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NYT is Talking Hogwarts... It's COMING!!! LOS ANGELES — The Wizarding World of Harry Potter, the hotly anticipated new Florida theme park, will open in the spring and allow visitors to tour Hogwarts, buy quidditch gear and drink butterbeer.
Universal Orlando unveiled some details about the park, a 20-acre addition to its Islands of Adventure property, on Tuesday in a Web presentation. The resort, co-owned by NBC Universal and the Blackstone Group, secured the theme park rights to J. K. Rowling’s Harry Potter books in May 2007, but has been silent about specific plans until now. The so-called “theme park within a theme park” will be faithful to the visual landscapes of the Harry Potter films produced by Warner Brothers, which licensed the rights to Universal after a flirtation with the Walt Disney Company. “We’ve tried to include something from every book,” Alan Gilmore, an art director for the films who is helping to oversee the theme park designs, said in an interview. “We had free range to be as grand and as excessive as we could be,” he added. “It’s only money that holds us back in the end.” Universal and Warner would not discuss financial details, but analysts estimate Wizarding World will cost about $265 million, a relative drop in the bucket compared to what Universal’s bigger rival spends on expansions. Disney is pumping $1 billion into its California Adventure park, for instance, and just detailed hundreds of millions in expansion and refurbishment plans for other properties. But the Harry Potter sum is still considerable and Universal executives hope the result will be an immersive experience unlike any theme park currently offers. “We wanted fans to be able to truly live the experience of these movies,” Mark Woodbury, president of Universal Creative, the research and development group responsible for designing the resort’s attractions, said in an interview. Islands of Adventure could use the help. While the park is home to popular rides themed after “The Cat in the Hat” and “Jurassic Park,” it faces an industry-wide downturn in attendance due to the recession and complaints by tourists that it lacks new attractions. Analysts say about 5.3 million people visited the park in 2008. Universal Orlando is also coping with Disney’s $4 billion acquisition of Marvel Entertainment. Two of the most popular rides at Islands of Adventure are themed around Marvel characters: the Incredible Hulk and Spider-Man. Universal’s licensing agreements are long term but exclusive only to Florida; Disney can add the same characters to its parks in California, Europe and Asia, potentially weakening their Florida drawing power. Wizarding World, backed by Ms. Rowling’s legions of fans, will allow Universal to lessen its reliance on the Marvel characters and, to some degree, attractions based on the movies of Steven Spielberg. Mr. Spielberg has a spectacularly rich consulting contract that gives him about 2 percent of the resort’s gross, or an estimated $20 million a year, in perpetuity. Mr. Spielberg’s contract contains a stipulation that allows him to be bought out in the coming months — at a price in excess of $200 million in cash — and Universal is trying to negotiate an extension or some other contractual change. Universal Orlando has a deal in place to refinance about $1 billion in debt, but the terms rest on getting Mr. Spielberg squared away first, adding urgency to the negotiations. Three rides will form the center of the new park. Universal still won’t talk about much about the biggest one, a high-tech experience inside the castle called Harry Potter and the Forbidden Journey that involves the likenesses of the heroes from the films. Flight of the Hippogriff is described as a family coaster that simulates a Hippogriff (the half-horse, half-eagle beast from “Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban”) training flight over Hogwarts castle. Dragon Challenge is a twin high-speed coaster that will feature elements from the Triwizard Tournament. Interactive shopping is a major component, said Paul Daurio, show producer for the destination. For instance, the Ollivanders wand shop will replicate Ms. Rowling’s storyline: the wand chooses the wizard instead of the other way around. Other stores will offer unique Potter merchandise that is unavailable elsewhere, like extendable ears. The castle itself will be about 150-feet tall but will appear to tower some 600 feet in the air because of architectural and filmmaking tricks, Mr. Daurio said. Overall, the park will resemble Hogsmeade, Ms. Rowling’s all-wizard village. Wizarding World is already receiving rave reviews from at least one contingent: the actors from the films. Tom Felton, who plays Harry’s towheaded nemesis Draco Malfoy, has visited the property twice, once when construction was just getting started and again in recent days. “We always say on set, ‘If this place was real, it would be absolutely fantastic,’ ” he said in a telephone interview. “To actually walk into this world and be able to touch it and taste it and smell it — well, it’s just going to be fantastic.” http://www.nytimes.com/20....html?_r=1 You CANNOT use the name of God, or religion, to justify acts of violence, to hurt, to hate, to discriminate- Madonna
