Runaway Railway the capper at transformed Hollywood Studios

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Guests on Mickey & Minnie’s Runaway Railway board one of four vehicles following a locomotive piloted by engineer Goofy to tour Runnamuck Park.
Guests on Mickey & Minnie’s Runaway Railway board one of four vehicles following a locomotive piloted by engineer Goofy to tour Runnamuck Park.

ORLANDO -- Mickey & Minnie’s Runaway Railway is a “capstone attraction” for Disney’s Hollywood Studios, said Walt Disney Resort president Josh D’Amaro.

The attraction, the first to feature Mickey Mouse himself, was dedicated Tuesday night and opened to the public on Wednesday, March 4.

Hollywood Studios has gone through major renovations, D’Amaro noted at a media event prior to the dedication. That has included the additions of Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge, Toy Story Land, Lightning McQueen’s Racing Academy, and a new Mickey Shorts Theatre showing a Mickey Mouse cartoon, also opening March 4.

The Chinese Theater at Disney’s Hollywood Studios, home to Mickey & Minnie’s Runaway Railway.
The Chinese Theater at Disney’s Hollywood Studios, home to Mickey & Minnie’s Runaway Railway. Photo Credit: Jamie Biesiada

“This park has been completely transformed,” D’Amaro said, with the Runaway Railway being the capstone in that transformation.

At the dedication ceremony for Mickey & Minnie’s Runaway Railway, he highlighted the park’s shift from being about the making of movies to transporting guests inside movies.

“This is a groundbreaking attraction that puts you into the fun and unpredictable world of Mickey Mouse cartoon shorts,” D’Amaro said. “It’s pretty wild, and we’re very proud of it.”

The attraction is located in the Chinese Theater, former home to the Great Movie Ride.

THE STORY

Mickey & Minnie’s Runaway Railway begins with a preshow, debuting a new cartoon short, “Perfect Picnic.” Mickey and Minnie (and a stowaway, Pluto) are on their way to a picnic in Runnamuck Park, passing train engineer Goofy in his locomotive on the way. The locomotive ends up getting into some trouble, after which Goofy invites viewers into the cartoon for a ride on his train. 

Riders board one of four ride vehicles following behind Goofy’s locomotive (he appears inside via a screen) for a tour of Runnamuck Park. After the train accidentally hits a track splitter, Goofy and his passengers are separated.

Riders are then sent through some madcap adventures -- from a carnival to getting thrown over a waterfall -- on trackless ride vehicles. 

The trackless vehicles move autonomously from each other, whisking riders around large scenes and providing delights a system on a track couldn’t (for instance, waltzing into and conga-ing out of a dance class with Daisy Duck in a choreographed routine).

“Mickey and Minnie definitely live in such a unique 2D world,” Walt Disney Imagineering’s Audrey Hauser, a control software developer on the attraction, said in an interview. “Bringing that 2D environment into a 3D space that our guests are really able to walk into and interact with was definitely a technological challenge.”

That walk into the cartoon begins right after the preshow video, in which the screen “explodes,” creating an opening to the ride loading system.

Before guests’ train cars and Goofy’s locomotive are reunited, they go through some madcap adventures, including at a carnival.
Before guests’ train cars and Goofy’s locomotive are reunited, they go through some madcap adventures, including at a carnival.

Throughout the attraction, the ride utilizes a number of technologies to immerse riders into a world that is three dimensional without forgetting its 2D roots.

“We took a bunch of different technologies, from projection mapping to practical effects, and even audio-animatronic figures,” Hauser said. “It’s really the integration of all of those different pieces of technology that brought us this wonder 2D, but 3D, world that guests are able to walk into that really holds true to the 2D look of Mickey Mouse’s cartoon universe.”

THE MUSIC

The attraction itself is an original, as is its music and theme song, “Nothing Can Stop Us Now,” is an earworm to rival “It’s a Small World (After All).”

The music was composed by husband-and-wife team Christopher and Elyse Willis, who also compose the music for Disney’s current Mickey Mouse cartoon shorts (the attraction’s characters are stylized in the same modern way as the current shorts).

“In the tradition of attractions with original stories and original theme songs like Pirates of the Caribbean, Haunted Mansion, It’s a Small World  --  Chris had to really rise to that occasion, because people love that,” Walt Disney Imagineering executive creative director Kevin Rafferty said in an interview. “And he did. He did it and he exceeded that, all of that.”

Christopher Willis said he is a big fan of some of Disney’s legendary songwriters, like the Sherman brothers Robert and Richard and Oliver Wallace. Composing the music for Mickey Mouse’s first attraction brought a certain responsibility with it, he said, but it was also fun to inhabit that world of Disney songwriters.

“You’re the next one, as far as I’m concerned,” Rafferty told him. “You are in their company now.”

MICKEY SHORTS THEATRE OPENS

In addition to Mickey & Minnie’s Runaway Railway, Walt Disney World guests also have a new theater to visit. 

The Mickey Shorts Theatre features a Mickey cartoon short original to Hollywood Studios, “Vacation Fun.” 

In the animated short, Mickey, Minnie and Pluto are getting ready to head out on a vacation, prompting Mickey to ruminate on previous travels documented in existing Mickey shorts like Croissant de Triomphe

The theater’s seats aptly feature details reminiscent of Mickey’s famous red and yellow shorts.

A RIDE ON THE RAILWAY

Members of the media were given a chance to ride Mickey & Minnie’s Runaway Railway in advance of its public opening on Tuesday.

The attraction had some big shoes to fill, but Runaway Railway is so far advanced technologically from the relatively simple dark ride (albeit, with cast member interaction) that was the Great Movie Ride.

Walt Disney World Resort president Josh D’Amaro at the dedication ceremony of Mickey & Minnie’s Runaway Railway.
Walt Disney World Resort president Josh D’Amaro at the dedication ceremony of Mickey & Minnie’s Runaway Railway. Photo Credit: Jamie Biesiada

Runaway Railway does a great job corralling new ride technology to create an experience like audiences haven’t seen before at Walt Disney World, much like Rise of the Resistance. Both are trackless rides, making it easy to surprise guests along the way, but Runaway Railway has a decidedly lighter tone than Rise of the Resistance

Imagineers used multiple layers of brightly painted sets, projections and video screens to create what can best be described as a three-dimensional version of a two-dimensional world, exactly what they were going for.

Each of the four train cars following Goofy’s locomotive offer riders a different perspective. I rode in each and saw different things on the attraction each time.

It was fun to see major characters -- Mickey, Minnie, Pluto, Goofy, Donald and Daisy -- in an attraction for the first time. I also immediately fell in love with Chuuby, a bird who enjoys singing and dancing in Runnamuck Park. Chuuby is a minor character, but an adorable one with personality.

The popularity of the characters, combined with the attraction’s next-level technology and catchy tunes, will resonate with guests young and old.

There are some surprises along the way. I won’t spoil it, but wait for the moment when Goofy asks what a certain lever does just before disembarking the attraction -- I jumped every time.

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