On my recent trip to the Disneyland Resort, you would think all I did was run from attraction to attraction. After all, I rode 26 of them in one long day- and 18 of them were "E Tickets". (How I did it is coming in a post in the next week or so- as well as the last of my trip reports from our recent Walt Disney World vacation.)
But as usual with every single Disney park visit, I stopped to take in all the incredible little details that make Walt's original kingdom as sweetly charming as it is.
Fantasy Faire is a relatively new piece of the park, an area next to the castle that was once the home of the Carnation Plaza Gardens. In spite of the objections of those two think Disneyland should never change, like the Disneyland Historical Preservation Society, Imagineering created a place that fits in wonderfully and creates a much needed space for another theater show and a princess meet and greet. Change is great as long as it is done well and retains the "spirit" of the park's origins.
But there's much more there than that. If you take time to look around, there's a wanted poster for Flynn Rider on the back wall. High above at rooftop level, there's more detail. Figaro the cat from Pinocchio playfully engages the bluebird in a cage. No, they're not static figures but simple Audio-Animatronics. It's touches like these that keep theme park geeks like me coming back for more. And there should be more details like this found in the park next door. Much more effective overall than hitting us over the head as with unneeded transitions like Pixar Pier.
(Photograph copyright Mark Taft.)
But as usual with every single Disney park visit, I stopped to take in all the incredible little details that make Walt's original kingdom as sweetly charming as it is.
The concept art is equally charming.
But there's much more there than that. If you take time to look around, there's a wanted poster for Flynn Rider on the back wall. High above at rooftop level, there's more detail. Figaro the cat from Pinocchio playfully engages the bluebird in a cage. No, they're not static figures but simple Audio-Animatronics. It's touches like these that keep theme park geeks like me coming back for more. And there should be more details like this found in the park next door. Much more effective overall than hitting us over the head as with unneeded transitions like Pixar Pier.
(Photograph copyright Mark Taft.)
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