That's how I've felt... It may not specifically fit, but the architecture and the description make it a fit within Liberty Squares limits...
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That's how I've felt... It may not specifically fit, but the architecture and the description make it a fit within Liberty Squares limits...
I think it's more the facade than the ride, though the ghost costumes suggest that it's taking place a long time ago. The bride and care taker? Not so much. The flow of the layout is odd, though, as the mansion appears to be built later than the rest of Liberty Square, and the expansion west as the years progressed moves towards Frontierland.
As I said...
Yep, nice explanation. From my understanding, the Hudson River Valley was aslo a good choice in themeing for the location of the mansion because it is the setting for the famous "Legend of Sleepy Hollow," which would have a been a popular story in the era in which Liberty Square is set. I guess the imagineers thought the creepy feel of the mansion would fit well in the Hudson River Valley since it already had a haunted backstory for it itself. Sleepy Hollow Refreshments, the small quick-service snack place on your right hand side just as you enter Liberty Square, is supposed to be themed to look like the home of Washington Irving, author of the "Legend of Sleepy Hollow", so the theming does go further than most people actually know.
Sorry to get the thread further off topic, just thought I'd throw that out there for those interested.
I find it blends in just fine. HM is set back, the decor outside doesn't have a modern Hearst out front.
The Riverboat helps blend the transition further. There are other areas where we could knit-pick apart the various land transitions. Tea Cups at the end of Tomorrowland. Seeing Tomorrowland corridor from the castle and hub. Does the Rabbit in Splash really represent Frontierland or the Magic Carpets represent the days of the Pirates or the Jungle. None of the above items are enough to get my undies in knot over. The one I am interested to see if the Imagineers cure is the Circus from Indy. They have added some landscaping but it still is odd to see from Indy however they might not be finished yet. Still not something that will ruin any experience for me. I'd rather they focus on keeping the E attractions like Splash and Space up and running, the transition doesn't matter much when they can't keep the major attractions operational.
I forgot where I read this but I read from an imagineer that Tomorrowland was supposed to showcase the true future of our society but technology was moving to fast to keep up so the imagineers just settled with a "fictional picture of tomorrow" hint monsters and stitch.
Yeh... Tomorrowlandgazette is supposed mirror more of a Buck Rogers sort of future... Like a 1950's glorified future... It worked soo much better... See the major problem with Futureworld in Epcot... This is one of the reasons...
Yep. That was a point I made last year when we were discussing the problems with Future World. One of the things that helped seal it's fate was the internet that Spaceship Earth predicted it all those years ago.
Think about the World Key kiosks. Touch screens and video conferencing. Now we carry that kind of thing in our pocket. A universe of information is at our fingertips, imagineers really don't have the power to wow us with the future anymore. Not when we can go back to our rooms and play with our iPad that has more processing power than most of the original Future World attractions.
That is like Back to the Future part 2... Its funny to look back at those scenes and laugh at what they got completely wrong... Hover boards and the idea of still using pay phones and such... And then see what little they got right... Like hands free phones and the house thermostat... It makes you laugh... But there in lies the problem with a land based on the future... It ages quickly and at what point will it be outdated and what new technology can they possibly predict these days...
I love the smell of gasoline from likely a single cylinder engine in the morning...
Well, that's the whole thing.
It didn't used to age quickly. Things weren't as readily available in those days.
And on top of that, things weren't going from R&D to market with the blinding speed they do these days. Back then, the future looked amazing, and filled the imagination with a sense of wonder. These days? It's right before our eyes. And available at a store near you!
There's simply no way for Epcot to compete with that.
I'm a design major and they've taught us how fast we need to get things out these days... hint: the reason why things are so poorly put together these days there's no time to make it a long lasting product (I hate saying that because I would rather make reliable products but that's how business runs these days)and I think Imagineering is in that problem to they don't get the time or resources they used to, to make mind blowing attractions like they used to...