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Summer Nights at Disney's California Adventure
DisneyDan  Sunday, August 22, 2010 7:59:04 PM

Hi all,

Another update for you from our trip to California for you! Enjoy.

This month on our trip to California we had the opportunity to see the brand new World of Color water spectacular at Disney’s California Adventure Park at the Disneyland Resort in Anaheim.

The show has received an extremely good reception so far from the locals and has become an instant hit at the Resort.

We were advised by our good friend that the best option for the seeing the show is the dining package that is offered at Ariel’s Grotto, so we booked that for the Sunday evening.

We had never eaten at Ariel’s Grotto before and I was keen to see what it was like. Sadly due to the nature of the dining package and the high volume of business they get for the show, the character experiences are not offered in the evenings for guests dining there for World of Color, which I was a little disappointed about. Nonetheless, we went along to our reservation and my immediate impressions were not so good.

The restaurant lobby is a very sparse looking lobby with a large blue window that looks onto Paradise Bay.

There are literally a few benches and the check-in desk. The walls have some strange coloured “gems” in them, which I guess is supposed to resemble jewels that are imbedded in the rock or something, but this effect is a complete failure, and our group agreed that it just looked like someone had taken shots at the wall.

So down the stairs we went into the restaurant, and to be honest my impressions down there were not much better. The wall still had the random holes and lumps in it, and there is a miserable looking mural on the wall with some random fish and a mermaid on it. The lights are really cheap and tacky looking, and the tables are crammed in together. There were 3 of us dining and we were initially put on a table obviously meant for two small people (which we were not). We got moved, and we sat down in our new place.

The first course was served and involved some cold meats, cheeses and salad items. Nothing spectacular, and was fairly bland.

The main course was a choice of fish or steak, we all chose the steak. It was quite a small main meal, and didn’t come with much else than the steak itself and a few small vegetables.

The desert was a set item, and consisted of a number of desert items on a sharing plate. It did actually look pretty neat with it‘s edible World of Color film strip, and was probably the best part of the meal.

For the price, which was around $40 per person, I would say that the meal itself was probably not worth that.

The reason for doing the meal of course is to get the “FastPass” tickets for the World of Color show.

World of Color has been pulling in immense crowds, and has caused Disney quite the logistical nightmare. Along with nightly showings of that and Fantasmic! over at Disneyland Park, the Resort becomes quite unworkable after about 6m every night. It actually is rather annoying and disappointing in a lot of respects. People come to Disney and spend a lot of money, and a lot of those people - like us - come a long way to be there. So when a parks posted opening hours are until say midnight, you don’t expect to pay full price entry and only be able to feasibly stay in the park until 6pm. Even attractions that you would not expect to be affected, are. The front of the park tends to be ok, but anything around Paradise Bay is either closed or simply inaccessible. The mass crowds that descend upon the Disneyland Resort on a nightly basis for World of Color and Fantasmic! are without question beyond Disney’s reasonable operational limit and experience.

So once we finished the meal, we went to line up in the holding area for our type of Fast Pass (there are different levels, which I will discuss later).

The holding areas are small and from what we understand from friends and Cast Members, are changing on a nightly basis simply because they haven’t figured out the best way to deal with it yet. So we waited a while, and were eventually allowed in quite some time before our show time. So far, along with the meal at the Grotto, we had “wasted” about 2 hours of our time. Now we had to wait nearly an hour more to see the show. As guests who have come from a long way, we ourselves thought that this was a bad way to do business and certainly does not add to the overall “magical” experience that visiting Disneyland Resort offers. People should not have to wait for three hours of their vacation time waiting for one show. Nor will they continue to do so once the hype has worn off.

The show is preceded by a small cavalcade of four giant lit up puppets of the Genie, Sebastian, Lumiere and Mike Wazowski. Along with a number of performers they do a mini procession around Golden Gate Park about fifteen minutes before the main show. It is semi-interesting, and keeps the crowds entertained, but I can’t help but think that they know that people are frustrated about wasting so much time over this one show - that they are almost compelled to watch because of the nightmare of actually trying to do anything else in the park while the show is going on - and so threw in this new offering to soothe them over.

The main show itself I have to say is interesting, but at the end of the day amounts to nothing more than pretty water. Fountains that shoot a hundred feet into the air and a bunch of lights aren’t really the most thrilling offering at the Disneyland Resort, and we personally think that Fantasmic! is much better.

The show features a number of scenes from the best Disney and PIXAR movies on large water “screens”, and are choreographed with the water fountains and lights under the water to the appropriate soundtrack for the movie.

It would also appear that Disney have had a number of problems with the mechanics of this show, as when we saw it some effects were not working, and as of currently the fountains are permanently visible above the water line in the bay, which makes the bay look very busy and messy in the day time. So much for the nice reflections scenic view.

As for the viewing arrangements, Disney have had to implement a FastPass system. You have to be at Grizzly Peak before park opening most days to get a good ticket, as they are distributed on a first come first served basis with the best location tickets going first, and very quickly. The dining packages offer the best views, and the picnics offer good views, but can be hit and miss. The front middle are of the bay, almost directly in front and slightly to the left of the new Little Mermaid construction, as you face the bay, is probably the best place to see the show. FastPasses go quickly, first thing in the morning and you have to be prepared to wait. If you aren't so worried about the view, and just want to see the show, you are still encouraged to get a FastPass, but probably don't need to do quite so much waiting around in the evening - just turn up. All those with FastPasses have a place, but where you end up even within your designated area can depend on how early you are.

The show requires a lot of time and effort to see, between the advanced planning of making a dining reservation, going to the reservation and waiting in the holding areas, or just waiting all day for the good places; or getting there at the crack of dawn for the first FastPasses.

Overall our experience with World of Color was ok. It wasn’t excellent, just ok; the show is not the awesome emotional rollercoaster I was expecting, and amounts to not much more than water and lights. The dining experience, although provided us with an excellent view of the show, was not a great one. The food was poor and the restaurant is everything that is wrong with California Adventure, and exactly why it so badly needs the upcoming improvements.

The biggest problem for me with the World of Color is the time it takes from you precious trip time, and the fact that most of the park becomes useless either because they close Paradise Pier early because of the show, or you simply can’t get about the park through the mass crowds.

If you are over in Disneyland Resort I would probably recommend it if you are able to spend the time and effort to see it, but if your vacation plans involve a lot of park hopping and seeing other attractions, maybe wait a year or two and just enjoy your Disney time first.

Glow fest was also in full swing during our visit, and has proved to be just as popular for Disney as World of Color. Glow Fest basically involves some food and drink wagons in the Sunshine plaza and Backlot areas, all brightly coloured with neon’s and lights, pumping out loud disco tunes from sundown to park close.

I have to say I was not overly impressed, and thought that it represented everything that is wrong with California Adventure, and why I thought they were trying to improve the place. It attracts large youth crowds, brings alcohol to the streets of the park, and makes the Sunshine Plaza and Backlot look like they have been hit by an obscure rainbow ad and banner campaign. The podium dancers wearing tights plastic outfits make it feel rather like a bizarre retro-futuristic 1980’s disco.

During Glow Fest the lines at the Backlot attraction can be really short, or even non-existent as people become too blurry eyed to realise they are in a theme park.

Currently Glow Fest is outsourced, but when it closes it is being re-imagined by Disney Imagineers and will be re-launched later this year as ElecTRONica, which sounds somewhat more interesting. Come Christmas it will be Snow Fest. Outsourcing was probably Disney’s biggest mistake with this one, and was wise to listen to the protests by the Imagineers to allow them to rethink it come the Fall.


Dan.

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