Home » 5 Reasons Soarin’ Around the World Doesn’t Quite Live Up to the Original

5 Reasons Soarin’ Around the World Doesn’t Quite Live Up to the Original

Image - Flickr, Josh Hallett

When Disney California Adventure opened in 2001, Disney fans didn’t quite know what to make of it. Many of the original attractions were off-the-shelf carnival rides, and the immersive themeing which Disney famously pioneered was nowhere to be found. Some attractions, such as the oft-maligned and short-lived Superstar Limo, were seen as far too glib and throw-together. In all, it was a disappointment.

Yet, throughout all the frustration and mixed reviews, one attraction rose above (pun intended) the din. That attraction was Soarin’ over California.

An immediate critical darling, Soarin’ was a must-see attraction in a park that had otherwise disappointed. It was so popular, Disney copied and pasted it into Epcot’s The Land pavilion in Orlando – a massive refurbishment that saw the entire pavilion undergo significant changes. And, from day one, Soarin’ became one of Walt Disney World’s most popular and beloved attractions, too.

Roughly 15 years after its debut in California, and about 10 following its Orlando opening, Disney reimagined the “Soarin’ over California” film into a new, grander package: Soarin’ around the World.

The new attraction takes guests on a flight around the globe, vising the world’s most historic, notable, and beautiful sites, before returning guests back to either the Disneyland Resort or Epcot.

Yet, in doing so, Disney seems to have lost some of the magic that made the original Soarin’ such a beloved attraction. Here are a few reasons why:

SPOILER WARNING: This article discusses the film portion of Soarin’ Around the World in depth. If you want to experience this attraction completely unspoiled, turn back now! 

5. The CGI

Image - Flickr, Josh Hallett

The real, unaltered beauty of the original.
Image: Josh Hallett, Flickr (license)

Something that will be immediately obvious to anyone experiencing the new attraction is the heavy reliance on CGI in nearly every frame of the film. From the way people or animals move in certain shots to the sharpness of the vistas, the ride’s use of computer-generated images gives it something of an uncanny feeling – and one that is quite removed from the original ride’s verisimilitude.

It’s hard to pinpoint why, exactly, the CGI feels so out of place, but to me, it doesn’t quite work because it seems to violate the central premise of the attraction. The idea is that these are the sights you would see if you hopped on a hang glider and flew around the world. However, it’s difficult to suspend one’s disbelief when you’re confronted with these somewhat unrealistically-moving animals or figures.

The computer images simply don’t feel real, which breaks the immersion of the attraction. And, ultimately, it makes the ride feel more like a gimmick. 

4. The transitions

Image - Flickr, inazakira

Imagine if this was coming RIGHT AT YOU!
Image: inazakira, Flickr (license)

Another immediately obvious change comes when each scene transitions into the next. Instead of simply cutting from location to location, like you would in a movie or like the original attraction did, Imagineers came up with a strange and new way of moving from scene to scene.

In each sequence, some animal, object, or prop flies toward the camera and wipes the image from one scene to the next. In one scene, a bird might fly toward you – only, at the moment just before it imacts the camera, the film cuts away to the next locale.

The result is a kind of game, where as each scene begins, you start looking for the thing that will cause the transition to the next sequence: A plane, a beam of light, a kite, etc. It feels goofy and affected, and it removes the smoothness the original attraction had.

The transitions are the kind of gotcha effect that you ordinarily only see in Disney’s 3-D films, which makes it all the more jarring here. An attraction that was meant to be a relaxing look at the natural beauty of the world becomes a busy and harried commute through highly-trafficked airspace. 

3. The music

The aspect of Soarin’ over California that brought the entire attraction together into an amazing work of art was its incredible, moving score. Composed by the late Jerry Goldsmith, the Soarin’ theme has since become one of the most iconic pieces of music ever written for the Disney parks. Fans were fearful that it might disappear when Disney reimagined the attraction, but to their credit, they kept the theme and rearranged it for the new film.

