Archive for the ‘Halloween Horror Nights Orlando’ Category

Halloween Horror Nights Orlando: A Horrifying Look Back

Tuesday, May 14th, 2013

2013

Haunt season 2013 is only 4 months away! As we impatiently wait to hear what’s in store for Halloween Horror Nights 23 at Universal Orlando, let’s pacify ourselves with a nostalgic look back at the HHN icons and classic commercials from the past 10 years.  We have to say that HHN Orlando has some of the best haunt commercials ever made. These commercial spots not only entice us to want to attend year after year but they’re also pretty damn scary.

It was fun putting the list together as it brought up memories and nightmares from our visits to HHN in the past ten years when we went to 2007′s Carnival of Carnage and last year’s HHN 22. There’s no question that Universal Orlando has one of the premier theme park haunts and we can only hope to see them make it even bigger and scarier for 2013.

Now check out all the icons and commercials from the past 10 years and be sure to VOTE for your favorites in the survey links at the bottom of this article.

 

 

Halloween Horror Nights 13  was the second year that HHN was located in Islands of Adventure. The Director, Paolo Ravinski , hosted the event, telling guest that “The Director Will See You Now.” The event featured six houses, six scarezones, and two special shows.

Haunted Houses: All Nite Die-In • ScreamHouse Revisited • PsychoScareapy • Jungle of Doom • Funhouse of Fear • Ship of Screams

 

 

 

 

Halloween Horror Nights XIV asked guests “What’s Your Breaking Point?”, it featured the first, and so far only time, that parts of both Universal Studios Florida and Islands of Adventure were used in the event. 2004 was the first time since 1999 that the event didn’t have an icon, instead advertisements featured a bald victim in a straightjacket in the confines of Shady Brook from the PsychoScareapy maze. Featuring seven houses, four scarezones, a show, and parade.

Haunted Houses: Castle Vampyr  • Deadtropolis  • Disorientorium  • Ghost Town  • Halloween Horror Nights Nightmares  • Hellgate Prison  • Horror in Wax

 

 

 

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Halloween Horror Nights: Tales of Terror was the 15th Halloween Horror Nights event in Orlando. Located in Islands of Adventure exclusively for the third time, it was the first time that all of the mazes, scarezones , and shows were linked in a large event-wide backstory. The Storyteller, Elsa Strict, weaved the tale of the world of Terra Cruentas, its ruler the Terra Queen, and her subjects. The event featured seven mazes, four scarezones, and two special shows. In 2006 it was awarded by Amusement Today with the Golden Ticket Award for Best Halloween Event.

Haunted Houses: Blood Ruins  • Body Collectors  • Cold Blind Terror  • Demon Cantina  • The Skool  • Terror Mines  • Where Evil Hides

 

 

 

 

Halloween Horror Nights: Sweet 16 was the 16th Halloween Horror Nights event in Orlando. Located exclusively in Universal Studios Florida for the first time since 2001, it was advertised as “Horror Comes Home”. The event featured the four original event icons The Storyteller, the Director, the Caretaker and Jack the Clown returning in mazes and in two shows. The mazes and scarezones featured were remakes of some of the greatest mazes in the history of Halloween Horror Nights.

Haunted Houses: All Nite Die-In: Take 2  • Dungeon of Terror: Retold  • People Under the Stairs: Under Construction  • PsychoScareapy: Maximum Madness  • Psycho Path: The Return of Norman Bates  • RUN: Hostile Territory  • Screamhouse: Resurrection

 

 

 

 

Halloween Horror Nights: Carnival of Carnage was the 17th Halloween Horror Nights event in Orlando. Located at Universal Studios Florida, it featured the return of Jack the Clown as event icon and leader of the traveling Carnival of Carnage. His carnival had brought together a number of attractions to present for the event, including three modern horror icons Leatherface, Freddy Krueger and Jason. In addition,  there were houses with Mary Shaw, from Universal’s film Dead Silence (one of our all time favorite HHN mazes) and a house that was a sequel to The Thing.

Haunted Houses: A Nightmare on Elm Street: Dreamwalkers  • Dead Silence: The Curse of Mary Shaw  • Friday the 13th: Camp Blood  • Jack’s Funhouse in Clown-O-Vision  • PsychoScareapy: Home for the Holidays  • The Texas Chainsaw Massacre: Flesh Wounds  • The Thing: Assimilation  • Vampyr: Blood Bath

 

 

 

 

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Halloween Horror Nights: Reflections of Fear was the 18th annual Halloween Horror Nights event  and at the time was the largest Halloween Horror Nights in the event’s history. With Bloody Mary as icon, fears, fairy tales, and urban legends formed the overall arching theme of the event.

