Tokyo Disneyland is Like a Disney Time Machine

Welcome to the Crossroads! Tokyo Disneyland was an interesting trip and experience. The park is beautiful and a throwback to Disney’s bygone era. I think of Tokyo Disneyland as the Ghost of Theme Park Past. So, is Tokyo Disneyland stuck in the past? Not exactly, but the parts that are can be a fun look at what has changed here at the US parks. My first trip to a Disney Park was Disney World in 1987, when I was at the tender age of twelve. I vividly remember the rides, my wonder, and the excitement of being in the Happiest Place on Earth. I carry those memories with me as a full-fledged Disney Adult.

So, what does this have to do with Tokyo Disney? Walt Disney famously said that Disneyland would be an ever-evolving park. Change would be one constant guests could count on in the Disney parks. Yes, Tokyo Disney has new attractions, but it is also home to sights and experiences from the past. Tokyo Disneyland is modeled after the US parks. The Japanese investors at the Oriental Trading Company (OTC) wanted their Tokyo theme park to be a copy of their US counterparts. The Haunted Mansion is a copy of WDW, It’s A Small World mirrors Disneyland, and Pirates of the Caribbean is also modeled on Disneyland. Tokyo Disney has its share of new attractions as well. One of their most popular rides is The Enchanted Tale of Beauty and the Beast. OTC has recently demolished Space Mountain and is rebuilding it in an exciting new design. So, it isn’t like everything there is stuck in the past.

Tokyo Disneyland is hardly a relic of the past, but it has many holdovers from parts removed or changed in the US parks. I will list my five biggest holdovers from the US parks in Tokyo Disneyland.

  1. Country Bear Jamboree-Tokyo Disney’s show is the same show WDW had until the program and animatronic upgrades in the past few years. Yes, it’s in Japanese, but it’s still fun to hear the original music and watch the bears perform. I will post a video of the Tokyo Disney show on the YouTube channel in the next few weeks, so be looking out for it if you want to see the old version of the show, but in Japanese.
  2. The Jungle Cruise—This one is a little controversial (not as much as one on this list, but close). When the skipper tells us the best Japanese dad jokes on the cruise, you will notice some people in the jungle who are not present in any other version. Tokyo Disney still maintains the dancing tribesmen and the headhunters. The end of the boat tour will take you by the original Trader Sam with his strands of shrunken heads.
Souvenir?

3. Pirates of the Caribbean- This one is an interesting mix of old and new. The Tokyo attraction did add Jack Sparrow and Captain Barbossa, but where the US parks altered the auction scene and the pirates chasing the women, Tokyo did not make the same change. Riding Pirates of the Caribbean in Tokyo allows you to experience the old-school auction and chase scenes with the women for sale and being chased. It is easy to understand why the change was made in the States. Disneyland Paris followed the US lead and changed the auction and chase scenes.

4. The Haunted Mansion- I loved this version. I rode the Orlando version dozens of times on my first Disney World trip. During the Electric Light Parade (also something else old in states that’s still in Tokyo), we rode the Haunted Mansion in a continuous loop for almost an hour because there was no line and the cast members let us stay in the Doom Buggies for repeated trips through the mansion. The Tokyo Haunted Mansion features the spiders and webs, where the staircase room is now, and the OG Beating Heart Bride. Props to OTC for not making her into the Constance Hatchaway attic bride we know and dislike.

5. Splash Mountain- This is the mother of all differences between the Tokyo and US parks. The ride in the States drew criticism because it is based on Br’er Rabbit, Br’er Fox, and Br’er Bear from the troubled Song of the South film. In the US, Disneyland and Disney World changed Splash Mountain to Tiana’s Bayou Adventure, based on the animated Walt Disney Pictures film The Princess and the Frog. Tokyo has fought off all attempts by the Walt Disney Corporation to force OTC to change Splash Mountain. This is one of the most popular attractions in Tokyo Disney, and they aren’t in a hurry to make a change. They see the reaction and issues the US versions have had, and I don’t think they want any part of that action. Riding Splash Mountain again after having the opportunity to ride Tiana’s Bayou Adventure was nice. It allowed me to make a better comparison between the two. I still prefer Splash Mountain, mainly because the story fits the ride better than it does with Tiana. I like Tiana, though; it is the right ride for the US. The Japanese don’t have the same cultural issues with Song of the South, which alters their views on the subject matter of the ride. They see it for the rabbit, fox, and other animals apart from the connotations we have with the film and characters in the US.

That wraps up this trip down memory lane to Disney’s past. We can still visit parts of the past in Tokyo Disneyland like we were time travelers. I’ve visited Disneyland, Disney World, Paris Disneyland, and Tokyo Disneyland. Only two parks are left, and I hope to get to them in the next couple of years.

Thanks for meeting me here at the Crossroads, and I hope to see you out on the road or in a Disney park!

Later,

Brent

Why I Would Never Do Tokyo Disney Without the Vacation Package!

Welcome back to the Crossroads! I’ve visited Disneyland and Disney World in the US many times over the years, but nothing could prepare me for the planning it takes to visit Tokyo Disneyland and Tokyo DisneySea.

Tokyo Disney is a different experience. To make the most of your trip to the Tokyo version of the Most Magical Place on Earth, you need some forethought and planning. I’m considering a live stream on the YouTube channel to answer questions, discuss the park’s ins and outs, and explain what kind of planning you need to do. In this article, I want to give you the five main reasons why I wouldn’t visit the Tokyo parks without the vacation package.

