VIDEO: First Look Inside Morimoto Asia at Disney Springs

 

Chef Masaharu Morimoto is teaming up with Patina Restaurant Group to open Morimoto Asia as Walt Disney World Resort brings to life Disney Springs, an entertainment-dining-retail district re-imagined from Downtown Disney. Studio V’s design for Morimoto Asia features a new two-story glass entrance, Asian calligraphy facades, and outdoor dining areas with views overlooking Disney Springs. To open in summer 2015 at The Landing, in the heart of Disney Springs, Morimoto Asia is the Japanese master chef’s first pan-Asian dining experience. (Concept renderings courtesy of Studio V.)

Morimoto Asia will open to guests tomorrow at Disney Springs, but today, Disney is sharing a behind-the-scenes look at Walt Disney World’s newest sit-down restaurant:

[sc name=”YouTube Embed 800w” id=”Zqz4mjxNOrc” ]

Dates Announced for “Star Wars – Seasons of the Force” Event at Walt Disney World

Disney has confirmed that Star Wars: Season of the Force will arrive at Disney’s Hollywood Studios on January 8th, 2016, running until March 20th, 2016. The event will include special food, drink, and merchandise offerings, as well as a special fireworks show on Fridays, Saturdays, and Sundays. All of the other offerings for the event will have already debuted by December 2015, including a new scene on Star Tours and the Star Wars Launch Bay attraction.

 

The event will replace Star Wars Weekends in 2016. There is still no word if Star Wars Weekends will ever return.

Pecos Bill’s at the Magic Kingdom Introducing Completely Revamped Mexican Style Menu in October np

Pecos Bill’s Tall Tale Inn & Cafe at the Magic Kingdom is about to undergo a radical menu overhaul.

pecos-bill-tall-tale-inn-and-cafe-00

Beginning October 1st, 2015, the new menu will feature fajitas, burritos, and rice bowls. The changes will come after a 3 day closure of the restaurant September 28th through the 30th.

The current menu features items like burgers, sandwiches and fries for the most part.

 

Jedi Training Academy at Hollywood Studios Ends October 4th, New Star Wars Show On The Way np

The long-running version of Jedi Training Academy that you know and love will have its final performances on October 4th, 2015 at Disney’s Hollywood Studios.

jedi training

To coincide with the upcoming release of The Force Awakens and Season of the Force, a new version of the show will debut later this year. The new show was already formally announced for Disneyland Park:

Jedi Training: Trials of the Temple

Coming in December, experience a twist on the Jedi Training experience when you will encounter new characters and a new villain from the popular Disney XD series, Star Wars Rebels.

The new villain is expected to be the Inquisitor. The new show should debut at Hollywood Studios by Thanksgiving.

Season Of The Force Begins at Disneyland November 16th, 2015 np

The Disney Parks Blog has just provided us with an update of new and exciting information regarding Seasons Of The Force, which is the upcoming Star Wars event that will be celebrated at the Disney parks.

From Disney Parks Blog:

At Disney Parks, we’re preparing to celebrate the excitement around all things Star Wars with brand-new themed experiences. Guests in Tomorrowland at Disneyland park in Southern California will soon be able to experience their favorite Star Wars stories when Season of the Force begins November 16. We’ll have opening dates to share for these new Star Wars experiences at Disney’s Hollywood Studios in Florida soon.

Season of the Force at Disneyland park will take guests to a galaxy far, far away with these special experiences:

SLB181501ccx

Star Wars Launch Bay

This new area will offer opportunities to visit with favorite Star Wars characters, special exhibits, peeks at the upcoming Star Wars: The Force Awakens and much more. Here’s a look inside!

SLB915900-615

  • Choose Your Destiny with Special Character Experiences
    • Dark Side – Encounter one of the most iconic villains from Star Wars, Darth Vader.
    • Light Side – Fly casual at this makeshift Rebel base, and meet the most famous co-pilot in the galaxy, Chewbacca.
  • Explore the Dark and the Light in Themed Galleries
    • Dark Side Gallery – Get a look at authentic pieces of stormtrooper armor as well as famous Sith lightsabers once wielded by masters of the dark side.
    • Light Side Gallery – Explore a gallery filled with Rebel flight helmets and lightsabers once wielded by Jedi Knights.
    • Preview Gallery – See props from the upcoming film, Star Wars: The Force Awakens.
    • Starship Gallery – Discover models of famous starships and their pilots from throughout the Star Wars saga.
  • Join the Battle in the Star Wars Game Center – Play the latest games from the Star Wars galaxy, including Disney Infinity 3.0 – featuring park-exclusive Toy Box levels.

Jedi Training: Trials of the Temple

Coming in December, experience a twist on the Jedi Training experience when you will encounter new characters and a new villain from the popular Disney XD series, Star Wars Rebels.