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well, being from that area (45 minutes away by car) I have a few concerns:
First: The weather there is almost NEVER cold. There are a couple of days in Junuary and Feb that might get down to 'chilly' for a brief time, but most of the days are warm and balmy to just plane hot. Whenever I picture the Harry Potter world, I see it being typically English with the usual chill, rain, and snow--How they're going to recapture that in Sunny Orlando is beyond me. Second: You have to drive about 11 hours before you see a mountain or high hill. How they're going to duplicate the Hogwarts landscape is beyond me. Of course, it is Universal, so if anyone can do it, they can. I just think sunny Florida is a strange place for that kind of setting. But then again, the Yeti ride in Disney World recreates the Himalayas in a fun way. | |
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Imago said: well, being from that area (45 minutes away by car) I have a few concerns:
First: The weather there is almost NEVER cold. There are a couple of days in Junuary and Feb that might get down to 'chilly' for a brief time, but most of the days are warm and balmy to just plane hot. Whenever I picture the Harry Potter world, I see it being typically English with the usual chill, rain, and snow--How they're going to recapture that in Sunny Orlando is beyond me. Second: You have to drive about 11 hours before you see a mountain or high hill. How they're going to duplicate the Hogwarts landscape is beyond me. Of course, it is Universal, so if anyone can do it, they can. I just think sunny Florida is a strange place for that kind of setting. But then again, the Yeti ride in Disney World recreates the Himalayas in a fun way. Vegas would have been the obvious choice it would have been an awesome casino | |
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ZombieKitten said: Imago said: well, being from that area (45 minutes away by car) I have a few concerns:
First: The weather there is almost NEVER cold. There are a couple of days in Junuary and Feb that might get down to 'chilly' for a brief time, but most of the days are warm and balmy to just plane hot. Whenever I picture the Harry Potter world, I see it being typically English with the usual chill, rain, and snow--How they're going to recapture that in Sunny Orlando is beyond me. Second: You have to drive about 11 hours before you see a mountain or high hill. How they're going to duplicate the Hogwarts landscape is beyond me. Of course, it is Universal, so if anyone can do it, they can. I just think sunny Florida is a strange place for that kind of setting. But then again, the Yeti ride in Disney World recreates the Himalayas in a fun way. Vegas would have been the obvious choice it would have been an awesome casino you never know it might happen. You CANNOT use the name of God, or religion, to justify acts of violence, to hurt, to hate, to discriminate- Madonna
authentic power is service- Pope Francis | |
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Imago said: well, being from that area (45 minutes away by car) I have a few concerns:
First: The weather there is almost NEVER cold. There are a couple of days in Junuary and Feb that might get down to 'chilly' for a brief time, but most of the days are warm and balmy to just plane hot. Whenever I picture the Harry Potter world, I see it being typically English with the usual chill, rain, and snow--How they're going to recapture that in Sunny Orlando is beyond me. Second: You have to drive about 11 hours before you see a mountain or high hill. How they're going to duplicate the Hogwarts landscape is beyond me. Of course, it is Universal, so if anyone can do it, they can. I just think sunny Florida is a strange place for that kind of setting. But then again, the Yeti ride in Disney World recreates the Himalayas in a fun way. i went to a University here that had snow every Christmas out in the student unions front yard it can be done. You CANNOT use the name of God, or religion, to justify acts of violence, to hurt, to hate, to discriminate- Madonna
authentic power is service- Pope Francis | |
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Ohh purple joy oh purple bliss oh purple rapture! REAL MUSIC by REAL MUSICIANS - Prince "I kind of wish there was a reason for Prince to make the site crash more" ~~ Ben |
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My wife & kids just went Universal this summer. They're BUMMED OUT that we didn't wait 1 more year!!!! By St. Boogar and all the saints at the backside door of Purgatory! | |
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