Los Angeles Times - 13.08.2019

(Michael S) #1

E2 TUESDAY, AUGUST 13, 2019 LATIMES.COM/CALENDAR


ONE CHILD NATIONE1:00 PM
3:10 PM 5:20 PM 7:30 PM
10:10PM
TELAVIV ONFIREI1:50 PM
4:30 PM 7:20 PM 10:00PM
HONEYLAND3:15 PM 5:30 PM
7:45 PM 10:15PM
THEWAITING GAMEI1:00 PM
BOSCH:THE GARDEN OF
DREAMSI1:00 PM

MILLENNIUMACTRESS7:00 PM
LIGHT OF MY LIFEE4:00 PM
10:10PM
LOVE,ANTOSHAE1:10 PM
5:45 PM 8:00 PM
THE NIGHTINGALEE1:00 PM
4:00 PM 7:00 PM 10:00PM
THEM THATFOLLOWE1:40 PM
7:20 PM 10:15PM
HONEYLAND1:10 PM 3:20 PM
5:30 PM 7:40 PM 10:00PM
MIKEWALLACEISHEREC
1:20 PM
ONCE UPONATIME...IN
HOLLYWOODE1:00 PM 4:30 PM
8:00 PM
DAVID CROSBY:REMEMBER MY
NAMEE3:30 PM 10:15PM
THEFAREWELLB4:10 PM
7:00 PM 10:00PM
MAIDENB4:20 PM
SHORTFILM PROGRAMIBOSH
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ODETOJOYE1:30 PM 4:10 PM
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THIS CHANGESEVERYTHING
1:50 PM 4:20 PM 7:00 PM
10:00PM

ONCE UPONATIME...IN
HOLLYWOODE1:00 PM 4:30 PM
8:00 PM
THEFAREWELLB1:20 PM
4:40 PM 7:30 PM 10:15PM

MAIDENB1:50 PM 4:50 PM
7:40 PM 10:15PM

THEM THATFOLLOWE1:20 PM
10:00PM

ONCE UPONATIME...IN
HOLLYWOODE1:00 PM 4:30 PM
8:00 PM
ANGELS ARE MADE OF LIGHT
1:10 PM 4:00 PM 7:00 PM 9:55 PM

THEFAREWELLB1:40 PM
4:10 PM 7:20 PM 10:15PM

MAIDENB1:30 PM 4:20 PM
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THELAST BLACKMAN IN SAN
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BRIANBANKSC1:30 PM
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FAST&FURIOUS PRESENTS:
HOBBS&SHAWC1:00 PM
4:00 PM 10:00PM
THE NIGHTINGALEE4:00 PM
7:00 PM 10:00PM
THEM THATFOLLOWE1:40 PM
7:30 PM 10:10PM
ONCE UPONATIME...IN
HOLLYWOODE1:00 PM 4:30 PM
8:00 PM
THEFAREWELLB1:20 PM
4:30 PM 7:10 PM 9:50 PM

FAST&FURIOUS PRESENTS:
HOBBS&SHAWC4:00 PM
7:00 PM
HONEYLAND1:20 PM 3:30 PM
5:40 PM 7:50 PM
MIKEWALLACEISHEREC
1:10 PM 3:20 PM 5:40 PM 8:00 PM
ONCE UPONATIME...IN
HOLLYWOODE1:00 PM 4:30 PM
8:00 PM
THEFAREWELLB1:30 PM
4:10 PM 7:30 PM
SHORTFILM PROGRAMIBOSH
!CV";1:00 PM

NoHo 7
5240 Lankershim Blvd. No. Hollywood

CLAREM450 W. 2nd StreetONT Claremont

JABARIYAJODII5:15 PM
8:00 PM
LOVE,ANTOSHAE1:00 PM
5:45 PM 8:00 PM
TELAVIV ON FIREI4:10 PM
7:10 PM
HONEYLAND1:20 PM 3:30 PM
5:40 PM 7:50 PM
MIKEWALLACEISHEREC
1:10 PM
DAVID CROSBY: REMEMBER MY
NAMEE3:20 PM
THEFAREWELLB1:50 PM
4:30 PM
SHORTFILM PROGRAMIBOSH
!CV";1:00 PM

