Disney Announces New Annual Pass

03/10/2010 – Anaheim, Ca – Today The Walt Disney Company announced a new annual pass aimed at the most intense (and wealthy) Disney fans: an all-inclusive nationwide unlimited annual passport. Selling for $700/per person/per year (for both children and adults), the pass includes unlimited admission (no black-out dates) to every American Disney theme park: Disneyland [...]

More Details on Universal’s King Kong

03/09/2010 – Universal City, Ca. – Today Universal Studios Hollywood’s press office released further details on the new King Kong 3-D 360 attraction set to open this summer along the Studio Tram Tour. This giant new experience, based off Peter Jackson’s interpretation of the famous story, replaces the 1980’s King Kong Audio-Animatronic, which was lost [...]

World of Color Video Released: WDI & Pixar

03/08/2010 – Anaheim, Ca. – The fine folks over at the official Disney Parks Blog released a behind-the-scenes video showing the growing partnership of Walt Disney Imagineering and Disney-Pixar in preparation for Disney’s World of Color. The new nighttime spectacular explores human emotions against a backdrop of water, color, music and animation. This video in [...]

Disneyland Guide Spotlight: Big Thunder Mountain

Each week we’ll spotlight a popular attraction from our extensive Theme Park Guides. Every attraction in every Southern California theme park is reviewed in-depth, complete with Attraction Type, General Description, Will’s Review, Touring Tips and Family Info. This week we’re dipping into our Disneyland Guide (the most comprehensive Disneyland Guide on the web or in [...]

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Disneyland Guide Spotlight: Big Thunder Mountain

March 8, 2010 News Updates No Comments
Disneyland Guide Spotlight: Big Thunder Mountain

Each week we’ll spotlight a popular attraction from our extensive Theme Park Guides. Every attraction in every Southern California theme park is reviewed in-depth, complete with Attraction Type, General Description, Will’s Review, Touring Tips and Family Info. This week we’re dipping into our Disneyland Guide (the most comprehensive Disneyland Guide on the web or in print), and spotlighting Frontierland’s signature mine-train adventure, Big Thunder Mountain Railroad!

Disneyland Guide Spotlight: Big Thunder Mountain Railroad

Attraction Type: Mining car-themed steel roller coaster.

Location: Can’t miss this attraction – the queue begins on the northern side of the Frontierland Plaza.

General Description: Hop aboard Big Thunder Mountain Railroad for an exciting ride on a runaway mine train through and around Big Thunder Mountain.

Will’s Review: A western mine-train ride has been a part of Disneyland since 1956. Originally developed as the Rainbow Caverns Mine Train, the slow-moving scenic mine train attraction rolled through the Living Desert, a large plot of land bordering the Rivers of America and the western side of Fantasyland’s Sleeping Beauty Castle. The Living Desert was also home to the Rainbow Mountain Stagecoach (1955-1960), Conestoga Wagons (1955-1960) and the Rainbow Ridge Pack Mules (1955-1973). A large feature of the Rainbow Caverns Mine Train was a ride through Rainbow Caverns – a colorful, stalagmite-filled cavern.

In 1960, additions were made to the Living Desert to transform a large section of it into a lush, lake-filled forest, and the whole area was renamed Nature’s Wonderland. Two major additions were Cascade Peak (a towering waterfall-inducing mountain that remained until 1998 along the Rivers of America) and Rainbow Ridge Mining Town, where the trains loaded at. The year of 1979 witnessed a major change to Frontierland, however, and Nature’s Wonderland was to be no more. A large new pathway was cut through the heart of the area, providing a direct link between the Frontierland and Fantasyland Plazas. The area just north of this walkway was converted to Big Thunder Ranch (the Window Rock replica featured since 1956 can still be seen at the Ranch), while the area to the west of the walkway was largely untouched, leaving various thematic elements in place along the river banks. This included Cascade Peak, a pond, and an abandoned mining tunnel which can easily be seen from the walkway even today. In addition, guests aboard any of the Rivers of America attractions can easily spot an old abandoned mine train that was “wrecked” sitting alongside some torn-up tracks; these tracks and train vehicle are left over from the old attraction. The centerpiece of this new development, however, were the towering peaks of Big Thunder Mountain. Designed after Utah’s Monument Valley, the brown rock towers immediately evoke the American Southwest.

A train pulling into Rainbow Ridge

A train pulling into Rainbow Ridge

The new theme departed from the Living Desert/Nature’s Wonderland theme, and the official back story of the attraction is one of those storylines that doesn’t translate too well to the average guest experiencing the attraction with no knowledge of its history. According to Disney legend, the old mining town of Rainbow Ridge was founded at the base of the ore-rich Big Thunder Mountain. The volume of valuable ore inside was so much that a special mining train was set up to easily haul the gold from deep inside the mountain. Unknown to the miners, however, Big Thunder was a sacred Native American site; the continual mining angered the Native American spirits to the point that they caused a large earthquake to strike the mining camp of Rainbow Ridge. Initially, the miners fled in terror. When they returned to gather their belongings they discovered that the spirits had possessed the trains and were running them wildly at high paces throughout the mountain. In an entrepreneurial effort to do something at Big Thunder under the mine, they decided to invite tourists (you) to ride on the runaway mining cars.

