Texarkana Gazette

Guardians of the Galaxy: COSMIC REWIND puts an exclamatio­n point on Disney World’s reinventio­n of Epcot

- By Todd Martens Los Angeles Times

ORLANDO, Fla. — Can a roller coaster dance? The new Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind at Walt Disney World’s Epcot aims to answer that question with ride vehicles that twist and turn in time to a beat. They move, swiftly and smoothly, in a journey that will take guests back in time to randomly selected songs such as the Trammps’ “Disco Inferno,” Miami Sound Machine’s “Conga” and Tears for Fears’ “Everybody Wants to Rule the World,” among others, transformi­ng an area of the park that was once dedicated to the edu-tainment of the Universe of Energy into one where good times and save-the-world heroics take precedence over classroom lessons.

“The goal of our transforma­tion is that Epcot is a park about what’s possible, it’s about inspiring people and people are our subject.”

Cosmic Rewind is part of a multi-year transforma­tion of Epcot, a park once loosely based on Walt Disney’s concept of an altruistic future city dedicated to innovation and experiment­ation. Opened in October of 1982, Epcot was ultimately designed as a sort of permanent World’s Fair, with attraction­s in pavilions dedicated to the land, the sea and various science and engineerin­g topics, all of them sitting across from World Showcase, a celebratio­n of internatio­nal cultures.

But today it’s out with the old and in with the Marvel, as Cosmic Rewind is also Walt Disney World’s first proper superhero-themed attraction, and only the third Marvelbase­d ride at a Disney park in the U.S. It’s one piece of a multi-pronged update to place more Disney characters in a park that has long stood on its own and with its own mascot, the little purple dragon Figment. Cosmic Rewind is arguably the boldest shift yet away from Epcot’s cultural and once educationa­l focus.

The good news: It’s a fresh infusion of theme park vitality to a park that has badly needed some reinventio­n among aging attraction­s.

The Universe of Energy, a ride once described by Disney as documentin­g how “oil, coal and natural gas [became] so important to our way of life,” was no modern classic, as its various revamps over the years never quite divorced the ride from its roots as borderline oil industry propaganda. It did, however, have a dramatic scene involving larger-than-life robotic dinosaurs. Cosmic Rewind is generally screen-based, with the exception of some impressive pre-show illusions that want to trick us into believing we teleported into space.

But lack of dinosaurs aside, the ride still attempts to make overtures to Epcot’s traditiona­l themes. Though irreverent and self-reflexive — the raccoon-like character of Rocket jokes about Epcot’s name at one point — the ride takes a science-rooted explanatio­n to the birth of the universe. Though the ride is essentiall­y a chase through a darkened show building filled with floor-to-ceiling screens, it’s ultimately a roller coaster that places an emphasis on feeling over high-speed thrills or any fake sense of danger.

The power of song to unite us is a theme, as is the joy of discovery through space exploratio­n. There’s a villain that wants to destroy Earth, but what I remember more is the wonder of rocking in time over a vision of the Milky Way, a moment that felt like a triumphant treatise on space travel. In that way, Cosmic Rewind nods to the classic Space Mountain, just with far more pop and Chris Pratt’s Peter Quill (other Hollywood personalit­ies who make appearance­s include Glenn Close and Terry Crews, in addition to the full roster of Guardians).

“The goal of our transforma­tion is that Epcot is a park about what’s possible, it’s about inspiring people and people are our subject,” says Zach Riddley, the creative executive with Walt Disney Imagineeri­ng who has been overseeing Epcot’s rebranding and additions, which include a ride inspired by “Ratatouill­e,” a new nighttime show and the upcoming walk-through attraction “Journey of Water,” inspired by “Moana.” “The idea of what a global community means is something that we focus on in different ways. It can be an intergalac­tic community.”

Where Epcot has been and where it’s heading is perhaps exemplifie­d and contrasted by Cosmic Rewind’s neighbor, Spaceship Earth. Both rides are centered on imaginativ­e concepts of time travel but Spaceship Earth is a slow-moving attraction that takes us through visions of the Renaissanc­e as well as the birth of space travel and the World Wide Web — the ride as an essay centered on human communicat­ion. Cosmic Rewind, in contrast, is around a 3-minute blast of infectious melody, modern intellectu­al property, and a unique ride system that marries Haunted Mansion-style Omnimover vehicles that can turn and rotate with roller coaster fluidity and speed.

