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Remain seated, please.
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Please remain seated.
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Pirates of the Caribbean,
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a beloved attraction
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based on a wildly successful
Disney movie franchise.
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Oh, no. Uh-uh.
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The original opened in 1967.
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Right, uh,
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Pirates of the Caribbean,
a beloved attraction from the '60s.
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A glorious nostalgic ode
to Walt Disney's creative vision
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and it has nothing to do with the movies.
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Oh, see, now that's from the movies.
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Hm, well, in this chicken or egg scenario,
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it was definitely the chicken
who came first, uh, see?
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-There it is.
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The chickens get a lot of attention.
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But whichever way you know
this Disney classic...
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Anaheim, Florida, Paris, Tokyo,
and Shanghai.
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...it seems that Pirates of the Caribbean
has stolen our hearts.
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It's one of those attractions
that you gotta ride.
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And conquered the seven seas...
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...from Anaheim...
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It actually probably is the ride
that inspired me to be an Imagineer.
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...to the full-blown technical might
of Shanghai's astounding deep dive.
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We're gonna take you
to the bottom of the ocean.
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We'll unlock the bounty of riches,
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deep within the warm welcoming waters
of this true Disney classic
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that has endured and evolved
for generations.
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Smells old.
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Oh, she's talking about
the maintenance manual,
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not the attraction.
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These squeaky clean pirates
have been constantly bathing.
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No, no!
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Since the late '60s.
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-Except for this guy.
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But before we plunge into the drink,
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we need to start this story on dry land
with a young midwestern boy
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in the early 20th century United States.
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His name?
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Walt Disney, of course,
and young Walt, it comes as no surprise,
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was quite the little bookworm.
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Walt Disney grew up
on the kind of adventure stories
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that you would have expected.
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He loved stories about tales
of the West and things like that,
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as all boys did at that time.
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But Walt was also interested
in pirate stories.
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-Ah.
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Of course, one of them was
Robert Louis Stevenson's Treasure Island
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and there was also the book
called Queen of the Caribbean
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by Emilio Salgari,
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and as he grew older, of course,
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those were the stories
that he wanted to share
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in his filmmaking endeavors.
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And when he started working
on live-action films in 1950...
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...the story he picked
was Treasure Island.
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The story of young Jim Hawkins,
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whisked away on a seafaring adventure
in search of buried treasure,
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alongside the salty scoundrel,
Long John Silver.
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The word of a gentleman
be good enough for Long John.
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And he was such an interesting
and layered character
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that was both kind of lovable
and difficult, but funny sometimes.
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There was something funny
about Long John Silver.
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- More specifically,
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about actor Robert Newton's portrayal
of the beloved pirate.
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He had such a great thick accent.
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Well, blow me down for an old sea calf.
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He set the standard for the way
we now think pirates talk, the whole...
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-"Arrr!"
-Arrr!
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That whole thing came from a Disney movie.
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But Walt was doing something else
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besides redefining pirate movies
around that time.
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In the early 1950s,
he started developing Disneyland.
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That's it, right here.
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A magical adventurous place
where pirates would fit right in.
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But he didn't have an opportunity
to add an attraction
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based on pirates then.
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So when Disneyland opened,
parkgoers could make treasured memories,
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without having to worry about them
being plundered.
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But before we walk that plank,
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we have to acknowledge
the land that pirates, uh... anchors,
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New Orleans Square,
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which also didn't exist
on Disneyland's opening day.
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But that's not to say the park was absent
of any southern charm.
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In the earliest years of Disneyland,
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there was a section of Frontierland
that they called Magnolia Park.
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Well, folks, as you can see,
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I'd like to stay here
at the Mardi Gras forever.
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And it was right there
on the rivers of America
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and had that real southern feel.
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It's the real thing, all right.
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It wasn't long
after Disneyland's 1955 opening
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that plans were underway
to start upgrading the park.
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And one of the ideas that they had
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was to take that Magnolia Park area
of Frontierland
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and turn it into a whole new
New Orleans-themed land by itself.
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Some kind of
a New Orleans center? Or maybe a...
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New Orleans Square.
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Exactly.
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But New Orleans Square
is not exactly a square.
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Yeah, but New Orleans Irregular Polygon
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doesn't quite have the same ring to it.
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And so it was a very much, you know,
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the... the kind of New Orleans Square
waterfront south.
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And pirates were a big thing in that area.
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That's right.
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New Orleans is rich with pirate lore,
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for example, there's the notorious
French pirate, Jean Lafitte,
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who helped the US win
the Battle of New Orleans
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in the War of 1812,
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and Walt wanted to feature
these historical figures
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in this new corner of the park.
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One of the things that they thought about
was a wax museum
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where you could walk through an attraction
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where you would see
the famous pirates of the past.
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And you could see Blackbeard
and Jean Lafitte.
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Yeah, there he is again.
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And other famous pirates.
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And so Walt...
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He asked me to give it some thought.
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And so this man did.
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But this is not just any man.
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This is former Disney animator,
turned Imagineer, Marc Davis,
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who happened to be one of Walt's
most trusted artists.
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He had a unique talent.
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You know, he's a fine artist,
but he's a gagman.
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He could draw a picture of a scene,
completely explain what is going to be,
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and somebody could just build it
from that picture.
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And so Marc began sketching out ideas
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for this nascent pirate attraction,
so that someone could build it too.
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But it would soon be pencils down
for Marc.
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Okay.
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Because in 1963, Walt put
a halt to much of the work at Disneyland
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to focus instead on an all-new
and exciting project outside of the park.
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The New York World's Fair.
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The entire Disney team has been called on
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to develop entertaining
and exciting attractions.
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The World's Fair was a good example
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of how Walt would ask people to do things
they've never done before
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and never gave it a thought.
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Take Bob here, for instance.
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I'm a car guy.
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That's because he designed
the Autopia cars.
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But he's also a dune buggy guy
and a monorail guy.
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I have my original monorail sketch
right here.
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But that didn't stop Walt
from making him an Abe Lincoln guy too.
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Walt wants me to do a human being
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and it has to be
the President of the United States.
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Hey, bud, huh?
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But we did it.
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After wowing the 1964,
'65 New York World's Fair
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with the wizardry
of audio-animatronic figures,
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Walt Disney and the Imagineers
needed to get back to Disneyland
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and start working again
on all those attractions
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they'd put on hold.
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Like, that pirate wax museum that had been
in the works now for...
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-over half a decade.
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But after all this...
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...it now fell to little...
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Kinda ho-hum.
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And Walt said "Why are we doing
this little, small pirate thing?
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We should do something really big."
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Like It's a Small World?
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Or maybe even bigger than that?
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Because Walt planned
to combine all the amazing technology
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from the World's Fair exhibits
into one attraction.
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There was a boat ride system
that was developed just for Small World.
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And they were able to see how efficient
the flume of It's a Small World ran
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and how many people
they could get through it,
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and how they could direct
people's attention with the boat.
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And Mr. Lincoln, which was the first human
audio-animatronic figure.
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It's really amazing,
and those two things land
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then go, "Oh, my God, yes.
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A boat ride is the perfect thing
to tell this,
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and we'll make it full
of audio-animatronic figures."
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The idea was scrapped,
the wax museum idea,
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let's put a flume attraction here,
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and they had to retool the entire concept
for Pirates of the Caribbean.
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So now,
Walt had everything he needed
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to make this pirates attraction
water-based and highly efficient.
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It must have been time for Walt
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to blatantly order somebody
to get started.
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Walt never blatantly ordered somebody
to get started on something.
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Oh, well, okay.
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He'd walk around the studio lot,
he'd walk around the machine shop.
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He'd start a little conversation
with somebody, it's usually a question.
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What we're doing here,
what's this all about?
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He'd say, uh, "Have you ever thought
of what if we did something like this?"
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Then he would describe it.
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-He'd walk around to somebody else...
- Marc.
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...and give a slightly
different version of that.
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And it turns out
the great Walt Disney wandered about
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asking a lot of questions
to all his very best Imagineers.
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What you got now, you have a slow buzz.
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"What's going on?"
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Well, what Walt had done,
he got people who were good thinkers,
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to start thinking about something
that sounded like fun.
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00:10:02,518 --> 00:10:05,730
Then he starts to get
a little bit more specific.
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00:10:05,813 --> 00:10:10,318
Then everybody goes,
"Oh, that's what he's gonna do."
199
00:10:10,401 --> 00:10:15,698
And with that, Walt's rugged
band of Imagineers were all hands on deck.
200
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Toiling away, working, experimenting.
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00:10:20,119 --> 00:10:22,538
Until finally, after three years...
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There's, uh, set work,
there's gonna be lighting, sound...
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-...animations,
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and a vehicle moving around.
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It was a very complicated attraction,
and no detail was spared.
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The Pirates of the Caribbean
were ready to set sail.
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And if you were there
for the attraction's opening day in 1967,
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which went over rather smashingly,
or even today, for that matter,
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this is what you'd see.
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Starting, of course, from the beginning.
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And while old Jean Lafitte
never did get his wax statue,
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00:11:01,243 --> 00:11:04,497
he did get this boarding dock
named after him.
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00:11:04,580 --> 00:11:08,709
And from Lafitte's Landing,
it's off into the Louisiana Bayou.
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00:11:08,793 --> 00:11:13,255
And that world itself is so amazing
and so atmospheric,
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00:11:13,923 --> 00:11:18,427
the elaborate detail
just for the beginning of this attraction
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is so incredible.
217
00:11:20,096 --> 00:11:24,350
But this leisurely
moonlit float will be short-lived
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because as guests turn the corner,
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00:11:26,977 --> 00:11:30,690
they're met with the ominous visage
of a Jolly Roger.