SÓCRATESISUB;3:20 PM
10:00PM
WICKED WITCHES9:55 PM
MIKEWALLACEISHEREC
1:00 PM 7:40 PM
DAVID CROSBY: REMEMBER MY
NAMEE3:15 PM 7:45 PM
YESTERDAYC1:20 PM
7:00 PM
PAVAROTTIC4:10 PM
ECHO IN THECANYONC
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ClosedforRemodeling

▼●■LUCE(R)


(12:00, 2:30, 3:45, 5:05) 7:40, 10:10

●■(PG)

THEFAREWELL
(11:00, 12:20, 1:20, 2:45, 5:10)
7:35, 9:55

▼●(R)THEMTHAT


FOLLOW


(12:40, 5:20)

LOVE,ANTOSHA(R)


(3:00) 7:45

●■(PG)

THE LION KING


(11:00, 1:40, 4:20) 7:05, 10:00

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▼●■(PG-13)THEPEANUT


BUTTERFALCON
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▼●■(PG-13)AFTERTHE


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ATIMEIN...
HOLLY WOOD
(12: 10,1:10, 3:35, 4:35) 7:00,
8:00, 10:15

9:45pm

PIRANHAS(NR)
(12:20, 2:40, 5:00) 7:20, 9:35

THE GOLDEN STATE.
DELIVERED.
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Photos: L.A. Times

LATexpeditions.com/explore

INSIGHT
IS ALWAYS ON THE
ITINERARY

Vintage Disney attrac-
tions are loaded with oddi-
ties. Seemingly outlandish
creations — operatic tropi-
cal orchids or rum-hungry
feral cats — are less likely in
today’s modern theme
parks, where referencing the
thing we saw in a movie too
often takes priority.
But even for ’60s-era Dis-
neyland, when weird wasn’t
in short supply, 1969’s long-
in-development Haunted
Mansion stood apart. Here,
the borderline perverse
clashes with the ghoulishly
celebratory. A serial-killing
bride hangs out in the same
manor as a king and queen
on a seesaw, not to mention
mummies, singing busts, a
regal organist, a royal psy-
chic, whatever the Hatbox
Ghost is (or was?)and a
drunk passed out under the
dining table.
Young, old, rich, poor and
even inanimate — all are wel-
come.
Delightfully original and
peppered with timeless
magic tricks, the Haunted
Mansion has endured to be-
come what is arguably Dis-
neyland’s most beloved
attraction. While Disney
doesn’t publicly rank rides
by how much merch each
sells, by observation, it’s
easy to surmise that the
Haunted Mansion would
rankat or near the top.


Nostalgia sells


The release of a Haunted
Manson anything is often
met with fans swarming the
park, waiting seven-plus
hours for a tiki mug or plas-
tic figurine. On this 50th an-
niversary of the ride’s open-
ing day, Aug. 9, 1969, fans
were lugging out three or
four giant bags of new Man-
sion merch at 9 a.m. when
others were simply begin-
ning their day.
And while Disney contin-
ues to perfect the art of sell-
ing nostalgia, plenty of ma-
jor rides have celebrated piv-
otal anniversaries — Pirates
of the Caribbean turned 50
two years ago — without the
fanfare of the Mansion, for
which Disney just staged
two high-priced events
($300!) that allowed fans
early access to commemora-
tive merchandise ($60 jugs
that glow with the Mansion’s
inhabitants admittedly are
pretty neat) and the ability
to experience the ride and
other attractions after hours
until 4 a.m.
Though nominally a
party to buy merchandise or
dine on limited-time food of-
ferings that are never as
good as year-round ones, the
event, held after 11:30 p.m.
Wednesday and Thursday,
also reveled in the Haunted
Mansion’s mysteries. A


