UNIVERSAL CITY, Calif. — It's not often that one exits an amusement park attraction thinking, "That ride was really well-written." But that just might be a common response to The Simpsons Ride, which opened last year at Universal Studios theme parks here and in Orlando, Fla.
In both locations, The Simpsons Ride replaced the aging Back to the Future ride, using the same building and much of the same mechanics. The Simpsons, a simulator ride that faces a multistory movie screen, uses the same ride system as Back to the Future, albeit updated. Instead of taking a journey with Doc Brown (Christopher Lloyd), park guests visit Krustyland amusement park with the Simpsons.
But the characters look differently than they do on TV. They were created for the ride as 3-D renderings.
"When you blow something up that big, there's a level of realism needed," said Matt Warburton, a supervising producer on the TV show who worked on the script for the ride. "With watching a show, there is not this illusion that you're part of it. In order to make that leap, the Universal guys, who know from doing a million projects, know that there needs to be this depth."
As it begins, riders feel as if they're in a roller-coaster car just behind the Simpson family getting ready to go over the coaster's first hill. Sideshow Bob (voiced by Kelsey Grammer) is once again threatening Springfield's most famous family.
"There's nothing you can do, you're about to die!" Sideshow Bob rages.
"You sound like my doctor," Homer (voice of Dan Castellaneta) replies.
As the coaster careens down its path, Homer winds up running a different direction on the track, chased by a wrecking ball.
"You don't want to hurt me, ball. We're both big and round and never finished high school," Homer says.
When the roller-coaster track snakes around a corner and through a giant Krusty head, riders hear Krusty say, "Welcome to a magical journey into my mouth."
It's curious that a "Simpsons" ride would end up at Universal Studios because the franchise is owned by 20th Century Fox, a rival media company. Mike West, executive producer for Universal Creative Studios, said his company opted to license "The Simpsons" because it fit the theme parks' audience profile.
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