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00:11:30,773 --> 00:11:33,734
His warning, not so jolly.
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And hold on tight
with both hands if you please.
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00:11:38,572 --> 00:11:40,408
Because...
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00:11:40,491 --> 00:11:42,326
We're gonna take them down a waterfall.
224
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And then another waterfall.
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That's a very exciting
attraction element.
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00:11:52,211 --> 00:11:54,338
But there's a very practical purpose.
227
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That's bringing the guests
down under the berm.
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- Of course. The berm.
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00:12:00,845 --> 00:12:02,805
Sorry, what is a berm?
230
00:12:02,888 --> 00:12:07,643
Disneyland berm is something
that we refer to as the original border
231
00:12:07,727 --> 00:12:10,521
that was built
when Disneyland first opened.
232
00:12:10,604 --> 00:12:13,149
And this embankment
called the berm,
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00:12:13,232 --> 00:12:15,401
is a road bed for our Disneyland railroad.
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The berm was Walt's idea
235
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to keep the outside world
outside of Disneyland.
236
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But in the process of designing
Pirates of the Caribbean,
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it soon became clear that there wasn't
enough space inside Disneyland.
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The area that had been allocated
for that experience,
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was pretty small
inside New Orleans Square.
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00:12:36,422 --> 00:12:38,048
And to get around this,
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Walt really needed to think
outside the box.
242
00:12:41,135 --> 00:12:43,012
Or the berm.
243
00:12:43,095 --> 00:12:47,516
And it was Walt's idea to say,
"Well, we can go outside of that barrier
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as long as the guests don't know it."
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00:12:49,518 --> 00:12:51,270
So he had to get
outside the train track loop,
246
00:12:51,353 --> 00:12:55,691
we're gonna have to go down drops
to get out into the other space,
247
00:12:55,775 --> 00:12:57,818
and that turned out to be
a really good way
248
00:12:57,902 --> 00:12:59,612
of getting guests into that experience.
249
00:12:59,695 --> 00:13:03,073
Surely, because the last thing
that you're thinking is,
250
00:13:03,157 --> 00:13:06,243
"Did I just go under a train track
and head outside the park,
251
00:13:06,327 --> 00:13:08,621
and enter a large unexciting building?"
252
00:13:08,704 --> 00:13:11,540
-Because as far as you're concerned...
-You go down this waterfall
253
00:13:11,624 --> 00:13:12,833
and it takes you
to this whole other world.
254
00:13:12,917 --> 00:13:15,461
You're in the caves
with the skeletons and the pirates.
255
00:13:19,089 --> 00:13:22,176
And making your way
through this cavernous ode
256
00:13:22,259 --> 00:13:26,972
to pirates long since passed,
you emerge on treacherous waters.
257
00:13:27,389 --> 00:13:29,600
- Fire at will!
258
00:13:29,683 --> 00:13:31,769
Suddenly,
you're in this gigantic environment.
259
00:13:31,852 --> 00:13:33,270
There's a whole pirate ship.
260
00:13:35,314 --> 00:13:38,234
Strike yer colors,
ya bloomin' cockroachers!
261
00:13:38,317 --> 00:13:39,610
And there's cannons firing,
262
00:13:39,693 --> 00:13:41,904
and there's splashing in the water
right next to you.
263
00:13:44,824 --> 00:13:47,952
And the Imagineer responsible
for this spectacle?
264
00:13:48,035 --> 00:13:49,078
Claude?
265
00:13:49,161 --> 00:13:51,872
Was the layout man, Claude Coats.
266
00:13:51,956 --> 00:13:55,376
Claude had been working
in Disney animation for decades,
267
00:13:55,459 --> 00:13:57,711
as a layout artist,
268
00:13:57,795 --> 00:14:01,423
which is basically the set designer
for animation.
269
00:14:01,507 --> 00:14:04,510
And as an Imagineer,
he did the same thing.
270
00:14:04,593 --> 00:14:05,928
But for attractions.
271
00:14:06,011 --> 00:14:08,222
He brought all that storytelling skill
272
00:14:08,305 --> 00:14:11,350
to the rich environments
of Pirates of the Caribbean
273
00:14:11,433 --> 00:14:13,060
that the guests ride through.
274
00:14:13,143 --> 00:14:15,771
And populating this rich environment?
275
00:14:15,855 --> 00:14:18,399
Por favor! No, no!
276
00:14:18,482 --> 00:14:20,109
Pirates, of course.
277
00:14:20,192 --> 00:14:22,403
-Pipe him aloft again, matey.
278
00:14:22,486 --> 00:14:23,988
By gum, he'll talk.
279
00:14:24,071 --> 00:14:27,825
Who, as we know,
all share a common ancestor
280
00:14:27,908 --> 00:14:32,329
in the 1964,
'65 World's Fairs, Abe Lincoln.
281
00:14:32,413 --> 00:14:34,790
Man was made for immortality.
282
00:14:34,874 --> 00:14:36,917
But while it proved challenging enough
283
00:14:37,001 --> 00:14:39,753
to keep just one
audio-animatronic figure running
284
00:14:39,837 --> 00:14:41,964
in great moments with Mr. Lincoln...
285
00:14:42,047 --> 00:14:45,926
There are more than 75 pirates
and villagers in Pirates of the Caribbean.
286
00:14:46,010 --> 00:14:49,597
...how on Earth did they upscale
to create robust
287
00:14:49,680 --> 00:14:53,934
audio-animatronic figures
that worked all day every day?
288
00:14:54,018 --> 00:14:57,813
The answer to that was thanks
to this Imagineer.
289
00:14:57,897 --> 00:14:59,565
-The car guy.
290
00:14:59,648 --> 00:15:01,901
So the company took a long look at,
291
00:15:01,984 --> 00:15:08,324
"Can we take designs of individual parts
and make multiple copies of them?"
292
00:15:09,033 --> 00:15:13,203
By using high-production techniques,
we could make a big bag of parts,
293
00:15:13,287 --> 00:15:15,831
something for a shoulder,
something for a neck.
294
00:15:15,915 --> 00:15:20,878
Any show we wanna do from Pirates onward,
we already had the parts.
295
00:15:20,961 --> 00:15:25,466
But it wasn't just pirates'
necks and shoulders they needed to create.
296
00:15:26,634 --> 00:15:28,010
Come on now.
297
00:15:28,093 --> 00:15:30,387
And, of course,
they had to add a lot of animals too.
298
00:15:30,471 --> 00:15:32,514
There were some 53 animal figures.
299
00:15:34,016 --> 00:15:36,143
There were pigs and even chickens.
300
00:15:36,226 --> 00:15:38,562
- Probably built them first.
301
00:15:38,646 --> 00:15:41,398
And besides, with Imagineers rummaging
302
00:15:41,482 --> 00:15:45,778
through infinite combinations
of Bob's bag of audio-animatronic parts,
303
00:15:45,861 --> 00:15:48,739
there was no limit
to what they could create.
304
00:15:48,822 --> 00:15:51,825
We can make a goat, a president,
and a pirate,
305
00:15:51,909 --> 00:15:53,786
out of the same bag of parts.
306
00:15:55,871 --> 00:15:58,290
Um, we'll leave the character creation
307
00:15:58,374 --> 00:16:01,460
to the great gagman himself, Marc Davis.
308
00:16:01,543 --> 00:16:05,130
And, oh, the characters,
such as this fellow.
309
00:16:05,881 --> 00:16:08,842
And these guys? Also Marc.
310
00:16:08,926 --> 00:16:11,095
And who could forget this motley crew?
311
00:16:11,470 --> 00:16:13,222
Also Marc's creation.
312
00:16:13,639 --> 00:16:18,227
When I started working down there,
there was nothing that was funny
313
00:16:18,310 --> 00:16:20,604
in any of the attractions
that I can recollect.
314
00:16:21,397 --> 00:16:23,315
And this was the thing,
all the way through
315
00:16:23,399 --> 00:16:25,734
that I have tried to bring in humor.
316
00:16:26,235 --> 00:16:28,946
Marc Davis, of course,
was not the only Imagineer
317
00:16:29,029 --> 00:16:30,739
involved in the storytelling.
318
00:16:30,823 --> 00:16:33,909
No, they dug up
another treasured Imagineer
319
00:16:33,993 --> 00:16:37,287
where the spot was undeniably marked by X.
320
00:16:38,664 --> 00:16:40,249
X Atencio.
321
00:16:40,332 --> 00:16:42,376
I have always been called X.
322
00:16:42,960 --> 00:16:44,461
Who made sure you knew
323
00:16:44,545 --> 00:16:49,049
the pirate-filled attraction
was more sweet than salty.
324
00:16:49,133 --> 00:16:51,218
And he was very involved with the story.
325
00:16:51,301 --> 00:16:55,347
What you do, is you start thinking
like a pirate and say, "Arrr," you know.
326
00:16:55,431 --> 00:16:58,559
And when I finished the script,
we needed a song for it.
327
00:16:58,642 --> 00:17:02,354
So X, in his story work,
jotted down some sample lyrics,
328
00:17:02,438 --> 00:17:06,108
and Walt said, "Great, a song,
that's just what we need."
329
00:17:06,191 --> 00:17:09,611
X thought, "Oh, well, he'll get
the Sherman Brothers to write it."
330
00:17:09,695 --> 00:17:12,865
However, as we know,
what you were known for
331
00:17:12,948 --> 00:17:15,993
didn't always match up
with what Walt asked you to do.
332
00:17:16,076 --> 00:17:18,245
Walt would do that to people.
333
00:17:18,328 --> 00:17:22,916
Walt instead said, "You write the lyrics
and get George Bruns to do the music."
