The "Alice" ride at DL is great--about twice the length of a normal kiddie dark ride. It's always been one of my all-time faves. I've always been surprised that they never put it into another park. Likewise for "Roger Rabbit"--just very inventive and the cue area is themed out like the back alleys in the movie.
"Pinocchio" is a nice ride, but has been a walk-on attraction since it opened. Hence, it's probably never going into any other park.
I'm shocked that they never did more with "Little Mermaid." Talk about the flick that brought Disney animation back! I know that they have one in Tokyo Disney Sea, but why not elsewhere? In fact the old 20,000 Leagues/Sub areas in both DL and MK would make a perfect setting. They already have the ride staging area awaiting a new attraction. It would just be a matter of doing a proper rehab. In the case of DL, they'd just have to make the cue happen on the Fantasyland side of the lagoon, near the Matterhorn.
Also shocked that the best that they can come up with for Aladdin attractions is the flying carpets (albiet, it is kind of cool, just not very complex) and the Iago addition to Tiki Room. Peter Pan's Flight has always been one of the more popular kid rides because of the flying boats. So taking the same concept and going Aladdin with it on flying carpets would be pretty cool.
I immediately thought coaster when I saw the door scene in "Monsters Inc." I was also thinking new flume ride when I saw "Emperor's New Groove"--which is highly underrated and was strangely not very supported by Disney. I thought it was quite good, had me going from the beginning with the Tom Jones' tune.
As far as "Atlantis." I've attempted to see it twice. My kids dig it, but I always fall asleep halfway into it. Yep, there's a lot blatantly there to make a ride out of, but I don't think it deserves it. May as well make one from "Black Cauldron" if they decide to do an Atlantis one.
Then again, this is the company that makes a "Country Bears" movie and pulls the show from DL a year before the movie's release. It's also the company that does a "holiday" makeover to the HM with a movie it didn't support much, that not too many people even associate with Disney, that hasn't really been seen nor exploited in a good 7 to 8 years prior to the makeover.
So "Black Cauldron": the ride actually makes sense if you're a Disney executive.
Oh, God. Now I gave them an idea.