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We’re just a day away from hitting the show floor at the biggest Disney fan event—D23 Expo 2017! Previously, we’ve told you all about the cool collectibles you can buy during D23 Expo, but do you know where you can load up on every Disney goodie and each piece of magical merchandise your Disney fanatic heart needs? Consider this your primer on all the exclusive shopping you need to check out at D23 Expo.
Disney Dream Store
This special store full of D23 Expo-exclusive collectibles returns to the show floor for D23 Expo 2017. We’ve given you the inside look at what you can expect at the store, from Pirates of the Caribbean 50th-anniversary merchandise to Ear Hats with an interchangeable bow. If you’re looking for that special something to commemorate your magical time at D23 Expo 2017, this is the store for you.
Disney Store
It wouldn’t be Disney shopping without the Disney Store on the show floor! Be sure to stop by to see the latest collections inspired by Disney, Pixar, Star Wars, and Marvel. Every day will bring new magic, with special product launches occurring throughout the weekend.
MOG: Mickey’s of Glendale
D23 Expo is one of your only chances to visit this famous Walt Disney Imagineering store! Keep an eye out for exclusive merchandise designed by Imagineers, such as hats, T-shirts, polo shirts, hoodies, and more. There will also be limited-edition pins released throughout the weekend, so this is one shop you can’t miss!
Disney Music Emporium
If there’s a song in your heart and space in your shopping bag, then the Disney Music Emporium is the store for you! Besides selling unique and collectible music products, this is the place to be for special artist and composer signings throughout the weekend.
Friends of Disney
As you’re strolling the show floor, be sure to stop by American Tourister, Discovery Cube’s McStuffins Toy Hospital, Funko, Havaianas, Honda, Ozobot, Sunglass Hut, The Walt Disney Family Museum, and more.
Disney Partner Retailers
The show floor will be full of retailers bringing all the Disney magic a fan could need. Retailers such as ANOVOS; Disney Fine Arts and Cyclops Print Workshop; JAKKS Pacific, Inc.; Jelly Belly; LuLaRoe; Marvel Gaming Partners; Mattel Inc.; Random House Children’s Books; Sphero; Stance; Kinkade Studios; UNIQLO; and more!
If you’re looking to curate your own collection of Disney art, check out the pop-up art gallery from Collectors Editions, the official publishers of Disney Fine Art. Feast your eyes on limited-edition and original artwork featuring favorite characters like you’ve never seen them before, such as “Sullivan & Mike” (pictured above) from the Pixar Art Collection. Plus, you won’t want to miss new screen print poster art releases from Cyclops Print Works.
D23 Expo Emporium
Let your Disney fanatic flag fly free and stop by stores from vendors such as Animation Ink Archives, Collectible Toys, Crafty Geek Girls, Disneyana Fan Club, Heritage auctions, SoCal Disney Pinporium, Walt Disney Birthplace, and the Walt Disney Hometown Museum.
It’s almost time for D23 Expo 2017! You’ve scanned the schedule, figured out what to pack, and you’re almost ready to go. But whether this is your first time at the ultimate Disney fan event or you’re a seasoned pro, make sure to follow these few tips for an unforgettable weekend.
1. Wear comfy shoes––Now is not the time to pull an Anastasia (or Drizella!) and try to make uncomfortable shoes work. Pack your comfiest shoes for happy soles.
2. Stay hydrated––Remember to take breaks to grab a bite and drink some water.
3. Bring a charger––A portable charger is a must-have for D23 Expo. With so much tweeting, texting, and photo-snapping, you need your phone to have as much energy as you do.
4. Stay mobile––The D23 Expo app (for iOS and Google Play) is your one-stop shop for all things D23 Expo. Search the full schedule, navigate through the show floor with the D23 Expo map, and answer pretty much every question you could ever ask, all in one place. Ta-da!
5. Strategic shopping––While you’re exploring the app, figure out which shops are on your must-do list. Mickey’s of Glendale, Disney Dream Store, and Disney Store have lots of Expo-exclusive products and there’s so much more in store (see what we did there?) on the D23 Expo show floor.