334
00:17:23,000 --> 00:17:25,669
So I became... I became a songwriter.
335
00:17:31,759 --> 00:17:35,095
So between X Atencio and Marc Davis,
336
00:17:35,179 --> 00:17:37,347
the tone of pirates was secure.
337
00:17:44,146 --> 00:17:47,357
But don't be fooled
because there's one Imagineer
338
00:17:47,441 --> 00:17:52,696
who provided arguably
the most important material of all.
339
00:17:52,780 --> 00:17:55,949
Alice Davis was one of the most important
Imagineers of the time
340
00:17:56,033 --> 00:17:57,284
because she was a costumer.
341
00:17:57,367 --> 00:17:59,036
Her husband Marc Davis,
of course,
342
00:17:59,119 --> 00:18:02,456
invented and designed those characters,
and Alice dressed them.
343
00:18:02,539 --> 00:18:06,502
A seamless team
that needed to work hand in glove
344
00:18:06,585 --> 00:18:10,089
because in the supernatural world
of pirate shenanigans,
345
00:18:10,172 --> 00:18:15,719
exposed servos and articulated joints
had no place whatsoever.
346
00:18:15,803 --> 00:18:17,805
One of the things
about those characters
347
00:18:17,888 --> 00:18:22,226
is that you have constant moving.
They're hydraulically powered figures.
348
00:18:22,309 --> 00:18:23,352
And they move all the time,
349
00:18:23,435 --> 00:18:25,270
and so, of course,
the costumes that they wear
350
00:18:25,354 --> 00:18:27,356
would wear out quite easily.
351
00:18:27,439 --> 00:18:30,442
And when it came to costuming
on a massive scale,
352
00:18:30,526 --> 00:18:33,028
Alice had a world of experience.
353
00:18:33,112 --> 00:18:35,656
Or at least a small world of experience.
354
00:18:35,739 --> 00:18:40,869
And Walt Disney had said he wanted Alice
to design the costumes for Small World.
355
00:18:40,953 --> 00:18:43,664
But when she was enlisted
for the pirates' attraction,
356
00:18:43,747 --> 00:18:45,749
she had bigger plans.
357
00:18:45,833 --> 00:18:50,129
Well one day, she asked, uh,
one of the producers of the show,
358
00:18:50,212 --> 00:18:54,383
"You know, it's just as easy for me
to make two sets of costumes,
359
00:18:54,466 --> 00:18:55,509
instead of just one,"
360
00:18:55,592 --> 00:18:57,302
and he's like,
"No, no, no, we don't have the time.
361
00:18:57,386 --> 00:18:58,428
I don't want the expense."
362
00:18:58,512 --> 00:19:02,641
She said, "Well, you know,
the figures leak hydraulics and things,
363
00:19:02,724 --> 00:19:04,226
and it might be a good idea--"
364
00:19:04,309 --> 00:19:06,019
"Alice, just one set will be fine."
365
00:19:06,103 --> 00:19:08,856
Hm, well, we'll see about that.
366
00:19:10,023 --> 00:19:15,988
Continuing through the glorious grottoes
and mischievous scenes of pirate antics,
367
00:19:16,071 --> 00:19:18,031
from the iconic dunking of the mayor...
368
00:19:18,115 --> 00:19:19,867
No! Por favor...
369
00:19:19,950 --> 00:19:21,785
...to these salty sea dogs.
370
00:19:23,996 --> 00:19:26,248
That is absolutely fantastic.
371
00:19:26,331 --> 00:19:27,833
Well, it's only part of it.
372
00:19:28,208 --> 00:19:29,793
You got a big climactic scene.
373
00:19:29,877 --> 00:19:31,253
But how could you top it?
374
00:19:31,336 --> 00:19:33,755
Well, you set the place on fire.
375
00:19:35,299 --> 00:19:37,634
At least, well, that was the plan.
376
00:19:37,718 --> 00:19:40,179
You know, it's difficult.
Like, "How are we gonna burn a village?
377
00:19:40,262 --> 00:19:41,722
This has to burn day and night."
378
00:19:41,805 --> 00:19:45,893
And there was some concern
from the Anaheim fire department.
379
00:19:45,976 --> 00:19:48,187
We can't use real flames. What do we do?
380
00:19:48,270 --> 00:19:50,981
Never fear,
because the solution could be found
381
00:19:51,064 --> 00:19:55,194
in R&D mastermind
Yale Gracey's room of magic.
382
00:19:55,277 --> 00:19:56,820
He had a room.
383
00:19:56,904 --> 00:19:59,573
And it was like a big toy box
full of junk.
384
00:20:00,407 --> 00:20:04,453
He was like a little kid
playing science inventor.
385
00:20:04,536 --> 00:20:07,664
And every time he had something
that he was kind of happy with,
386
00:20:07,748 --> 00:20:11,460
he'd sort of stand in the hallway
and had that little twink look in his eye,
387
00:20:11,543 --> 00:20:15,505
and he says, "You wanna come in?
I've got something."
388
00:20:15,589 --> 00:20:19,635
And what he had to show Bob
seemed to defy nature itself.
389
00:20:19,718 --> 00:20:24,932
An illusion so masterful
that it remains unchanged to this day.
390
00:20:25,015 --> 00:20:27,935
It's the same effect from 1967.
391
00:20:29,311 --> 00:20:32,564
And you go into that portion
of the attraction, you still, it went on.
392
00:20:32,648 --> 00:20:36,944
And Yale Gracey made this magic
using cutting-edge technology.
393
00:20:37,027 --> 00:20:41,114
Just a piece of cloth with a light
coming up out of the bottom, and a fan.
394
00:20:43,408 --> 00:20:48,497
See, he could take physical materials
and reduce it down to the simplest thing,
395
00:20:48,580 --> 00:20:51,792
so it would be real easy to build it
and maintain it.
396
00:20:51,875 --> 00:20:53,418
And it looked so real.
397
00:20:53,502 --> 00:20:58,048
As it turns out, one day,
it looked so real it actually was.
398
00:20:58,131 --> 00:21:01,635
The show was open only for about,
well, a month and a half.
399
00:21:01,718 --> 00:21:03,011
And there was a fire.
400
00:21:03,762 --> 00:21:05,973
And they had to close the ride down.
401
00:21:06,056 --> 00:21:07,599
And they came running to me
402
00:21:07,683 --> 00:21:09,476
and, "Good Lord,
how long is it going to be
403
00:21:09,559 --> 00:21:12,271
before we can get costumes
for the figures?"
404
00:21:12,354 --> 00:21:14,106
An issue Alice Davis...
405
00:21:14,189 --> 00:21:15,524
"Alice, no!"
406
00:21:15,607 --> 00:21:17,192
...had tried to plan for.
407
00:21:17,276 --> 00:21:18,694
"Just one set will be fine."
408
00:21:18,777 --> 00:21:22,489
But the great Alice Davis
had everything under control.
409
00:21:22,572 --> 00:21:26,910
And Alice said, "No worries, I went ahead,
did another set anyways,
410
00:21:26,994 --> 00:21:28,954
so we have another set of costumes.
411
00:21:29,037 --> 00:21:31,415
We can get this open, you know,
as soon as possible."
412
00:21:31,498 --> 00:21:33,625
And they didn't know
whether to hit me or to hug me.
413
00:21:34,793 --> 00:21:36,670
But the show opened the next day.
414
00:21:36,753 --> 00:21:38,338
It was only closed down one day,
415
00:21:38,422 --> 00:21:41,091
so now they make three costumes
for each figure.
416
00:21:41,675 --> 00:21:43,969
Well, for the park guests
of the late '60s,
417
00:21:44,052 --> 00:21:45,762
it was hugs all around.
418
00:21:45,846 --> 00:21:48,265
And Disneyland was pirate crazy.
419
00:21:48,348 --> 00:21:52,060
With the wildest crew
that ever sacked the Spanish main.
420
00:21:52,144 --> 00:21:54,104
The Pirates of the Caribbean.
421
00:21:54,187 --> 00:21:58,442
Walt's team had created
one of the most astounding attractions
422
00:21:58,525 --> 00:22:00,444
the world had ever seen.
423
00:22:02,279 --> 00:22:07,409
But, giving it everything they had
did come with an eye-watering price tag.
424
00:22:08,201 --> 00:22:12,247
New Orleans Square, with all these things
that people could do, plus the ride,
425
00:22:12,331 --> 00:22:14,541
it was a huge amount of money.
426
00:22:15,751 --> 00:22:17,711
It was a giant bet, but it paid off
427
00:22:17,794 --> 00:22:21,089
because that put Pirates of the Caribbean
on the map.
428
00:22:21,173 --> 00:22:24,384
With the staggering success
of Pirates of the Caribbean,
429
00:22:24,468 --> 00:22:27,220
people all around the world were saying...
430
00:22:27,304 --> 00:22:28,889
"Oh, my God, I have to go there."
431
00:22:28,972 --> 00:22:30,223
And if you couldn't,
432
00:22:30,307 --> 00:22:33,435
friends would be more than happy
to tell you all about it.
433
00:22:33,518 --> 00:22:36,438
I didn't grow up in California,
but I heard the story many times.
434
00:22:36,521 --> 00:22:38,523
"We went to Disneyland, and I saw pirates.
435
00:22:38,607 --> 00:22:39,733
And I just fell in love."
436
00:22:39,816 --> 00:22:41,151
"That was the place for me."
437
00:22:41,234 --> 00:22:43,028
"It was incredible."
"It just changed my life."
438
00:22:43,111 --> 00:22:44,279
But don't worry,
439
00:22:44,363 --> 00:22:47,449
Luc Mayrand will get his time
on the high seas soon enough.
