Have a nice trip. See you next fall.
Posted: Thu Apr 22, 2004 12:32 am
(WARNING: SPOILERS AHEAD!!!) During the recent Cast Previews, Polar and I had the chance to ride the new Twilight Zone: Tower of Terror at Disney's California Adventure. This was my first trip on this ride either here or Florida but I had some idea of what I was getting into after reading about Florida's version and what one of the testers had to say about the Anahiem version.
Walking down Hollywood Blvd and turing left I finally saw the finished version of what I watched being built everyday for three years and I was awe struck. The sheer size of the building and seeing how high you go when the elevator doors open up at the top was amazing. The building is finely detailed including a broken fountain with light fixtures at the bottom to indicate it was a once working fountain. As you walk inside there are plenty of things to really make you feel like this is an old abandoned hotel (ignoring the all the people around you). Right as you walk in on your left there is a small table that was being used to play a game of poker (the pair of tens is winning). There is also a set of keys on the table one of many that can be found around the hotel. Next you enter the library/pre-show also very detailed. The lights go out and this is where I have my first problems.
With only a few major changes DCA's version is nearly a direct lift from Florida, that in mind let's get back to the pre-show. The pre-show direct copy and it shows. One issue is that the movie starts with the original opening the the TV show film grain and cool optical effects included, the next scene of people walking through the hotel and getting into the elevator was obliously shot on video and de-colorized. No film scratches and no age to it at all. My second compalint has to do with the special effects, specifically the electricity spreading across the guests in the preshow. Again a direct lift from a ten year old ride. Great effects back then but today's standards are a little higher. It looks cheesy. Mix that with the video look of the video, it brought me out of the world that the lobby had worked so hard to bring me into. On to the Boiler room.
I must be in the Twilight Zone, we went from the first floor to the basement (a very large basement I might add,) without going down any stairs! Eh, trivial. as soon as you walk down a short hallway the room opens up to very detailed basement with leaky pipes, bad lighting and a large boiler with what looks like a face. Very creepy. Here is where you are grouped and positioned to enter the service elevator. When the doors open the Hotel Bellman is standing there waiting to greet you suprisingly and you are ushered past hallway to enter the elevator. Wait... we go through elevator doors to enter a hallway to go through a second set of elevator doors? I don't get it. WHY!? So sit down, belt up, and hold on it's time to enter the Twilight Zone.
So now were at the meat of the ride. This is what you came for so here goes. This is where the major changes are evident.
"You are the passengers on a most uncommon elevator about to take the strangest journey of your lives."
The elevator slides back into position in the ride shaft and up you go.
"Your destination unknown, but this much is clear, a reservation has been made in your name for an extended stay."
"Wave goodbye to the real world."
Since the deletion of the "5th Dimension" scene a new scene is here. The doors open and you see your whole car for a few seconds in a large mirror. It quickly changes to a black backround with ghostly images of your car's passengers. This is really cool since it is yor outline making the image. wave your arms, do something stupid, it's all reflected in front of you in a purple haze, (seems like it's a high tech version of the Playstation 2's "Eye Toy." In another flash all the cars passengers dissapears. Very cool. The moves to the next scene.
"You have just entered the Twilight Zone. What happened here to dim the lights of Hollywood's brightest showplace is about to unfold once again."
At this point you are presented with a hallway similar to the in Florida's famous "5th Dimension" scene. You see the five spirits inviting you to come along with them when they are struck by lightning, (aging, cheesy effects again,) and disappear. the hallway dims and you see a starfield. The elevator at the end of the hall remains but as a ghostly image slightly rotating. The door open and you see the guests again. They drop out of sight. Then it's your turn.
"One stormy night long ago, five people stepped through the door of an elevator and into a nightmare. That door is opening once again, but this time, it's opening for you."
I should take a second to say that everything up to this point takes about a minute and ten seconds to unfold compared to Florida's That clocks in at over 2 mins before the first drop. The story just seems to be rushed and kills the apprehension a bit.
After Rod Serling finishes his monologue you drop... Then head up as the doors open and you see all the way across DCA and DL. At this point I have to admit everytime I rode it lost track of where I really was and could not get an idea of where I was looking. Flash, your picture is taken and you drop again moving up and down several times before going to the top again. With one last look at the real world you make your last drop all the way to the bottom where Rod comes back.
"Next time you check into a deserted hotel on the dark side of Hollywood, make sure you know just what kind of vacancy you're filling...or you may find yourself a permanent resident of...The Twilight Zone."
The doors open and you are let out into that hallway I mentioned earlier. Sure it's supped to be behind closed doors type of feel but it's just so bland. they could have done a little more with this area before you are forced into a gift shop.
All in all I liked the ride but considering it is so short (total time is two min. ten secs.), I would not want to stand in line for two hours. It looks like I won't be riding till the off season. Too bad.
MEDIA CENTER:
Photos:
The Hollywood Tower Hotel
Ahh this looks normal...
Umm... Maybe not...
The Lobby
Desk in the Boiler Room
The Elevator
ToT Computer Desktop
Videos and more:
(If it doesn't work, right click and "Save Target as..." then open with Quicktime Player)
Quick Lobby Shot (2.01 Megs)
Library Pre-show (12.9 Megs)
The Ride Itself (20.1 Megs) Note: Most of this video is dark. It's a dark ride.
