chris mcfly
Mouseketeer
- Joined
- Aug 14, 2001
- Messages
- 177
I was reading some of the other posts on here by DocBosch and kellymonoghan and It just really got me thinking. Wow- What a difference in the USF of 1991 and the USF of today. A totally different atmosphere.
A couple days ago, I was looking through an old promotional brochure of USF from 1991. It is amazing how much more of a "studio" theme there was back then. This WAS AN ACTUAL MOVIE STUDIO. Its so funny to open up this brochure and see a page with the word "Stars!" in big gold letters with photos of every movie star imaginable (all taken on grand opening day, of course). The idea that these STARS were constantly roaming the studio is a little bit of an exaggeration, but you FELT like they were. In the Dynamite Nights Stunt Spectacular page, it refers to the actors as "Hollywood's best stuntmen" and a photo of the boathouse exploding is captioned by the phrase "Only we could pull of a stunt like this!". Elsewhere it states "Roam our backlots and watch as our Cinemagicians (TM) make movie magic happen!".
I loved the look of the old tickets-uhm, excuse me, "STUDIO PASSES". On the front of them, it told you what areas you had access to (commisary, front lot, etc). All hoopla, of course, but still- it made you feel as if you were paying admission to roam around an actual working movie studio. I can remember coming down here on vacation from New England when i was younger, and leaving USF feeling like I had just taken a step into Hollywood. I wanted to work in the business.
Do people still feel like this today? Do I just not feel that way anymore becuase I am there all the time now? Or has this park totally lost its studio feel?
I gotta give it to 'em... In the early 90s, Universal had such grand visions- Orlando would soon be the Hollywood of the east. With things being so cheap, everyone everywhere would want to come to USF to film their movies. Looking at old internal company documents, all house phones were called "studio phones". On the phones, it said "Dial 0 for a studio operator"... "Contact studio security in case of an emergency" Anyway- you get the idea.
I can remember driving into the parking lot off of Turkey Lake and seeing Laurel and Hardy in the hot Florida sun standing by the little pink and green neon Universal Studios sign, waving to cars as they pass by. Or entering through the Kirkman entrance, by the Huge gold UNIVERSAL STUDIOS letters, making me feel as if I am in for something really special.
Little details that are no longer there. Like the payphones in the front of the park has a silver plate above them that said "E.T. Phone Home Center". Or me, looking at the Administration building at the front entrance and wondering what big studio execs are in there.
Alright, so I was 13 years younger, a little stupider, and not knowledgeable about how theme parks are, well... just that-- themed.
Does anyone have any old scanned photos of USF during its first years or know where I can find them? The Parking lot? the Psycho house? the Feivel Theatere? Ghostbusters show? Studio Stars Restaurant? Anything?
Do you feel that USF is better the way it is now? (i.e. listening to J-Lo's hits from 3 years ago while walking through New York and having attractions that have little or no educational value). Have DVDs ruined the studio theme park? Do people even care about how movies are made anymore? 10 Years ago, nobody knew what a green screen was. Now kids can use their macintosh to do whatever movie effect they dream. It is a good thing that everything is business and marketing based?
A couple days ago, I was looking through an old promotional brochure of USF from 1991. It is amazing how much more of a "studio" theme there was back then. This WAS AN ACTUAL MOVIE STUDIO. Its so funny to open up this brochure and see a page with the word "Stars!" in big gold letters with photos of every movie star imaginable (all taken on grand opening day, of course). The idea that these STARS were constantly roaming the studio is a little bit of an exaggeration, but you FELT like they were. In the Dynamite Nights Stunt Spectacular page, it refers to the actors as "Hollywood's best stuntmen" and a photo of the boathouse exploding is captioned by the phrase "Only we could pull of a stunt like this!". Elsewhere it states "Roam our backlots and watch as our Cinemagicians (TM) make movie magic happen!".
I loved the look of the old tickets-uhm, excuse me, "STUDIO PASSES". On the front of them, it told you what areas you had access to (commisary, front lot, etc). All hoopla, of course, but still- it made you feel as if you were paying admission to roam around an actual working movie studio. I can remember coming down here on vacation from New England when i was younger, and leaving USF feeling like I had just taken a step into Hollywood. I wanted to work in the business.
Do people still feel like this today? Do I just not feel that way anymore becuase I am there all the time now? Or has this park totally lost its studio feel?
I gotta give it to 'em... In the early 90s, Universal had such grand visions- Orlando would soon be the Hollywood of the east. With things being so cheap, everyone everywhere would want to come to USF to film their movies. Looking at old internal company documents, all house phones were called "studio phones". On the phones, it said "Dial 0 for a studio operator"... "Contact studio security in case of an emergency" Anyway- you get the idea.
I can remember driving into the parking lot off of Turkey Lake and seeing Laurel and Hardy in the hot Florida sun standing by the little pink and green neon Universal Studios sign, waving to cars as they pass by. Or entering through the Kirkman entrance, by the Huge gold UNIVERSAL STUDIOS letters, making me feel as if I am in for something really special.
Little details that are no longer there. Like the payphones in the front of the park has a silver plate above them that said "E.T. Phone Home Center". Or me, looking at the Administration building at the front entrance and wondering what big studio execs are in there.
Alright, so I was 13 years younger, a little stupider, and not knowledgeable about how theme parks are, well... just that-- themed.
Does anyone have any old scanned photos of USF during its first years or know where I can find them? The Parking lot? the Psycho house? the Feivel Theatere? Ghostbusters show? Studio Stars Restaurant? Anything?
Do you feel that USF is better the way it is now? (i.e. listening to J-Lo's hits from 3 years ago while walking through New York and having attractions that have little or no educational value). Have DVDs ruined the studio theme park? Do people even care about how movies are made anymore? 10 Years ago, nobody knew what a green screen was. Now kids can use their macintosh to do whatever movie effect they dream. It is a good thing that everything is business and marketing based?