The holidays come earlier every year, don't they? By the time this
posts, Disneyland's Halloween Time will have begun, meaning the
Haunted Mansion will be occupied by Burtonian forces. We won't be
able to enjoy its normal mode until sometime after the New Year.
Even apart from the seasonal
wonkiness, it's a real shame that the Haunted Mansion is
functionally unavailable for such a large slice of the year, because
it's...how to put this?
Really effin' awesome.
So. Effin'. Awesome.
But I probably don't need to tell
you that, if you're
the kind of person who reads Disney theme park blogs to begin with.
The Haunted Mansion is quite simply the most beloved
attraction in the history of Disney parks. Other rides may garner
longer queues, claim grander reputations, or boast more fashionable
characters, but the Haunted Mansion has the most devoted fans.
A subset of Disney park aficionados are interested first and foremost
in the Mansion, giving it a status entirely apart from the
institution that spawned it. No other feature of the parks has such
an extensive line of dedicated merchandise. No other inspires as many
blogs. No other has fanfiction
written about its mythos.
In a park full of rides, shows, and
themed environments that work amazingly well together, the Haunted
Mansion is one—maybe the only one—that can stand on its own.*
This, however, is not sufficient to
account for its popularity. Why is the Haunted Mansion the ride with
the following? Why not Space Mountain, usually considered the
thrillingest of the thrill rides? Why not Pirates of the Caribbean,
which is technically a superior work of theme park art? Why not any
of a number of newer and/or faster rides?
Probably because everyone loves a
ghost story.
Unlike most of the newer
attractions, the Haunted Mansion doesn't really tell
a story...at least not one about its (former?) inhabitants. Fans have
gone to some lengths to try and extract a definitive backstory from
“clues” scattered around the attraction's exterior and interior,
but all they really have to work with is bits and pieces of baggage
from the extraordinary number of revisions the Mansion went through
in its journey from Blue Sky to opening. None of the stuff about the
bloodthirsty pirate captain or the jealous spurned medium is, as they
say, “canon.” There is no official explanation as to how the
house even became haunted in the first place.
No, the Haunted Mansion doesn't tell
us its backstory...but boy howdy, does it ever suggest
such a story. No, not just a
story. More than one. More than two. More than ten.
How many altogether?
Let's call it...999.
The mere existence of a ghost
automatically hints at an interesting story. According to the most
widely accepted lore on the subject, ghosts don't just happen
randomly, but signify that the person so transformed lived an
extraordinary life, died an extraordinary death, or both. At the very
least, becoming a ghost means that a person died with unfinished
business...and it's always interesting
or emotionally affecting unfinished business, not humdrum stuff like
returning a library book.** Either way, if you have a ghost, the
question inheres in the situation: Why
do you have a ghost? (And also, often: How can you stop
having a ghost? In that case, the first answer usually suggests the
second.)
A surprising amount of the
aforementioned fanfiction isn't really about
the Haunted Mansion per se, but is rather a tale of someone's
exceptional life and/or death, ultimately resulting in their shade
taking up residence there. (Fin.)
I don't think it's mere coincidence that so many fans go in the same
direction with their ideas, nor do I think they're just all copying
each other. I think the Mansion inspires such stories by its very
nature. We're told outright that nearly four digits' worth of spooks
call it home, but on the ride itself we only ever see a fraction of
that total, so what about the rest? Fertile ground indeed for
speculation and creativity!
Maybe someone should point out to
Bob Chapek and his posse that the most successful Disney theme park
attraction of all time is not
one based on a pre-existing movie or other IP, but the one that
inspires mythmaking on the part of the guests.
Which brings me to my next point,
which is that the Haunted Mansion doesn't just suggest hundreds of
individual personal stories, but a lot of nebulous lore.
It feels like a place
with a lot more going on than we can see...which is of course true of
any effects-heavy attraction, but the Haunted Mansion might be the
one case where a peek behind the scenes has the potential to enhance
the magic rather than spoiling it.
Long-Forgotten
Haunted Mansion is a blog*** dedicated to chasing down all the
inspiring influences, discarded ideas, concept art, rough drafts, and
other past phases of the Mansion's development. The blogster, HBG2,
is a real treasure of the Disney theme park fandom for his diligence
in unearthing (heh) and analyzing all this stuff. He observes that the
conceptual divide between the secret history of the Haunted Mansion
as a theme park attraction (a real place) and the secret history of
the Haunted Mansion as a haunted mansion
(a fictional setting) is a fuzzy one indeed. It may not be a literal
house, but it is a literal building, and it really does have doors
that lead to surprising places, sealed-off passageways, and other
architectural oddities similar to those often found in haunted house
mysteries. The tricks of the Imagineer's art and the turbulent
process of the attraction's development have resulted in a place with
real, not just pretend, twists and turns and secrets and relics of
the forgotten past.