Star Tours – The Adventures Continue

This popular attraction will feature a new scene inspired by the upcoming film, Star Wars: The Force Awakens

SOF181500

Limited-Time Experiences

  • Hyperspace Mountain – Climb aboard a reimagined Space Mountain attraction, in which guests will join an X-wing starfighter battle.
  • Revisit favorite scenes from classic Star Wars films at Tomorrowland Theater.
  • Try new themed food.

Choose your side during Season of the Force, beginning November 16 at Disneyland park in California. And keep an eye on the Disney Parks Blog for dates and details on these new Star Wars experiences coming to Disney’s Hollywood Studios in Florida.

Source: Disney Parks Blog

FIRST LOOK: Mickey and Figment Celebrate 20 Years of the Food & Wine Festival at Epcot with New Merchandise for 2015

::__IHACKLOG_REMOTE_IMAGE_AUTODOWN_BLOCK__::0

Even though the Festival doesn’t actually start until tomorrow, merchandise was out in MouseGear today

Shotglass… I mean toothpick holder

Magnet

::__IHACKLOG_REMOTE_IMAGE_AUTODOWN_BLOCK__::13

They even have a new garbage can salt and pepper shaker for the Festival

We have plenty more photos and coverage from the Epcot International Food & Wine Festival coming over the weekend, so stay tuned!

PHOTOS BY DIRK WALLEN

Walt Disney World Pulls The Plug on Duffy the Disney Bear np

After over 5 years, Disney seems to be giving up on making Duffy the Disney Bear the must-have souvenir at Disney Parks.

Duffys Easter Fair at Tokyo DisneySea

The Duffy the Disney Bear walk-around character will greet guests in World Showcase at Epcot for the last time on October 3rd, 2015. A Daisy Duck meet and greet will replace the current Duffy location.

The nearby Duffy store at Epcot was stripped of the bear a while back and is now a shop that sells Star Wars and Marvel franchise items.

The Disney Bear was reintroduced on both coasts in 2010 as Duffy after years of unbridled success at the Tokyo Disney Resort. Other than the Epcot meet and greet experience, other theme park experiences with Duffy were planned, but never came to fruition. Supposedly, sales of the plush were never quite what Disney expected and those cast members who launched the project were promoted within the company, leaving Duffy in the hands of those who never envisioned leading the charge for the plush bear.

There was even a media event celebrating Duffy’s arrival at the park back in 2010:

[sc name=”Youtube Embed 600×360″ id=”yCY8hprk7KA” ]

 

Disney also shuttered the Duffy meet and greet at California Adventure a few months back.

Despite all of these changes, Duffy will still be sold at the parks and there are no plans to retire the nightly bedtime story on Walt Disney World Resort TV as of right now.

Happy 35th Birthday Big Thunder Mountain: Looking Back to the Origins of a Disney Original np

Because Big Thunder Mountain Railroad has become such a staple attraction in Magic Kingdom’s Frontierland, it’s often forgotten that along with Space Mountain and Splash Mountain, Big Thunder was not an original Magic Kingdom attraction when the park opened in 1971. And because Disney imagineers believed that Floridians wouldn’t be interested in a pirate story, Pirates of the Caribbean wasn’t originally planned for Phase I of Walt Disney World’s Magic Kingdom, either. It wouldn’t be until September, 23, 1980, that Big Thunder would finally roll into the old mining town station, but not until after it created its own unique backstory.

Big Thunder Mountain

Much like the Haunted Mansion, Big Thunder Mountain’s concept and genesis emerged from multiple iterations, planning stages, and story lines beginning with an attraction called Big Thunder Mesa. Although not the first phase of WDW, traces of the attraction made for a very significant component of the earliest Frontierland and Magic Kingdom concept. Imagineer Marc Davis was asked by Roy Disney to create something that exceeded anything WDI had developed at that point in its history. Additionally, Davis was instructed to create something “like” Pirates of the Caribbean, yet completely different. It was to be designed as a boat ride, make greater use of audio-animatronics, but with a different story. Basically, Marc Davis’ challenge was to culminate everything imagineering had learned and roll it into what became known as Big Thunder Mesa. That is, he was to take the load capacity and attraction philosophy from Pirates, audio-animatronics technology from Great Moments with Mr. Lincoln, environmental lessons from The Enchanted Tiki Room, and effects from The Haunted Mansion. In terms of scope and sequence, this project promised to be a massive undertaking.