440
00:22:47,532 --> 00:22:48,742
That's another story.
441
00:22:50,243 --> 00:22:53,080
Four years after
Pirates of the Caribbean's unveiling,
442
00:22:53,163 --> 00:22:58,251
in 1971, the Walt Disney World Resort
opened in Florida
443
00:22:58,335 --> 00:23:00,462
and the people there also said...
444
00:23:00,545 --> 00:23:02,381
"Can't wait to go
on Pirates of the Caribbean."
445
00:23:02,464 --> 00:23:04,383
Followed quickly by...
446
00:23:04,466 --> 00:23:05,550
"Where is it?"
447
00:23:10,180 --> 00:23:11,390
It's not here.
448
00:23:11,473 --> 00:23:15,560
But at the time,
Imagineers thought they had a good reason
449
00:23:15,644 --> 00:23:17,604
for not bringing Pirates to Florida.
450
00:23:17,687 --> 00:23:19,189
They thought it was redundant.
451
00:23:19,272 --> 00:23:22,984
You know, a pirate attraction
in the Caribbean?
452
00:23:23,735 --> 00:23:24,820
Doesn't make a lot of sense.
453
00:23:24,903 --> 00:23:26,029
Because after all,
454
00:23:26,113 --> 00:23:29,116
Florida is the northern border
of the Caribbean.
455
00:23:29,199 --> 00:23:30,325
You're gonna be in the South.
456
00:23:30,409 --> 00:23:33,203
You don't wanna put something
that's Southern or Caribbean-related.
457
00:23:33,286 --> 00:23:34,788
They might be more interested
458
00:23:34,871 --> 00:23:37,040
in something like
the Western River Expedition,
459
00:23:37,124 --> 00:23:40,752
which was a Western-themed attraction
that Marc Davis had created.
460
00:23:40,836 --> 00:23:41,878
That's right.
461
00:23:41,962 --> 00:23:46,925
Disney Imagineers had big plans
for the Western River Expedition
462
00:23:47,008 --> 00:23:50,512
which promised
to be an altogether more wet, wild,
463
00:23:50,595 --> 00:23:54,474
and Western flume-based attraction.
464
00:23:54,558 --> 00:23:57,018
-But...
-In the meantime,
465
00:23:57,102 --> 00:23:59,146
guests at Walt Disney World were saying,
466
00:23:59,229 --> 00:24:01,523
"We want to go
on Pirates of the Caribbean."
467
00:24:01,606 --> 00:24:03,442
And they got a lot of complaints.
468
00:24:03,525 --> 00:24:05,819
And so by popular demand,
469
00:24:05,902 --> 00:24:09,739
those Western River Expedition plans
were set aside.
470
00:24:09,823 --> 00:24:13,743
And in their place,
went a Pirates of the Caribbean.
471
00:24:14,035 --> 00:24:16,288
Actually kind of near the Caribbean.
472
00:24:16,371 --> 00:24:19,207
Since Pirates of the Caribbean
had already been created,
473
00:24:19,291 --> 00:24:22,085
they didn't have to go
through all the development.
474
00:24:22,169 --> 00:24:24,796
They could just kind of construct it
and pop it in.
475
00:24:24,880 --> 00:24:28,550
But it was getting popped in
differently than its predecessor.
476
00:24:28,633 --> 00:24:30,594
In California, you could dig down,
477
00:24:30,677 --> 00:24:33,972
and you can go under the berm,
and out into a show building.
478
00:24:34,055 --> 00:24:36,224
Well, because of the water tables
in Florida,
479
00:24:36,308 --> 00:24:39,269
you can't go down,
you just kind of have to go out.
480
00:24:39,352 --> 00:24:42,647
So Pirates in Florida
has a little different footprint.
481
00:24:42,731 --> 00:24:45,108
And since there's no New Orleans Square
482
00:24:45,192 --> 00:24:49,029
in the Magic Kingdom,
it has a slightly different location too.
483
00:24:49,112 --> 00:24:50,405
-In Florida,
484
00:24:50,489 --> 00:24:52,240
it's set in an area of Adventureland
485
00:24:52,324 --> 00:24:55,410
called Caribbean Plaza
which was created just for the attraction.
486
00:24:55,494 --> 00:24:56,786
But other than that,
487
00:24:56,870 --> 00:24:59,289
and a different queue
through a Spanish fort,
488
00:24:59,372 --> 00:25:02,417
no swampy prelude, then only one drop...
489
00:25:02,501 --> 00:25:03,668
And then another.
490
00:25:03,752 --> 00:25:05,545
...it's pretty much the same ride.
491
00:25:05,629 --> 00:25:07,422
A lot of the animatronics
that we have here,
492
00:25:07,506 --> 00:25:09,424
are pretty much copies
of the original animatronics
493
00:25:09,508 --> 00:25:10,884
that they have in California.
494
00:25:10,967 --> 00:25:13,011
And also, like California,
495
00:25:13,094 --> 00:25:17,516
the Florida Pirates 1973 opening
was a success,
496
00:25:17,599 --> 00:25:20,894
albeit considerably less unruly.
497
00:25:20,977 --> 00:25:26,316
All of those satisfied fans were proof
that the Pirates' attraction was a splash.
498
00:25:26,399 --> 00:25:27,692
On both coasts.
499
00:25:27,776 --> 00:25:31,780
But what about across the high seas
on the other side of the planet?
500
00:25:33,323 --> 00:25:38,286
When Tokyo Disneyland opened in 1983,
of course, they wanted one there.
501
00:25:38,370 --> 00:25:42,415
And by that, he means
Tokyo Disney wanted the same Pirates...
502
00:25:45,085 --> 00:25:47,504
...park guests were already enjoying.
503
00:25:50,966 --> 00:25:52,592
The only problem was
504
00:25:52,676 --> 00:25:55,345
park guests were already enjoying
two of them.
505
00:25:55,428 --> 00:25:58,640
The Pirates of the Caribbean attractions
in the United States were so popular,
506
00:25:58,723 --> 00:26:00,517
that they added it to Tokyo Disneyland.
507
00:26:00,600 --> 00:26:04,563
So when building their own,
they took the best of both worlds,
508
00:26:04,646 --> 00:26:07,440
Disney World and Disneyland.
509
00:26:07,524 --> 00:26:11,653
It starts off like Anaheim,
where you're floating through the bayou,
510
00:26:11,736 --> 00:26:13,697
and then you go down the one drop.
511
00:26:15,615 --> 00:26:17,909
Then it kind of turns into Florida,
512
00:26:17,993 --> 00:26:23,498
where because of the high water table,
it can only have one drop.
513
00:26:23,582 --> 00:26:25,375
You can't go any further down.
514
00:26:26,042 --> 00:26:28,253
It seemed like Tokyo's classic version
515
00:26:28,336 --> 00:26:31,715
of Pirates of the Caribbean
was keeping everyone happy.
516
00:26:32,382 --> 00:26:35,594
But when Disneyland Paris opened
almost a decade later,
517
00:26:35,677 --> 00:26:39,681
the technology was definitely changing
with the fashions.
518
00:26:39,764 --> 00:26:42,684
And truly amazing to think
that just three and a half years ago,
519
00:26:42,767 --> 00:26:44,603
this was all fields of beetroot.
520
00:26:45,020 --> 00:26:48,898
As were the ideas on how to add
more action to the attraction.
521
00:26:48,982 --> 00:26:51,776
Because while the French
Pirates of the Caribbean
522
00:26:51,860 --> 00:26:55,280
boasted many of the same thrills
as its predecessors...
523
00:26:57,782 --> 00:27:00,910
There are smoke and flame effects.
524
00:27:00,994 --> 00:27:02,704
And also water effects.
525
00:27:04,289 --> 00:27:08,084
There was still room
to bone up on the excitement.
526
00:27:08,168 --> 00:27:12,088
The Imagineers were looking for ways
that they could take it forward
527
00:27:12,172 --> 00:27:13,548
from a technological standpoint.
528
00:27:13,632 --> 00:27:15,800
What have we learned
that we could make better?
529
00:27:15,884 --> 00:27:20,305
Make your offer
for this lovely young lady.
530
00:27:20,388 --> 00:27:23,516
And that was in a time period
where we were making a leap forward
531
00:27:23,600 --> 00:27:25,310
with our audio-animatronics figures.
532
00:27:25,393 --> 00:27:29,022
A leap forward that Imagineer,
Tony Baxter, thought
533
00:27:29,105 --> 00:27:32,067
could add a new edge
to the Pirates of the Caribbean.
534
00:27:34,486 --> 00:27:38,948
The classic thing
if you're gonna define what do pirates do
535
00:27:39,032 --> 00:27:40,116
is a sword fight.
536
00:27:40,200 --> 00:27:43,620
So I said, "If we can get
an audio-animatronic pair of figures
537
00:27:43,703 --> 00:27:45,121
to do a sword fight,
538
00:27:45,205 --> 00:27:49,250
that would be a real moment
that people would talk about".
539
00:27:49,334 --> 00:27:51,878
And so the challenge that we set
to our figure team,
540
00:27:51,961 --> 00:27:56,424
was to say, "Can we actually
have two pirates fighting, sword fighting?
541
00:27:56,508 --> 00:27:59,761
Can they actually hit swords together?"
542
00:27:59,844 --> 00:28:02,931
Not only could they, but they did.
543
00:28:03,807 --> 00:28:07,686
And sure enough when we opened it,
just when everyone gets comfortable,
544
00:28:07,769 --> 00:28:11,147
saying, "I know what they can do
and what their limits are,"
545
00:28:11,231 --> 00:28:16,027
you turn that corner
and there is a sword fight going on.
