One Last Fall: A Final Ride on Disney California Adventure’s Tower of Terror

I’d never been to a wake for a building before, much less one held inside that building, but that’s what it felt like when I rode The Twilight Zone Tower of Terror at Disney California Adventure for the last time earlier this fall. A trio of jazz singers inside the ride’s intricately detailed Pueblo Deco hotel lobby serenaded a crowd excited to plummet through that tower one more time before its permanent closure on January 2, 2017. There were no drinks or finger foods, but the mood was simultaneously happy and grim, like we were saying farewell to something while reflecting on the joy that it brought us.
Opened in 2004, as part of a number of additions and upgrades to salvage the then-flailing California Adventure theme park, the West Coast version of Disney’s iconic drop tower is closing for good in less than two weeks. It’s being replaced with a similar ride themed around the Guardians of the Galaxy, the Marvel Comics space heroes whose second big budget film opens next May. That attraction, Guardians of the Galaxy—Mission: Breakout!, beyond having far more punctuation in its name than any theme park ride could ever need, will reuse the same ride system and structure as the Tower of Terror, although the exterior and interior will be heavily altered to make it look like the private museum of the comic and movie character known as the Collector. As Disney Imagineer Joe Rohde said in the video announcing the conversion, the new building will be “a kind of warehouse fortress power plant,” a thematic vagueness that doesn’t encourage much excitement among those who believe theme parks should have a strong theme.
Theme is the greatest strength of the Tower of Terror, especially the version found at California Adventure. Built relatively cheaply and quickly compared to the original ride at Disney’s Hollywood Studios in Orlando, this Tower is a fairly straight-forward drop tower ride once you’re strapped into your seat. You go up, you come down, and then you do it two or three more times before it all wraps up. The elevator cart in the Orlando version actually has horizontal movement before and after the drops, with a fantastic real-life recreation of the iconic Twilight Zone opening credits before the frightening plunge; California Adventure’s ride does neither. Still, California’s tower itself is a gorgeous testament to the power of theming. Its line winds throughout a decrepit lobby, a real-life snapshot of the 1930s frozen in rot and decay. Messy tabletops hint at customers who fled in a hurry, and cobwebs and cracks evoke the passage of time undisturbed by man. Subtle references to classic Twilight Zone episodes abound. Whether you’re familiar with the show or not, the design of the Tower itself, inside and out, powerfully grounds you in the era of its supposed creation, and also prepares you for the scares that lie within. And with decor straight out of the Golden Age of Hollywood, it anchors an area of the park known as Hollywood Land.
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