Monday, January 9, 2023

Fantasyland Pt. 2

It's time for what will probably be the longest post in this series, a look at the dark rides of Fantasyland (all six of them)! But let's start with the land's classic walkthrough that runs through Sleeping Beauty Castle.I went through this attraction twice and had two very different experiences. The first time I did it, there was hardly anyone else inside, allowing me to leisurely walk past the scenes at my own pace.On a crowded day later in the week, though, the walkthrough was an endless conga line that ruined the atmosphere of walking through the dim castle corridors.When the walkthrough is uncrowded, the spooky Maleficent scenes are quite effective.The foreboding Maleficent shadow terrified me, so much so that people were giving me weird looks when I was still screaming while riding the carrousel.Although Pinocchio's Daring Journey was my least favorite of the Fantasyland dark rides, I still really enjoyed it. The ride is fine, but the set presentation feels in need of an upgrade. Some of the scenes were difficult to see, so I think new backlights would be a welcome addition.That isn't to say that this ride isn't delightful. In most other parks it would be one of the best attractions, but at Disneyland, it plays a supporting role in the park's lineup of world-class dark rides.I enjoyed the dark turn from the whimsy of the Pleasure Island scene to the Salt Mine donkeys and the climactic Monstro effect.Flash photography isn't kind to the painted plywood flats in these rides, but I really like the pictures I captured.It may sound silly, but Mr. Toad's Wild Ride was one of the main things I was looking forward to experiencing at Disneyland.

Fantasyland is classic dark ride heaven, and Mr. Toad, with its zany gags typical of an old haunted house, is one of the best remaining rides of that genre.
Of course, after hearing stories about the closed Mr. Toad ride at Magic Kingdom, I was especially intrigued to ride Disneyland's now one-of-a-kind attraction.
I could have stood here all day, listening to "The Merrily Song" and watching the cars exit the fireplace. It entranced me. ;-)
I took this picture because I have never seen double lap seating on a dark ride before. They just doubled Toad's capacity like a boss.
It's hard to make it out in this picture, but there's a minuscule hidden Mickey in one of Toad's eyes.
I was smiling all the way through Mr. Toad every time I rode it (which was several times)! 
I love that the fountain in Mr. Toad is real, when it could just have easily been another plywood cutout.
Of course, your uncontrolled spin through London ends up in a steamy hell, which I'm sure has surprised and shocked generations of children.
Alice in Wonderland runs above Mr. Toad in part, but I really took this picture to capture the gigantic tree that I believe once broke an "accidental" fall from the Skyway. ;-)
I was astounded how every ride vehicle at Disneyland seemed to be polished and gleaming, which is amazing considering how many hundreds of ride vehicles are in the entire park as well as the heavy use these attractions see 16 hours a day.
Alice in Wonderland is a little longer than the other Fantasyland dark rides, and the elevated outdoor portion is still a highlight, even though it was subject to the addition of more walkways years ago. 
The landscaping is nice I guess, but more importantly, get a load of that beautiful, sinuous Arrow Development-designed guiderail with electrical pickup included!
I took this photo looking behind me on Alice during the Tulgey Wood scene.
Passing through this scene while listening to"March of the Cards" and "Painting the Roses Red" is wonderful. Unfortunately, the effect of the marching cards was not working while I was at the park. But all was forgiven when I heard that wacky Goofy yell while emerging onto the balcony.
I know I had some Mad Tea Party pictures in the last post, but this ride is just perfect. Perfect, you hear me?!
I was keen to ride the updated version of the Snow White attraction, though I am slightly disappointed that I never had the chance to experience the old Snow White's Scary Adventures, here or in Florida.
I almost left my lens cap in one of the cars, but I told the Cast Member at the unload panel, and a few minutes later, the empty car arrived back with my lens cap sitting on the seat.
While I wish the ride could have retained all of its campy old spooks, it seems like the update gaves Snow White a sense of cohesion it never had before now.
During one time I rode Snow White, my 9-year-old sister was in the front row, and she covered her ears when we came into this scene. When the Evil Queen spun around, she really jumped! But even so, she liked the ride.
I wish I could have taken flash photos in all the dark rides, but of course, that would be obnoxious and disrespectful in rides like the Haunted Mansion or Pirates.
While I wish I could have seen the Dark Forest scene that was removed for this updated finale, it's a delightful way to end the ride. The thousands of twinkling lights are really awe-inspiring.
I know we haven't looked at Fantasyland's most popular dark ride, but I only rode Peter Pan's Flight once, so I don't have any interior pictures to share.
I can see why Peter Pan gets such long lines, but it felt painfully brief, especially compared to the longer version of the ride at Magic Kingdom with its huge Neverland scene. I would probably name Snow White as my favorite Fantasyland dark ride, followed by Mr. Toad and Peter Pan.
it's a small world is in a class all its own among the Fantasyland dark rides. Although I enjoyed the ride itself of course, my favorite part was the attraction's charming and fanciful facade.
My family wasn't involved in this evacuation, but that would have been fun to walk off through the ride's scenes--though not fun for the Cast Members, obviously.
The Disneyland Railroad is seamlessly integrated with the facade, and there's no way you'd know the track is there without seeing the train go past.
A scene like this is what makes Disneyland special and one-of-a-kind: Mary Blair whimsy, meticulous landscaping, and Walt's train.
I only rode small world once, as my mom is not a fan of the song. Some people just are not in touch with their inner child. ;-)
Even though we still have only one land left to explore, there are still several more posts to come in this series!