6. StorePass and StagePass––Maximize your time by utilizing StorePass and StagePass. Both systems provide complimentary tickets––StorePass grants you priority entry to one of the three stores mentioned above, and StagePass guarantees seating at select sessions at D23 Expo Arena, Stage 28, and the Walt Disney Archives Stage. Click here for more info on both offerings.
7. Follow along on social––With so much to see and do, it’s impossible to do it all! Follow along on Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, and Snapchat for updates throughout D23 Expo.
D23 Expo 2017 is just around the corner and, to celebrate, why not add some Disney magic to your iMessages with Disney Stickers: Decades, available on the App Store for iMessage now. The pack features stickers celebrating every decade of Disney films, but that’s not all… As a special surprise for D23 Members, there are secret unlockable D23 stickers! How do you release the magic? Tap these stickers in the following order:
Click Oswald the Lucky Rabbit (1st sticker)
Click Jiminy Cricket (9th sticker)
Click Steamboat Willie (2nd sticker)
Click Minnie Mouse (3rd sticker)
Did you notice what code you create when you tap the stickers? 1923, the year that inspired our fan club name! Be sure to download these stickers so you can share your Disney love with all of your friends.
This year’s D23 Expo Design Challenge celebrates 50 years of Pirates of the Caribbean. Arrrrrrtists were encouraged to base their work on the beloved theme park attraction or any of the Pirates of the Caribbean films, as well as other marauders from Disney’s treasure trove of cads including those from Peter Pan, Treasure Island, and Jake and the Never Land Pirates. The winner was selected from 23 pieces of finalist artwork, and all 23 works of art will be on display throughout the D23 Expo weekend on the show floor.
We congratulate Matthew Maldonado, who was recently named winner for his piece “Retired Pirate Ear Hat.” Matthew’s work features a Mickey Mouse Pirate Ear Hat placed on top of a skull. On top of the hat is a scene from the attraction Pirates of the Caribbean, complete with tiny guests in boats.
Two runners-up also received trophies along with Matthew. Runner-up Kristin Mouri submitted her piece, “Nine Stitches of Eight,” a quilted portrait of Captain Jack Sparrow.
Runner-up Lauren Knipper’s painting, “Caribbean Pirate Cruise,” depicts famous scenes from the Pirates of the Caribbean attraction as performed by the Muppets.
The panel of judges for the D23 Expo Design Challenge includes Michael Singer, author of Disney Pirates: The Definitive Collector’s Anthology (above right); Mike Gabriel, animator and art director (above middle); and Luc Mayrand (above left), Imagineer and Portfolio Creative Executive for Shanghai Disney Resort and Hong Kong Disneyland.
Matthew received a prize of $2,300 and complimentary tickets to D23 Expo 2017.
Get a close look at the judges, the winners, and all the beautiful pieces below.
We all have our favorite attractions and locations inside a Disney Park… whether it’s the grandeur of Sleeping Beauty Castle or the majesty (and excitement) of Expedition Everest, they often hold memories we return to again and again. And many of them are inspired by real-life locations around the globe!
Come with us on a (virtual) tour to some of the farthest-flung spots on planet Earth, and see how some of your Disney Parks faves were informed by real—and really amazing—locales. They’re our very own “seven wonders of the world”… the kind of places we’d put on our ultimate vacation bucket list.
Have you ever been to a real-life location that inspired a Disney Park fave? Let us know over at Facebook and Twitter!
The Matterhorn / Matterhorn Bobsleds (Disneyland Park)
The Matterhorn Bobsleds opened at Disneyland on June 14, 1959—and you might be surprised it’s not just based on the breathtaking mountain that sits on the border between Switzerland and Italy in the Swiss Alps. (It’s also inspired by a Disney film called Third Man on the Mountain, released in 1959.) While the real-life Matterhorn towers over all that surrounds it at 14,692 feet, the Disneyland version comes in at 147 feet—about 1/100th the size of its counterpart!