Haunted Houses: Body Collectors: Collections of the Past  • Creatures!  • Dead Exposure  • Doomsday  • The Hallow  • Interstellar Terror  • Reflections of Fear  • Scary Tales: Once Upon a Nightmare

 

 

 

 

Halloween Horror Nights: Ripped from the Silver Screen featured classic, 80′s and modern horror movie franchises with Child’s Play (Chucky), Saw (Billy /Jigsaw), and Universal’s The Wolfman taking top billing. Ripped from the Silver Screen’s theme surrounded a mysterious old movie theater, the Universal Palace Theater and  The Usher (aka Julian Browning), the undead usher Icon who (s)cares for the theater.

Haunted Houses: The Wolfman  • Dracula: Legacy in Blood  • Frankenstein: Creation of the Damned  • Leave it to Cleaver  • Saw  • The Spawning  • Chucky: Friends till the End  • Silver Screams

 

 

 

 

Halloween Horror Nights XX: Twenty Years of Fear  featured a nostalgic celebration of HHN’s 20 years with the Icons characters of HHN past. The logo was a lantern with 2 X’s on it that featured the faces of the Usher , the Director , Jack the Clown , the Storyteller , the Caretaker , Billy , the Gentleman , and the Mad Hatter in the flame. The actual icon was said to be “fear itself” which was visualized with a vicious monster mouth. This was the first year that featured  three houses based upon the previous Horror Nights  featuring a cameo by one of the icons.

Haunted Houses: Legendary Truth: The Wyandot Estate  • PsychoScareapy: Echoes of Shadybrook  • Hades: The Gates of Ruin  • ZombieGeddon  • The Orfanage: Ashes to Ashes  • Havoc: Dogs of War  • Catacombs: Black Death Rising  • Horror Nights: The Hallow’d Past

 

 

 

 

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Halloween Horror Nights XXI: No One Beats the House The icon for HHN 21 was Lady Luck. The year’s theme appeared to be set in the roaring 20′s with gambling, speakeasy, and gangsters. We all know Blackjack is 21 which was apropos for this year’s event. We though that this was a very unique and creative theme; but we wouldn’t expect anything less from HHN Orlando.

Haunted Houses: Winter’s Night: The Haunting of Hawthorn Cemetery  • Nightingales: Blood Prey  • The Thing  • H.R. Bloodengutz Presents Holidays of Horror  • Saws N’ Steam: Into the Machine  • Nevermore: The Madness of Poe  • The In-Between  • The Forsaken

 

 

 

 

Halloween Horror Nights 22: There Is No Escape featured houses based on Silent Hill and The Walking Dead which were both featured in Orlando and Hollywood. This was also the first HHN since 2007 to have one huge park-wide scare zone rather then multiple scare zones scattered throughout the park. It will also was the first event since 2006 to have only 7 houses rather then the usual 8, which was due to the construction of new new Harry Potter and Transformers: The Ride attractions. While the movie/tv show based haunts were fun our favorites were Universal’s original creations, Gothic, Dead End and Universal’s House of Horrors.

Haunted Houses: Dead End  • Gothic  • Universal’s House of Horrors  • The Walking Dead: Dead Inside  • Welcome to Silent Hill  • Alice Cooper: Welcome to My Nightmare  • Penn and Teller: New(kd) Las Vegas

Check out Scare Zone’s HHN 22 REVIEW HERE!

 

Now, we ask you to click the links and VOTE for:

Your FAVORITE HHN ICON

and  

Your FAVORITE HHN COMMERCIAL  

 

* Additional HHN info provided by:  http://halloweenhorrornights.wikia.com

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Universal Orlando Halloween Horror Nights 2013 Dates Announced

Tuesday, April 23rd, 2013

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In semi-exciting news, Universal Orlando has annoucned the dates for Halloween Horror Nights (HHN) 23. This year’s horrors will take place on 27 select nights: Sept. 20-21, 26-29, Oct. 3-6, 10-13, 16-20, 23-27, and 31-Nov. 2. Since Halloween falls on a Thursday this year we get an extra 2 nights. Hopefully all haunts follow suit this season.

HHN Orlando recently was awarded “Best Theme Park Halloween Event of 2012″ from the About.com Readers’s Choice Award slightly beating HHN Hollywood. Last year we visited both events and do agree that Orlando’s was better with it’s broader mix of original and movie/TV show based haunts. Their original Gothic maze was one of our favorites and an instant HHN classic in our book. However, for us it fluctuates as back in 2007 our vote went to Hollywood, which had scarier versions of the Friday The 13thA Nightmare on Elm St., and The Texas Chainsaw Massacre mazes.