546
00:28:16,820 --> 00:28:19,114
A very difficult trick to achieve,
547
00:28:19,197 --> 00:28:21,991
and also we've changed
some of the characters in the show.
548
00:28:22,075 --> 00:28:26,121
Including the addition
of a female swashbuckler.
549
00:28:26,204 --> 00:28:29,416
As the global treasure map
unfurled further still,
550
00:28:29,499 --> 00:28:34,629
and Disney landlubbers the world over
were singing pirates' praises,
551
00:28:34,713 --> 00:28:40,760
there was one young non-Californian boy
who had since grown into an Imagineer.
552
00:28:40,844 --> 00:28:42,303
Among other things.
553
00:28:42,387 --> 00:28:44,097
Producer, art director, creative director,
554
00:28:44,180 --> 00:28:46,558
executive in different ways,
and concept designer.
555
00:28:46,641 --> 00:28:50,812
Well, he was singing
a different tune, or thinking it rather.
556
00:28:50,895 --> 00:28:55,191
I had been thinking in my head, like,
"What could be the next Pirates thing?"
557
00:28:55,275 --> 00:28:58,069
Because I love the original line,
of course,
558
00:28:58,153 --> 00:29:01,114
but I was always thinking of like,
"What would be the next level
559
00:29:01,197 --> 00:29:02,866
or step you would take with that?"
560
00:29:02,949 --> 00:29:06,911
And while Luc didn't know
the answer to that question just yet,
561
00:29:06,995 --> 00:29:08,872
he would soon find out
562
00:29:08,955 --> 00:29:13,626
because Pirates of the Caribbean
in the spirit of the original attraction,
563
00:29:13,710 --> 00:29:19,758
was about to step outside of the park,
and onto the big screen.
564
00:29:19,841 --> 00:29:22,177
We have the debut
of Pirates of the Caribbean,
565
00:29:22,260 --> 00:29:24,971
Curse of the Black Pearl in 2003.
566
00:29:27,140 --> 00:29:31,394
And of course, you see the little nods
and homages all the way through that film.
567
00:29:34,314 --> 00:29:35,482
Come on.
568
00:29:35,940 --> 00:29:37,150
Come here, boy.
569
00:29:37,817 --> 00:29:40,069
Nods and homages aside,
570
00:29:40,153 --> 00:29:42,947
the movie itself
and the franchise that followed,
571
00:29:43,031 --> 00:29:46,993
don't directly reflect
the beloved Disney attraction.
572
00:29:47,076 --> 00:29:48,620
You know, there are many guests,
573
00:29:48,703 --> 00:29:51,790
their first understanding
of Pirates of the Caribbean
574
00:29:51,873 --> 00:29:53,541
isn't the attraction anymore.
575
00:29:53,625 --> 00:29:54,918
It is a movie.
576
00:29:56,503 --> 00:29:58,129
And so when they go onto the attraction,
577
00:29:58,213 --> 00:30:02,175
they're going to expect something
from what they saw before.
578
00:30:02,258 --> 00:30:04,302
And where guests once asked...
579
00:30:04,385 --> 00:30:06,429
"Where's Pirates of the Caribbean?"
580
00:30:06,513 --> 00:30:07,806
Now they ask...
581
00:30:07,889 --> 00:30:10,725
"Where's that main character?
Why isn't he here?"
582
00:30:11,643 --> 00:30:15,897
Well, Jack Sparrow
wouldn't be absent from any of the four
583
00:30:15,980 --> 00:30:18,608
Pirates of the Caribbean attractions
for long.
584
00:30:18,691 --> 00:30:21,653
Pirates of the Caribbean was adapted
with a little bit of Captain Jack Sparrow,
585
00:30:21,736 --> 00:30:23,446
and you know,
Captain Barbossa and other things,
586
00:30:23,530 --> 00:30:25,490
trying to get a little bit of the flavor
of that movie
587
00:30:25,573 --> 00:30:27,617
back into the original attraction.
588
00:30:27,700 --> 00:30:30,787
We knew that, in the future,
we would have kids saying,
589
00:30:30,870 --> 00:30:34,415
"Wait, you mean Jack Sparrow
wasn't always part of this attraction?"
590
00:30:35,208 --> 00:30:37,418
But it wasn't just movie-based updates.
591
00:30:37,502 --> 00:30:39,087
Wipe your feathers, dearie.
592
00:30:39,170 --> 00:30:40,630
Show them your flaunt.
593
00:30:40,713 --> 00:30:44,175
Hey, send them into Davy Jones!
594
00:30:44,259 --> 00:30:45,802
Because over the years,
595
00:30:45,885 --> 00:30:49,264
Pirates of the Caribbean has changed
with the times.
596
00:30:49,347 --> 00:30:52,392
It's changed many, many, many times.
597
00:30:53,977 --> 00:30:55,728
When it was clear
that we needed to look at
598
00:30:55,812 --> 00:30:57,021
how women were being exploited,
599
00:30:57,105 --> 00:30:59,566
just in general,
but also in our attraction,
600
00:30:59,649 --> 00:31:02,193
we made pirates chase food and not women.
601
00:31:02,277 --> 00:31:05,196
And when you go into the auction scene,
that's where we have Redd.
602
00:31:05,280 --> 00:31:07,490
We want the redhead!
603
00:31:07,574 --> 00:31:09,367
We want the redhead!
604
00:31:09,450 --> 00:31:12,662
As time progressed, we decided
maybe we shouldn't be selling women.
605
00:31:12,745 --> 00:31:16,332
And so a thirst trap
of a decidedly different nature
606
00:31:16,416 --> 00:31:18,835
-was devised.
- The gentleman want the rum.
607
00:31:18,918 --> 00:31:21,045
-Don't you, boys?
- Yes!
608
00:31:21,129 --> 00:31:24,632
And now Redd is our only woman pirate
in the entire attraction.
609
00:31:24,716 --> 00:31:27,552
Drink up, me hearties. Yo ho!
610
00:31:27,635 --> 00:31:29,470
I really like that scene a lot,
since it got to change.
611
00:31:29,554 --> 00:31:31,180
So do we, Katy.
612
00:31:33,558 --> 00:31:36,269
But even with all the updates,
613
00:31:36,352 --> 00:31:39,480
the world's various
Pirates of the Caribbean attractions
614
00:31:39,564 --> 00:31:41,649
are still at their core,
615
00:31:41,733 --> 00:31:44,402
the same exciting adventures
that they always were.
616
00:31:46,779 --> 00:31:50,700
But in June 2016, all that would change.
617
00:31:50,783 --> 00:31:55,580
It is my privilege,
to present Shanghai Disney Resort.
618
00:31:55,663 --> 00:31:59,000
Bob Iger's vision for Shanghai
was ambitious,
619
00:31:59,083 --> 00:32:00,627
and overwhelming
620
00:32:00,710 --> 00:32:04,047
for the guy
who had to put it all together.
621
00:32:04,130 --> 00:32:06,090
And his name? Bob Weis.
622
00:32:06,174 --> 00:32:07,300
I'm Bob Weis.
623
00:32:07,383 --> 00:32:09,761
Who was the perfect man for the job.
624
00:32:09,844 --> 00:32:13,473
I was working at Disneyland
as an ice cream popcorn maker,
625
00:32:13,556 --> 00:32:17,393
and they told me
we were now gonna also sell balloons.
626
00:32:17,477 --> 00:32:21,481
And the first time I sold balloons
I was so stressed out that I quit.
627
00:32:22,148 --> 00:32:25,276
However, it didn't take long
for Bob to take his talents
628
00:32:25,360 --> 00:32:29,322
with ice cream and balloons,
and questionable work ethic,
629
00:32:29,405 --> 00:32:32,867
and apply them
to all the great parks of the world.
630
00:32:32,951 --> 00:32:34,827
And much like Luc Mayrand...
631
00:32:34,911 --> 00:32:37,997
What could be the next Pirates thing?
632
00:32:38,081 --> 00:32:41,209
When it came to Shanghai,
Bob was thinking the same thing.
633
00:32:41,292 --> 00:32:44,212
What could be the next Pirates thing?
634
00:32:45,213 --> 00:32:47,423
We thought, especially with movies,
635
00:32:47,507 --> 00:32:49,926
and so much of the Pirates culture
having been expanded on,
636
00:32:50,009 --> 00:32:51,886
it was time to update Pirates.
637
00:32:51,970 --> 00:32:55,223
Well, an update
might be an understatement.
638
00:32:55,306 --> 00:32:58,518
It was decided to make an entire
land based on Pirates.
639
00:32:58,935 --> 00:33:03,523
And do a live show and do the restaurants,
and the lagoon,
640
00:33:03,606 --> 00:33:06,943
and really make that
into a land unto itself.
641
00:33:07,026 --> 00:33:09,153
And the centerpiece of that land
642
00:33:09,237 --> 00:33:11,364
is a new Pirates of the Caribbean
attraction.
643
00:33:11,447 --> 00:33:17,120
And to execute this leviathan
task, Bob Weis assembled a team.
644
00:33:17,203 --> 00:33:19,205
Yes, let's do this,
let's make this happen.
645
00:33:19,288 --> 00:33:22,458
And ideally, someone to lead the project
646
00:33:22,542 --> 00:33:25,003
who had been thinking about it
for quite a while.
647
00:33:25,086 --> 00:33:27,672
And someone who believed in Pirates
in the very beginning,
648
00:33:27,755 --> 00:33:30,925
believed that it needed to match the scope
649
00:33:31,009 --> 00:33:33,720
of what the world's view
of Disney Pirates is today.