Twilight Zone Music (880 Kb)
Walking down Hollywood Blvd and turing left I finally saw the finished version of what I watched being built everyday for three years and I was awe struck. The sheer size of the building and seeing how high you go when the elevator doors open up at the top was amazing. The building is finely detailed including a broken fountain with light fixtures at the bottom to indicate it was a once working fountain. As you walk inside there are plenty of things to really make you feel like this is an old abandoned hotel (ignoring the all the people around you). Right as you walk in on your left there is a small table that was being used to play a game of poker (the pair of tens is winning). There is also a set of keys on the table one of many that can be found around the hotel. Next you enter the library/pre-show also very detailed. The lights go out and this is where I have my first problems.
With only a few major changes DCA's version is nearly a direct lift from Florida, that in mind let's get back to the pre-show. The pre-show direct copy and it shows. One issue is that the movie starts with the original opening the the TV show film grain and cool optical effects included, the next scene of people walking through the hotel and getting into the elevator was obliously shot on video and de-colorized. No film scratches and no age to it at all. My second compalint has to do with the special effects, specifically the electricity spreading across the guests in the preshow. Again a direct lift from a ten year old ride. Great effects back then but today's standards are a little higher. It looks cheesy. Mix that with the video look of the video, it brought me out of the world that the lobby had worked so hard to bring me into. On to the Boiler room.
I must be in the Twilight Zone, we went from the first floor to the basement (a very large basement I might add,) without going down any stairs! Eh, trivial. as soon as you walk down a short hallway the room opens up to very detailed basement with leaky pipes, bad lighting and a large boiler with what looks like a face. Very creepy. Here is where you are grouped and positioned to enter the service elevator. When the doors open the Hotel Bellman is standing there waiting to greet you suprisingly and you are ushered past hallway to enter the elevator. Wait... we go through elevator doors to enter a hallway to go through a second set of elevator doors? I don't get it. WHY!? So sit down, belt up, and hold on it's time to enter the Twilight Zone.
So now were at the meat of the ride. This is what you came for so here goes. This is where the major changes are evident.
"You are the passengers on a most uncommon elevator about to take the strangest journey of your lives."
The elevator slides back into position in the ride shaft and up you go.
"Your destination unknown, but this much is clear, a reservation has been made in your name for an extended stay."
"Wave goodbye to the real world."
Since the deletion of the "5th Dimension" scene a new scene is here. The doors open and you see your whole car for a few seconds in a large mirror. It quickly changes to a black backround with ghostly images of your car's passengers. This is really cool since it is yor outline making the image. wave your arms, do something stupid, it's all reflected in front of you in a purple haze, (seems like it's a high tech version of the Playstation 2's "Eye Toy." In another flash all the cars passengers dissapears. Very cool. The moves to the next scene.
"You have just entered the Twilight Zone. What happened here to dim the lights of Hollywood's brightest showplace is about to unfold once again."
At this point you are presented with a hallway similar to the in Florida's famous "5th Dimension" scene. You see the five spirits inviting you to come along with them when they are struck by lightning, (aging, cheesy effects again,) and disappear. the hallway dims and you see a starfield. The elevator at the end of the hall remains but as a ghostly image slightly rotating. The door open and you see the guests again. They drop out of sight. Then it's your turn.
"One stormy night long ago, five people stepped through the door of an elevator and into a nightmare. That door is opening once again, but this time, it's opening for you."
I should take a second to say that everything up to this point takes about a minute and ten seconds to unfold compared to Florida's That clocks in at over 2 mins before the first drop. The story just seems to be rushed and kills the apprehension a bit.
After Rod Serling finishes his monologue you drop... Then head up as the doors open and you see all the way across DCA and DL. At this point I have to admit everytime I rode it lost track of where I really was and could not get an idea of where I was looking. Flash, your picture is taken and you drop again moving up and down several times before going to the top again. With one last look at the real world you make your last drop all the way to the bottom where Rod comes back.
"Next time you check into a deserted hotel on the dark side of Hollywood, make sure you know just what kind of vacancy you're filling...or you may find yourself a permanent resident of...The Twilight Zone."
The doors open and you are let out into that hallway I mentioned earlier. Sure it's supped to be behind closed doors type of feel but it's just so bland. they could have done a little more with this area before you are forced into a gift shop.
All in all I liked the ride but considering it is so short (total time is two min. ten secs.), I would not want to stand in line for two hours. It looks like I won't be riding till the off season. Too bad.
MEDIA CENTER:
Photos:
The Hollywood Tower Hotel
Ahh this looks normal...
Umm... Maybe not...
The Lobby
Desk in the Boiler Room
The Elevator
ToT Computer Desktop
Videos and more:
(If it doesn't work, right click and "Save Target as..." then open with Quicktime Player)
Quick Lobby Shot (2.01 Megs)
Library Pre-show (12.9 Megs)
The Ride Itself (20.1 Megs) Note: Most of this video is dark. It's a dark ride.
Twilight Zone Music (880 Kb)