No details on the mazes or themes has been revealed. Of course, they’re promising that this year will “be unlike any other year”, which is what they promote every year. We do expect that there will be some shared themes with HHN Hollywood, which as been the case over the past few years. We speculate that The Walking Dead is sure to return, perhaps this time set in the prison and with the Governor. There could even be mazes based upon (promoting) the new Universal owned TV shows Bates Motel and/or Hannibal. However, we don’t think that mazes based on the actual shows, as they are, have enough substance to be scary enough but perhaps something with the characters and themes. We do know that synergy is increasingly important to Universal.

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We’re keeping our finger on the pulse of HHN news and will provide updates as soon as we hear more. We do know that last year, tickets went on sale in mid-June, and the theme and description of all the haunted houses was announced in late August.

For a look back at HHN Orlando 2012 click HERE

Check In to Bates Motel

Sunday, March 17th, 2013

If you’re like us and going Psycho waiting for haunt season then be sure to check in to the Bates Motel premiering tomorrow night, Monday March, 18th on A&E.  With the continuous popularity of suspense/horror based drama series such as American Horror Story and The Walking Dead it only seems appropriate that Hollywood would now take a stab at recounting the story of Norman Bates and his beloved mother for the television screen.

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The series is inspired by Alfred Hitchcock’s Psycho, and depicts the life of Norman Bates and his mother Norma (played by Freddie Highmore and Vera Farmiga, respectively) and the events that would eventually make him go… Psycho. The series is said to be based on the characters and settings portrayed in Hitchcock’s film but is in no way to be considered (by the producers) as a direct prequel. Distinctively, the story takes place in today’s world of iPhones, Facebook, etc. along with the iconic house and Bates Motel being relocated from the Arizona desert to a sleepy Pacific Northwest town.

16711410523083217943 This past week we were able to attend the show’s premier party (pics on Twitter) and in addition to having a good time at the elaborately themed party, we also got to see the first episode titled “First You Dream, Then You Die”. Without providing any spoilers we can say that the first episode begins with a mysterious event that then quickly takes Norman and Norma to the center of the show’s universe at the Bates Motel. Here they encounter unwelcoming neighbors, fast girls, well intentioned but nosey teachers and suspicious police officers. The show is suprsisingly tense throughout and offers subtle homages to it’s movie source. At the end we couldn’t wait to see more as the relationship between Norman and his mother seems to be on the verge of becoming quite distrubing. We’re told the series isn’t going be a about a blood thirty Norman but from what we already saw there was a nice balance between the elements of mystery and suspense, and the visceral thrills that should be able to keep both drama and horror fans satisfied.

If the show is successful, which we hope it is, then we wonder if Universal will have any interest in turning it into a haunt for this year’s Halloween Horror Nights (HHN). We may have to wait for a few seasons so it can build up a fan base and more scenarios that can be placed into a haunt, similar to what they did with The Walking Dead, which became a haunt after running for 2 seasons. A&E is producing the show, but the characters and settings are owned by Universal. Therefore, this is a property that they already have the rights for and could easily transform into a haunt. In fact, as many of our Haunt Stalkers already know, every year at HHN in Hollywood, the Terror Tram takes HHN visitors to the iconic Psycho house where they can walk past the hotel and up to the house to take a picture with Norman, himself. While this is always a nice atmospheric touch to HHN, it isn’t really scary. So it’s hard to tell if there’s enough in the Psycho movies or the new Bates Motel series to make a complete and satisfactory scary maze. Let us know what you think…

Should HHN make a full maze for Psycho/Bates Motel?
Yes, a Psycho maze is long overdue0%
No, Norman isn’t scary0%
Too Soon, give the show another year0%

Vote for “The Best” Theme Park Halloween Event of 2012!

Sunday, February 24th, 2013

Now that the Oscar’s and all the other self appreciating Hollywood award shows are over the time has come for the awards that really matter. Now you can vote for your favorite Theme Park Haunt in the About.Com Reader’s Choice Awards.

Voting is open through Wednesday, March 19, 2013. The winners will be announced on March 27, 2013. May the Best Theme Park Halloween Haunt win (but they can only win if you vote for them)! Haunt Stalkers can vote once per day in each of the seven categories one of which is “Best Theme Park Halloween Event of 2012″. Not that we’re biased but you can see our 2012 haunt rankings HERE as we were able to attend all of the nominated haunts expect for HalloWeekends.

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This is the third year that the Theme Parks site has participated in the Readers Choice Awards. Do you want to know which parks got the nod for last year’s crop of awards? Check out last year’s RCA winners and runners-up.

