11/11/14 Disneyland Resort Report – Fantasmic FastPass & Dining Packages Coming, Frozen Shark Jump?, Walt’s Railroading at the Family Museum

 “All Aboard!”

None of Man’s mechanical inventions seem more alive than a train. Especially a steam train. They breathe.

It’s easy to see why a young Walt Disney became enamored with railroading. His hometown of Marceline, MO, was a division point for the the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway where  trains could take on fuel, water, and fresh crews. Among them was his uncle, engineer Mike Martin, a cherub of a man, whose stories of life on the rails thrilled the young man.  Walt later worked a summer job with the railroad, selling newspapers, popcorn, and sodas to travelers. He lost money, but it didn’t dim his fascination of the rails.

A train runs though many of the most treasured of Walt Disney’s creations, like they run right through the center of the American experience. After all, Mickey Mouse was “born” on a cross-country train trip.

Beginning later this week, The Walt Disney Family Museum will debut All Aboard: A Celebration of Walt’s Trains, running from November 13, 2014 through February 9, 2015. This comprehensive exhibition explores the influence that railroading had on Walt Disney’s life and work. It also tells the story of how his railroading legacy lives on to this day in Disney films and theme parks around the world. Including more than 200 artifacts, firsthand accounts, archival videos, images of Walt and his trains, and actual model trains running throughout the show.

Lilly Belle, as seen in the museum

Walt Disney’s backyard railroad the Carolwood Pacific on display at the Walt Disney Family Museum. Photo courtesy of The Walt Disney Family Museum.

 

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Walt in 1951 with the Carolwood Pacific. Intended as a hobby to help him relax, his railroading led to the development of Disneyland. Image: © Disney

Guest curator Michael Campbell, president of the Carolwood Pacific Historical Society, constructed the exhibition to reflect Walt’s railroad journey as told through multiple chapters: Lighting the Fire, Building Steam, Gaining Speed, Full Throttle, Switching Tracks, Branching Out, A Grand Circle Tour Around The World, and Coming Full Circle. The exhibition’s conclusion reminds us that, even over a century later, Walt’s railroading influence remains a vibrant and relevant force.

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American-Type trains are still a big part of off-shore Disney Parks that strive to recreate the American mythos. Image: © Disney

Frozen So Hot It Might Just Melt

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There is a Frozen unit in the “long in the tooth” Christmas Fantasy Parade. The early debut of Disneyland’s parade is primarily due to filming of the Christmas Day television special.

Back during my long nights at the City Desk, I worked a cold and lonely beat, covering the mean streets of the Disneyland Resort for a local bird-cage liner. But nothing like this has crossed our desk since the Big War. It’s like a hostage crisis. Day 351.

I know a lot of folks like their Frozenand I like it fine. A lot of that music does make the hair on the back of my neck stand up, but hey… Let it Go. My attitude was: I playfully punch the phenomenon in the arm. I kid because I love.

But the minute I let my guard down, Frozen slipped a right cross straight to the bridge of my nose, staggering me and caused the referee to call a standing eight-count.

I should have been ready. After all, ABC invented  “Jump The Shark” with a Happy Days episode ratings stunt where Fonzie… jumped a shark. On waterskis. From nearly that moment, the phrase “jumped the shark,” described a program that had abandoned any degree of integrity in a quest for ratings. Generally said right before, “I’m done with it.”

You be the judge, but think I smell some shark after discovering that the yearly Christmas Special has this year been titled: Disney Parks Frozen Christmas Celebration.

I guess getting ratings for what is essentially a 2-hour long commercial for Walt Disney World and Disneyland can be a challenge, if ratings are even the concern. Running under different names, since 1983, well before The Walt Disney Company bought the American Broadcasting Company, the mission of the show was essentially to showcase a highly edited, glossy impression of the Christmas Festivities in Florida, and sell trips to the resort. As the years went on, views and pitches for the Disneyland and other Disney resorts became more frequent. Everybody wanted on. It was like a yearbook for Disney. I’ve always thought that the show was probably hand delivered to ABC, by the Mouse, with “house” commercials sewed in, and some spaces left for the network and the local affiliates to drop in some ads. Make a little “walking around money.” But what do I know from television?