25 comments:

TokyoMagic! said...

There is more terrific photography here, Andrew. With a flash or without a flash.....it doesn't matter to me. I like both! And who does it really bother, when you are the only one in the vehicle, or you are riding with people who don't care if you use a flash? But I'm sure some people will disagree with me on that.

I'm with you, Pinocchio is my least favorite of the Fantasyland dark rides. Not that it is bad....there is just something about it that doesn't measure up to the others. Also, "Snow White" next door was noticeably shorter, and I never understood why they didn't use some of the extra space given to Pinocchio, for Snow White instead. And it was even more noticeable when "Snow White" used to end with the Witch pushing a giant boulder down onto the Seven Dwarfs, immediately followed by a sign that read, "And they all lived happily ever after." Really? How is that possible? I'm glad to hear that they did a good job with the newest version of the attraction. Now if they could only do something about that new name!

Alice always used to be my favorite dark ride. I guess it still is, but it was better before the 1984 changes. Also, it definitely lost something when they had to widen the descending leaf/track outside of the attraction....both visually from the ground, and while riding in the vehicle.

Mr. Toad has always been a fun experience. And who would have thought that the Hell scene would still be there, today! I hope it never gets eliminated.....as well as the overall ride itself. That is sad about what happened to Walt Disney World's two-track Mr. Toad attraction.

Oh, and I think the Sleeping Beauty Castle walk-through is absolutely brilliant! It was a nice surprise when it re-opened with the new scenes. I say, kudos to Chris Merritt! He has to be the reason that it turned out so incredible.

I'm surprised to see guests being evacuated along that IASW walkway, without a safety rail! I would think that the Disney lawyers would insist on three layers of metal bars, so that anyone who's being evacuated, can't fall into the waterway, or a "parked" boat. I guess it's fortunate (for your mom), that you didn't all get stuck inside the attraction, with the theme song blaring. It wouldn't bother me, but I know the song is like fingernails on a chalkboard for some. Personally, I think any ride evacuation is fun!

Thanks for more "trip reporting"! I'm looking forward to more!

TokyoMagic! said...

P.S. Where is the video footage of you screaming, while riding the Carousel? I want to see that!!!

MIKE COZART said...

I’d say Toad is my favorite …. Of the Fantasyland Dark Rides …. But it’s difficult to put them in any order because there is something about them all I really love. I actually think Pinocchio is great …. It’s possible because we waited so long for it. It was announced to potentially be a part of a 70’s Fantasyland improvement adding a PINOCCHIO VILLAGE …. But then it was to be included as part of the unbuilt DUMBO CIRCUS “land” …. Then once the ORIENTAL LAND CO. declined on bring Toad to Tokyo Disneyland …. And they loved the models of Pinocchio WED had been working on. Pinocchio’s Daring Journey was one of the first Disneyland projects Tony Baxter worked on after Florida installation. And I have to agree with him … Pinocchio fit perfectly with the other New Fantasyland upgrades - and it felt like it had always been there.

Andrew: did you know the fleet of Disneyland Toad cars are comprised of newly made 1983 cars and original 1971 WDW 2 seater cars added when Florida replaced their cars with four-seaters and Disneyland was able to retire the original 1955 steel Toad cars.

