Pop Goes the Weasel
Road trip adventurist.
- Joined
- May 14, 2015
- Messages
- 44
Toy Story movies are great, and while I'm sure Toy Story Land will be cool and some day I will take my family there and enjoy it, I was hoping for either Cars Land or Pixar Place. Here's why I think it is a mistake.
While my kids LOVE to watch Toy Story, that world does not engage them outside the movie. While they watch Woody, Buzz and company, they LIVE Cars, Planes, and The Incredibles. Among my kids and their friends, Mater, Lightning, Dusty, and similar merchandise abounds and is cherished. Woody doesn't get played with.
The numbers show that while Toy Story is a merchandising success, Cars merchandising is even greater growing to be a $10 Billion giant even before the release of the sequel Cars 2. The Cars world is a rich imaginative environment which translated well into the successful Cars Land.
The cast of Toy Story is purposefully generic toys who do the extraordinary. That's why we all love the movies. They are ordinary toys in an ordinary world.
The ordinary nature of the Toy Story universe is what makes me skeptical of a Toy Story Land. The concept of walking in a giant world of toys seems a bit reminiscent of an All Star resort (perhaps a better fit for this concept). Maybe that generic nature will give it staying power when the movies are older, but it seems rather unremarkable compared to the rich world exhibited in Cars Land.
With so many rich worlds and wonderful characters in the Disney/Pixar universe, why limit it to Toy Story which might not translate as well in a large immersive experience?
While my kids LOVE to watch Toy Story, that world does not engage them outside the movie. While they watch Woody, Buzz and company, they LIVE Cars, Planes, and The Incredibles. Among my kids and their friends, Mater, Lightning, Dusty, and similar merchandise abounds and is cherished. Woody doesn't get played with.
The numbers show that while Toy Story is a merchandising success, Cars merchandising is even greater growing to be a $10 Billion giant even before the release of the sequel Cars 2. The Cars world is a rich imaginative environment which translated well into the successful Cars Land.
The cast of Toy Story is purposefully generic toys who do the extraordinary. That's why we all love the movies. They are ordinary toys in an ordinary world.
The ordinary nature of the Toy Story universe is what makes me skeptical of a Toy Story Land. The concept of walking in a giant world of toys seems a bit reminiscent of an All Star resort (perhaps a better fit for this concept). Maybe that generic nature will give it staying power when the movies are older, but it seems rather unremarkable compared to the rich world exhibited in Cars Land.
With so many rich worlds and wonderful characters in the Disney/Pixar universe, why limit it to Toy Story which might not translate as well in a large immersive experience?