Now, it’s almost certainly an impossible task to update the Soarin’ theme in any kind of satisfying way, and it should be known that the man given that impossible task – Disney music genius Bruce Broughton – did an admirable job. But the new score lacks the kind of emotional crescendo that made the original piece such an important part of the attraction. The Soarin’ over California film continually built on its theme, adding new layers and new discoveries in each sequence. The music electrified that crescendo, coloring each new image with a brighter and more emotionally tense hue. By the time we flew triumphantly over Disneyland’s Main Street USA, the music had taken us on a journey every bit as moving and extraordinary as the ride.

Broughton’s score couldn’t possibly match that, but it seems as though the deck was stacked against him all along. The constant shifting of locations, from China, to Egypt, to India, to the South Seas, required such significant restructuring of the theme that any kind of emotional crescendo would nearly be impossible. Not only would the music need to build, we’d have to hear it transposed to a new cultural style with each edit. The result, ultimately, doesn’t quite work.

It’s a solid score, certainly, and it has its moments (the Eiffel Tower sceneis particularly incredible), but it’s more academically impressive than emotionally resonant. You hear each version of the Soarin’ theme and appreciate it, but it’s hard to feel moved by it – unlike in the original.

2. The smells

Image - Flickr,  Patrick Pelletier

RIP Orange Groves
Image: Patrick Pelletier, Flickr (license)

Soarin’ over California was a full-sensory experience. You saw California on the incredible omnimax screen, you felt the smooth sensation of flight, you heard the incredible score that evoked the sensation of flying … and you could even smell and taste the world before you.

Perhaps the most memorable effects on Soarin’ were the scents: The salty ocean air, the evergreen forests, and the fresh orange groves. If the scents on the new attraction are there, they’re far more subtle and much less memorable.

This may seem like kind of an esoteric complaint, but I do think it matters. Part of the brilliance of Soarin’ over California was that it combined that full-sensory experience into something that told a kind of story. The smells were every bit as important to that story as the visuals and the sound. But in the new attraction, the film is the dominating feature, and all of the other elements – the music, the smells, even the movement – are secondary to it.

It’s a simple and subtle change, but it’s one that has a real effect on the sensory experience of Soarin’.

1. The lack of simplicity

Image - Flickr, inazakira

A farewell to simple beauty.
Image: inazakira, Flickr (license)

Soarin’ around the World is kind of unique for Disney, in that it is a real, honest sequel to a beloved attraction. Disney has never really done that kind of change before. Horizons was a kind of sequel to the Carousel of Progress, but it existed more in concert with it, rather than as a building on it. The closest thing to a sequel, perhaps, was Star Tours, but even that had a world of source material to reference and interact with.

That Disney would attempt to give Soarin’ a sequel is an admirable risk, and that they didn’t shoehorn, say, The Guardians of the Galaxy into it shows a kind of restraint that didn’t seem possible with modern Disney. But like so many sequels in the film industry, Soarin’ around the World suffers from the pains of success.

The original attraction was a simple, effortless thing. It didn’t try to dazzle you with smash cuts or polar bears. It embraced the natural beauty of California, and of the earth itself. It was, in many ways, a work of art as much as it was a work of entertainment – arguing that humanity is shaped by the Earth just as much as we’ve shaped it ourselves. That idea is why it thematically can live at The Land pavilion at Epcot without feeling too out of place.

But Soarin’ around the World, instead, has a kind of excess to it. There are so many amazing sights to see, and so many tricks and games it employs to entertain you, that it all starts to feel chaotic and overwhelming. If Soarin’ over California explored how humans and the natural world interact, Soarin’ around the World spotlights how hectic life in the interconnected modern world can be. There’s so much to see and so little time to see it all, that it’s hard to stop and appreciate the simple pleasures in the world around us.

It certainly is interesting in its new incarnation, and it’s the kind of risk we should all be pleased to see Disney taking. It’s still a great ride and a crown jewel of the Disney Parks, but it lacks the heart and simplicity that made it so iconic in its original state. With all the changes to Disney – and even the world itself – since the ride first debuted in California in early 2001, perhaps it’s fitting that technology has become the star of the show, while the simple beauty of the natural world fades away.