650
00:33:33,803 --> 00:33:35,722
- But who, among the--
-I said, "That's it, I'm in.
651
00:33:35,805 --> 00:33:37,056
This is gonna be fantastic."
652
00:33:37,140 --> 00:33:39,517
Oh, yeah, Luc Mayrand's
probably a good choice.
653
00:33:39,600 --> 00:33:41,936
I've always wanted to do this.
Now's the time to try.
654
00:33:42,020 --> 00:33:43,646
And with Luc Mayrand at the helm...
655
00:33:43,730 --> 00:33:45,898
Luc is the creative genius
behind this project.
656
00:33:45,982 --> 00:33:49,736
...he'd also be joined by Ric Turner.
657
00:33:49,819 --> 00:33:52,071
I'm kind of a jack of all trades.
658
00:33:52,655 --> 00:33:57,618
He's one of those polymath thinkers
that has so many diverse interests.
659
00:33:57,702 --> 00:33:59,037
I do a little bit of everything.
660
00:33:59,120 --> 00:34:00,913
I do illusion design
and projection mapping,
661
00:34:00,997 --> 00:34:03,833
and media design, and audio design,
and my background is radio and television.
662
00:34:03,916 --> 00:34:05,543
I have a degree in computer science.
663
00:34:05,626 --> 00:34:08,588
And without Ric Turner,
there are so many things we could not do.
664
00:34:09,005 --> 00:34:10,590
Hilcia Peña...
665
00:34:10,673 --> 00:34:13,217
Well, I'm just the architect.
666
00:34:13,301 --> 00:34:14,594
A tremendous architect.
667
00:34:14,677 --> 00:34:16,846
I worked through it
from early concept design,
668
00:34:16,929 --> 00:34:19,098
all the way through construction
in Shanghai.
669
00:34:19,182 --> 00:34:20,349
Amy Jupiter...
670
00:34:20,433 --> 00:34:21,684
I'm a visual effects supervisor.
671
00:34:21,768 --> 00:34:24,145
I was responsible
for all the media design.
672
00:34:24,228 --> 00:34:26,439
And eventually, Bill George.
673
00:34:26,522 --> 00:34:30,610
When we were going into production
on Pirates, we had a gift from heaven.
674
00:34:30,693 --> 00:34:32,236
I am proud to announce
675
00:34:32,320 --> 00:34:35,114
the Walt Disney Company
is acquiring Lucasfilm.
676
00:34:35,198 --> 00:34:39,368
Disney bought Lucas,
and with Lucas came ILM,
677
00:34:39,452 --> 00:34:42,371
and Bill George's genius
became completely available to us.
678
00:34:42,455 --> 00:34:43,915
And seemed appropriate too.
679
00:34:43,998 --> 00:34:47,960
Because we had done a lot of
the visual effects for the Pirates films.
680
00:34:48,044 --> 00:34:52,298
And with Luc's team
of talent assembled, the work could begin.
681
00:34:52,381 --> 00:34:55,927
But it was clear
that they had pretty big shoes.
682
00:34:56,010 --> 00:34:57,428
Or...
683
00:34:57,512 --> 00:34:58,554
...boots to fill.
684
00:34:58,638 --> 00:35:00,723
It was a scary project
685
00:35:00,807 --> 00:35:03,976
because the original
Pirates of the Caribbean was beloved,
686
00:35:04,060 --> 00:35:06,437
and a lot of people rated it
as the best ride in the world.
687
00:35:06,521 --> 00:35:08,189
So how are we gonna beat that?
688
00:35:08,272 --> 00:35:10,399
And you can't be afraid.
You gotta dive in.
689
00:35:10,483 --> 00:35:13,152
And absolutely fearlessly
put anything down
690
00:35:13,236 --> 00:35:17,657
and think it through and have the courage
to put big ideas out there, just do it.
691
00:35:17,740 --> 00:35:20,785
Big ideas. Like this one?
692
00:35:20,868 --> 00:35:23,621
One of the core ideas
that had always been floating in my head
693
00:35:23,704 --> 00:35:25,289
since I was a little kid was,
694
00:35:25,373 --> 00:35:29,085
those kind of secret epic places
in the world
695
00:35:29,168 --> 00:35:30,670
that would be kind of incredible.
696
00:35:30,753 --> 00:35:32,922
That you would see in adventure novels,
697
00:35:33,005 --> 00:35:35,842
you know, like the early century,
like, the great cemetery
698
00:35:35,925 --> 00:35:39,762
where all the elephants go to die
that no one has ever seen, right?
699
00:35:39,846 --> 00:35:44,016
Or this immense graveyard of ships
at the bottom of the ocean.
700
00:35:44,100 --> 00:35:46,060
Which led to another very big idea.
701
00:35:46,144 --> 00:35:48,229
I always thought, like,
"Wow, wouldn't it be incredible
702
00:35:48,312 --> 00:35:50,148
to take us underwater?"
703
00:35:50,648 --> 00:35:52,692
Uh, sorry, underwater?
704
00:35:52,775 --> 00:35:54,652
We're gonna take you
to the bottom of the ocean.
705
00:35:54,735 --> 00:35:57,113
That was the one thing
that everybody on the team said,
706
00:35:57,196 --> 00:35:59,490
"Oh, that's cool, that's different.
707
00:35:59,574 --> 00:36:01,576
I've never done that. I wanna go there."
708
00:36:02,160 --> 00:36:04,412
That gives us the opportunity
to have stuff all around,
709
00:36:04,495 --> 00:36:05,746
either seaweed, there's sharks,
710
00:36:05,830 --> 00:36:08,541
and kind of steering us down,
we're following sharks.
711
00:36:08,624 --> 00:36:12,795
Feeling very jolly about the Pirates idea,
712
00:36:12,879 --> 00:36:16,507
the team jumped in the deep end,
so to speak,
713
00:36:16,591 --> 00:36:20,094
and the first place they'd start
was with a fledgling technology
714
00:36:20,178 --> 00:36:22,847
known as "moving eye-point".
715
00:36:22,930 --> 00:36:24,849
You understand
what moving eye-point is, right?
716
00:36:24,932 --> 00:36:27,059
Sure, everyone does.
717
00:36:27,685 --> 00:36:31,522
It's an incredibly complex
series of projectors,
718
00:36:31,606 --> 00:36:33,816
spread around a large dome.
719
00:36:33,900 --> 00:36:39,322
You go in with your back towards this huge
60-foot high, 90-foot long dome.
720
00:36:39,405 --> 00:36:44,160
You can be in a three-dimensional set
and as, if my eye's moving this way,
721
00:36:44,243 --> 00:36:46,746
it will pick up the media background
722
00:36:46,829 --> 00:36:49,457
and it will just take me seamlessly
to the next thing.
723
00:36:49,540 --> 00:36:52,001
We render from the perspective of the car.
724
00:36:52,084 --> 00:36:57,298
So you're moving the guests' perspective
in the media that's playing back from you,
725
00:36:57,381 --> 00:37:00,426
but if you're not looking at it
from the actual guests' perspective...
726
00:37:00,509 --> 00:37:03,095
It's got this weird perspective to it.
727
00:37:03,596 --> 00:37:07,892
But when you look at it from the boat,
it actually looks 100 percent accurate.
728
00:37:07,975 --> 00:37:09,977
You have to exactly know
729
00:37:10,061 --> 00:37:11,854
where the guest is
and where they're moving.
730
00:37:11,938 --> 00:37:16,400
Which presumably you can't do
in a bobbing boat?
731
00:37:16,484 --> 00:37:19,195
In Disneyland, it's being pushed by water,
732
00:37:19,278 --> 00:37:21,906
and you know, it kind of bounces,
and it moves a little bit.
733
00:37:21,989 --> 00:37:24,533
You can't do moving eye-point
734
00:37:24,617 --> 00:37:27,536
with that kind of low-resolution
ride vehicle.
735
00:37:27,620 --> 00:37:28,829
But luckily...
736
00:37:28,913 --> 00:37:32,959
We had a brand-new idea
for a new ride system.
737
00:37:33,042 --> 00:37:35,503
You will be providing then a ship?
738
00:37:35,586 --> 00:37:40,299
A ride system that can be
described in so many words as...
739
00:37:40,383 --> 00:37:44,470
A boat floating in water,
completely controlled by magnets,
740
00:37:44,553 --> 00:37:47,431
so that it's always
in exactly the same spot,
741
00:37:47,515 --> 00:37:49,308
no matter how much water's around it.
742
00:37:49,392 --> 00:37:51,352
Which sounds impressive.
743
00:37:51,435 --> 00:37:52,853
Maybe too impressive?
744
00:37:52,937 --> 00:37:54,105
We didn't know if it was gonna work.
745
00:37:54,188 --> 00:37:56,065
But we designed it
assuming it was going to work.
746
00:37:56,148 --> 00:37:58,901
It was a huge expensive gamble.
747
00:37:58,985 --> 00:38:01,362
We're gonna take a chance on this working,
748
00:38:01,445 --> 00:38:04,115
and we're gonna trust our engineers
can get there.
749
00:38:04,198 --> 00:38:07,618
And so with technology
that possibly wouldn't work,
750
00:38:07,702 --> 00:38:10,579
the team forged ahead as if it would.
751
00:38:10,663 --> 00:38:14,041
So from concept design,
where things are basically on a napkin,
752
00:38:14,125 --> 00:38:18,004
we start with a visualization
and concept art.
753
00:38:18,087 --> 00:38:20,631
A model, and that model
just begets another model
754
00:38:20,715 --> 00:38:21,966
which begets another model,
755
00:38:22,049 --> 00:38:25,720
and eventually,
we had a big-scale mock-up.
