Buy a Ticket to Buy More Disney Merch

 
 

You may have seen one of the avalanche of articles proclaiming just how wonderful it is that a new Disney cruise ship will have a Haunted Mansion themed bar called the Haunted Mansion Parlor. I can’t imagine very many people will actually take a cruise to go to a themed bar, but if that’s you, I don’t judge you. I hope you have a great time.

My beef is with the little tidbit that was dropped in the press release alongside pics of the bar. It seems this will be a place where you can line up to buy some exclusive HM stuff. That’s right. Pay for a cruise just so you can buy more Disney merch!

Disney has been way ahead of the curve with park exclusives and Disney Store exclusives for decades. Now, they’re attempting to extend that reach into every pocket in sight. Have you been on Disney Plus lately? I have, and despite the fact that I couldn’t find much there worth watching, I noticed that they’ve added merch access buttons to individual shows to try and get you to buy buy buy while you watch!

I used to respect Disney for the artistry and presentation of it’s animated features and parks. I even worked on the backlot in Burbank (technically, I was employed by Touchstone, which used to be the adult subsidiary of Disney). But now, it’s nothing but money grabbing as far as the eye can see. That ship has only one rudder, and it’s made of solid gold.

Folks, there’s only one response to this - stop buying the merch. You know I adore the original Haunted Mansion attraction as much as anyone, but I’ve bought my last licensed HM product. As long as we keep buying, Disney will continue to focus on selling goods instead of developing quality entertainment.

Review: The Haunted Mansion (2023)

 
 

I’d really like to tell you that this year’s Haunted Mansion film is much better than the one starring Eddie Murphy that came out twenty years ago, but, alas, I cannot. It seems that the folks at Disney haven’t learned a single thing in the twenty years that passed between the two productions. They’ve delivered yet another vapid and poorly crafted take on the greatest dark ride of all time, and as an avid fan of the ride, I’m disappointed once again.

I don’t know why I even entertained the idea that they might have actually mad a decent movie this time around. They’ve only had 54 years to think about it. While I’m no fan of the Pirates films, at least the first one (Curse of the Black Pearl) used the ride as a jumping off point and not a destination. That’s alluded to in the presence of a subtitle despite the fact that it was the first film in the series. You could chop the “Pirates of the Caribbean” IP out of the film completely and still have pretty much the same movie.

The Haunted Mansion should be so lucky. The ride really has no story at all. It’s a series of vignettes that’s strung together almost entirely by the Ghost Host narrator who follows you through the ride. Like the Pirates ride before it, it’s the ride’s audio track - more specifically it’s music - that’s the through line for the attraction. Sadly, this music is almost entirely absent in the new film.

Screenwriter Katie Dippold fails to follow even the most basic tenets of storytelling. This refugee from bad TV writing on Parks and Recreation (sorry, not a fan) has driven one bus load of characters into another busload of vague stories but they don’t collide in any meaningful or entertaining way. It’s like she was writing five or six individual episodes of a Haunted Mansion anthology series instead of a feature. I defy you to figure out who the protagonist of this mess is. I genuinely disliked the Eddie Murphy Haunted Mansion movie, but even I’ll admit that I knew who the protagonist was from frame one.

When the foundation is weak, the mansion is likely to fall and oh boy this one falls like the house of Usher. Its junky mess of stories and characters are further thwarted by what feels like a very rushed production. Tone varies wildly, not only from scene to scene, but from shot to shot. A character who’s real-world morose one minute, is running around like Wile E. Coyote the next. It’s frankly stupifying that this edit made it out the door.

I liked some of the production design choices, but even they pale in comparison to that of the Eddie Murphy movie. The sets are okay-ish in that they reference the ride but they never take that next step into reality.

I couldn’t quite figure out why there were so many bad wigs on display. Couldn’t the producers of the film see that they never look real on camera? It’s distracting, especially on Rosario Dawson. Her wig should get screen credit as her sidekick.

Jamie Lee Curtis as Madame Leota seems like an interesting bit of stunt casting until you realize that Curtis isn’t exactly great at broad comedy. Her accent comes and goes at random despite the fact that she’s a head in a ball and all of her work had to have been done in post anyway. Besides, since when does Leota have a vaguely eastern European accent?

I kept asking myself why Danny Devito and Owen Wilson were even in this. I suppose it must have been a pretty decent payday for them both. They’re not utilized onscreen except as plot points. The casting of the whole film is a scattershot attempt at getting all ages and ethnicities interested in attending. The film appears to have been cast by the Disney marketing department.

I could go on, but I think you get my drift. This movie is one “zoinks” shy of being a Scooby Doo episode, and not a particularly good one. NOT recommended.

Buy the Haunted Mansion!

 
 

The Haunted Mansion is finally up for sale! I’ve been waiting a long time for this. There’s just one problem. The price is one human soul. I guess that’s a bargain. It’s not like I was using it anyway.