I do know that those unaffected by my cynical outlook, like the wearers of some 3 million Anna and Elsa dresses, will have plenty to celebrate this season. Like: Anna and Elsa’s daily appearance in “A Christmas Fantasy Parade” at Disneyland Park. Also, more songs from the hit soundtrack will be added to “World of Color: Winter Dreams” over at Disney California Adventure for those who are counting. It is also rumored that the ladies from the flick will take up residence in the Animation Building on Hollywood Boulevard. (They’re just gonna crash there for awhile. Is that cool?) Also Olaf’s Frozen Ice Rink, will return this year as part of the Downtown Disney Winter Village.

Be Sure To Wear Some Flowers In Your Hair

The last remnant of the Occupy Frontierland Movement will finally be dislodged from their long standing camp site, as Disneyland announces that Fantasmic viewing will soon transition exclusively to FastPass.

Hard to say what these Sooners are thinking when they get to a show that has been running 22 years, hours early, and throw blankets down on the ground in a busy theme park. Not to mention that once the first show is over, many scoot forward, like a canine in distress, and wait for the second show. And then, there are the lovely Guests who sell their blanketed spots. Stay classy!

This is Disneyland, not Woodstock. “Face painting?” “No, we’re all set.” Don’t take the brown acid!

So, beginning December 12, a “Fantasmic!” FastPass will be required to gain access to the show’s reserved viewing space. Beginning at Disneyland Park opening, “Fantasmic!” FastPass distribution will take place along Big Thunder Trail in Frontierland. They will be distributed on a first-come, first-served basis until one hour prior to show time or while supplies last, whichever comes first. Each “Fantasmic!” FastPass will indicate the assigned showtime, suggested return time and assigned viewing section. Also, a non-ticketed area will be available in the “Fantasmic!” viewing area each night for limited stand-by viewing on a first-come, first-served basis. In addition, there are several new dining packages in Disneyland Park that will allow you to obtain a FastPass for a special viewing area.  Your milage may vary.

This procedure has been found to be sound for World of Color at Disney California Adventure since its premiere. Why have the Park Overlords waited so long to introduce it for Fantasmic?

The blankets, quilts and tie-dyed banners are sure to become elaborate just before the troops move in on 12/12.

That will do it…

Cheers!

VIDEO: New “Into The Woods” Trailer Released

Walt Disney Studios Motions Pictures has released a new trailer along with character images for the upcoming film Into The Woods, which releases in theaters December 25, 2014.

You can see the trailer after the character posters below:

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Check out the trailer here:

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2Byk9Is3TjY]

WDWNT.com will have all Into The Woods news as it becomes available, keep checking back!

“Toy Story 4” To Be Released In 2017 And Directed By John Lasseter

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Walt Disney CEO, Bob Iger, announced today that “Toy Story 4” is in development and will be released in 2017. John Lasseter is to direct the 4th installment of the “Toy Story” franchise. Bob Iger made this announcement to Wall Street analysts while discussing Disney’s 4th quarter results. Very little is known other than that the movie will come out in 2017 and that John Lasseter will direct the movie. John Lasseter directed the very first “Toy Story”, which was also the very first Disney and Pixar co-production. Lassester later went on to direct “Cars” and “Cars 2” and is now the head of Pixar and Walt Disney Animation Studios. It should be very interesting to see John Lasseter go back to the franchise that started his career.

Source: Variety

Frozen Wish, Osborne Lights, & What’s Inside Club 33 and the Disneyland Dream Suite Tonight (11/06/14) on WDWNT: The Radio Show

radio_show_post_logoTonight, on WDWNT: The Radio show, we preview the Christmas events at Walt Disney World including “A Frozen Holiday Wish” and the Osborne Family Spectacle of Dancing Lights. Also, Tom is back from Disneyland and he has an update on happenings on the West Coast, including a look inside Club 33 and the well-guardedDisneyland Dream Suite. As always, we will play some games for some great prizes from Theme Park Connection!

Hosted by radio veterans and life-long Disney fans Tom Corless and Nick LoCicero, the live radio talk show on AM 1520 WBZW in Orlando focuses on the latest news and current trending topics at the Walt Disney World Resort in Orlando, Florida. WDW News Today: The Radio Show can also be streamed live at www.1520wbzw.com. WDW News Today the Radio Show debuted in August of 2013 as a 1 hour broadcast on Saturday evenings and has grown into a 2-hour program by popular demand.