756
00:38:25,803 --> 00:38:27,013
It was modeled in a way
757
00:38:27,096 --> 00:38:29,348
so that we could sit
on a little rolling chair,
758
00:38:29,432 --> 00:38:33,769
and roll through the different scenes,
and see what these spaces might look like.
759
00:38:33,853 --> 00:38:38,858
Until you're actually in the attraction,
on a rolling desk chair...
760
00:38:38,941 --> 00:38:40,860
Pushing it
to match the movement of the boat
761
00:38:40,943 --> 00:38:42,236
as we look at the media to go,
762
00:38:42,320 --> 00:38:44,071
"Okay, well, you know,
this should go earlier,
763
00:38:44,155 --> 00:38:46,115
that should go later,"
and we figure it out.
764
00:38:46,198 --> 00:38:50,953
But as Imagineers figured out
the attraction's clockwork scene by scene,
765
00:38:51,037 --> 00:38:53,164
Luc soon became more concerned
766
00:38:53,247 --> 00:38:56,834
with the clockwork of one scene
in particular.
767
00:38:56,917 --> 00:38:59,420
We were working with ILM and Bill George
768
00:38:59,503 --> 00:39:02,965
on the scene where Jack and Davy
are fighting together.
769
00:39:03,049 --> 00:39:05,634
And I'd always imagined
something funny happened,
770
00:39:05,718 --> 00:39:07,261
like chickens jump out.
771
00:39:07,345 --> 00:39:09,930
To me, that's the classic,
like, you know, gag moment.
772
00:39:10,014 --> 00:39:11,474
The...
773
00:39:12,683 --> 00:39:13,893
But the whole scene is digital,
774
00:39:13,976 --> 00:39:17,480
and we didn't have it in the budget
to build the chickens digitally.
775
00:39:17,563 --> 00:39:19,648
- This was no poultry...
776
00:39:19,732 --> 00:39:21,484
...uh, paltry dilemma.
777
00:39:21,567 --> 00:39:23,778
After all, Pirates of the Caribbean
778
00:39:23,861 --> 00:39:27,698
had a rich legacy of featured feathers
to maintain.
779
00:39:27,782 --> 00:39:30,493
And then I said,
"Well, could we use real chickens?"
780
00:39:30,576 --> 00:39:33,287
- To which Bill replied...
-Yes.
781
00:39:33,371 --> 00:39:34,497
So next thing you know,
782
00:39:34,580 --> 00:39:37,500
we're actually shooting chickens
against a green screen,
783
00:39:37,583 --> 00:39:41,545
at Industrial Light and Magic,
and I'm directing that.
784
00:39:41,629 --> 00:39:46,092
But he wouldn't have long
to savor this fulfilling collaboration...
785
00:39:47,385 --> 00:39:49,845
...because back in Shanghai,
786
00:39:49,929 --> 00:39:54,308
it was nearing time to put the water
in this water-based attraction,
787
00:39:54,392 --> 00:39:57,603
something Luc had been in no rush to do.
788
00:39:57,686 --> 00:39:59,188
Oh, wait, wait, wait, hang on a minute.
789
00:39:59,271 --> 00:40:00,356
For good reason.
790
00:40:00,439 --> 00:40:02,691
You're done doing anything else
below the water.
791
00:40:02,775 --> 00:40:04,610
That's the end,
so it's a really important,
792
00:40:04,693 --> 00:40:05,694
you know, moment.
793
00:40:05,778 --> 00:40:07,363
But for Luc and the team,
794
00:40:07,446 --> 00:40:11,367
more important than just filling it up
and seeing if it would work,
795
00:40:11,450 --> 00:40:15,413
this moment represented
the culmination of years of work.
796
00:40:15,496 --> 00:40:18,499
You know, after you've been working
on a project for six years or more,
797
00:40:18,582 --> 00:40:20,251
I wanted us to register that moment.
798
00:40:20,334 --> 00:40:22,586
You put so much of your life
in these things,
799
00:40:22,670 --> 00:40:26,632
and Luc Mayrand had put so much,
so much into Pirates.
800
00:40:27,550 --> 00:40:29,969
So when we had the water filled up,
801
00:40:30,052 --> 00:40:33,931
we arrange a little ceremony
to connect this attraction
802
00:40:34,014 --> 00:40:37,518
with all of the other
Pirates of the Caribbean attractions
803
00:40:37,601 --> 00:40:39,645
in the family.
804
00:40:39,728 --> 00:40:46,527
So I had, um, some, uh, secret agents
go into each attraction
805
00:40:46,610 --> 00:40:48,112
to get a little bit of water,
806
00:40:48,195 --> 00:40:53,451
from the flume of Anaheim,
Florida, Paris, Tokyo.
807
00:40:53,534 --> 00:40:56,579
He built this beautiful box
with these test tubes in it.
808
00:40:57,580 --> 00:40:59,290
And then he got the team together.
809
00:40:59,373 --> 00:41:01,542
And we had a ceremony
where we christened our attraction
810
00:41:01,625 --> 00:41:03,502
by pouring in water
from all of the other ones.
811
00:41:06,714 --> 00:41:10,009
And that was very symbolic
because it was kind of like,
812
00:41:10,092 --> 00:41:13,637
the water became alive and connected
with everything else.
813
00:41:14,805 --> 00:41:17,683
That was the most powerful
moment of the whole project.
814
00:41:21,729 --> 00:41:26,984
And so, as emotions ran high,
along with the rising water line,
815
00:41:27,067 --> 00:41:30,738
the team could finally test
their boat system.
816
00:41:30,821 --> 00:41:33,616
When we filled the flume
and we started running boats,
817
00:41:33,699 --> 00:41:34,700
everything was great.
818
00:41:34,783 --> 00:41:37,203
It's like, oh, good, you know,
we had one, two, three boats.
819
00:41:37,828 --> 00:41:38,829
And...
820
00:41:38,913 --> 00:41:40,956
- And then...
-I can't believe you brought that up.
821
00:41:42,166 --> 00:41:44,251
- Well...
-I talk about the problem we had.
822
00:41:44,335 --> 00:41:46,378
They had a big one.
823
00:41:47,254 --> 00:41:48,631
Um...
824
00:41:48,714 --> 00:41:50,674
When we started adding more boats,
825
00:41:50,758 --> 00:41:54,803
all of a sudden, we were having problems
where, like, the water was shallow
826
00:41:54,887 --> 00:41:57,139
at the beginning of,
in the first few scenes,
827
00:41:57,223 --> 00:41:59,058
and sometimes the boats
would hit the bottom,
828
00:41:59,141 --> 00:42:01,769
and then the water was overflowing
at the end.
829
00:42:01,852 --> 00:42:04,313
The ride engineers figured it out
right away. It was like, "Oh."
830
00:42:04,396 --> 00:42:06,023
Something that we didn't think of
831
00:42:06,106 --> 00:42:09,318
is if you push boats
down a trough of water
832
00:42:09,401 --> 00:42:12,696
using magnets underwater,
they kind of act like a pump.
833
00:42:12,780 --> 00:42:15,908
They're actually pushing water up
to one end of the ride.
834
00:42:15,991 --> 00:42:19,203
With the attraction due to open
in a matter of days,
835
00:42:19,286 --> 00:42:22,581
Luc and the team were in deep water.
836
00:42:22,665 --> 00:42:26,669
Or, shallow water, depending on which end
of the attraction they were on.
837
00:42:26,752 --> 00:42:29,630
The boats were scraping at one end
and then the water's, you know,
838
00:42:29,713 --> 00:42:31,674
overflowing into the building
at the other.
839
00:42:32,258 --> 00:42:34,051
What are we gonna do? Well...
840
00:42:34,635 --> 00:42:36,971
Well, they did what they always do.
841
00:42:37,054 --> 00:42:38,472
That being...
842
00:42:38,556 --> 00:42:41,976
Classic Imagineering,
you know, genius stuff.
843
00:42:42,059 --> 00:42:45,688
They pumped it from one end
to the other using some pipes.
844
00:42:45,771 --> 00:42:49,066
For soft opening, we were still using
our "temporary solution"
845
00:42:49,149 --> 00:42:51,068
until we figured out a way to pipe it
846
00:42:51,151 --> 00:42:53,529
through a back-of-house portion
of the building.
847
00:42:53,612 --> 00:42:55,197
But we got it to work.
848
00:42:55,281 --> 00:42:57,866
In fact, everything worked
849
00:42:57,950 --> 00:43:00,911
when the Pirates
of the Caribbean-themed land,
850
00:43:00,995 --> 00:43:05,124
Treasure Cove, opened on June 16th, 2016.
851
00:43:05,207 --> 00:43:11,005
Filled with a bounty of pirate treasure,
and one extraordinary attraction.
852
00:43:11,088 --> 00:43:13,132
Oh, no, not the one you're thinking.
853
00:43:13,966 --> 00:43:18,095
There's an incredible attraction
called Eye of the Storm, a fun stunt show.
854
00:43:18,178 --> 00:43:19,638
And why so incredible?
855
00:43:19,722 --> 00:43:22,933
In the middle of the show,
there's a moment when a wind tunnel,
856
00:43:23,017 --> 00:43:25,978
or a giant hurricane
literally lifts the performers
857
00:43:26,061 --> 00:43:31,066
up into the air, not suspended by wires,
sword choreography, fighting,
858
00:43:31,150 --> 00:43:34,820
jumping from tower to tower,
all through the use of a wind tunnel.
859
00:43:34,903 --> 00:43:38,365
But, for as uplifting
as the stunt show is...
860
00:43:38,449 --> 00:43:41,994
I recommend
our guests pluck up the courage
861
00:43:42,077 --> 00:43:44,705
to dive to the bottom of the ocean
862
00:43:44,788 --> 00:43:47,541
with our pirates to plunder the treasure.