Chuck said...

My last visit in November (after a 13-year gap) was my first opportunity to see the restored version of the Sleeping Beauty Walkthrough. I thought they did a marvelous job of recreating the mood of the original. Afterwards, they wouldn't even let me on the carrousel because I couldn't stop screaming. I still have nightmares.

Pinocchio is also my least favorite of the dark rides, although it's perfectly cromulent in its own way. I think the biggest issue is the "book report" format it takes, presenting a literal retelling of the story almost as though you are watching the film. Yes, there's the scene where you are in the birdcage in Stromboli's wagon, and there may be a scene where you are trying to escape from Monstro (I can't remember; I last rode it I think 13 years ago), but it doesn't have the same sort of pastiche-feeling relationship to their source material that the other three "front country" Fantasyland dark rides have.

Completely understand your desire to ride Toad, particularly since it's been relegated to the status of "legend" in its East Coast incarnation. I'm glad you enjoyed it and now understand from personal experience why it's a fan favorite. I do regret that you never had an opportunity to see Rolly Crump's version at the MK. The sheer size of the attraction and complexity of the track plan alone were amazing.

I thought you were messing with us on that Hidden Mickey. I even dug up and zoomed in on a 2006 picture I took of the Toad statue from almost the same angle with nearly-identical lighting and couldn't find it. I finally tracked down a YouTube video that showed the location, and I even had to watch that twice before I realized I wasn't being had with some Disney-insider practical joke I wasn't aware of. Thanks for pointing it out - I would have totally missed it otherwise.

One of the two things I missed on my last visit that were on my "must see" list but we just didn't get to was Alice (the other was Storybook Gardens). With my long-running Alice fandom (which stretches back to my mother reading to me in the afternoons when I was in pre-school), I almost feel like I cheated on her. Please don't tell her - I promise it won't happen again!

Glad you noticed the most important part of the attraction. Without that guiderail, that ride goes nowhere.

I also missed the Snow White update. Your pictures imply that the biggest thing they changed was the name.

Come to think of it, we didn't do any of the attractions on the east side of Fantasyland. It's just never been the same since we lost the Welch's Juice Bar.

On our visit, it's a small world was closed for its annual redressing into small world holiday, opening the day after our last day in the Park. I was disappointed I couldn't ride the original attraction; I could ride that thing for hours and not get tired of it. I don't even need earplugs. I now understand the complaints about the new boat aesthetics.

Thanks again for sharing, Andrew, and I look forward to the next installment!

Chuck said...

Mike, the concept art for a Pinocchio ride is the only thing I clearly remember from our one visit to the Preview of Coming Attractions in the old Wurlitzer space in 1976. By the early '80s, I figured it was never going to happen. I remember reading (during my one and only detention in high school) in the WDP 1983 Annual Report about New Fantasyland and everything that had opened with it and being pleasantly surprised that it had finally been built.

Cool detail about the Toad car fleet. Thanks again for your contributions to this community (as well as being an all-around swell guy).

Andrew said...

TokyoMagic!, I had no idea that they had to shorten Snow White when Pinocchio was added, but that makes sense. I think the “what the heck?” ending was pretty much the signature of the old Snow White, for better or worse. The name could be worse… pretty soon, it will be “Weather Rainbow’s Enchanted Wish,” so Disney can be more inclusive. ;-) The pre-1984 Alice is high on my list of rides I would love to go back and visit when I have a time machine one day (which is inevitable). In some ways, it seems like it was wackier than Snow White.

I want to say Toad is safe given that parts of Alice are right above it, but I’m not going to jinx it. Chris Merritt and team did a great job with the SBC Walkthrough–I think we can all agree on that. How wonderful it must be to call an attraction your own. When I had to evacuate people from the “shoot-the-chute” ride at Kennywood, I had to help people get out of the boats while on a high incline with a gap of a few inches between the boat and the staircase. All bets are off during emergency situations, I guess. Thanks for commenting as always! And I always scream during a carousel ride, including when I’m operating the Kennywood Merry-Go-Round. It gives the band organ music a much fuller sound.

Andrew said...

