Lucky
Well-Known Member
She knows how it's spelled because she lives in Rohde Island.I don't take spelling advice from tanned blondettes.
She knows how it's spelled because she lives in Rohde Island.I don't take spelling advice from tanned blondettes.
This would depend entirely on whether or not Disney has learned that content, not brand, is the true king.
Firstly, it spelled Joe Rodeh.
Secondly: Dinoland USA. Kali River Rubbish.
Thirdly: Rodhe took Indy, an awesome IP, with an awesome Ride, already tried and testes, and managed to turn gold into dust by turning Indy into Dinosaur. No, Roehd, 'large animatronics lunging at you in the dark' does not for great rides make. Not even if you try it twice- in the same park.
I believe that's Road Iland.She knows how it's spelled because she lives in Rohde Island.
Good for you. That doesn't mean content in one medium guarantees content in another.LOL. Middle-Earth is practically DRIPPING with content!
Went and saw Desolation of Smaug the other day....the entire movie had me daydreaming about theme park lands.
The barrel escape from Mirkwood? RIVER RAFT RIDE! The queue could wind through the Wood-elves' fortress, where the guests would be loaded into rafts designed to look like giant wine barrels!
Legolas, Tauriel, and Thranduil would be available for meet and greets.
Erebor? MINE TRAIN ROLLER COASTER FEATURING A 50-FOOT TALL FIRE BREATHING ANIMATRONIC SMAUG!
Hobbiton? Kid-friendly area with Hobbit meet-and-greets, quick service restaurants (with elevenses!), flower gardens and hedge-mazes!
Then there's the Gollum/Misty Mountains themed log flume (with fish rawww and wrigglin', precious!), the Minas Tirith tour/dark ride, the Riders of Rohan Carousel, Radagast's Rabbit-Racers ("Tomorrowland Indy Speedway" but with less gasoline and more focus on green energy), and the Mount Doom Drop ("Tower of Terror").
Disney, left to be Disney, with the imagineers hard at work, could've been a huge success. They do what they do (or did) very well.
I am glad for Potter, because it did give IoA (and Spidey) the attention and attendance that it deserved. But Universal's marketing techniques in the early days of IoA were... Poor.To harken back to your first post about their not even being a Spidey-swatter yet: Disney hasn't learned the lesson that content, not brand, is the true king. On the contrary.
Spidey was the most amazing ride on the planet. Nobody visited.
Potter was the next most amazing ride. IoA exploded.
Cartoon comic book Spiderman, before the Marvel movie mania didn't do anything for attendance. Potter, supported by books and movies and merchandise, drove attendance through the roof. Disney, as well as UNI, learns that IP, not content, is decisive.
Nothing about the movie was particularly memorable or made an impact on pop culture.
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