cubswinnow said:
I was wondering if there was any chance that there could be new attractions based on movies not from disney , like when they made attractions through Lucasfilm?
There was a time after Michael Eisner took over as the head of Disney that the company thought it was a good idea to license creative properties from other companies. Eisner's gut reaction (with input from his then-young son) was that Disney's own creative properties weren't hip, cool, or relevant. In fact, Disney-MGM Studios was designed to distance itself from Disney. Even though MGM had nothing to do with the ownership or design of the park, Disney even licensed the MGM name.
That changed over the years. Toward the end of the Eisner regime, the whole idea was synergy with Disney-owned creative properties, including Pixar (Disney owned the rights to the Disney-distributed Pixar films, even before Disney bought Pixar). In fact, almost everything had to be synergy, and the company didn't want to promote any other company's creative properties.
It remains to be seen if this changes now that Bob Iger is calling the shots. It will take a few years before post-Eisner, Iger-approved projects start showing up in Disney's theme parks.
Supposedly, Disney owns the US theme park rights to Harry Potter. I don't know if this is really true. I recall reading a believable report that this was stated by a Universal executive. However, the Universal executive could be mistaken, or the report could be inaccurate. It is true that Disney (ABC) paid a fortune for the TV rights to the Harry Potter movies, so I suppose it's possible that this contract could have a clause about theme parks. Sometimes, interesting clauses creep into legal agreements such as NBC-Universal returning the Oswald the Rabbit rights to Disney (after almost 80 years), as part of the agreement for Al Michaels to jump from ABC to NBC.