 

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Best Theme Park Halloween Event of 2012

Which park will get your vote for last year’s best Halloween event? This award is not for any one attraction, but for the best overall presentation, including scare zones, shows, haunted houses, and decorations.

The five finalists are:

Vote now for the Best Theme Park Halloween Event of 2012

Note that users must provide an email address or log in via their Facebook or About.com accounts to vote. Readers are limited to one vote per award category per 24-hour period, and any votes not originating from the About.com domain will be rejected. To ensure fairness, we have internal checks in place to detect fraudulent voting activity, and in some cases the poll results shown during voting may not reflect the accurate final counts used to determine winners.

Learn more about the Readers’ Choice Awards for theme parks and water parks.

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Scare Zone’s 2012 Year in Review

Sunday, December 30th, 2012

As 2012 comes to a close, Scare Zone would like to thank all of our readers for checking our our site this year. It was a great year for haunts and horror, and we’re glad to see the haunted attraction business growing bigger and better every year. Be sure to check back with us throughout 2013 as we bring you the latest news and rumors regarding haunted attractions nationwide.

Of course, you can’t end a year without a best of/worst of list. So as we slowly lower 2012 into its grave, it’s time to look back at some of the best and worst haunt and horror moments of the past year.

Best of 2012

♦ Haunts aren’t just for Halloween anymore – Over the past few years, haunted attractions have been making an effort to expand their business beyond the standard October Halloween season. This is a great trend for haunt stalkers, because it gives us many opportunities to be terrified throughout the year. In 2012, we saw haunts open for Friday the 13th (January and April), Valentine’s Day, and Christmas. 2012 also saw the inauguration of a great new year-round haunt in (where else?) Las Vegas, Eli Roth’s Goretorium.

♦ Haunt and horror conventions continued to get bigger and more innovative – And the best of the bunch include TransWorld (March), Monsterpalooza (April), HauntCon (May), and the Midwest Haunters Convention (June). Not only are these conventions a great place to see the latest in haunt technology and innovation, but they also feature off-season haunt tours! This year, we saw horror conventions set sail on the high seas (Tides of Torture cruise, Saw movie cruise) as well as ones taking place in campgrounds (Haunted Slumber Camp Massacre, Horror Camp Live). We hope that these events continue to come up with crazy new ideas to keep us traveling around the country.

♦ Haunts went Hollywood – This year, we saw a few big Hollywood names step into the world of haunts: Neil Patrick Harris (co-producing Haunted Play presents Delusion), Jason Blum (producing Blumhouse of Horrors), and Eli Roth (creating Eli Roth’s Goretorium). These attractions show their movie-making influences with amazing attention to detail and production, and the celebrity backings help greatly in their promotion. As more high-profile names become involved with haunted attractions, we expect to see haunts get better and better.

♦ Knott’s Scary Farm is back on top – The original theme park haunt had slipped in quality over the past decade or so, but in 2012, they came up with some truly original concepts (Pinocchio Unstrung, Trick or Treat) that made them stand apart from their competition. Although they still have room to increase the level of scares, we were really impressed with their comeback this year and awarded them best theme park haunt.

 

Worst of 2012

 ♦ The Zombie Apocalypse arrived (and it’s time to eradicate it) - Zombies were everywhere in 2012! From the Zombie 5K race touring the country, to the “Walking Dead Escape” experience at ComiCon, to the Walking Dead mazes at Halloween Horror Nights Hollywood and Orlando (plus the Terror Tram), it was impossible to escape the hordes of bloody, flesh-craving “walkers.” Zombies have had their day, and we think it’s high time for something new. We’ve said many times that although zombies may be creepy and gross, they are not scary. But with the popularity of AMC’s The Walking Dead at an all-time high, will we be able to kill off these zombies in 2013?

♦ ”VIP” mazes and front-of-the-line upgrades emptied our wallets - Depending on the size of your bank account, this trend of “upcharging” guests at theme park haunts is either a really good or a really bad thing. If you’ve got the money, a front-of-the-line pass is a great way to beat the long lines, and VIP mazes limit overall capacity and prevent the conga-line effect inside the maze. At Knott’s Scary Farm, their VIP maze “Trapped” was able to present guests with puzzles they had to solve in order to advance to the next room, which would be impossible to pull off in a traditional maze. However, these gimmicks are just band-aids on top of overcrowding issues (especially at HHN), and we wish the theme park haunts could come up with more innovative solutions that would benefit all guests—not just those with the ability to pay more.

