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Islands of Adventure: Harry Potter

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June 1, 2007

Updates are starting to come in. This new land will take up 20 acres and borrow some land from the Lost Continent.

May 31, 2007

It's Official! The Wizarding World of Harry Potter is coming to Islands of Adventure in 2009. Billed as "A Theme Park within a Theme Park". Expected to open in late 2009 (possibly early 2010), the new environment will feature immersive rides and interactive attractions, as well as experiential shops and restaurants that will engulf guests to sample fare from the wizarding world's best known establishments. Also debuting will be a state-of-the-art attraction that will bring the magic, characters and stories of Harry Potter to life like never before.

The area will use a portion of the Lost Continent and an undeveloped area the is currently not in use. Look for the Forbidden Forest, Hogsmeade, and the Hogwarts Castle.

 

 

April 16, 2007

More on the Harry Potter rumor. This from the Jim Hill Media website:

By now, you've probably heard that Nikki Finke has confirmed what I wrote back back on February 5th (Though -- to be fair here -- I guess I should acknowledge that it was actually Arthur Levine of About.com & Lance Hart of Screamscape who first reported this story). That Universal Studios has in fact scored the theme park rights to J.K. Rowling's characters. More importantly, that Universal will shortly be announcing its plans to add a whole "Harry Potter" -themed land to the line-up of attractions that the company currently has at its "Islands of Adventure" theme park.

Mind you, Universal can't be all that happy about Ms. Finke (Or me, Mr. Levine & Mr. Hart, for that matter) letting Crookshanks out of the bag. Given the elaborate security precautions that the company had put in place in order to keep "Project Strongarm" under wraps. With a 24-hour guard being placed on the Universal Studios Hollywood soundstage where that mock-up of the flying Ford Anglia had been built. Where only key members of the creative team and/or senior General Electric / NBC / Universal officials were actually allowed in to view and then ride the prototype.

Now you'd think -- given the enormous amount of time, money & effort that the Walt Disney Company had wasted over the past few years in trying to woo Ms. Rowling, so that the Mouse could then score the exclusive theme park rights to "Harry Potter" -- that the Imagineers would be rather upset to see Universal Studios wind up with those rights instead. But that's honestly not the story that I've been hearing coming out of Glendale.

If anything, the guys at WDI are breathing a sigh of relief that it's Universal -- rather than Disney -- that will now have to deal with J.K. on a daily basis. Based on the tales that I've been told about Mickey's protracted negotiations with Ms. Rowling ... Well, let's just say that the author of the "Harry Potter" series is said to be somewhat difficult to deal with.

Wait a minute. It's probably not all that fair of me to characterize J.K. in this fashion. So how's about instead that I say that Ms. Rowling was reported to be very protective of her characters. More to the point, that she supposedly had some very definite ideas about what a theme park version of Harry Potter's world should look like.

How so? Well, according to the folks that I've spoken with who worked on the Disney version of this project ... J.K. allegedly wanted each & every guest who was experiencing the theme park version of Harry Potter's world to do so by first entering the Leaky Cauldron pub. Where -- by tapping on just the right brick ("Three up and two across ... ") -- they'd then gain access to Diagon Alley, that odd collection of Wizards-only shops & restaurants that's hidden away in the heart of London

From this area (Which was -- at least in the stand-alone version of the proposed "Harry Potter" theme park -- supposed to have been the equivalent of Main Street U.S.A. at Disneyland. As in: That area that established the style & the tone of the theme park to follow. More importantly, Diagon Alley would have been where most of the guests purchased their souvenirs before exiting the park that night), these folks were then supposed to have made their way to Platform 9 & 3/4 at King's Cross Station. Where -- after magically piercing the barrier that separates the Muggle world from the Wizard world -- guests would have then been able to board a full-sized version of the Hogwarts Express for a trip to Harry's alma mater.

Which admittedly (on paper, anyway) sounds wonderful. But to the folks who actually run the Parks & Resorts side of things at the Walt Disney Company, what Rowling was reportedly asking for sounded unfeasible. Never mind the costs involved in building such an elaborate recreation of Harry Potter's world, just the guest-flow issues (EX: In order to give each & every guest the experience of entering Diagon Alley through the Leaky Cauldron ... Well, that meant that the Mouse would have had to have built multiple versions of this seedy pub and then staffed each of these) were enough to give these Ops experts agita.

Even though this "Harry Potter" project was once viewed as Disney's possible answer to Anheuser-Busch's Discovery Cove (Where every day, 1000 guests each pay nearly $300 for the opportunity to swim with dolphins at this ultra-exclusive theme park) ... In the end, given everything that Ms. Rowling was allegedly insisting upon, Mouse House executives thought that it would take a decade or more to finally get a return on their initial investment. And given that no one within the company could actually guarantee that the public's interest in "Harry" wouldn't wane after the seventh book was published and the last "Potter" motion picture had been released ... Well, it was then thought that it might be best if the Mouse took a pass on this particular project.

Plus (to be blunt here) given that -- just about this same time -- the Walt Disney Company was wrapping up its deal to acquire Pixar Animation Studios ... Well, it was felt that the characters that John Lasseter & Co. had already created (Not to mention all of the animated features that this talented group of film-makers would be making for the Mouse in the future) would more than off-set the loss of the theme park rights to "Harry Potter."

As one Imagineering insider told me last week:

"Given how difficult Rowling had been to deal with, losing "Harry Potter" wasn't really that much of a loss. But Universal scoring an exclusive on Kuka's robotic arm technology ... That was a real heartbreaker."