Neuschwanstein Castle / Sleeping Beauty Castle (Disneyland Park)
It’s been said that the palace served as Walt Disney’s inspiration for Disneyland’s Sleeping Beauty Castle—a park landmark since it opened in 1955—and there are many similarities between the candy-colored castle and Neuschwanstein Castle in Bavaria, Germany. Commissioned by Ludwig II of Bavaria in 1869, as both a haven and an homage to composer Richard Wagner, Neuschwanstein Castle is built in the Romanesque Revival style.
Carthay Circle Theatre / Carthay Circle Restaurant and Buena Vista Street (Disney California Adventure)
Walt Disney’s first full-length animated film, Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, premiered at Hollywood’s famed Carthay Circle Theatre on December 21, 1937. The theater, with its Spanish Colonial Revival architecture, was demolished in 1969… but we’re lucky that a recreation of the theater’s edifice now stands sentry at the end of Buena Vista Street at Disney California Adventure. Inside is the Carthay Circle Restaurant and Carthay Circle Lounge, featuring some of the best dining the Disneyland Resort has to offer.
Himalayas/ Expedition Everest (Disney’s Animal Kingdom)
Most of us won’t get to visit the Himalayan range or attempt a journey to Mount Everest in our lifetimes, but the opportunity to visit the Forbidden Mountain at Disney’s Animal Kingdom is much more achievable. At just under 200 feet tall, the attraction is actually the tallest mountain in Florida! By contrast, Mount Everest in Nepal is Earth’s highest peak—towering at an unbelievable 29,029 feet above sea level. Around 640 people summited Everest in 2016… Ever wanted to be one of them?
Cadillac Ranch / Cars Land and Radiator Springs Racers (Disney California Adventure)
If you’ve been to Cars Land at Disney California Adventure, you’ll recognize the distinctive “car-shaped” range of hills just behind the fabulous Radiator Springs Racers. But did you know they’re based on a real-life public art installation in Amarillo, Texas? Created in 1974 by artists Chip Lord, Hudson Marquez, and Doug Michels (part of Bay Area-based group known as Ant Farm), Cadillac Ranch is a line of Cadillac cars half-buried nose-first in the ground. Take a trip down Amarillo’s Interstate 40 and you can see it for yourself!
St. Mark’s Campanile / Italy Pavilion (Epcot)
The Campanile di San Marco is the bell tower at St. Mark’s Basilica in Venice, Italy. Standing at 323 feet tall, with a belfry housing five bells and a golden weathervane in the shape of archangel Gabriel, the tower has (in its current form) stood watch in St. Mark’s Square since 1912… but the original tower was built back in 1512. No doubt it’s seen its fair share of history! Epcot’s Italy pavilion houses its very own St. Mark’s Campanile re-creation, just outside its replica of the Doge’s Palace.
New York City Harbor / American Waterfront (Tokyo DisneySea)
Taking a trip to Japan but itching to see a harbor that resembles an Industrial Age-era Northeastern seaboard of our own United States? On first blush, it’s a rather interesting request, but it can be fulfilled—by visiting the quaint and cool American Waterfront inside Tokyo DisneySea! With an elevated railway, a theater, and a harbor containing all manner of ships (including the S.S. Columbia), the American Waterfront is home to several beloved Disney Park attractions—including Tower of Terror and Toy Story Mania!
D23 Expo 2017 is less than a week away, and Friday is going to be a big day for all the fans in attendance. There’s so much magic in store—Disney Legends, animation, music, and, of course, Mousequerade! We can’t wait to see all the clever, creative, and just plain crazy cosplays that fans will be showing off at Stage 28 and all over the D23 Expo show floor. Need to get your cosplay fill before Friday? Enjoy this gallery of some of our favorite cosplays from around the D23 EXPO 2015 show floor. We’ll see you on Friday for Mousequerade—where you’ll surely be the Belle (or Cinderella, or Tiana, or Elsa…) of the ball!
Our day gets a sprinkling of pixie dust every time we find something Disney waiting for us on our doorstep, and Disney Treasures by Funko are no exception. The new subscription box features the most memorable moments from classic Disney films and even theme parks, with super-cute Funko collectibles in every box. In fact, each box you receive will be filled with 100-percent-exclusive Disney collectibles and accessories created by Funko just for Disney fans.
