I have long felt that the success of Disneyland as an experiment was that it is secretly theatre and not cinema. Part of the stumbling of the company today is that they misunderstand Disney Parks to be foundationally a cinematic experience - that the concept was the park being Walt Disney's walkable, liveable, in-person answer to Hollywood. In truth, I think the park was Walt Disney's walkable, liveable, in-person answer to Broadway, whether he knew it or not. That Music drives so much of the enterprise speaks to this - that the world seems to be bursting with song is much more a theatrical convention than a cinematic one. This too is part of why people get so fed up with "screenz" - because they are not Theatre, they are Cinema crammed in where it doesn't belong. It feels cheap on Broadway too when they replace scenic elements with scenic images on LED panels. You feel cheated of the tangible reality that is at the core of what you came to experience.So I find it to be a new inventive form of theater first, ride second. Granted, we aren't feeling the spinning and the tipping by watching the video. That would definitely influence a legitimate in-person review.
This is probably the best summation of what was great about the older rides. I think this is why I sometimes end up liking the queues of modern rides better than the rides themselves. There's a much more concerted effort in queues to not direct your attention to specific elements.Pirates of the Caribbean is practically a concept musical that paints in shades of piratical being and ephemera conspiring to no direct plot-based end, instead proposing merely "consider this; take it all in and be entertained".
They actually dispatch six vehicles with each one sitting 10 people. It really is a hybrid of a theater show and darkride and I find it interesting that the Japanese chose for this kind of darkride versus ROTR. Both very storytelling heavy attractions, but with a different cultural flavour.Seems like all the Japanese’ rave reviews of Pooh’s Hunny Hunt and the ‘dancing’ during Hephalumps scene had a big influence on this attraction.
But even Pooh dispatches you out and brings you in one pot at a time. RotR two at a time, and Mystic Manor / MMRR four at a time. Beast does four also, but the pacing... it’s not bad, but it’s not what we’re expecting.
“Beauty and the Beast, brought to you by Exxon!”
Probably the good-old Pepper's Ghost effect my guy.I need someone to explain the transformation effect. My mind can’t handle it. I’ve been rewatching it for hours.
In a way that it replaced the Speedway is knock against it for me. Not because the Speedway was lost but because part Tomorrowland was lost for more Fantasyland while even more Fantasyland is being glommed onto Tokyo DisneySEA.The biggest compliment you can give the ride is that it's vastly superior to the one it replaced, but the Speedway set the bar low.
Maybe we can get our Speedway replaced with a trackless Fantasyland Ride? I was thinking Alice maybe?The biggest compliment you can give the ride is that it's vastly superior to the one it replaced, but the Speedway set the bar low.
In a way that it replaced the Speedway is knock against it for me. Not because the Speedway was lost but because part Tomorrowland was lost for more Fantasyland while even more Fantasyland is being glommed onto Tokyo DisneySEA.
It's frustrating that non-Disney properties like Avatar, Marvel and Star Wars all get rides with original narratives in their worlds, but for in house content it's mostly book reports. As if an experiential ride through the Beast's castle would not be interesting enough (I disagree).
Contrast this with Magic Lamp Theater at DisneySea next door. That's a show that builds on the Aladdin movie instead of repeating it.
Register on WDWMAGIC. This sidebar will go away, and you'll see fewer ads.