You see, to date, that's been the under-reported part of this story. That it wasn't just that Universal Studios had scored the theme park rights to the "Harry Potter" characters. But that Kuka had also awarded Universal a 10-year exclusive on using its amazing technology in a theme park setting.

It was this news (and not that the Walt Disney Company & J.K. Rowling had failed to come to terms) that really upset the guys in Glendale. Mind you, before Kuka & Universal were able to hammer out their new deal, WDI did manage to score seven of these robotic arms. One of which is now being used in the angler fish sequence of Epcot's new "The Seas with Nemo & Friends" introductory ride. While the other six will then be used to create a similar sequence in Disneyland's soon-to-be-opening "Finding Nemo Submarine Voyage." With three of these robotic arms being used to move angler fish around on each side of the sub.

For more visit: Jim Hill Media

April 14, 2007

I’m told that Universal Studios Florida is finalizing terms to bring a type of “Harry Potter World” to its Orlando resort. The themed area would be at a previously unused portion of the amusement park. The negotiations have been kept uber-secret. This is in addition to the The Simpsons ride deal I announced earlier this week. (Previously, various online blogs and websites that follow theme parks have posted only unconfirmed rumors about both.) Having Harry will be like a cash cow for Uni. After all, the six Potter books published to date have collectively sold more than 325 million copies and been translated into more than 63 languages. The seventh and last book in the series, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, is scheduled to be released on July 21st. Its publishers have announced a record-breaking 12 million copies for the first print run in the U.S. alone. The first four books have been made into wildly successful motion pictures by Warner Bros, which has earned an estimated $4 billion in total worldwide revenue from them. The fifth pic, Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix, is scheduled for release on July 13. The books and movies have also spawned video games and assorted merchandise but never a theme park attraction. Back in 2005, a news story made the rounds that Walt Disney Co. wanted to create a Harry Potter theme park and execs were reportedly looking at a Singapore site for a huge complex with rides devoted to the Harry Potter stories. Disney watcher Jim Hill said that the company had been in protracted negotiations with J.K Rowling and Warner's to secure theme park rights for the complex. But that project never materialized. Instead, I'm told Universal went into negotiations with Warner's and that a Harry Potter them park deal is now set in principle but terms are still being finalized. Bill Davis, president of Universal Orlando Resort, was asked in February by the Orlando Sentinel about the possibility of a Harry Potter attraction. Davis replied: "Boy, I think that would be great. I can't talk about what we're going to be bringing to either one of our parks in the future. That's a forward-looking thing we can't discuss. I will tell you we're working hard to bring innovative, new technologically-advanced attractions to both of our parks.”

Universal has cashed in on other movie-related attractions by spinning Jurassic Park, The Mummy, Van Helsing, King Kong, Spider-Man, Hulk, Back To The Future, Jaws etc. into theme-park gold. Disney has woven its Pixar toons into its theme parks and went the reverse route with Pirates of the Caribbean, a Disneyland water ride that received a facelift in time for the second installment of the movie. Wall Street has been only so-so about theme parks because they have fixed costs and swing up and down with the economic cycle. When it first took over Universal, GE/NBC reportedly planned to sell the theme parks. But the company apparently discovered that they also generate great cash flow. Until now, the closest anyone has come to making Harry Potter into an attraction is Alnwick Castle, the location for Hogwarts School. And the gardens at London’s Buckingham Palace in 2006 were turned into a $10 million children’s theme park celebrating British children’s literature for the Queen's 80th birthday. J.K. Rowling read from her next Harry Potter book joined by Harry himself, actor Daniel Radcliffe.

 

February 1, 2007

Screamscape is reporting that the rumor is real! A source close to Screamscape confirms that Universal will replace the Lost Continent with Harry Potter. It appears that Universal has been trying to obtain the rights since the first film, Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone debuted back in 2001.

I'll admit I'm buying into the rumor being true since today also happens to be the day J.K. Rowling announced on her website that the 7th and final book, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hollows will be released on July 21, 2007. Could an announcement be in the works from Universal? We'll have to wait and see.

 

January 31, 2007

Here the latest news coming from Screamscape.com:

The Harry Potter project at IOA has been working under the codename of "Project StrongArm". Although screamscape can not confirm the Harry Potter story, the have been told by a source that StrongArm does involve the rethemwing of an existing attraction and the addition of an all new attraction.

They also published a report that the timeline for an opening could be mid to late 2008.

 

January 30, 2007

There's a whopper of a rumor out today that that The Lost Continent maybe in for a complete magical overhaul. According to a story which just appeared on Screamscape.com has the Islands being completely transformed into match a "hugely popular" children's franchise. We are talking about the one and only, Harry Potter. Could this rumor be true? There is absolute nothing comfirmed. But a rumor this size is worth at least posting.

Screamscape.com claims to have heard a rumor that maintenance crews have been giving the Island the Royal treatment for a group of executives who had come to the park.

About.com also posts that something is brewing for one of the Islands according to a source and that an "official" announcement from Universal may be imminent. If so, there could be wizards and witches some time in 2008/2010.

Talk about landing a first round draft pick! The franchise has been out in publication since 1998 with movies first appearing in 2001 and no amusement park has yet to claim an attraction to one of the biggest book and movie franchise in history.

Could there be a Howards Castle, Diagon Alley, and Whomping Willow in IOA's future?



 

 

 

 

 
 


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