Perhaps some of the ghosts are real
too...?
Speaking of the hypothetical reality
of ghosts, that's another thing HBG2 points out: the Haunted Mansion
asks much less of your suspension of disbelief than most other Disney
attractions. Other rides may ask you to temporarily believe in pixies
or the Force or that you have been suddenly transported through space
and time. All the Haunted Mansion expects you to believe, in order to
make the premise work, is that ghosts exist...and maybe you already
do. Lots of people believe in ghosts.
If you're one of them, surely you've
wondered from time to time whether any genuine spirits have taken up
residence there. It advertises itself as a “retirement home” for
ghosts; what if some of the real thing (assuming any exist) have
taken it at its word? And from time to time, someone will post a
“true ghost encounter” story on a Disneyland message board, the
veracity often supported by a statement such as “I've been on that
ride thousands of times and have every inch of it memorized and that
has never happened before!”
We mustn't get too
excited, of course. Any number of mundane explanations, from a
software glitch to a Cast Member taking an ill-advised shortcut,
could account for such an “encounter.” But you never know!
That's what a lot of the Haunted
Mansion's appeal boils down to, isn't it? You never know.
Real ghost or Cast Member prank? Scrapped effect or promotional-only
photo? Did that lady really scatter her son's ashes in the load area,
or is that an urban legend? Snopes and other fact-checking resources
can only go so far in quelling the rumors, which pop up again,
mushroom-like, after a suitable resting period, perhaps having
mutated in the meantime. The Haunted Mansion is far too hospitable a
soil for such things.
I could keep rambling on in this
vein indefinitely, but we all have other things to be getting on
with, so I'll close with my own addition to the lore. This really
happened, and it happened to me,
pretty much exactly as I present it here:
Some years ago, I was at Disneyland
with a large group of friends, so I was in an especially waggish
mood. We rode the Haunted Mansion in the morning, and I had Phineas
(the carpetbagger with the big top hat) as my Hitchhiking Ghost. So I
pretended to steal his hat. After we got off the ride, I asked all my
friends to admire my new ghost hat. Much later in the day, we went on
the ride again. I got Phineas again......and......
His hat was missing.
Mere coincidence? Or a
ghostly trickster playing along with me?
You never know.
It's a gift that keeps on giving,
our Haunted Mansion. No Sandy Claws is required.
* This is obviously not to say that
it should.
** Though to be fair, that sort of
thing would get taken care of by the deceased's survivors while going
through their belongings, so it wouldn't be unfinished for long.
*** An amazing
blog. My feelings will not be hurt if you put this post on hold while
you go roam around there for a while, it's so good.
The Haunted Mansion is my sentimental favourite Disney attraction after 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea and Journey to the Center of the Earth. Stateside, yes, it is my unparalleled favourite. It's a magnificent attraction.
ReplyDeleteIn keeping with your post, I think part of its strength is that it DOESN'T have a story, but it SUGGESTS a story, but you DON'T KNOW the story. I could refer back to my own essay about spectatorship and experientialism, and how the best Disney attractions are experiential... They place you, the guest, at the centre of an exeprience in a new world. Haunted Mansion does that.
But as you say, the fact of ghosts suggests that each one has a story, and so does the Mansion itself. That's a rich, intriguing mine of possibility. But there is no story. In typical Marc Davis fashion, these aren't stories... They're gags. We can never know the Haunted Mansion's story because there isn't one. It's only an implied richness. That works in its favour though. The weakness of a lot of new rides is that I can just watch the movie it's based on, if all it's going to be is an abridged form of the movie. The HM, instead, holds a complete experience, but feels like an abridged story, but there's actually no story. That leaves room for mystery and imagination.
Plus, it's just so cool! It's all dark and spooky and Goth and charismatic and funny and charming and creative and...
Yes yes yes, it is all of that! And because there is no *actual* story, whatever you come up with is as right as anything else. The one exception is of course Constance, whose story is as obvious as anything in the park...which is a big part of why I preferred previous iterations of the Bride. But the Attic has always been rather disconnected from the rest of the Mansion in terms of narrative, both real-time and implied.
DeleteI'd disagree about Constance. I think she gives the appearance of a story, but at the end of the day, she's an elaborate gag. The portraits are all build-up for the punchline of "till... death... do us part" and "I do... I did" and so on. Badump-tish.
DeleteIt's interesting to note that the Constance figure herself is completely superfluous as far as grokking what story there is. The pictures and heaps of wedding paraphernalia say it all.
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