♦ Pop-up haunts left us disappointed – These are haunts that pop up in mini-malls or empty parking lots, usually around the end of September. Some of the owners seem to be in it just for the money and don’t have a great love of haunts or Halloween at all. Black plywood walls, cheap 3-D effects, and a lack of actors lead to a disappointing experience. Although these haunts usually have cheaper ticket prices than the big-name haunts, they usually suck and aren’t worth the money. However, rare gems can pop up occasionally. Scare Zone tries to visit as many of these haunts as possible and provide our honest reviews.

♦ Extreme haunts tested our limits“Blackout” came to Los Angeles this year, and after reading a few reviews of the New York version, we just couldn’t get excited enough to visit this one. We suppose it depends on your personal limits, but these haunts sound more like an actual torture session than a fun walk through a haunted house. What we love about typical haunts is the use of suspense, atmosphere, and well-placed startles to give you an adrenaline rush similar to riding a rollercoaster.  In contrast, the scenarios inside these “extreme” haunts are designed to make you feel very uncomfortable. We’d love to see this kind of psychological manipulation incorporated into haunts in a more subtle and fun way; until then, we just don’t feel like paying to be waterboarded.

Haunt Review: Halloween Horror Nights Orlando

Sunday, November 4th, 2012

This haunt season we were  fortunate enough to make a trip cross country to check out Universal Orlando’s Halloween Horror Nights (HHN22). As the  22 indicates, this year marked the event’s 22nd anniversary and it was also our 3rd visit to the Orlando haunt.  After planning the trip we were disappointed to hear that they would be having 4 similar themes as HHN Hollywood (The Walking Dead, Silent Hill, Alice Cooper, and Universal Monsters). We were further disappointed to learn that the closure of the Jaws ride and sudden construction for the new Transformers ride would result in 1 less maze than in recent years. Ironically, the last time we attended Orlando’s HHN in 2007 (Carnival of Carnage), it was also the last time that both parks featured a few similar mazes (Friday The 13th, A Nightmare on Elm Street, and Texas Chainsaw Massacre).

As our trip got closer, we readjusted our expectations and looked forward to comparing the two HHN events against each other. In 2007, we actually found Hollywood’s versions of the mazes to be superior. To us, their sets were more elaborate and they did a better job of capturing the atmosphere and terrors of the respective movies. However, we also found Orlando’s original mazes to be the best of the two parks so the big question is how would the two compare this year?

THE HHN 22 EXPERIENCE

The similarities seemed to present themselves immediately upon arrival. Just like Hollywood, if you don’t have a Front of the Line (FOL) pass then you’ll be destined for a night of standing in long lines with minimal hope of being able to experience all of the mazes. As those who follow us on Twitter know, we weren’t able to secure FOL passes. It seems that the second day of the ’2 day/2 park’ tickets we had purchased during our 2007 visit couldn’t be upgraded online or via the phone to add the ‘Stay and Scream’ or FOL options. So, we weren’t able to upgrade our passes until we got to the park and by that time it was too late to get the FOL option which was sold out. Honestly, this entire ticket purchasing process was infuriating and the snarky attitude of the Universal “Guest Services” employee we dealt with really set a negative tone for the beginning of our evening. We would think that after 22 years, HHN Orlando would have figured out to sell tickets online but it seems that they still have quite a few operational issues to work out. In addition, to the ticketing, throughout the night we encountered other operational issues such as incorrectly posted wait times, pushy ‘blackouts’ working inside the mazes, backed up bathroom lines, and some rather hard to find mazes.

As we feared, the crowds began to quickly descend on the park and even though it was a Wednesday night it quickly became apparent that we would have our work cut out for us in order to experience all the mazes. With optimistism we began our journey through HHN22, trying to strategize how to stay ahead of the crowds as much as possible.

SCARE ZONES

 This is the first year HHN22 did not feature a iconic character or defined scare zones. Instead, they adopted the roaming street monsters which Busch Gardens over in Tampa began doing last year. While it wasn’t apparent during our visit, we later learned that all the construction within the park was tied into the event’s overall theme. Supposedly the story is that during construction an ancient cemetery was uncovered and released  an ancient evil called “The Iniquitas” . The Iniquitas then summoned various “Dark Legions” of zombies, vampires, warriors, beasts, female chainsaw wielding prisoners and “Halloween Traditionals”. To further enhance this story, there also was a online/in-park game entitled “Horror UNSEARTHED” which allowed guests to play and earn points for their favorite Dark Legion. The roaming hordes were actually more menacing and scarier than the scare zones in Hollywood and it did feel as if HHN22 had a deeper Halloween atmosphere across the park. Yet it also seemed more chaotic as we were being attacked by zombies, vampires, and the Halloween Traditionals all at the same time when we entered the park.