Guests board one of four runaway mine trains, and then make their way past the old mining town of Rainbow Ridge (the same mining buildings from the previous attraction) and then into a breezy bat cave that leads to an indoor cavern full of colorful boiling pools of water (the old Devil’s Pots from the previous attraction). Up past the main lift and under a waterfall, the adventure begins as the mine trains wildly race through, in, and around Big Thunder Mountain. Three different lift hills power this attraction; the last one features an earthquake effect as boulders begin to tumble down and the walls shake. Just as one of the main boulders give way, the train drops through a break in the mountain and then around the final pond and through a partially-exposed excavation site before pulling back in to Rainbow Ridge.

As a point of trivia, the Big Thunder Mountain runaway mine train concept was originally developed by famed Imagineer Marc Davis as one part of a massive multi-attraction complex intended for Walt Disney World’s Frontierland. For a complete description of this story, including the involvement of then-up-and-coming Imagineer Tony Baxter, read the Splash Mountain review in the Critter Country section of this guide (the connection between this attraction and Splash Mountain is examined in full there).

Touring Tips: This is one of the park’s most popular attractions, and while long lines can easily build, they move fairly quickly thanks to large capacity trains and relatively rapid arrivals at the station. Try to visit before 10am or later in the evening.

Warning: Guests with heart, back, or neck problems are urged not to ride; as are expectant mothers and other guests with conditions which could be aggravated by this adventure.

Family Info: Guests of all ages love this fun-filled attraction, although small children may be frightened. By theme park standards, it is a relatively mild coaster, but like Space Mountain it incorporates several thematic elements which make it seem much more intense than it actually is. Guests must be at least 40” tall in order to ride.

Variations: With minor thematic variances, Big Thunder Mountain Railroad can be found at every Disneyland-style park except Hong Kong Disneyland.

Explore Our Disneyland Guide!

Visit other exciting Frontierland attractions, or visit these other popular Disneyland mountains: Splash Mountain, Matterhorn Bobsleds, and Space Mountain.

King Kong 360 3-D Trailer Released

March 5, 2010 News Updates 1 Comment
King Kong 360 3-D Trailer Released

3/5/2010 – Universal City, California – Universal Studios Hollywood has released a teaser trailer for the big summer blockbuster attraction, Peter Jackson’s King Kong 360 3-D. This dynamic experience, opening in Summer 2010, will be found along the tram route and is a replacement for the former King Kong Experience, which burned to the ground in a June 2008 back lot fire. The experience will place guests in the center of a multi-story, 3-D, completely surrounding experience as King Kong battles a T-Rex. While the trailer doesn’t reveal much about the attraction itself, it definitely sets the tone for what is to come. More details to follow.

HT: Crave

Headliner image Copyright 2010 Universal Studios.

OsCene2010 Exposes the Soul of O.C.

March 3, 2010 News Updates No Comments
OsCene2010 Exposes the Soul of O.C.

3/3/2010 Laguna Beach, California – The picturesque artists’ hideaway of Laguna Beach comes alive again with a brand new exhibit at the seaside town’s Laguna Art Museum. One of the most anticipated Southern California exhibits of the year, OsCene2010: Contemporary Art and Culture in OC, celebrates the diversity of resident artists as they continue to redefine and rework what post-modern culture means in a region where business, entertainment and the beach lifestyle triangulate in an increasingly public-aware fashion. Emphasis is placed on the laid-back surf culture of the more low-key coastal cities of Laguna, San Juan Capistrano and parts of Irvine, with intermixed nods to Santa Ana’s deep-rooted Spanish American history. Art must imitate life, and no one is ever restricted to a single city, with the lines of what defines us often blurred more than defined. To that end, this year’s collection will include culture and lifestyle issues also central to San Pedro and Long Beach, a section of Los Angeles County that became identified more solidly with Orange County, largely thanks to the Beach Punk scene anthems of Sublime.

The exhibit, as a collective whole, presents a level of suburban conformity at first glance, but with a spirit that breaks away from the O.C.’s conservative, wealthy, reality-tv-hyped image and digs into the roots of immigration, drugs, punk rock, and personal idealism far too oft drowned out in well-crafted isolationism that have made life in Orange County develop the true soul that constantly fights with the dichotomy of its television-ready, white-washed face.

Perhaps, after this exhibit, you’ll be more apt to recognize the O.C. while driving along PCH blasting Social Distortion and Suicidal Tendencies, or sitting alone in your Fullerton apartment watching “A Scanner Darkly”, then when you tune in to the self-imposed drama of the “Real Housewives” or eavesdrop on the well-written witty banter of Ryan and Seth on a moon-lit wooden pier off Balboa.

Regardless of your take on the county that has, until the last decade, lived in the shadow of Disneyland and Los Angeles, you’re sure to walk away with an awakened perspective on the people who make the O.C. breathe, even if they’re a world away. OsCene2010: Contemporary Art and Culture in OC, runs through May 21st. Visit lagunaartmuseum.org for more details.

-Review by William J. Nash-McAdam

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