Heppenheimer
Well-Known Member
This is why World's Fairs were not permanent exhibitions. They caught the spirit of a brief moment in time, then closed before they dated themselves. What was a fascinating item at one World's Fair could easily enter a history museum a decade later (Rubik's cube, anyone?). Therein lies the central paradox of Epcot. It brilliantly displayed the Futurism of a distinct period, and has struggled (and mostly failed) to adequately update itself as the actual future has diverged from the visions of the late 1970s-early 1980s.Future World has the same problem as Tomorrowland. As soon as you approve an "update" for something and then actually build it, it's obsolete before a guest ever sets foot in the attraction. That's why I actually like the addition of Guardians of the Galaxy... 80s kitsch executed with modern technology can be a lot of fun.