In one of the more clever movie product placements, the Haunted Mansion is currently being listed on Zillow, complete with spooky images that reveal details of the production design. To be honest, the designs don’t look much different from those of the terrible Eddie Murphy bomb, but the production design was the only good thing about that film. Let’s hope this one is better.

In the meantime, check out the listing on Zillow here: https://www.zillow.com/house/disney-haunted-mansion/

Another Haunted Mansion Movie

 
 

Disney is definitely persistent in their pursuit of profit. If any Disney IP is popular, it must be monetized in every possible permutation! One of those permutations is the feature film, and nothing gets stuck in the Disney craw like a popular IP that hasn’t been turned into a cash cow movie with sequels, ancillary rights, and rabid new fans.

When the Disney parks were first conceived of, many of the lower-tier dark rides were based on existing IP. Mr. Toad’s Wild Ride, Peter Pan’s Flight, and Snow White’s Enchanted Wish (AKA Adventures and AKA Scary Adventures) were inexpensively produced and popular ways to keep patrons away from the E-ticket rides. Those expensive E-ticket rides, however, were almost entirely made up of new IP. The one exception was the 20,000 Leagues submarine ride, but even it started life branded as the generic Submarine Voyage. The other big-Es were Small World, Matterhorn, Country Bear Jamboree, Enchanted Tiki Room, Jungle Cruise, Pirates of the Caribbean, and the Haunted Mansion. As Disney execs have looked down that list in the decades since Walt died, they’ve had blockbuster movie dollar signs (you know - dollar signs with glitter and stars) dancing in their eyes. Most of these rides have been made into movies, with only one - Pirates - emerging as the proof of concept that continues to taunt Disney executives to this day.

Which brings us to the new Disney film, The Haunted Mansion. Have you seen the trailer? If not, I’ll link to it below. Take a look.

 
 

Here we go again. Yet another attempt to turn the beloved ride into a family comedy. Did they learn nothing from the Eddie Murphy debacle? I’ve been surprised by the recent wave of nostalgia surrounding that awful film, but I shouldn’t have been. After all, it’s been 20 years since its release - more than enough time for kids who saw it to have grown up and remember it fondly because children have no taste.

While I’m hopeful that this will be a better movie than the 2003 mess, it still looks like a greatest hits of the ride. The thing that made Pirates of the Caribbean work (the first one, anyway) was it’s insistence on ignoring the flimsy narrative of the ride and forging its own way. Yes, there were nods to the ride, but they were few and far between. That’s the kind of approach we need for the Haunted Mansion.

While a prestige series doesn’t have the bottom-line appeal of a cash cow film franchise, that’s exactly what I feel the HM needs. Imagine a Disney anthology series wherein a variety of writers and directors take their turn at presenting various stories of the Mansion. It could be a series where the house consumes someone new each week along with an exploration of the various resident's’ backstories. This seems more in line with the ride’s episodic presentation and better for a variety of approaches. In my series, we’d have horror comedy, straight-up horror, and full-on comedy side by side.

Instead, Disney is once again chasing the lowest common denominator. Yes, I’ll see it, but I’m pretty certain that I won’t be happy about it. At most, I’m looking forward to the soundtrack.

Happy 52nd Birthday to Disneyland's Haunted Mansion!

 
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The opening of the first Haunted Mansion at Disneyland is difficult to pin to a single date. According to Wikipedia: “Employee previews of the Mansion were held August 6, 7, and the 8th, followed by soft openings on August 9 and 10 where limited numbers of park guests were allowed to ride. A Midnight Press Event was held on the evening of August 11. The mansion opened to all guests August 12, 1969.”

So, in a way, we get a week-long celebration of what may be the greatest haunted attraction ever made, and it lines up with the beginnings of the Halloween season for those of us who like to build things for our displays in October. That’s okay by me. It would take more than a week for me to explain just how awesome I think this ride is.

So, Happy Birthday, Haunted Mansion! I can’t imagine how I would be different if I’d never ventured through your halls or listened to your record countless times as a child. Thank you to Walt and all the Imagineers for making it a reality before the world became so offended by everything that it wouldn’t allow such a thing in a theme park for children. Here’s to another 52 years!

Muppets Haunted Mansion

 
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The Muppets were one of the first big properties that Disney purchased. Way back in 2004, it cost a paltry $75 million. Since then, Disney has mostly ignored the property. Sure, they’ve made a couple of mediocre movies and they generated some revenue off the existing shows and films, but they haven’t exactly gone full tilt Marvel with it. Maybe that’s changing.

This week, Disney announced that Muppets Haunted Mansion will be on Disney+ this year, presumably around Halloween. While this is interesting news, it begs the question, will it be any good? Let’s face it, since the originators of the Muppet brand moved on years ago, the current batch of Muppeteers aren’t so great at capturing the magic that made the characters great. The original characters were contentious upstarts - more like the Looney Toons characters who were irreverent takes on Disney’s cartoons (note the symmetry between “Looney Tunes” and “Silly Symphonies”). Now, they’re just pale imitations of their former selves.

