RE: Project 2018: Rebirth of Hurler
Can you point it out please? I missed it when I went 3 days ago.
Fury 325 has decent theming.
Can you point it out please? I missed it when I went 3 days ago.
Fury 325 has decent theming.
Box office
The movie was a box office success debuting at No.1. The film's final domestic gross was $121,697,323., making it the eighth highest-grossing film of 1992 and the highest-grossing of the 11 films based on Saturday Night Live skits.
Critical response
Wayne's World received mostly positive reviews from critics. On Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an 85% "Certified Fresh" rating based on 47 reviews, with an average rating of 6.8/10, with the critical consensus stating, "An oddball comedy that revels in its silliness and memorable catchphrases, Wayne's World is also fondly regarded because of its endearing characters". On Metacritic, the film has a score of 53 out of 100, based on 13 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews". Roger Ebert said in his review: "I walked into Wayne's World expecting a lot of dumb, vulgar comedy, and I got plenty, but I also found what I didn't expect: a genuinely amusing, sometimes even intelligent, undercurrent." However, Desson Howe said in the Washington Post that making a movie out of such "teeny sketch" is "better than you'd expect" but especially criticized the finale as "an attempt to lampoon movie endings" "and a despair-driven inability to end the movie."
In 2000, readers of Total Film magazine voted Wayne's World the 41st-greatest comedy film of all time.
Effect on pop culture
Wayne's World AMC Pacer clone at Planet Hollywood in New York City
Filled with pop culture references, the sketches and film started catchphrases such as "Schwing!" and "Schyea", as well as popularizing "That's what she said", "Party on!" and the use of "Not!" after apparently affirmative sentences in order to state the contrary. The "not" joke's popularity saw a resurgence after its use in the 2006 mockumentary film Borat.
Grand Theft Auto IV: The Lost and Damned and Grand Theft Auto V feature a car based on the AMC Pacer named "Rhapsody" in reference to the famed scene from the film. In The Lost and Damned, if the player zooms in on the dashboard with the sniper rifle, they can see a pixelated photograph resembling Wayne and Garth.
Awards
American Film Institute recognition:
AFI's 100 Years...100 Laughs - Nominated
AFI's 100 Years...100 Movie Quotes: "Schwing!" - Nominated
"We're not worthy. We're not worthy." - Nominated
AFI's 100 Years...100 Songs: Bohemian Rhapsody - Nominated
Nicole said:I don't think it makes very much sense to judge a movie from 1992 by 2017 standards. Cultural aesthetics were fundamentally different then.
Regardless, theming a section of a park owned by Paramount to a popular Paramount movie makes plenty of sense.
Sorry Joe, I have to agree. I could see them easily going to the "generic modern" theme. Sadly, it's not as fun as the 50's theme could have been. Cedar Fair is famous for being highly generic. With the existing attractions, I'm sure they can pull off generic modern, but how well they'll implement it is the main question.Joe said:The more I think about it, the more I think we won't see any emphasis on the 50's theme in the Hurler area when the new coaster opens next season. More and more elements from the 50's theme continue to be removed, at this point making it seem like the park is gradually eschewing the theme altogether.
First, the two vintage Chevy Bel Airs were removed from the patio in front of Juke Box Diner last year.
At the beginning of the 2017 season, the area's doo wop soundtrack was turned off. Now the Hurler area just plays the same pop music that the rest of Candy Apple Grove has.
The painted road markings on the asphalt (which were looking awfully faded lately) were power-washed from the path this past week, removing any evidence that the walkway was ever supposed to look like a street.
Sometime within the last two weeks, all of the 50's themed props have been removed from Juke Box Diner. The television sets, radios, kitchenware, and the real antique jukebox have all been removed. I noticed the jukebox sitting unplugged in the kitchen today.
Rock Shop used to have some subtle stickers, signage, and other paraphernalia themed to the 50's, but it was renovated over the off-season and is now a generic, modern sportswear shop.
Were it not for Juke Box Diner's architecture and the few signs depicting images from the 50's scattered around the restaurant, the 50's theme would be completely obsolete. Even Rock Shop's giant electric guitar neck could conceivably represent any number of decades (including the present one), just as it did when it was part of Wayne's World.
At this point, I'd say the chances of the RMC and the area around it being themed to the 1950's are growing increasingly slim. Personally, I think this is a shame because the 50's is a fascinating decade in regards to American pop culture, with plenty of potential to capitalize on it to create an energetic themed area.
At this point, as Zachary pointed out to me, I'd be much less surprised to see the former Wayne's World area become one of those generic modern areas that Cedar Fair has been developing lately. While that design would be less ideal for a theme-centric person like myself, the crisp and shiny feel of those areas would probably lend itself well in tying Windseeker, Ricochet, and the new coaster into a nice "modern" area.
But perhaps even that is wishful thinking...
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