The conceit is that it’s Epcot’s first “other-world” showcase pavilion, one dedicated to showing the similariti­es among humans, aliens and the residents of the planet of Xandar, the fictional Marvel world that figures heavily into the “Guardians of the Galaxy” films. Here, in the queue of the ride, there are nods to the Xandar way of life — Riddley notes, for instance, that we can learn a little about Xandar’s urban planning — but these are fantasy history lessons. That’s not necessaril­y a bad thing; just a change from Epcot’s original mission, but Cosmic Rewind still ultimately succeeds as a jukebox roller coaster.

“One of the big themes here is Xandar is this other planet that has come to Epcot and essentiall­y put their ver

—Zach Riddley, Walt Disney Imagineeri­ng

sion of a World Showcase pavilion here,” says Steve Spiegel, a story editor executive at Imagineeri­ng. “We really wanted that theme to be that even though they’re from another planet two and a half million light years from us that we’re more alike than we are different. They’re reaching out across the stars to make friends, because we all came from the Big Bang and we all were born with the same stardust.”

Such themes of togetherne­ss come at a time when the Walt Disney Co. has been embroiled in a tussle with Florida Republican­s over the company’s statement against the anti-LGBTQ legislatio­n known as the “Don’t Say Gay” bill, which has led to state leadership taking retaliator­y moves to dismantle long-held operationa­l privileges given to Walt Disney World. There’s no indication that anyone at any of Walt Disney World’s crowded parks gives a hoot, but Cosmic Rewind includes one moment where it’s implied humans may not always have their act together.

Park aficionado­s, for instance, will certainly hear some words that would have once been blasphemy to echo in Epcot. The villain here is out to destroy all humans and Earth, with the justificat­ion that “this species has failed.” Striking words for a park built on concepts of human ingenuity, but Guardians doesn’t dive deep into human foibles and instead plays the line off as humor.

“That’s why it’s the villain saying it,” says Spiegel. “Because Epcot is all about the aspiration­al and how we’re all more alike than we are different. We all live on this Spaceship Earth together. So it’s about saving humanity from a person who just doesn’t get it.”

Cosmic Rewind is the loudest piece of Epcot’s reinventio­n, which will also include a new plaza dedicated to festivals and the “Moana” walk through. Other promised initiative­s, such as a pavilion dedicated to the art of play and a “Mary Poppins” inspired attraction, have fallen off the current docket in the wake of extended pandemic closures with no word yet as to when they may re-materializ­e. But in the meantime, Ridley promises “Moana’s” Journey of Water will tap into Epcot’s original themes.

“The Epcot-ness of this story is to focus on learning about the water cycle — how it moves through various ecosystems,” Ridley says. “We use ‘Moana’ as references and a jumping off point, but we’re not telling that story of that film or of her. It’s about this message. Epcot again is a park about people and possibilit­y. So our way in on an Animal Kingdom or Magic Kingdom story is that it is about us, and what we can learn and do, and what it should inspire us to do in terms of action.”

Hitting all those marks in a roller coaster is a challenge, but I look forward to revisiting Cosmic Rewind. No ride before this, after all, has ever inspired me to want to dance on a roller coaster.

 ?? Joe Burbank /Orlando Sentinel ?? video extra
See related video on the Gazette app.
above
Celestial projection­s greet guests in queue to ride the Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind roller coaster during a preview event May 5 at Epcot at Walt Disney World, in Lake Buena Vista, Florida. Based on the popular movie franchise, the ride is scheduled to open on May 27 and is one of the largest fully enclosed coasters in the world.
Joe Burbank /Orlando Sentinel video extra See related video on the Gazette app. above Celestial projection­s greet guests in queue to ride the Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind roller coaster during a preview event May 5 at Epcot at Walt Disney World, in Lake Buena Vista, Florida. Based on the popular movie franchise, the ride is scheduled to open on May 27 and is one of the largest fully enclosed coasters in the world.
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