And Big Thunder Mesa was just that. Originally this concrete mesa would stretch from the present-day Briar Patch shop through the current Big Thunder attraction and along the Rivers of America. When art director Dick Irvine and Roy expressed their concerns about how this concrete monolith would dominate the western side of the Kingdom, Davis countered by turning the objection into a positive. Davis proposed that it be accessed by the public — people even outside the park — just wanting to get a view of the Magic Kingdom. But, Davis added, the accessible mesa “summit” will also include attractions in its own right. Because of this, hiking trails and even a native American village of some kind became a part of the concept. Even though Roy Disney was sold on the idea, there were still a couple of challenges.

First, to build such an ambitious attraction would require money that had been allocated for another ambitious project — Space Mountain. Magic Kingdom needed a thrill ride along the lines of Disneyland’s The Matterhorn and Space Mountain was the answer. Because of the Magic Kingdom’s need for a ride of this kind, the solution seemed apparent —construction of Space Mountain must move forward. But Marc Davis had an alternative. He suggested they build a thrill ride inside Big Thunder Mesa and this would be a runaway mine train ride.

By all accounts, Davis’ vision for Big Thunder Mesa went beyond anything we had seen from imagineering at that point in time. In addition to the runaway mine train, Big Thunder Mesa would also include the Western River Expedition: a western river boat ride through the great American West. Boasting a sky always at dusk with lighting reminiscent of the Blue Bayou in Disneyland, the WRE story included a stagecoach robbery, a western town called Dry Gulch, dance hall girls, a painted desert, and even a forest fire sparked by lightning. According to one source, the bandits from the stagecoach robbery scene actually intercept the passenger boat later in the ride to demand valuables from its passengers! A final waterfall and plunge punctuated the experience of this amazing attraction, at least in concept. Guests exiting the Western River Expedition could find their way to the Big Thunder Mesa silver mine.

The Big Thunder Mesa silver mine was planned to take up a fairly significant portion of the Big Thunder Mesa real estate. Of course, the most intriguing component of the silver mine was a tour. Guests loading the mine cars were led to believe they were embarking on an innocent tour of the famous Big Thunder Mesa mine. The tour, however, would take a turn when the cars accidentally became unhitched from the engine and began rolling backwards — yes, like Expedition Everest — toward a bottomless pit they had been warned about at the beginning of the ride. Of course, the engine driver would get the cars reattached just in time to save the day.

If the Big Thunder Mesa experience sounds ambitious, it is because it absolutely was. The costs alone was a deterrent, but so was the time to complete such an ambitious project in the face of a fast-approaching opening day deadline. Also working against the Big Thunder Mesa project were the repeated calls for a pirates ride “like the one in California”. The Disney imagineers were wrong in assuming Floridians wouldn’t be interested in a pirates attraction. All of these factors contributed to the decision to push Big Thunder Mesa and the Western River Expedition to the imagineering on-deck circle. But there was another monumental event that contributed to the decision to table this concept as well: Roy Disney’s death in December, 1971. Roy had been one of Big Thunder Mesa’s most enthusiastic supporters. Card Walker made the call. Phase 1 of the Magic Kingdom would include the safer plays of Pirates of the Caribbean and Space Mountain. It would not include the Big Thunder Mesa project. This direction was more economical while appeasing guests at the same time.

Clearly the Big Thunder concept didn’t die. Due to the concept’s obvious merit, Imagineer Tony Baxter had adapted Thunder Mesa’s mine train as a stand-alone attraction as early as 1973. The  scaled model Baxter created was very close to the ride that opened as Big Thunder Mountain Railroad in September 1980. The original Big Thunder Mountain backstory was based on the experience of Sam, the last of the Big Thunder miners. Apparently things had gotten bad once the Big Thunder mine was abandoned. The machinery, ore cars, and other remnants of the once-productive mine had fallen into terrible disrepair. After sluggin’ from a bottle of Old Imagineer, poor old Sam fell into an ore car that took off down into the Big Thunder abyss through bats, rainbow water and waterfalls, and many stalactites and stalagmites. The ore car sped past Spiral Butte and over Bear River Trestle Bridge before stopping in Big Thunder Town. Old Sam’s story was told and retold across the generations for years before a young Imagineer heard it and decided to check it out for himself. When he did, he thought it a splendid idea to re-open the mine and its famous runaway train to the public. He did and in doing so salvaged a thread of the original story of the Big Thunder Mesa.

Dreams of the Western River Expedition and Big Thunder Mesa were kept alive until Walker officially declared Phase 1 of Magic Kingdom complete. With this announcement most hope for getting this monumental attraction into production ended. The cost was certainly a factor, but so were the company’s plans to begin the EPCOT project that would require such significant resources. But what we got is a piece of Davis’ grand vision and a legacy from one of Disney’s most recognized imagineers, Tony Baxter, in addition to yet another great chapter in the Walt Disney World story. So Happy Birthday, BTM!