MAZES

Since HHN22 is already dead and buried we will share some more specific details of the houses in the review. To understand our ratings please check the ratings guide. 

Welcome to Silent Hill

 

This was definitely a different and better version compared to Hollywood’s. The story line was more linear with more variation of scenery

and scare effects. The maze begins with a more elaborate point of entry to the town of Silent Hill with a cop popping out of the bushes firing a gun at a demon that suddenly emerges from the other side of the road, placing us in the cross hairs of the gunfire. The effect of ash raining down highlights this scene as we made our way down the foggy highway and cross through the portal from Fog World to Otherworld. Inside, guests venture through a police station’s locker room and bathroom, to a hospital’s boiler room, and pass the abandoned carnival into the back alleys of the town Silent Hill. Similar to Hollywood, there were some very elaborate effects featured in the maze, such as bathroom mirrors with appearing and disappearing figures, the colossal Pyramid Head executioners, and the disfigured nurses -we have to say that the talent playing the nurses in Hollywood was better. Of course, there also was Robbie the Rabbit who had a more prominent presence in this version. In fact, there’s even a scene where he is seemingly daring  us to stick our hands inside a toilet- but the blackouts were trying to rush us so we didn’t get to experience that scare. We very much appreciated the fact that unlike Hollywood they didn’t add the ridiculous shit smell to the bathroom scenes. Overall, this maze felt like more like a journey through the world of the video game than in Hollywood where it felt like we were stuck on the same level of the video game. We do think Hollywood’s had a few stronger scares with better talent but this version’s content and layout was far more interesting and creepy.

Ratings:

  • Haunt Design: 4.5 skulls
  • Theming: 4.5 skulls
  • Scare Factor: 3 skulls

Overall Rating*: 4 skulls 

The Walking Dead: Dead Inside

Just like Hollywood’s version this maze blatantly promoted the show with tune-in messaging plastered all over the maps, signage, and just about everywhere else. While waiting in line, they played highlights from the previous season along with reminders to tune in which we had plenty of time to watch as this was a maze with a 30 minuted posted wait time that ended up being a whopping 75 minutes.

The maze is very similar to Hollywood’s, taking victims through the post-apocalyptic world of the television series, where we follow in the footsteps of the show’s human survivors, making our way from the devastated suburban hospital, through the streets of Atlanta, to the remote countryside, where we end up in an old barn. While the zombie’s makeup was impeccable and had the look of the show, there weren’t as many recognizable characters like we saw in Hollywood. Due to this maze being so “popular” the crowds were packed inside and it became difficult to tell the zombies a part from the guests, further minimizing the scare factor.  There were a lot of scares using  Universal’s signature “strobe-and-sound startle” scare effect and like  Hollywood the effect was overused becoming quickly predictable and almost annoying. There were also many predictable scares with zombies always popping out of a corner. Again, there were just too many people inside which prevented the  experience from becoming to scary and in this category, Hollywood wins. We did like the department store scene where zombies were lurking among the racks of clothes. However, outside of this scene the rest of maze was pretty forgettable.

Ratings:

  • Haunt Design: 2.5 skulls
  • Theming: 3 skulls
  • Scare Factor: 1.5 skulls

Overall Rating*: 2 skulls 

Universal’s House of Horrors

This maze was tucked in a back corner of the park and rather hard to find but we’re very glad we found it. Our initial thoughts were that this maze was going to a generic haunted house showcasing the not-so-scary and old Universal Monsters just like Hollywood’s similarly themed Universal Monster’s Remix maze, sans the dubstep music blasting inside. This maze however, is a creative and very scary experience. The maze begins by walking through a dimly lit hallway with posters and Boris Karloff sound clips from the classic movies of the monsters we’re soon going to encounter. We then make our way into a projection room which is the gateway to the classic horrors. Throughout the maze they use flashing black-light against the white sketched sets and costumes creating the awesome and temporarily blinding effect of being trapped inside old black and white celluloid film. In the first scene we found ourselves inside the Wolfman’s old world forest where Wolfmen lunged out of the set’s dark shadows. We then ventured into a catacomb maze with the Phantom of the Opera lurking about. Next we found ourselves in Dracula’s castle which featured a very cool scare with Dracula standing up on a balcony looking down at us and then he suddenly flings up his cape, disappears, and reappears at ground level-right in our face! Escaping the prince of darkness we turned a corner and had to duck down to crouch through a passageway inside the Mummy’s tomb. Aside from feeling trapped we were vulnerable to the Mummies who were laying in very close of proximity to us. Next we were in another forest with waterways and a quick but menacing appearance by the Creature of the Black Lagoon. We then made our way into Frankenstein’s castle, where the raging monster literally crashed through a wall creating one of the most surprising scares we’ve seen to date! The finale of the maze featured a room filled with giant film strips dangling from the ceiling with the flashing lights and all of the monsters attacking from every possible angle. We heard that this was the most scareactors they’ve ever put into a single maze scene and it was a very climactic end to a rather short but exciting maze.