Mike Cozart, I feel like the high number of classic dark rides is one of the main strengths that Disneyland has over WDW. I understand why you would be a big Pinocchio fan, as I know you were closely following the park’s new additions back when it was being planned. How cool that a Mr. Toad ride could have ended up at TDL, and no, I had no idea that some of the cars at Disneyland are originals from WDW. That is awesome… I’m assuming there’s no way to pick them out from the 1983-built vehicles?

Andrew said...

Chuck, my uncontrollable screaming is a real problem or something like that. Every dark ride, no matter how chessy, is cromulent in my book. Even if Pinocchio isn’t as original as the rest of the Fantasyland dark rides, it’s still a classic at this point. I agree that the best part of a ride like Mr. Toad is how it is almost tangentially related to the film that inspired it. When I was in elementary school, I found one picture of the track layout for the Florida Mr. Toad ride and was fascinated by it. I’d give anything to have ridden that thing. Sorry if I sent you on a goose chase to find that Hidden Mickey. I didn’t look for too many during my visit, but that is definitely one of the most obscure ones!

By “Storybook Gardens,” I assume you mean Storybook Land? The changes in the first half of Snow White don’t go much beyond projection mapping and some new special effects in the dwarfs’ mine. They moved the dwarfs on the cliff to be earlier in the ride and replaced the old finale with a new figure of Snow White and the prince. I’m pretty sure the Welch’s Juice Bar was on the west side of Fantasyland, but don’t take my word because I’ve been confused ever since we lost the Chicken of the Sea Pirate Ship. And you were reading the WDP 1983 Annual Report in your high school detention… haha! Thanks, Chuck.

Chuck said...

Not a wild goose chase on the Hidden Mickey - it was kind of fun. I lost interest in most Hidden Mickeys in the late ‘90s when the Internet fanbase went crazy over it and it stopped feeling “special,” but it’s fun to find the really subtle ones.

Oof! Of course I meant Storybook Land. Storybook Gardens was an attraction in Wisconsin Dells that I visited as a kid and later took my own kids to before it closed around 2010.

And…argh! I meant the west side of Fantasyland. I have a good excuse though…hear me out on this! When I think about actually being in Disneyland, I orient myself on the castle. Which means in much of the Park, the castle is in a northerly direction, but when you are inside Fantasyland, the castle is to the south, which means that west is to the right rather than the left like it is on maps or everywhere else in the Park. Either that, or the Major has infested me with his directional dyslexia.

The detention story was kind of funny - I was in English class my sophomore year and we were in the library doing research for a paper. We were forbidden from talking, but one of my friends at out table would not stop running his mouth. I got frustrated, turned to him and quietly told him “you need to shut up or you are going to get us in trouble.”

Well, Mrs. McCauley just happened to look over at that moment and saw my lips moving. She stomped over and slapped a detention on me.

My friend felt pretty bad about it (although not bad enough to speak up and take the blame in my place) and gave me the 1983 and 1984 annual reports (which he just happened to have in his backpack) as reading material. I actually enjoyed that detention and was surprised how quickly it was over.

JB said...

Poor Andrew, scarred (and scared) for life because of spooky ol' Maleficent. Maybe in 20 or 30 years you'll be able to ride the Carousel again without screaming. There's always hope!

I've never been on the Pinocchio ride so your photos are extra special for me. (I suppose I could use google images, but that's no fun.) I like the elaborate puppet show facade above the entrance. I like that we can see the track on the floor. And yes, the pictures came out really well!

"Mr. Toad's Wild Ride was one of the main things I was looking forward to experiencing at Disneyland."... That sounds silly. ;-)

I noticed several 'plus-sized' ride operators in these photos. We never would have seen that in ye olden days. Oh well, things change.

In the "Arrow Development-designed guiderail" photo of the Alice ride, you clearly didn't keep your arms inside the vehicle at all times like the sign warns us. For shame! Did they kick you off the ride and send you to Disneyland jail to make churros for 10 years?

"Snow White's Enchanted Wish"?... Hmmph! It should have read "Snow White's Dreamy Magical Enchanted Wish"! Why must they use that language on everything they do these days? It's become a running gag.

I've always liked that strange pump organ that Grumpy plays. Years ago, I was going to make a working model of it but I'm not sure if I figured out how it would actually work; with multiple notes per pipe.

That's a really nice shot, outside Peter Pan, with all the medieval architecture and flowers. Also a really nice pic of the Small World facade with the little clock figures going around. Perfect lighting.