To interact with the hosts during the show, listeners can call in at (407) 774-8255, tweet @WDWNT using #WDWNTRadio, or use the new LIVE chat that will be available at Radio.WDWNT.com.

The show begins at 8PM EDT Thursday night, don’t miss it!

VIDEO: Osborne Family Spectacle of Dancing Lights Preview Including “The Nightmare Before Christmas” Song, New For 2014

Last night was the cast preview for the Osborne Family Spectacle of Dancing Lights at Disney’s Hollywood Studios and we were lucky enough to attend the event and share with you what’s new and exciting for tea annual offering in 2014.

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The Spectacle is brought to you by Siemens this year

One new song was added for the lights to dance to in 2014, and interestingly enough Walt Disney world is continuing on its “The Nightmare Before Christmas” kick rather than Frozen. The new sequence is beautifully choreographed to Jack Skellington singing “What’s This?” from the 1993 film:

The “Made with Magic” Minnie Mouse Bow was recently released, just in time to dance with this year’s spectacle:

Not much else is new for this year, but the impressive light canopy on San Francisco street seemed to be working much better than in years past. You can see the canopy in action in our highlights video:

Merry Christmas!

VIDEO: “A Frozen Holiday Wish” Debuts at The Magic Kingdom

“A Frozen Holiday Wish” debuted today at The Magic Kingdom and we’ve got it recorded and uploaded to share with you. The show features Elsa, Anna, Kristoff and Olaf as they light up Cinderella Castle in over 200,000 LED DreamLights. Unlike it’s predecessor, A Frozen Holiday Wish utilizes projection mapping (the same found in Celebrate the Magic) prior to the DreamLights turning on. Go ahead and enjoy the full show and leave your thoughts below in the comments.

PHOTOS & VIDEO: Lights-On Walk Through of the Graveyard in Haunted Mansion Holiday at Disneyland

As a Disney Parks guest, there’s nothing worse than running to an attraction only to find that it is closed ( or “went 101”) due to some malfunction. Certainly, if you follow WDWNT Now, you never do this anyway, but it can be pretty depressing. As a fan of the parks, there are a handful of attractions that you wish would come to a halt as you were riding them, and perhaps maybe the lights in the ride would turn on and allow you to see what is lurking in the dark depths. For me, Spaceship Earth is one that certainly comes to mind, but the holy grail for most fans would have to be the Haunted Mansion. The attraction is so rich in detail and is a marvel of what many would consider the golden age of Imagineering, it’s hard to not squeal with delight over the idea of walking through the attraction with the “work lights” on, being able to see what you weren’t meant to. Lucky for us, I had the opportunity to do so during a breakdown of the ride at Disneyland just last week…

Photo & Video Sharing by SmugMug

While we were on the Haunted Mansion Holiday attraction at Disneyland last week, the ride suddenly came to a halt as soon as we came down from the house and into the graveyard scene. Honestly, this isn’t a rare occurrence as if anyone using a wheelchair is loading or unloading from the ride, this will happen. However, after about 10 minutes it became clear that there was a serious issue with the ride. After a somewhat mumbled announcement over the speakers, the “work lights” came on in the ride and the attraction audio stopped completely. Even with the audio off, all of the moving figures and effects in the ride were still in motion, which made the experience a little more interesting as you could see how some of the 1969 effects worked. Not long after, one-by-one, each Doombuggy full of guests was opened and unloaded. Guests were then led by a cast member through the graveyard and out the exit of the ride.

My personal favorite observation from the experience was that the ground in the scene is actually covered with sawdust. With the lights off, the little of the ground you can see looks like it may be the texture of grass and dirt, so you would assume Imagineers lined the floor with some sort of “turf”, but it’s actually much simpler than that.

For your enjoyment, here are some photos we took of the Graveyard in Haunted Mansion Holiday with the lights-on:

We also have a full video of the experience where you can see many of the graveyard features in motion with the lights on:

“101 Dalmations” Being Released On HD Blu-ray Disc – February 10th, 2015

big__101-Dalmatiner-review-001Source: Blu-ray.com

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Walt Disney Home Entertainment has officially announced and detailed the Diamond Edition Blu-ray release of 101 Dalmatians (1961). Disney’s 17th animated feature arrives via a Blu-ray/DVD/Digital HD combo pack with an all-new, never-before-seen animated short on February 10, 2015.

