Mousequake
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Apr 29, 2012
- Messages
- 730
Surprised there hasn't been a thread about this one yet; I guess it's getting overshadowed by the GotG opening.
My daughter did this one twice over the weekend. While I was worried it'd be super difficult to get into, it was a relative breeze. We showed up around 3:30 and signed up for an alternate at the 4:30 show, and she got in with every other alternate signed up. They were walking around Hollywood Land looking for more kids to sign up. Sunday, we showed up about 10:00 and we had our pick of all except the very first show.
So as to the show itself-- it very much feels like a higher-up in park management said "hey, Jedi Training is super popular. We need that over at DCA." It feels very half-baked. Some SHIELD agents come out to introduce Black Widow and Hawkeye, the 'recruits' (the kids) come in and learn a short sequence of six fight moves. Puzzlingly, they only use two of those fight moves later in the show, so the last four are pointless.
There are two main things kids do: match some kind of 'color crystals' to an onscreen prompt to restore power to some indeterminate battery thing, and fling Captain America shields at a bomb-like device that looks for all the world like a Dalek in disguise. And here lies the main problem with the show: kids throwing shields made out of some flimsy material, that don't go where the kids throw them. It's extremely difficult for kids to hit the intended target. What it's not extremely difficult for them to do, though, is hit other kids in the group across the stage in the face with the shields. This happened at least once at each show.
I think another problem with the show is that Black Widow and Hawkeye are so recognizable-- in Jedi Training, the characters aren't supposed to be any Star Wars characters that we know. But the whole time during Avengers Training, I'm sitting there thinking, "wow, they really don't look or act anything like Scarlett Johansen or Jeremy Renner."
This show has potential, but it needs a lot of work to bring it up to Jedi Training standards. That being said, my 9YO daughter absolutely loved it, and I guess that's what it's all about.
My daughter did this one twice over the weekend. While I was worried it'd be super difficult to get into, it was a relative breeze. We showed up around 3:30 and signed up for an alternate at the 4:30 show, and she got in with every other alternate signed up. They were walking around Hollywood Land looking for more kids to sign up. Sunday, we showed up about 10:00 and we had our pick of all except the very first show.
So as to the show itself-- it very much feels like a higher-up in park management said "hey, Jedi Training is super popular. We need that over at DCA." It feels very half-baked. Some SHIELD agents come out to introduce Black Widow and Hawkeye, the 'recruits' (the kids) come in and learn a short sequence of six fight moves. Puzzlingly, they only use two of those fight moves later in the show, so the last four are pointless.
There are two main things kids do: match some kind of 'color crystals' to an onscreen prompt to restore power to some indeterminate battery thing, and fling Captain America shields at a bomb-like device that looks for all the world like a Dalek in disguise. And here lies the main problem with the show: kids throwing shields made out of some flimsy material, that don't go where the kids throw them. It's extremely difficult for kids to hit the intended target. What it's not extremely difficult for them to do, though, is hit other kids in the group across the stage in the face with the shields. This happened at least once at each show.
I think another problem with the show is that Black Widow and Hawkeye are so recognizable-- in Jedi Training, the characters aren't supposed to be any Star Wars characters that we know. But the whole time during Avengers Training, I'm sitting there thinking, "wow, they really don't look or act anything like Scarlett Johansen or Jeremy Renner."
This show has potential, but it needs a lot of work to bring it up to Jedi Training standards. That being said, my 9YO daughter absolutely loved it, and I guess that's what it's all about.