Get an inside look below and make sure to stop by the Disney Treasures by Funko booth at D23 Expo to see some of the boxes in person—and even pick up one to take home!
The Disney Treasures subscription boxes are built around a treasure map to a fictional Funko Disney world. Each box features a new location on the map—if you collect them all, the map will show the complete Disney Treasures journey by the end of the year. The boxes, designed as old-fashioned travel chests, will come with a new sticker added to the top of each box, showing your journey through the Disney Treasures world—think of a vintage suitcase with stickers for each destination you’ve traveled to, and then add some Disney Funko magic!
The first two boxes, Pirates Cove––filled with your favorite Disney swashbucklers, and Festival of Friends––featuring the lovable Dumbo and Timothy, will be available to explore at D23 Expo. Be sure to sign up by August 1 (you can sign up at the Funko booth at D23 Expo!) to receive the next Disney Treasures box, Tiny Town, featuring a flying Tinker Bell Pop!
Walt Disney once said, “You can dream, create, design, and build the most wonderful place in the world… but it requires people to make the dream a reality,” and The Walt Disney Company has been honoring these dream makers in a very special way since 1987. The Disney Legends award was first introduced 30 years ago, and to celebrate, Disney twenty-three has created a unique stand-alone issue featuring all 267 current honorees, as well as the 10 new Legends, who will be inducted next week at D23 Expo 2017.
What else can you expect from this one-of-a-kind issue? Kurt Russell gives a first-person account of his time working for Walt himself and the many Disney adventures he has had over the years, Richard Sherman pens a touching tribute to Annette Funicello, Dave Smith answers your Disney Legends Qs, and, of course, tons of photos from Disney Legends Awards ceremonies throughout the years.
Plus, Disney animator Eric Goldberg crafted a piece of artwork exclusively for this issue featuring more than 30 Disney Legends, including Julie Andrews, Steve Martin, Angela Lansbury, and Robin Williams. As a bonus, D23 Gold Members attending D23 Expo 2017 will receive a complimentary print of the artwork at the event.
Click here to find out how to become a D23 Gold Member!
This article originally appeared in a slightly different form in the Winter 2010, edition of Disney twenty-three magazine and was modified for D23.com.
Remember life before home computers? When USB drives and laptops were merely tantalizing futuristic ideas? Those were the days when TRON was created. It’s a film about enigmatic Kevin Flynn (Jeff Bridges), a young video game programmer who hacks into a mainframe computer to prove that a crooked executive stole his work, but instead is beamed smack-dab into the computer world and forced to fight for his life on the game grid. Flynn and TRON (Bruce Boxleitner), a security program, together attempt to overthrow the evil Master Computer Program (MCP), resulting in a visually stunning adventure. But how did TRON’s filmmakers begin to produce a world that exists inside a computer when in the early 1980s, computer technology was as foreign to filmmakers as it was to the public?
Tron and Flynn
A Story Ahead of Its Time TRON was clearly ahead of its time, but it was so innovative that its filmmakers had a pretty good hunch that Walt Disney himself would have been enthused and intrigued by this fascinating film about the digital world. “We made a lot of the film with traditional animation techniques,” recalls Steven Lisberger, creator/director of the original TRON and a producer of TRON: Legacy. “By using backlight and diffusion and multiple exposures, we gave the impression to people that it had been generated by a computer.”
(left) A rare color image of Jeff Bridges as Clu on the set and (right) Flynn on the Recognizer set
Going off the Grid
The results were so convincing that many thought the film was done entirely by computer, even though the technology didn’t even exist at that time. Audiences took for granted all the hand-done, time-consuming technical effects that went into the film. The Academy even failed to nominate the film for a much-deserved Best Visual Effects Oscar®; instead, TRON got the noms for Best Costume and Best Sound. “TRON was so unique that there really wasn’t anything to compare it to,” Lisberger explains. “So, in a way, they solved the problem by just ignoring it.”