Ratings:

  • Haunt Design: 4.5 skulls
  • Theming: 4.5 skulls
  • Scare Factor: 4.5 skulls

Overall Rating*: 4.5 skulls 

Dead End

Dead End is one of this year’s original mazes set inside a dilapidated haunted house where countless horrific acts had occurred in the past. This maze features the traditional haunted house tricks and aesthetics that you’d find in your local haunts but with Universal’s added level of sophistication.  We heard that is was actually inspired by 2010′s “Legendary Truth: The Wyandot Estate” maze and it reminded us a little of 2007′s “Dead Silence” maze. Dead End also felt similar to Knott’s Scary Farm’s Trick or Treat with rotted Jack-O-Lanterns sitting on the front porch and supernatural activity running rampant throughout the house. Inside the house you make your way through various rooms and the walls where you encounter a variety of ghostly, and monstrous inhabitants such as a girl with a broken neck, killer plants, and a photographer who’s already to take your picture with a family that’s impatiently waiting on a couch. In another scene there’s a very cool variation of the spinning tunnel room effect where the seemingly regular hallway fades into a spinning vortex as the lights dim down. There’s also the library room with books  floating above distracting us from the scareactors who begin to grab at us from behind the bookcases. In addition to the use of state of the art props and projection effects, the scareactors in this house were very skilled at timing the scares to keep frightening the long  line of people who were making their way through. This was maze very long but it was also one of the ones with the worse ‘blackouts’ who were being over zealous in trying to make us rush through the house. It became so annoying that we had to yell back at them to stop ruining the experience we’ve paid good money to enjoy and that actually seemed to work.  Overall, this was a beautiful and visually stimulating maze that captured the true essence of Halloween frights.

Ratings:

  • Haunt Design: 5 skulls
  • Theming: 4.5 skulls
  • Scare Factor: 4 skulls

Overall Rating*: 4.5 skulls 

Gothic

Have to begin this review by saying this is one of the top mazes we’ve experienced anywhere this season. Of all the HHN 22 mazes Gothic was non-descript prior to our visit and we even contemplated skipping it for the Alice Cooper maze. Luckily we made a better decision and experienced one the best HHN mazes. This maze is fully decked out with incredible attention to detail creating a set that was so realistic that for a time we forgot we were inside a maze and believed that we were actually trapped inside a Gothic Parisian cathedral over ran by vengeful gargoyles. The gargoyle theme was very original as we don’t ever recall seeing these hideous creatures used in any maze before. It’s all gargoyles, all the time, inside this maze with no variation with other kinds of monsters but it’s very effective and they scare with an unmatched level of intensity from every imaginable and unimaginable direction possible - flying and diving out of every corner, the ceilings and even from below the floors. The size of some of the sets were breathtaking , one of which featured a precarious gargoyle’s eye view of the church  from a balcony ledge. There were also impressive visuals such as a hall of with candles, similar to the ones we saw earlier in the day on the Harry Potter Ride,  that simultaneously get blown out by the wind. There’s also a stone wall that hides a stilt walking statute that seemed to appear out of thin air. With many of the gargoyle statues blended in with real scareactors it was nerve racking to walk through the church’s dark hallways not knowing which gargoyles were really going to jump at us, which is extremely scary.

Ratings:

  • Haunt Design: 5 skulls
  • Theming: 5 skulls
  • Scare Factor: 5 skulls

Overall Rating*: 5 skulls 

Penn & Teller New(KD) Las Vegas 3D

We’re still wondering who thought it would be a good idea for Penn & Teller to have their own HHN maze. Yeah they can do some good magic tricks but they’re NOT scary. This maze was supposed the year’s comical offering but the theme was just corny and lame. While in line, we get see a video of how Penn and Teller have placed a tent over the entire city of Las Vegas creating a New Las Vegas – WTF? It seems some nuclear energy was used to make this transition with some very ill results. We remember back in 2007 when they had the “Jack’s Fun House 3D” maze and it seems that they recycled a couple those sets. Unfortunately the 3D was not an asset to this maze and unlike Hollywood’s recent 3D mazes such as “Rob Zombie’s House of 1,00 Corpses” and “Alice Cooper Goes to Hell,” the 3D effects in the maze were amateurish and didn’t have a significant impact in the maze experience  There were some clever parodies of Las Vegas with disgusting buffet displays, twisted slot machines with functional levers to pull, a tiger trick done by those “other” popular Vegas magicians-gone wrong and a cocktail waitress with 3 boobs. There’s also a zombie Elvis  marrying off an unlucky couple. The problem was that there was nothing particularly scary about the maze, there were quite a few rooms where nothing happened, and it was just plain bizarre. We’re glad that we only waited 20 minutes for this maze as a wait any longer would’ve made it an even bigger disappointment.