Sounds like everybody is cringing at the Snow White attraction name. (I refuse to mention it again.)

Awesome photos, as usual Andrew! (Is a 69 year old guy allowed to say "awesome"?)

Nanook said...

Andrew-
As usual - your photos are so flattering to The Park - and make it hard for anyone to not stop everything and head on over to Disneyland.

Thanks for sharing these with us.

TokyoMagic! said...

Andrew, I guess I didn't phrase that right. It's not that they shortened Snow White for the 1983 version. It's just that the new Pinocchio attraction was so much longer than SW. I thought they should have devoted some extra space to the new SW ride, since it looked like they ran out of room for a proper ending to the attraction....or at least a proper closure to the story that they were trying to convey. I remember an employee telling me back in the eighties, that a lot of guests complained about the ending. I wouldn't have had a problem with the ride ending the way it did. I just don't think they should have followed that ending with a sign that reads, "And they all lived happily ever after." Supposedly, the guest complaints were the reason they went back and added the "lightning strike" behind the Witch, and also the silhouette of her appearing to fall backwards. Those weren't there when the 1983 version first opened.

I have a question! I haven't seen the new "Snow White's Magical Enchanted Wish Filled With Dreams" yet. Is the scene where the Prince kisses Snow White a projection, or actual three-dimensional figures like the ones from the former SW attraction at WDW?

Major Pepperidge said...

Andrew, thanks for yet another fun post! I’m glad you had at least one chance to see the Sleeping Beauty Castle walk-thru without too many distractions. My last visit was no ideal, too many slow people who talked loudly. Ugh.

I quite like Pinocchio’s Daring Journey, maybe I am not looking at it with your critical eye? Or maybe it’s because Pinocchio is my favorite animated film. Either way I’m always happy to ride it.

Mr. Toad is always wonderful, I was shocked when a friend of mine suggested that going to Hell was “too much”. What? It’s the best part of the ride!

The Alice update is quite nice, though I am still not entirely sold on all of the projection effects. I suppose it’s the only way to make affordable changes. I rode it twice on my last visit!

I miss the scarier version of the Snow White ride - it’s still nice, but it amazes me that scaredy-cats must have complained enough to have the thing dumbed down. Boo! I did not know that the Florida version of Peter Pan was (significantly?) longer, as far as I’m concerned all of the dark rides are much too short.

I still hope to be evacuated off of a ride someday - my last ride on “Pirates” seemed like it might happen, we were stuck for a LONG time without moving. But they finally got us going. IASW would have been a good one, I wonder if there are lots of hidden exits along the way? And how do they get everyone out of the boats?

I look forward to MANY more trip report posts! ;-)

Andrew said...

Chuck, I’ve heard of Storybook Gardens. I love those old storybook parks with their fiberglass statues that look like they have 100 layers of paint on them. I appreciate you trying to cover your back on getting the direction of Fantasyland wrong, but there’s really no excuse. ;-) Oh my gosh, your detention story is hilarious! You’re lucky to have had a friend who was big enough of a nerd to have a Walt Disney Productions annual report in his backpack!

Andrew said...

JB, if the carousel is too nerve-racking, at least I can always ride the park bench. As for Mr. Toad, I’m just silly sometimes, okay?! :-) I took the Alice photo from the walkway next to the ride, or maybe my arms are six feet long. I disagree that “Snow White’s Enchanted Wish" is a bad name. In fact, I think it should be extended to the rest of the Fantasyland dark rides. How does “Mr. Toad’s Enchanted and OSHA-Approved Ride” sound? Yes, you are more than allowed to say awesome haha. Just don’t say “lit” or “fire…” but I’m sure you’re probably not familiar with those slang words!

Andrew said...

Nanook, I’m glad that you found my photos to emphasize the better parts of Fantasyland.

Andrew said...

TokyoMagic!, thanks for clarifying that the Snow White layout wasn’t heavily modified in 1983. I think you give the perfect insight when you say the old ending was fine, but the “happily ever after” sign was a bit puzzling. I couldn’t recall if the “lightning strike” was added in 1983 or not, but even that was too abrupt to lead right into a fairytale ending. The scene with Snow White and the Prince uses physical figures, with the Prince being animated. There is a scrim in front of them that uses projection effects.

Andrew said...