The Master Computer Program (MCP)
A Hand-Drawn Computer World
Many people still assume TRON was created 100 percent by using computer graphics. When asked if it can be considered a handmade film, Lisberger fires back, “There’s no question that TRON is, first of all… a hybrid. It’s a live-action movie that then is dismantled, and goes through the entire cel process of hand-animation. And then it’s reconstructed, colored, and the effects are put in. And it’s re-photographed like an animation film.” In the end, only a small percentage of TRON was computer-generated. All of the exteriors of the vehicles, including the memorable light cycles and their light trails, were animated on computer, as was the overbearing villainous MCP, the first onscreen CG character to deliver an acting performance; its design bore the characteristics of a human face.
Steven Lisberger
Lisberger acknowledges the incredible technical challenge of bringing TRON to life: “I think people at any other studio would have thrown up their hands and said, ‘This is impossible,’ but it was like an animated movie, and we were talking to the people at the Disney Studios about the fact that we had 100,000 frames of this or 200,000 frames of that and all this effects animation.” But, he recalls, it turned out that “We were speaking their language, and they were like: ‘Yep, we can do that.’” Lisberger concludes philosophically, “TRON has an analog soul, but it’s a movie about CG.”
Kodaliths from a single TRON frame
Creating a Computer World with Kodaliths
Thousands and thousands of special animation cels, called Kodaliths, had to be created to achieve the film’s unique look, and each needed to be photographed separately. The Kodaliths contained everything for the main image of the character, along with all the details such as the circuit glow, eye and teeth highlights, effects animation, even a scene’s background. This was an enormous task, especially for the camera department staff, which had to keep all of these special elements organized. “We were not trying to reinvent the wheel. We were trying to make a whole different wheel that was not necessarily round,” master matte artist and TRON associate producer Harrison Ellenshaw explains. “All movies until TRON were set in an established genre. TRON created a new one.”
Jeff Bridges as Kevin Flynn at Flynn’s Arcade
Going to the Next Level TRON was the first film to have a coin-operated video arcade game created to tie into the film’s story line. Today, it’s common practice to market and promote action-based movie properties by creating a tie-in videogame, but it was unheard of in 1982. Following the success of the TRON arcade game, Bally Midway created an innovative sequel, Discs of Tron, in 1983. This game featured an enclosed cabinet that allowed a player to step inside to simulate the feeling that you were within TRON’s world. It had exciting external flashing light effects that illuminated in sync with your actions during game play. Years later, the stunning TRON 2.0 brought fans back into the grid, which you can read about in our list of favorite Disney video games (LINK: https://d23.com/level-up-your-nostalgia-with-these-classic-disney-video-games/).
Jeff Bridges as Kevin Flynn in Tron: Legacy
Predicting the Future
Reflecting on the 2010 film TRON: Legacy, Lisberger says, “One of the craziest things is that I made up that whole idea of scanning Jeff Bridges in the first film with a laser (so he could enter into the computer world), and MCP puts him on the game grid, and that’s how we do it now!” He continues, “We actually scanned Jeff Bridges, and in real time he pops up, you know, his low-res version on the game grid.” In order to recreate a younger Jeff Bridges as Clu (a program that Kevin Flynn sends inside the computer world to locate his stolen files appropriated by the villainous Sark and the MCP), a four-camera head rig was used to capture and scan Jeff’s facial performance. The computer is actually able to render Jeff Bridges’ face the way he looked in the first film. A body double on set portrays Clu’s physical movements and the computer superimposes Jeff’s facial performance onto the body double, resulting in Clu as we remember him from 1982.
A light cycle taking form on the game grid
Keep Moving Forward
Life imitates art in many ways, and TRON was the first film to imagine just what a computer world would be like. Perhaps the reason TRON fascinates and always captures the imagination is its unique combination of technical mediums that depict a very possible world of the future. In 1982, filmmakers said, “How do we generate a computer world?” The answer was to create techniques that made images appear to be computer generated, even though computers could only provide limited help at the time. The same question was asked in 2010.
Now, when the look of the original film could actually be created on a laptop, TRON’s world advanced, has become far more complex. History repeats itself, imagination moves forward, turning the dreams of filmmakers, and TRON aficionados, into dazzling reality.
