Well then, Hedy, we'll just have to start our own club, won't we?
Now back to
the Shmoopy DINKs adventure in gawking, riding, and face-stuffing!
After Grandma Girlbomb had her nap, we headed over to the Great Movie Ride, which was a walk-on. I love the movie clips they show before the ride, and the clips they chose for the ending of the ride, and some of the setpieces during the ride are great, but of course I have to find fault with everything, so I walked off the Great Movie Ride shaking my head.
“I just don’t understand the narrative,” I said to Bill. “I mean, the gangster wants to make a quick getaway, so he takes over the slowest-moving vehicle possible, and then it just sits there for an awkward minute before it even moves? And…we’re supposed to be his hostages? Or not? And then the ride operator comes back, and she says she went to get popcorn? I just don’t get the story they’re trying to tell.”
I know, I’m putting way too much thought into it. But it feels like such a near-miss, like if they straightened out the script a little bit, the whole thing would make much more sense. Or maybe they could just take us through scenes from movies without the logically faulty subplot. Anyway, I must really enjoy griping and quibbling, because I do it so often and so well.
So we went back to a ride with a perfectly understandable plot – Tower of Terror – and there was still no standby wait. “Is it normal for this ride to have no line?” I asked the CM at the podium before the libraries. “It’s the time of year,” she said. “This is the slowest it ever gets.” Her answer made me really smug – we managed to go during the slowest time of the year! And I’d worried that maybe the week after Thanksgiving was better than ours, or the second week of January. We got two more rides in on ToT, and then it was time to check in for our 3:50 “dinner” reservations at Hollywood & Vine.
Neither of us usually wants dinner at 3:50, but that’s what they offered us for the Fantasmic package, so we took it. We did the H&V Fantasmic package our first year, and it worked out well; last year we took our chances and saw it standby and had even better seats (aside from the kid behind us kicking us – oh, and the Pop Warner cheerleaders who would not stop cheering for the whole half hour before the show). This year, we were tempted to do without the package, but we were going to MGM on a night when there was only one showing of Fantasmic, not two, so we figured we’d rather be safe than sorry. Also, we like the buffet at Hollywood & Vine. It’s noisy, but the kids are always having a great time with the characters from Playhouse Disney, and that’s another big draw for me.
Well, they stopped having the characters at “between times.” But the food was as good (and rich) as ever, and we took our time indulging in plenty of it.
After lunch, we didn’t know what to do next. We’d been on Tower of Terror nine times already, so we were ready to give that a break, and Streetmosphere was nowhere to be seen. There weren’t any other shows we were interested in seeing (I could have seen Beauty and the Beast again, but Bill was satisfied with seeing it last year and had no desire to see it again), and neither of us felt like shlepping over to the Backlot Tour, (which used to be sooooo much better, in my opinion, before they gutted it to make room for LMA). And they took away Who Wants to be a Millionaire! We loved playing it on our first trip, and Bill was going to be next in the hot seat, when the show ended. Now we’ll never be able to win that cruise! Unless the Dream Team wants to help us out…
So we decided to check out the friendship boats I’d read about on the DIS, and to look around the Boardwalk, before it was time for us to be seated for Fantasmic. On our way out of the Studios, we met a much friendlier Photopass photographer:
And Bill took this shot of the gates, with the sky darkening behind us:
Then we located the boat launch, and had fun watching the Happiest Ducks on Earth waddle and swim around while we waited for the boat.
Once aboard, a young CM led us all in some Christmas carols, starting with “Frosty the Snowman.” As it happened, nobody on the boat actually knew too many of the words to Frosty, so she had to abandon that one for “Rudolph” (sung to its own tune, and not “Joy to the World”).
The boat ride was slow, and our time window was somewhat short, so we decided to get off at the Swan/Dolphin stop and walk over to the Boardwalk ourselves. We were headed in that direction, when we saw two gentlemen I’d noticed earlier at the park, wearing matching Mickey shirts, matching Mickey
crocs, and Happy Anniversary pins.
“Happy Anniversary!” we hailed them as we passed, and they smiled and waved thanks. “How many years?”
“Twenty!” they said proudly. “But we’re not legally married.”
“Neither are we – we’re domestically partnered!” we told them. They gave us a big thumbs up, then went on their merry way.
So we hit the boardwalk, which looks like a fun and lively place to hang out:
None of the entertainers were there yet, but I understand that there are a lot of wandering performers after dark. Too bad we didn’t get a chance to experience the Boardwalk in all its glory – we realized almost as soon as we got there that we only had a half hour to get back to the Studios for Fantasmic. So we breezed past all the intriguing shops, and asked a CM where the walkway to the Studios could be found.
I could have sworn I understood the directions she gave us, which started with “Go through that building, and you’ll see the pool area…” But we went through that building, and we didn’t see a pool area, just a parking lot. We started darting around like we were on The Amazing Race (one of our favorite shows), looking for people who might be able to give us directions, but finally we had to go back through the building and ask someone else. By now, time was really getting short.
But we found the pool area (“Cool pool,” we noted, as we jogged past it), and we saw the walkway, so we felt better. A brisk walk back through the gates, a stop at the restroom, and then through the special entrance to the ampitheater. Good thing we got there when we did (a half hour before the show was due to start), and good thing we had the package – that theater was full! We got good seats in the reserved section, as close to the middle as you can get over there, and sat down to wait.
This show is stunning. This is our third time seeing it, and I am still amazed by everything that’s involved – videos projected onto screens of mist; elaborate fight scenes staged on a mountain; the brilliant costuming and choreography; the way they
set a lake on fire…just jaw-droppingly cool. I couldn’t imagine a trip to the World without a viewing of Fantastmic.
We were on the aisle, so we made it out of the theater pretty quickly, and hopped right on the empty line for ToT, which we rode another three times in rapid succession. Then it was almost time for park closing, but we wanted to see the Osbourne Family Lights, so we walked back to that section of the park. We found the menorah, which seemed to be missing a few candles:
Then we wandered around gaping, and watched the lights dance. I kept hoping that they’d play my favorite holiday song, the song I most associate with being at Disney World in December, “The Most Wonderful Time of the Year,” but as long as we lingered, it didn’t play. Seems like they had a lot more contemporary holiday songs playing during the Osbourne lights this year instead of classics, at least while we were there.
It was time to head out of the park, as they were closing, and our feet were beat. The line for the bus was super-super-long, so we once again spoiled ourselves and hopped in a cab back to the Contemporary ($16, including tip). We were chatting with our driver, a really nice guy named Ken, when my song came on the radio – “The Most Wonderful Time!” It made my already great night to hear it playing.
Just as we stepped into our room, we heard a loud sonic BOOM. Wishes was starting! We rushed out on to the balcony, and had a grand view, even if there was no music or narration. What a treat, to see Wishes from our room, after a long day full of treats.
After Wishes, went to bed, and were asleep by ten o’clock. Our fourth wonderful day at Disney had come to an end.
(Coming soon: Yet More Epcot, and a Very Merry Christmas Party -- with tears!)