Synopsis: Pongo (Rod Taylor), Perdita and their super-adorable puppies are in for thrills, hilarious spills and an epic action-packed adventure when they face off with Cruella De Vil (Betty Lou Gerson), Disney’s most fabulously outrageous villainess. When Cruella dognaps all of the Dalmatian puppies in London, brave animal heroes launch a daring plan to save all puppies from Cruella’s clutches.

The Diamond Edition Blu-ray release of 101 Dalmatians is presented in 1080p (at 1.33:1) with DTS-HD Master Audio 7.1 surround. Special features include:

  • All New Short: The Further Adventures of Thunderbolt
  • Walt Disney Presents “The Best Doggoned Dog in the World” (1961 Version)
  • Dalmatians 101: Hosted by Cameron Boyce (Disney Channel’s “The Descendants”)
  • Lucky Dogs
  • DisneyView
  • Plus a Selection of Classic Bonus Features

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xvhfNBDP41o]

Review: Disney’s “Big Hero 6” Delivers Super-Powered Laughs and Heart As Studio Continues New Renaissance

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Taking non-human characters and imbuing them with empathy has been one of the keys to the success of Walt Disney Animation since 1928, and Big Hero 6’s Baymax is another great example. The first official feature crossover collaboration between Marvel and Disney takes what the House of Mouse and the House of Ideas do best and combines them into a warm, funny, heartfelt, and riveting adventure film.

Hiro Hamada is your typical rebellious fourteen year-old, except he’s already graduated high school and is using his robotics genius to hustle the world of underground robot fights. His older brother, Tadashi, decides Hiro needs to focus his genius and introduces Hiro to his lab at the San Fransokyo Institute of Technology. Impressed by Tadashi’s classmates Wasabi, Gogo, and Honey Lemon and most of all Tadashi’s experiment, the medical robot Baymax. Hiro of course decides to join the school.

When an accident curtails Hiro’s attempts to join the school, he sets out on a mission to find the mysterious man in a kabuki mask who he thinks caused the accident, but before he can stop this new super-villain, his robot, and his new friends from the school need some upgrades to turn them into superheroes.  That, in a carbon fiber armor shell, is the simplest spoiler free synopsis I can give you.

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While the story is both fun and engaging, it is not the strength of the movie. In a way, it is your typical coming of age storyline akin to Spider-Man grasping “with great power,” but in other ways it’s so much more than that. We don’t just watch Hiro struggle as a teenager to define the man he wants to be, we see Baymax develop from a robotic nurse to a full sentient being and it is their relationship growth that drives their maturity and the story.

The movie is also visually stunning in its design. The Japanese-American crossover of San Fransokyo is simply a place I would love to visit. Modern skyscrapers dotted with traditional Japanese imagery and the Golden Gate Bridge topped with torii gates provide a unique and eye-catching background for the action. The armor of the eponymous team reflects a more manga style than Marvel’s traditional heroes wear. Oh, and being a Marvel movie, watch for the excellent Stan Lee cameo.

The biggest weakness of the film is in the development of the secondary characters. The team is rounded out by Gogo, Wasabi, & Honey Lemon, who have technological powers fueled by their own inventions, and Fred is the school’s mascot and science enthusiast. None of them really change at all, aside from the obligatory “we need to be a team” type moment these films inevitably have. I don’t even remember if we get the character’s real names, just the nicknames Fred has given them. However, this is really nit-picking the plot as they are all decent and likable characters from the start. The actors embody the characters enough to keep them realistic.

The comedy of the piece maybe what drives the heart. It ranges from slap stick, to fish-out-of-water, to just plain awkward and beyond. However, it’s not just played for laughs. The laughs fuel the relationship between Baymax and Hiro and allow them to grow together and individually. They work on levels for adults and kids, and in the typical Disney way without having to rely on double entendres .

Filled with exciting and moving set pieces, easy to empathize with characters, beautiful backdrops, and gut busting moments, Disney has another hit on its hands with Big Hero 6. It won’t outperform Frozen, but it’s likely nothing will for a long time. Wreck-It Ralph will be more of an apt comparison, with a similar feel and demographic target.

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I have been fortunate enough to see two preview screenings of Big Hero 6, including the first showing to anyone outside the studio at New York Comic Con. The writers directors and actors were in attendance, and it was a unique pleasure to watch the looks on their faces as they rose to a standing ovation from their first audience. I wish them all the success this film can muster, and I encourage all of you to see it in theaters.