If you’re a Disney fan, there’s no better way to celebrate any season than with a trip to your favorite Disney park. You can dress up in your spooky best for Halloween, enjoy holiday cheer in the winter, but what about for the Fourth of July? If you can’t imagine yourself celebrating America’s independence anywhere other than Main Street, U.S.A. with a Mickey ice cream sandwich in your hand, why not get an extra dose of American history, patriotism, and fun with these ways to celebrate America at Disney parks.
The Disneyland Story Presenting Great Moments with Mr. Lincoln, Disneyland Park
Why not celebrate the American spirit by reliving great moments with the 16th president? Great Moments with Mr. Lincoln is a classic Disneyland attraction and passion project of Walt Disney. Featuring the latest in Audio-Animatronics® technology, President Abraham Lincoln tells the tale of generations past and provides an important vision of the future. A replica of Lincoln’s life mask was originally used by late Imagineer Blaine Gibson to bring realism to this famous Audio-Animatronics® figure, to support a historically accurate and deeply moving presentation perfect for celebrating the United States.
The American Adventure pavilion, Epcot
Epcot is your doorway to the world, but sometimes we need to stop back home—which is why you should take some time and visit The American Adventure pavilion at World Showcase. Enjoy a dramatic retelling of America’s story, featuring 35 Audio-Animatronics® figures, and meet famous American figures such as Susan B. Anthony, Frederick Douglass, and Will Rogers. This 30-minute show, hosted by Benjamin Franklin and Mark Twain, is the perfect salute to America’s greatest resource: its people.
Liberty Square Riverboat, Magic Kingdom Park
What better way to celebrate the United States than by taking a relaxing cruise along the Rivers of America? The Liberty Belle features a working steam engine to ferry guests around Tom Sawyer Island on a trip through the past.
Watch the Flag Retreat, Magic Kingdom Park
At 5 p.m. each night, crowds gather in town square of Main Street, U.S.A. to respectfully observe the nightly retiring of the park’s American flag. After reciting the pledge, a special Color Guard lowers the flag to the philharmonic performance of “Star Spangled Banner.” Guests can then join in singing “God Bless America.” The color guard then hands the flag to a special guest veteran, who joins a procession down Main Street, U.S.A. to conclude this special ceremony. Guests don’t always know about this little piece of patriotism happening every afternoon at the Magic Kingdom, but if you’re feeling especially spirited, be sure to come by and pay your respects.
Watch The Muppets Present… Great Moments in American History, Magic Kingdom
Liberty Square at the Magic Kingdom provides guests with many an option to discover American history through unique and authentic experiences. Guests can stop to visit under the Liberty Tree or gaze at an exact replica of the famous Liberty Bell. But only one experience lets them learn about our country through the eyes of a Muppet, however… The Muppets Present… Great Moments in American History is a show unlike anything you’ve ever seen, featuring original music, flashy costumes, and one very annoyed Sam Eagle. If you want some all-American laughs, be sure to stop and watch the two unique performances that tell either the tale of the midnight ride of Paul Revere or the famous signing of the Declaration of Independence.
Meet Captain America, Disney California Adventure Park
The Star Spangled Man with a Plan is ready to meet fans in Hollywood Land! This red, white, and true-blue hero is waiting to meet you, so make sure to stop by and say hi. While you’re visiting Hollywood Land, why not sign up to be a true-blue hero yourself? The Avengers Training Initiative provides aspiring Super Heroes with the chance to wield the famous vibranium shield and prove they can save the world with the Avengers.
Watch the Main Street Electrical Parade, Disneyland Park
While the Main Street Electrical Parade itself is an American classic of electronic pageantry and lights, one string of floats stands out with its American spirit. While we love the spectacular floats celebrating classic Disney films like Cinderella, Peter Pan, and Pete’s Dragon, nothing compares to the finale unit. Covered in dazzling lights, the celebration of Americana is the grand finale that makes any Disneyland day a little more patriotic. Each night, a similar patriotic finale closes the Electrical Water Pageant at Walt Disney World Resort—which was the inspiration for the Main Street Electrical Parade!