lol
Disney's in sort of a sad state rn. This is probably their lowest point since the end of the Eisner era in the early '00s...except they don't even have someone like Pixar working with them making all-time classics.

The only one doing decently right now is Marvel but even they're not doing as well as they were in the '10s.
 

DisneyCane

Well-Known Member
Like what exactly? Marvel is out for WDW, Star wars is being done to death, Toy Story Land has also been played out as far as theme park use at WDW...Jungle Cruise didn't hit their mark, Elemental came and went, Clearly Indy did not do as expected...So what is new and hip?...I mean, aside from Olivia Rodrigo...lol
They can form a partnership with Taylor Swift to make Swiftland. It will be hyper realistic if they make all of the attractions VQ and ILL only to immerse people in the experience of having trouble getting tickets.
 

Donald Razorduck

Well-Known Member
I'd be afraid they'd clone that horrific pinfari coast they used at DLP.

It could work at AK as well The dinoland area and a ride rebrand, stunt show relocation and another new attraction.
 

Bocabear

Well-Known Member
The idea for the DLP coaster is good, the actual ride is not great... I have been on it a few times... It is also incredibly short, and what everyone wants is an indoor coaster for Indy...through a temple but with cinematic effects...or the ore car coaster from Temple Of Doom... The Temple Du Peril coaster seems like a quick add-on when the park was built because they were light on attractions.
I love the idea of one massive show building containing multiple attractions... Like the original ideas for Indy in Disneyland or the never-built Thunder Mesa/Western River Expedition...A huge show building like that might also give DHS a bit of a skyline as well... but properly themed....
 

SpectreJordan

Well-Known Member
That won't happen anytime soon with how cheap they seem to be about AC. Half of the Remy line being outside when that entire area is brand new is ridiculous.
 

Eric M Blake

Active Member
That won't happen anytime soon with how cheap they seem to be about AC. Half of the Remy line being outside when that entire area is brand new is ridiculous.
I mean, to be fair the queue once you get indoors is long enough for that to be understandable.

What *I* find weird about the Remy line is how you enter the doors at the very beginning...and then immediately go outside again through other doors. You're outside for however long depending on the time or day...and then go back inside.😜
 

Communicora

Premium Member
The idea for the DLP coaster is good, the actual ride is not great... I have been on it a few times... It is also incredibly short, and what everyone wants is an indoor coaster for Indy...through a temple but with cinematic effects...or the ore car coaster from Temple Of Doom... The Temple Du Peril coaster seems like a quick add-on when the park was built because they were light on attractions.
I love the idea of one massive show building containing multiple attractions... Like the original ideas for Indy in Disneyland or the never-built Thunder Mesa/Western River Expedition...A huge show building like that might also give DHS a bit of a skyline as well... but properly themed....
Yeah. That coaster made me feel like someone boxed me in the ears. Disney could certainly do better than that.
 

DonniePeverley

Well-Known Member
The last thing Disney or UNiversal need is another blot of coasters.

Enough already. We know why management love them - as opposed to big major attraction they are relatively cheap. Pick any standard coaster of the shelf, paint it blue, attach the letter 'S' to the front, bit of themeing for the queue and call it 'Superman' etc

Enough of this nonsense now.
 

MagicHappens1971

Well-Known Member
The last thing Disney or UNiversal need is another blot of coasters.

Enough already. We know why management love them - as opposed to big major attraction they are relatively cheap. Pick any standard coaster of the shelf, paint it blue, attach the letter 'S' to the front, bit of themeing for the queue and call it 'Superman' etc

Enough of this nonsense now.
Disneys most recent coaster cost half a billion dollars.
 

DonniePeverley

Well-Known Member
The idea for the DLP coaster is good, the actual ride is not great... I have been on it a few times... It is also incredibly short, and what everyone wants is an indoor coaster for Indy...through a temple but with cinematic effects...or the ore car coaster from Temple Of Doom... The Temple Du Peril coaster seems like a quick add-on when the park was built because they were light on attractions.
I love the idea of one massive show building containing multiple attractions... Like the original ideas for Indy in Disneyland or the never-built Thunder Mesa/Western River Expedition...A huge show building like that might also give DHS a bit of a skyline as well... but properly themed....


The actual attraction is shameful.
 

Eric M Blake

Active Member
Thing is, a good coaster is a go-to safe bet to ensure visitors have a good time. I said before, Primeval Whirl was a key element of keeping Dinoland a well-attended part of AK--that coaster and Dinosaur (Countdown to Extinction) TOGETHER helped it be a worthwhile land in the park.

Now, with PW gone, Dinosaur is consistently the shortest wait in the whole park...and it's not even close. I somehow don't find that a coincidence.

On average, every "land" should have at least two go-to attractions, not including any "kiddie rides". (Epcot's an obvious exception, since the lands are all pretty much the size of one ride apiece.😂)
 

spacemt354

Chili's
Then it's a horrific waste in my opinion. But at least there were attempts to configure an actual attraction, themeing, some form of nonsensical storyline, etc. What i take great offense are you standard coasters.
I wouldn't categorize any Disney coaster in the last 20 years as being 'standard' - they may not be overly thrilling like a Cedar Fair coaster, but each has a unique story that makes it more memorable than a typical coaster.
 

Twirlnhurl

Well-Known Member
The last thing Disney or UNiversal need is another blot of coasters.
I agree that both Universal parks, Magic Kingdom, and Hollywood Studios don't need any more roller coasters. But Animal Kingdom and Epcot only have one each.

I wouldn't put a roller coaster at the top of my priority list for any park, but in the context of a new themed land with three or four rides, a roller coaster would be a good addition for a balanced attraction program.
 

WaltsTreasureChest

Well-Known Member
Whether people like the new Indy movie or not, DHS park goers would LOVE an engaging, beautifully designed Indy land with a few new attractions... That is the fact. Make some great merch and sell it in the gift shops there... A beautifully themed restaurant in the temple ruins... As long as it is beautiful and immersive, people will come, people will love it....regardless of if the movie tie in is a hit or not... as a matter of fact, the attraction could bolster the movie's popularity...
Splash Mountain's extreme popularity in the parks is because it is a great attraction...not because the film was relevant...
Right on with you. If you place the era in the 30s during Indys prime and go all out, it’d be great. But Disney doesn’t really care for Jones, and the fact that we got this movie was made is a miracle. Either way they’ll move on and obsess with Star Wars
 

celluloid

Well-Known Member
The issue is the quality of attraction modern Disney is willing to give. If we are just happy with more cloned rollercoasters in and out of buildings with an aesthetic and rethemes of already successful attractions than.... great.

There is a reason Avatar has Pandora, and Tron has what Shanghai has and Princess and The Frog needs good bones to work with.
 

WaltsTreasureChest

Well-Known Member

Not my work but a personal project of someone else’s rendition of what a great Indy water ride would be. I’d love to see something like this
 

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