Yes, I know you were clearly pointing to the show. I was clearly pointing to how Universal semi-regularly does temporary things to take advantage of what is currently popular or to temporarily promote something not meant to last.
Sorry if I lost you, there.
A show in a general use theater can be like that. The sets get made. The rigging gets set up. the show runs. The show closes. It gets replaced with another show in the very same theater - you know?
You're aware that's a thing, right?
Given the show in Japan only lasted a few years, seems like the right approach for a movie property that may come and go unless they're planning more film adaptions loosely based on the other books... which it sounds like, at least someone is considering.
I mean, maybe this will have Potter-style legs but Potter has Potter style legs thanks to
wildly popular books and eleven movies made by the same studio with a singular, cohesive look-and-feel, to date.
... Or I guess - I don't know - build a new theater somewhere in Epic (like that plot near the front) facing Celestial Park that's set up like Hyperion Theater that they can drop the next Live show they want to do into it when the time comes.
But building a new theater from the ground up is going to cost more money and take more time and with the second movie coming out this year, the clock is ticking to hit the apex of popularity with the general public* unless they're turning it into a franchise in which case, sure why not a whole land, I guess?
Or since this is all just speculation, maybe they do nothing at all.
Personally, I'd rather this than an Epic portal devoted to F&TF.
Because they couldn't just put a
different show in the theater appropriate for the land being redeveloped next to it when that time comes, right?
That'd just be madness.
*I know all the theater kidos think the Broadway show is this big part of mainstream pop culture but the first movie was likely seen by more people in the first month than the Broadway and touring show combined have in their entire runs - that's just the magic of cheaper ticket prices and being able to run it in thousands of different places a half dozen times a day with no dark days. If a single movie or two was all it took to sustain popularity of something, there'd be more opening day attractions still open at USF.