Our vacation package was the three-day and two-night package. This included one-day tickets to Disneyland and two days for DisneySea. The hotel we stayed in was the Fantasy Springs resort in DisneySea. We visited Disneyland on the first day, and the other two were DisneySea. The two nights we stayed in Fantasy Springs, we had Happy Entry. Happy Entry allows you into the parks fifteen minutes before regular ticket holders. This is a huge advantage because you can’t start booking Premier Access, 40th Anniversary Priority Passes, or try for the standby show passes until after you scan your ticket and enter the park. While the regular ticket holders are waiting to get in the gates, you can get the jump on booking passes for the day. This is a huge advantage in making your day easier.

One perk with the vacation package is the ability to pre-book two rides per day. So, on our day focusing on Fantasy Springs, we pre-booked Frozen Ever After and Rapunzel’s Lantern Festival. Having these booked in advance allowed us to rope-drop Peter Pan’s Neverland Adventure and Fairy Tinker Bell’s Busy Buggies. In the first hour, we rode all four Fantasy Springs attractions. Without the passes or being able to rope-drop Fantasy Springs, it could’ve taken hours to get on all four if you had the chance to ride them all. Staying in the Fantasy Springs hotel allowed our Happy Entry to be straight into Fantasy Springs instead of entering DisneySea from the main entrance, since Fantasy Springs is in the back of the park, far away from the main gate.

Worth. Every. Penny.

The vacation package also includes meals that you can book in advance. This is purely up to you as to which restaurants and times you want to book. We tried to plot our path through the park to end up close to a restaurant at our reserved dining time. We wish we would’ve tried some different places, but there’s always next time…

Each vacation package also includes a drink package. I found that how packages are accepted varies from place to place. Disneyland was very strict about what you could get with your drink package, and we did not use it much on the first day. Trying to figure out what drinks we could and couldn’t get was becoming a pain. DisneySea was much easier to navigate with the package. The DisneySea Food and Wine Festival was happening, and we were surprised to find out they allowed us to use the drink package for the specialty drinks for the festival. This made up for how tight they were with it in Disneyland.

Some of the other perks of the vacation package were a gift you picked out, a popcorn bucket (one per package, not per person), and tickets for a character meeting. The popcorn lines are crazy, so you may want to pick your flavor and bucket based on the line. We caught the cool new light-up castle with the soy and butter flavor popcorn. Some lines were an hour or more for various flavors or specific buckets. The ability to use the vacation package ticket to bypass the lines at a character greeting helped get more accomplished, too. I chose Mickey, and instead of waiting for an hour and a half, I waited fifteen minutes. Again, things like this make the package’s cost worth it. I only have a small window of time in the Japanese parks, and my time to experience as much as possible is worth the money. People may not feel the same, but I’m only here on the planet for a short time, and I aim to experience everything as much as possible.

To close, I will throw out some advice that most people and ‘Disney travel’ experts don’t realize. Happy entry does not count on the first day of your ticket. The two days following the nights in the hotel of your package do, but not the first day. You can pick up your package the day of or the day before, but you can only get the Happy Entry if you stayed in a participating Disney hotel the night before your package starts. Getting a room for one night on property before your package begins is difficult. We didn’t get a room like this until a few weeks before. The Fantasy Springs resort was booked solid, so we stayed two nights in the Disney Celebration Wish hotel before our package started. The resort moved our luggage to Fantasy Springs, and we enjoyed Happy Entry on our first day because we stayed in a Disney resort the night before. It is difficult, but if you watch closely, you can snag a room for the night before your package begins. This also allowed us to take the bus to Disneyland and line up early for the Happy Entry. I plan on discussing this process and experience more in the livestream. I’ll drop the time and date for that later.

I will take off now, but if you have any comments, drop them below, and I’ll answer them based on my experiences. Thanks for stopping in, and I’ll see you at the Crossroads!

Brent

It’s About to Get Crazy- Star Wars, Disney, and Japan

Welcome to the Crossroads! I’ve said recently that there are many roads one can take here at the Crossroads. I am a horror fan and writer, Disney Adult, Universal Studios guy, traveler, cruise enthusiast, and Star Wars nerd. All of these different roads converge at a central point, and that central location is what I refer to as Brent’s Crossroads. At various times, each of these passions of mine meet here as I travel around the world. I will share my thoughts, ideas, and experiences with everyone in a no BS manner. Everything I post is my honest opinion and not influenced by any outside forces. If I tell you I liked something I did. Likewise, if I say something wasn’t great, I didn’t think it was great. I wanted to say this because things are growing, and I want everyone to know where I stand at the Crossroads.

So, what’s going on? I haven’t posted here as much as I wanted recently, but that is about to change. I will be embarking on a trip soon to Tokyo, Japan, and there will be plenty of new content related to the trip. Tokyo Disneyland will have multiple posts. The park is an entirely different entity from how US parks or those in Paris operate. There will be information about the differences and tips on how to navigate the Tokyo Disney experience. I will also cover my other travels in Japan, including the food and snacks, as well as Star Wars Celebration Japan.

During the trip, I will be posting short videos and pictures on the Crossroads Instagram, Threads, TikTok, YouTube channel, and Facebook pages. Once I return, the full YouTube videos will be released, and the posts here will chronicle the tips, tricks, and experiences I had in Japan. If you haven’t followed the Crossroads on our other social media platforms, please do! You’re support goes a long way in helping keep the lights on here on the Crossroads and allows the whole venture to grow. In the coming weeks, I will be showcasing the new logo and releasing some branded merch to help support the various sites and YouTube channel.

That is what is happening, my friends. I have a lot of irons in the fire, but the desire and love I have for creating and for my hobbies drive me to continue. Trying to grow the Brent’s Crossroads project is exhausting, but I’ve loved every minute of it. Thank you for being here and for your support. It means a lot to this guy; you have no idea how much it does.

On that note, I have miles to go before I sleep and camera equipment to prep for the trip. Let’s take a ride together, shall we?

I’ll meet you all out at the Crossroads,

Brent