bright light shone behind
it, as if its ghosts were break-
ing free to flood the park,
and fog surrounded guests
as everyone cheered for fu-
neral processions and lis-
tened to ghostly characters
serenade us as we rode the
Mark Twain Riverboat at 2
a.m.
Throughout New Orle-
ans Square and the neigh-
boring lands, characters
sprang to life — Madame
Leota spoke in rhyme from a
balcony, spectral dancers
cavorted in front of Pirates
of the Caribbean, tightrope-

walking portrait character
Sally posed for photos and
ghostly projections emerged
on Disneyland’s Rivers of
America. The power of the
Mansion bled to its neigh-
boring lands, as attractions
with supernatural themes
such as Pirates of the Carib-
bean, Indiana Jones Adven-
ture and Big Thunder Moun-
tain stayed up past their
bedtime.
Of course, the star attrac-
tion of the night got some
party-only embellishments.
Live actors dotted the
Haunted Mansion, cleverly

mixing in with illusions and
projections in the ballroom
scene. A knight even pro-
vided a slight jump scare as
guests rode through the
Mansion’s hallway, an addi-
tion Disney once considered
for the attraction’s normal
operations.
The late-night-to-early-
morning soiree tapped into
the idea that the Haunted
Mansion has become some-
thing of a guiding light for its
devoted fans. Such a senti-
ment was just echoed in a re-
cent interview with film-
maker Guillermo del Toro,

who was once associated
with a never-made Haunted
Mansion film. “The Haunted
Mansion is not an attrac-
tion, it’s a way of life,” he told
Moviefone. Of course it is.
The Haunted Mansion is far
from just a simple celebra-
tion of the macabre. Without
a clearly defined plot — early
treatments told of a sea cap-
tain who murdered his wife
and buried her in a brick wall
—the Haunted Mansion has
become a melting pot of life-
styles and misdeeds. It’s a
fete that contains an assort-
ment of humanity’s self-cen-
tered tendencies — our lust
for wealth, our idiocy to en-
gage in gunfight duels — and
tempts us with them.
Isn’t this fun? Isn’t this
what you want? Just wait,
and someday, this will be
yours.

Beyond the scares
It should be noted that
while its sinister side is
draped in humor, it also has
relatively progressive el-
ements. The ax-wielding
bride in the attic who has
murdered one husband af-
ter another can be read as
less of a cruel joke and more
of a course correction for a
male-led world that’s made a
mess of it. No, we don’t en-
dorse manipulative relation-
ships and beheading a fi-
ancé, but today we sympa-
thize with Constance, nick-
named the black widow
bride, for not waiting for her
prince to come and instead

taking matters into her own
hands. In a way, she’s a prin-
cess for the app-dating age
of snap judgments and be-
lieving a better person is a
swipe away.
The Haunted Mansion is
chaos, a dismantling of
power structures, and mer-
cenary in its embrace of our
flaws. No wonder the car-
etaker in the Mansion’s cem-
etery looks so frightened;
this is what humanity might
really look like if we just let
ourselves go and decided to
get along with a bunch of
singing, dancing, drunken
fools where all that divides
us was buried with us.
As a whole, the ride is
both a love letter and a
middle finger to us “foolish
mortals,” arguing that we’re
all doomed and our pen-
chant for sin will, at best,
lead to one hell of a party
in the afterlife. It’s the
Hot Girl Summer of Disney-
land attractions: Everything
stinks, so live it up.
For all the stress, anxi-
eties and downright horrors
of the modern world, there’s
something reassuring in the
Haunted Mansion’s view of
death. We’re all equal, for
one, at this swinging wake,
and the guest list is open
for everyone forevermore
when the velvet rope has no
power.
If only a ghost could truly
follow us home and remind
us that whatever is frighten-
ing us today won’t matter in
the end.

Ghouls and guests celebrate 50 years


A late-night salute to


Disneyland’s classic


Haunted Mansion


brings out all its weird


charms (and merch).


By Todd Martens


BRIGHTlight emanates from Disneyland’s Haunted Mansion during an after-hours bash last week in celebration of the ride’s 50 years.

Photographs byTodd MartensLos Angeles Times

GHOSTLYcharacters were part of the revelry at sites throughout the park.
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