Likewise, the Disney folks have been hard pressed to turn their Haunted Mansion into a bankable property outside the parks. Sure, they’ve used the gothic rides as fodder for lots of successful merch, but they missed the mark with their messy film adaptation in 2003.

Which brings us back to 2021 and this new “special”, as it’s described by Variety. At the very least, that infers that it’ll be relatively short. I’m cautiously optimistic. Check out the announcement video below.

 
 

Haunted Mansion Updates

 
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This week, Disney released a new video about some changes at their Haunted Mansion attraction in Anaheim. The voiceover is horrifically bad (and not in a good way) but the video is reassuring nonetheless. It reveals that the updates are extremely minor and that the Imagineers haven’t screwed up anything in our beloved dark ride.

My favorite addition is the new bird bath shown above. There’s also a new cat statue in what looks like the loading area. Hmmm. Did Disney hire a cat lover to meow things up a bit?

 
 

Haunted Mansion Holiday

photo © Thomas Raven

photo © Thomas Raven

I first visited the Haunted Mansion Holiday at Disneyland in October of 2003 and was truly wowed by the work that had been done to transform the attraction. It was nothing short of amazing. The Imagineers did a great job using The Nightmare Before Christmas’ characters and design motifs in the existing ride. I daresay that if the attraction were being built from scratch today, I could see Disney producing a full time TNBC ride instead of the original Haunted Mansion.

While I’m not in the camp of those who feel that the original rides should never be tampered with, I’ve wondered why didn’t they just build an all-new ride for TNBC and leave my beloved Haunted Mansion alone. This overlay is in place for almost five months every year!

I’d guess the answer is twofold: budget and popularity. The overlay would cost only a fraction of what it would take to build an all-new ride, and in 2004 when this launched, TNBC wasn’t the holiday juggernaut it is today. So why not take the leap now, Disney? We need a Nightmare ride 365 days a year! There’s room for more than one attraction with gothy goodness in each of the parks!

Long Forgotten

 
image © Disney & Long Forgotten

image © Disney & Long Forgotten

 

I mentioned this blog in another post, but it’s worthy of a post all its own. If you’re a big fan of the Disney Haunted Mansion rides, like I am, you really should check out the Long Forgotten Blog on Blogger.com.

What sets this blog apart is the fact that each post is a scholarly research project. These are deep dives, folks, and not for the faint hearted reader. The author, whose name I couldn’t locate on the site, gets very serious about the origins of each and every element in some of the best dark rides of all time.

It also helps that these articles are well written and the “facts” are offered with a grain of salt. This level of excavation is similar to archeology in that we don’t have all the facts from all the different people who were involved. We often have conflicting accounts of things that may or may not have even happened.

Our host also shares a plethora of wonderful images to support his arguments and to illustrate just how creative the ride designers were. There’s concept art here that you simply won’t find anywhere else unless you plan to spend days digging for them.

If you’re interested in the origins of the Haunted Mansion rides and are willing to not touch the safety bar, I can think of no better Ghost Host to act as your guide. Very highly recommended.

The Story & Song from The Haunted Mansion

 
image © Buena Vista Distribution Co. Inc.

image © Buena Vista Distribution Co. Inc.

 

When I was a child, one of my most prized possessions was the record album you see up above. On side 1, it had a narrated version of the classic Disney cartoon Trick or Treat. That’s right, there was actually a time in America when parents didn’t go all wobbly over the mention of witches, spells, or a child in a devil costume. But I digress. I liked side 1, but the real attraction was side 2.

Relegated to side 2 was The Story & Song From The Haunted Mansion. This was a dramatized version of the experience of going through the Haunted Mansion ride and it included much of the actual audio used in the ride. I freaking LOVED it. I must have played side 2 ten thousand times! I’m sure my mother got tired of hearing the Ghost Host’s intro spiel because I could recite it verbatim, complete with echoes.

What’s funny to me now is the fact that the Ghost Host on the record wasn’t Paul Frees, the voice from the ride, but a performance by Disney stalwart Pete Renaday specifically for the record. I had only been on the Disney World ride once or twice (this was in the day of individual ride tickets) so I always thought it was the original voice. Due to the fact that I could listen to it in my room over and over again, I actually think of Renaday’s as the “real” version to this day.

Actor and director Ron Howard was the voice of one of the two foolish mortals on vinyl. His date, the unfortunately named Karen, was played by Robie Lester. She can be heard on all sorts of Disney records and films from the 60s and 70s, including performances as the singing voice for Eva Gabor in The Rescuers and The Aristocats.

Little did I know at the time, that the version of the story on side 2 of my record had been trimmed significantly. It had originally been released as both sides of a record and cassette tape. If you’re interested, check out that longer version below. Just be sure to bring your death certificate.

If you love the Disney Haunted Mansion as much as I do, you owe it to yourself to visit the Long Forgotten blog. It isn’t updated frequently, but it has a plethora of behind-the-scenes posts about my favorite haunted house and its 999 residents. Check it out here.