863
00:43:47,625 --> 00:43:50,669
And people did.
By the thousands.
864
00:43:50,753 --> 00:43:51,754
Then said...
865
00:43:51,837 --> 00:43:52,880
This is amazing.
866
00:43:52,963 --> 00:43:56,133
Yeah, but we probably shouldn't
just take Luc's word for it.
867
00:43:56,216 --> 00:43:58,844
It cleverly blends all the elements
868
00:43:58,927 --> 00:44:02,640
and gives guests
a shocking immersive experience.
869
00:44:02,723 --> 00:44:04,433
Although it's the world's fifth
870
00:44:04,516 --> 00:44:06,435
Pirates of the Caribbean attraction,
871
00:44:06,518 --> 00:44:10,189
battle for the sunken treasure
sure has a lot of firsts.
872
00:44:10,272 --> 00:44:12,900
Moving eye-point media, large-scale media,
873
00:44:12,983 --> 00:44:16,028
boats that are controlled
in a whole new way,
874
00:44:16,111 --> 00:44:19,198
it was a combination of all those things
that allowed that team
875
00:44:19,281 --> 00:44:21,617
to take Pirates to a whole new level.
876
00:44:21,700 --> 00:44:23,994
But a level that wasn't too high
877
00:44:24,078 --> 00:44:26,580
that you couldn't still see
where you've come from.
878
00:44:26,664 --> 00:44:31,126
We put in some... some little tableaux
that reflect back to the original, right?
879
00:44:31,210 --> 00:44:32,419
One of them is...
880
00:44:32,503 --> 00:44:34,797
Three skeletons in a jail cell
and a skeleton dog
881
00:44:34,880 --> 00:44:36,632
because they never did get the key.
882
00:44:36,715 --> 00:44:37,925
It's very subtle,
883
00:44:38,008 --> 00:44:40,761
but if you're... if you're familiar
with the original ride,
884
00:44:40,844 --> 00:44:43,931
you certainly would recognize them
as callbacks.
885
00:44:44,014 --> 00:44:46,016
Oh, we're familiar, all right.
886
00:44:46,100 --> 00:44:50,104
Pirates of the Caribbean
is among the most iconic attractions
887
00:44:50,187 --> 00:44:51,939
in all the Disney parks.
888
00:44:52,940 --> 00:44:55,275
When I talk to audiences today,
889
00:44:55,859 --> 00:44:59,238
most people will say
that Pirates is their favorite attraction.
890
00:44:59,321 --> 00:45:03,367
And most of them
have not been to Shanghai,
891
00:45:03,450 --> 00:45:08,497
so the basic premise of going underwater,
892
00:45:08,580 --> 00:45:10,666
going on the search for treasure,
893
00:45:10,749 --> 00:45:14,253
we stand on the shoulders
of a classic Disneyland attraction.
894
00:45:14,336 --> 00:45:19,341
One of the last things, I think,
that Walt was able to... to think about.
895
00:45:19,425 --> 00:45:22,177
-You believe in pirates, of course?
-Oh, yes.
896
00:45:22,636 --> 00:45:25,639
It's impossible to know
what Walt Disney himself
897
00:45:25,723 --> 00:45:29,768
would have thought of the Shanghai version
of Pirates of the Caribbean.
898
00:45:29,852 --> 00:45:32,271
We knew that if Walt was around today,
899
00:45:32,354 --> 00:45:35,107
he would grab onto whatever
new storytelling tools we had
900
00:45:35,190 --> 00:45:37,067
in order to tell better stories.
901
00:45:37,151 --> 00:45:39,653
And so we went into
Pirates of the Caribbean for Shanghai,
902
00:45:39,737 --> 00:45:41,780
we wanted it to feel
like you're really there,
903
00:45:41,864 --> 00:45:43,699
like it's really happening to you.
904
00:45:44,366 --> 00:45:45,784
Indistinguishable from reality.
905
00:45:45,868 --> 00:45:48,245
Storytelling with no suspension
of disbelief.
906
00:45:48,328 --> 00:45:51,206
But sadly, it's impossible to know
907
00:45:51,290 --> 00:45:53,375
what he thought of the original too.
908
00:45:53,459 --> 00:45:56,420
There was one
that Walt had his heart set on,
909
00:45:56,503 --> 00:45:58,297
and he followed every detail of it.
910
00:45:58,380 --> 00:46:01,508
You see the publicity photos
of Walt, he's all over everything.
911
00:46:01,592 --> 00:46:03,385
He's posing
with audio-animatronic figures,
912
00:46:03,469 --> 00:46:04,678
he's down there with the heads,
913
00:46:04,762 --> 00:46:06,764
and it looked like
he was just having a ball
914
00:46:06,847 --> 00:46:08,432
putting that attraction together.
915
00:46:08,515 --> 00:46:12,436
And all these little streets
are gonna be very intriguing.
916
00:46:12,519 --> 00:46:15,147
He did get very far into the development,
917
00:46:15,230 --> 00:46:18,192
and he did see the opening
of New Orleans Square.
918
00:46:18,275 --> 00:46:21,403
We had a real jubilee, southern style.
919
00:46:23,113 --> 00:46:25,908
But they hadn't finished the Pirates
of the Caribbean attraction yet,
920
00:46:25,991 --> 00:46:28,535
when he passed away in 1966.
921
00:46:31,079 --> 00:46:34,082
And Pirates of the Caribbean opened,
922
00:46:34,166 --> 00:46:38,420
actually, fairly soon thereafter
in early 1967.
923
00:46:38,504 --> 00:46:41,924
But before the end, Walt was able to see
924
00:46:42,007 --> 00:46:45,677
at least the beginnings
of this amazing creation.
925
00:46:45,761 --> 00:46:48,639
And you get down here,
and look through that little ring,
926
00:46:49,139 --> 00:46:51,183
you get the view that the audience gets.
927
00:46:51,266 --> 00:46:56,230
And even more than that,
the Imagineers pulled a few strings.
928
00:46:56,313 --> 00:47:00,484
He had the joy of experience
a mock-up version of it.
929
00:47:00,567 --> 00:47:04,071
He was able to sit in a boat
where they pulled him through the sets
930
00:47:04,154 --> 00:47:07,032
with the audio-animatronics
and the lights, and the special effects.
931
00:47:08,200 --> 00:47:12,538
So he did at least get to experience
what the attraction was going to be.
932
00:47:12,621 --> 00:47:15,123
Despite never seeing it completed,
933
00:47:15,207 --> 00:47:21,463
Walt Disney's vision for this attraction
can be seen all around the world
934
00:47:21,547 --> 00:47:26,802
from the original attraction
to Florida, Tokyo, Paris...
935
00:47:26,885 --> 00:47:31,181
I was very privileged to take Marc
and Alice Davis to Disneyland, Paris.
936
00:47:31,265 --> 00:47:34,768
The one thing they loved the most,
was Pirates of the Caribbean.
937
00:47:34,852 --> 00:47:38,605
He just lost a gasket. That's it.
938
00:47:38,689 --> 00:47:40,899
That's what we always wanted.
939
00:47:40,983 --> 00:47:42,818
He just thought
it was the greatest thing ever,
940
00:47:42,901 --> 00:47:45,153
and he didn't stop talking about it
for days.
941
00:47:45,237 --> 00:47:46,572
...and Shanghai.
942
00:47:46,655 --> 00:47:49,324
To me, it is about what Walt wanted.
943
00:47:49,950 --> 00:47:52,578
Walt Disney said
that Disneyland would never be complete,
944
00:47:52,661 --> 00:47:54,538
but he also saw it
as a living breathing thing,
945
00:47:54,621 --> 00:47:56,498
that changed constantly.
946
00:47:56,582 --> 00:47:59,084
And that's what Pirates has done,
and it's why it's still,
947
00:47:59,167 --> 00:48:01,879
and will always be my favorite attraction
of all time.
948
00:48:01,962 --> 00:48:05,841
Pirates of the Caribbean
is many things to many people.
949
00:48:05,924 --> 00:48:09,595
Like, my first project that I did
from start to finish.
950
00:48:09,678 --> 00:48:11,680
I'm really proud of what we accomplished
951
00:48:11,763 --> 00:48:14,516
so it's something that's like dear
to my heart.
952
00:48:15,142 --> 00:48:17,394
From a wax museum to one of the world's
953
00:48:17,477 --> 00:48:20,731
most successful movie franchises,
954
00:48:20,814 --> 00:48:24,735
between here and there is an adventure.
955
00:48:24,818 --> 00:48:30,282
One of technological discovery
and swashbuckling creativity.
956
00:48:30,782 --> 00:48:34,244
From the original team
to the Shanghai team,
957
00:48:34,328 --> 00:48:37,581
the crew aboard
this multigenerational classic
958
00:48:37,664 --> 00:48:40,959
sets sail with courage and bravery,
959
00:48:41,043 --> 00:48:44,421
and you certainly
couldn't call them chicken.
960
00:48:44,504 --> 00:48:46,590
It's a classic like, you know, gag moment.
961
00:48:46,673 --> 00:48:47,758
Well, you don't need to tell us,
962
00:48:47,841 --> 00:48:49,134
-obviously.
963
00:48:49,217 --> 00:48:52,137
Plundering the depths
of their imaginations,
964
00:48:52,220 --> 00:48:56,683
looking for treasure,
what they found was pure gold.
965
00:48:56,767 --> 00:49:00,687
And I hope that people will enjoy it
for generations to come.
966
00:49:00,771 --> 00:49:05,442
Dead men tell no tales.
81314
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