Major, I’m sorry that your last time going through the walkthrough was not the best. Walkthrough attractions can only be consistent if they have an attendant at the entrance who disperses people evenly. I love Pinocchio as well, I just think it’s lacking a distinctive touch of wonder or zaniness like the rest of the dark rides have. The Hell scene in Mr. Toad is over before you realize what happened, pretty much. It’s perfect!

Some of the Alice projection effects are tasteful, but I’m not the biggest fan when they replace physical scenes. Both Alice and Snow White have a lot of projections, but I think the lack of them adds charm to Pinocchio and Mr. Toad. Peter Pan might be a minute longer at Magic Kingdom–it has the same scenes but they’re just bigger. I’ve never been evacuated off a ride either (though I’ve done them myself), but an “evac” from any Disneyland attraction would be amazing.

I’m going to WDW with my school orchestra in April, so don’t worry, there will be lots more trip reports!

TokyoMagic! said...

Andrew, I can't say for sure if the original layout of the SW attraction was modified much for the 1983 redo. That ride layout wasn't "burned" into my memory as much as the ride layouts for "Alice" and "Peter Pan." I can say that the track for SW was completely ripped up, the floor/concrete completely dug up, and the entire space gutted. You can see the evidence of that here:

https://meettheworldinprogressland.blogspot.com/2015/04/king-arthurs-carrousel-part-2.html

I just remembered that the long-time DL veteran cast member, who told me about guests complaining about the ending for the SW attraction, also told me about another New Fantasyland ('83) complaint. He said that guests also complained about the ending to the Pinocchio's Daring Journey, and asked why he was still in "puppet form" at the end of the ride and not a "real boy" like at the end of the movie. Once it's pointed out, it does make one wonder......

Melissa said...

I've fallen behind on your Disneyland posts! I'm going to have to go backwards through time and catch up on them all. All these shots are lovely and capture the rich colors of Fantasyland. And you're right; everything does look shiny and clean.

I was lucky enough to ride Florida's version of Snow White's Scary Adventures a bunch of times very close to its closing, and while it was sad to see how they'd let the maintenance go in anticipation of the teardown, I'm glad I have reasonably recent memories of it.

"Lou and Sue" said...

Andrew, your pictures are excellent! And, as always, your commentary is fun!

I'm laughing at your new name for the Snow White attraction:
"Weather Rainbow's Enchanted Wish," and also at your statement, "And I always scream during a carousel ride, including when I’m operating the Kennywood Merry-Go-Round. It gives the band organ music a much fuller sound." LOL!

Thank you, again, for an entertaining post, with a trip to my favorite place. I'm looking forward to more, plus your future posts from your upcoming WDW trip in April. How cool is that?!

Andrew said...

TokyoMagic!, thanks for the link to that post, which I had never seen before. I had no idea that the Carrousel coexisted in its new location with Skull Rock for a time. Those are some really rare and valuable images you captured. I guess Pinocchio should be a "real boy" in the final scene, but you go by it so quickly that I can't help but wonder if that's too much of a nitpick.

Andrew said...

Melissa, no worries! Read them whenever you have the time. You're lucky that you got to ride Snow White in Florida so close to its closing. You're completely right that maintenance always begins to let things go when an attraction is nearing its end. Sometimes you can see the warning signs several years in advance.

Andrew said...

Sue, I'm glad you enjoyed the post! I'm excited about my WDW trip--hopefully I'll get to ride the new Tron roller coaster.

MIKE COZART said...

That statue of Mr. Toad in the Toad Hall que has been there since the New Fantasyland opened …. The mold for it was created for Walt Disney World in 1971 the master was sculpted by imagineer Harry Holt. In 1983 the Disneyland ( there’s two : another in the fountain sculpture in “London Towne”) had Toad with one arm behind his back and the other extended foward holding his Monocle …. They way he does in the film’s courtroom scenes. Guest however were constantly breaking the Monocle out of his fingers …. Eventually WDI stopped replacing the prop. Guests were then constantly placing rolled up napkins or paper made to look like a joint and placing it in the open space between his fingers where the monocle used to be. Over time Toad’s hand was experiencing so much extra wear from passing guests always having to touch or pull on his extended hand , WDI performed some surgery to Toad and now BOTH his arms are behind his back in a contemplative stance.


A very good example of why WED/WDI created the “safety envelope” for attractions!