BuzzedPotatoHead89
Well-Known Member
because of that., they are pushing their agendas home that she has to only wear pants, she has to succeed at everything alone, and can't have a man around her. Notice the barely existent naveen is back behind her in the finale and not out front or next to her? The whole thing reeks of agenda pushing.
Herein lies the problem.
As an early supporter of the concept, I still think replacing SoTS with a contemporary franchise like PaTF makes sense on the surface. However, grounded in reality, I must admit that taking known material and scrubbing it of all potentially problematic content (essentially checking boxes by committee) is not a successful formula for creating new, engaging attractions.
Under this "check box" model aimed at placating the most people, the Imagineers attempted to divorce a New Orleans macabre-based Princess and the Frog attraction from the core elements of its setting:
- Gone is Princess Tiana’s signature “princess” look from the film.
- Gone is Prince Naveen in any meaningful role.
- Gone is any element of suspense befitting a thrill ride.
- Gone is the highly popular Dr. Facilier, who despite dying in the film, could easily be conjured as a ghost.
- Gone (or significantly modified) is a significant portion of Randy Newman’s famous score.
But if the sum of all parts no longer feels like a representation of the film, franchise, or character itself, it's time to either: 1) start from scratch with original ideas (unlikely); 2) choose a different IP (possible); or 3) return to old-school Imagineering where creators take risks and develop attractions without layers of bureaucratic neutering and over-analysis by committee.
I’m generally a supporter of updating park attractions and don’t believe in “preserving the park as a museum”. However, I think I’ve finally seen enough after the WDW 50th anniversary disaster, EPCOT, recent DVC projects, and now this, arguably the best thing TWDC could do to preserve their brand and shareholder value is to right-size the company of these “oversight committees” that have stymied creativity while inflating costs, conserve resources in this high interest rate environment, and let competitors create new attractions until they figure out the right mix.