I remember going to Disneyland as a little girl and riding this ride,
"Mr. Toad's Wild Ride".
Maybe it was supposed to be fun, but I recall it being disturbing.
I think I only rode it once.
I can almost see the darkness and feel the jerky little car
careening around corners and stopping and starting unexpectedly,
without my control...wild indeed!
Here's more from Wikipidia:
Mr. Toad's Wild Ride is a dark ride at Disneyland Park. It is one of the few remaining attractions that was operational on the park's opening day in 1955. The ride's story is based on Disney's adaptation of The Wind in the Willows, one of the two segments of the film The Adventures of Ichabod and Mr. Toad. It was once an attraction at the Magic Kingdom park inWalt Disney World, but despite a long protest against its closure, Mr. Toad's journeys to nowhere in particular were put to an end in 1998 and the ride was replaced the following year with The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh. However, a statue of Mr. Toad can be seen with many others at a pet cemetery outside the Haunted Mansion. Corey Burton does every voice at the attraction, except for the usage of audio from the film. Both parks now sell two shirts representing Mr. Toad's Wild Ride, with the shirts at Walt Disney World made for the 1971 Collections set.
I woke up this morning thinking about this ride and how many times in life
our thoughts and feelings invite us to step aboard...and we do...and we ride...
and how good it feels when the ride stops and we choose to get off...
because we can...but it seems we have to ride it to the end,
no detours, no short-cuts...but always remembering,
it's just a ride.
(And, that's the hardest part!)
In the
Disney Land version, guests enter a recreation of Toad Hall, passing by
artistic works commemorating characters from "The Wind in the
Willows". A large mural shows the adventures of Toad and his motorcar,
foreshadowing various scenes in the ride. Guests hop aboard miniature, early1900s-era, multicolored motorcars. The name of
one of the characters from the film (Mr. Toad, Toady, Ratty, Moley, MacBadger,
Cyril, Winky or Weasel) is inscribed on each motorcar.
Passengers
begin their journey by crashing into a library, where MacBadger is seen
teetering atop a ladder with a stack of books. They then crash through the fireplace, where fiberoptic effects simulate
the scattering of embers on the floor. Narrowly avoiding a falling suit of
armor, the passengers break through a set of doors to find the interior hallway
of Toad Hall in disarray, as weasels swing from chandeliers. Guests then enter
the dining room, where Mr. Mole is eating at a dinner table and gets knocked
aside.
Upon
leaving Toad Hall, guests travel through the countryside, passing Mr. Rat's
house, aggravating policemen and terrifying a farmer and his sheep. Making a
right turn, guests head for the docks and get the impression that their car
will plunge into the river, but quickly make a sharp turn in a different
direction and enter a warehouse full of barrels and crates containing
explosives. Guests crash through a brick wall as the warehouse's contents
explode. They then head out into the streets of London, avoid a close collision
with a delivery truck, and enter Winkie's Pub, where Mr.Winkie the bartender holds two beer mugs. He ducks
down, leaving the mugs spinning in the air.
Passengers
then enter the town square, where the cars wreak further havoc on the citizens.
A working fountain featuring Toad and Cyril Proudbottom stands in the center of
the town. Behind this statue is a statue of Lady Justice peeking out from under her
blindfold. Next, guests enter a jury-less courtroom,
where the riders are proclaimed guilty by a judge (based on the film's
prosecutor for the Crown). The cars then enter what is presumed to be a dark
prison cell before abruptly turning right and landing on railroad tracks. The
vehicles bounce along the tracks in the dark before colliding head-on with an
oncoming train.
Guests
then arrive at the ride's final scene: a tongue-in-cheek depiction of Hell not
inspired by any scene in the movie or book. The entire room is heated, and the
scenery features small devils who bounce up
and down. We also see a demon who resembles the Judge from the courtroom scene.
Near the end of the scene (and the ride),a towering green dragon emerges and attempts to burn the riders to a
crisp. A glowing light is seen in the back of its throat and choking, coughing
noises are heard while the motorcar speeds away. Granted a reprieve, the
passengers eventually "escape" to the ride's loading and unloading
area, where they disembark.
Mr.
Toad's Wild Ride in Florida was one of the Magic Kingdom's
opening day attractions on October 1, 1971. Although it was modeled after the Disneyland attraction, it had some unique
characteristics that set it apart from its California counterpart. The most obvious
was that theFlorida incarnation had two separate
boarding areas. The vehicles (in the form of Jalopies) in each boarding area
were on separate tracks that followed different paths, so riders would get a
slightly different ride, depending on where they boarded.
Like its
counterpart at Disneyland, it was not
a thrill ride, but it was not slow and quiet like most dark rides. It made
sudden turns and often the vehicle would move at full speed towards an
obstacle, which would move out of the way at the last second. At one point the
vehicles on different tracks would head directly towards each other, giving the
sense of an oncoming collision. It was a very stylized attraction and resembled
a cartoon more than any other Disney ride. It contained highly ornate plywood
characters and sets that were very reminiscent of the multiplane camerawork
featured in many Disney films.
Despite
the ride's popularity and many protests, Mr. Toad's Wild Ride closed on
September 7, 1998 and was subsequently replaced with The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh. While
minor tributes to the ride can be found in Disney World, including paintings of Mr. Toad andMoley within The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh and
a statue of Toad in a pet cemetery outside
of Haunted Mansion,
traces of "The Wind in the Willows" characters within Walt Disney
World are minimal.
The two
tracks of the Walt Disney World version of Mr. Toad's Wild Ride didn't pass
through all of the same show scenes. Thus, each track gave riders a completely
different set of scenes to pass through.
On Track #1, riders passed through rural
English countryside upon leaving Toad Hall, coming face to face with a few cows
along the way. After passing through a small tunnel with several warning signs,
guests made a turn into a central plaza. Traveling around the turn, the
vehicles passed a policeman signaling riders to stop with his whistle. Guests
then made a right hand turn into the courtroom as the judge declared Mr. Toad
guilty. Upon making a right hand turn, the vehicles entered several
weasel-filled jail cells.
After
winding through the cells, guests emerged out into a dark forest, passing by a
shootout between the police and some weasels (using red lights to simulate
gunfire). Several of the police barriers then moved aside revealing a railroad crossing, complete with a ringing
bell. The gate then moved aside, and vehicles made a right hand turn onto the
tracks. Vehicles traveled along the railroad tracks, until getting hit by a
train (with riders seeing the headlight of the locomotive). A door then opened,
revealing the "Hell" scene. Afterwards, guests went through a door
back to the boarding area.
From the
boarding area to the plaza, Track #2
passed through two scenes not seen in Track #1: Toad's trophy room, and a Gypsy camp.
After rounding the plaza, instead of entering the courtroom, guests continued
on and entered Winkie's Tavern. The vehicles made a right hand turn and guests
could see the Weasels hiding out in the Tavern among the ale barrels. Following
this, guests emerged into the night countryside. Passing by Mr.Rat's house, the
vehicles reached a railroad crossing. This gate moved aside, and vehicles made
left hand turn onto the railroad tracks. Like on Track #1, the headlight of the
locomotive was visible before the train hit the riders. The "Hell"
scene on this track was merely a mirror image of the Track #1 "Hell"
sequence.
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