Ratings:

  • Haunt Design: 2 skulls
  • Theming: 2.5 skulls
  • Scare Factor: 0.5 skull

Overall Rating*: 1.5 skulls 

Alice Cooper Welcome to My Nightmare in 3D

 Unfortunately due to the length of some of the other lines and HHN closing the mazes at midnight, we were not able to experience this maze.  What we’ve heard is that we didn’t miss much and after watching an online video we didn’t feel too bad about missing this one.

REPASS

This year we would have to give the slight edge to Orlando as being the best of the two U.S. HHN events. While both have their own redeeming qualities, Orlando’s event is bigger with more variety and originality. We still think that our best trip to HHN Orlando was back in 2001 where all but one of the mazes (The Mummy) were original themes. We do like being able to experience some of the movie and TV based mazes but these concepts generally are not as scary as they are confined by the elements and scenes from the properties they’re based upon and come with an inflated expectation to be scary. Simply put, the original mazes have more unpredictability.

The frustrating elements we encountered at HHN22 seem to be prevalent at all major theme parks we’ve attended this season. Crowds, long lines, drunks and the feeling of being rushed the entire night in order to experience all the haunt offerings. We don’t expect Universal’s “Comcastic” management team cares too much as long as the turnstiles and registers keep clicking. As guests who traveled cross country we have to gripe about the ticket buying process, poor maze location signs, and inaccurate wait time postings. If these elements were better managed we probably would’ve been able to go through all the mazes, maybe catch one of the shows, and enjoy more of their rides (we really wanted to ride Hollywood Rip Ride Rockit coaster). The bad combination of all these issues did distract from our overall enjoyment of the evening.

Hopefully in the coming years as the construction wraps up around the park they’ll add back more mazes to accommodate the large crowds they draw. When asked if our trip to Orlando for HHN22 was worth it, we would say yes but we’re also not going to be rushing back anytime soon, especially if they continue to share more of the same themes with Hollywood.

 HHN 22 Fright Value: 3.5 Skulls

Overall Rating of HHN 22: 4 Skulls

TerrorVision: Creepy Haunt Commercials 2012

Tuesday, September 18th, 2012

The first day of fall is only 3 days away and the official haunt season is set to begin. The signs are everywhere with the days getting shorter and the nights longer. There’s candy overflowing in the grocery store aisles and Halloween stores are appearing on every corner. Now our favorite signs of haunt season are the commercials that are materializing for this year’s major theme park and local haunt attractions.

We think our fellow Haunt Stalkers would like to get into the spirit of the season with us so take a look at some this year’s best haunt commercials. In particular, we really love Knott’s Scary Farm’s 40th Haunt commercial and just can’t wait to see what they have in store this year. The U.S. versions of Universal’s Halloween Horror Nights share the same spots as do the other Cedar Fair theme parks, who all have a variation of the Cedar Point HalloWeekends spot. Howl-O-Scream’s commercials are creepy  and the Tampa Icon, Trickster, is one of the scariest haunt characters we’ve seen this season. The major local haunts have also put a good amount of production value into their commercials to scare us into coming… and you can bet we plan to go to as many as possible!

After you to watch these creepy commercials don’t forget to keep checking our Open Haunts 2012 page to get the latest info on haunts around the world (but mostly in America).

Knott’s Scary Farm

Halloween Horror Nights Hollywood

Halloween Horror Nights Orlando

Halloween Horror Nights Japan

Howl-O-Scream Tampa

Howl-O-Scream Williamsburg

HalloWeekends at Cedar Point

Sinister Pointe (CA)

Winchester Mystery House (San Jose, CA)

Six Flags Fright Fest (Nationwide)

Blood Manor NYC

Killers: A Nightmare Haunted House NYC

House of Torment (TX)

Goretorium (NV)

The Dent Schoolhouse (OH)

The Mortuary Haunted House (LA)

Jason’s Woods (PA)

Haunted Plantation (HI)

Final Preparations Under Way As Haunts Prepare to Open for the Season

Friday, September 14th, 2012

If you’re anything like us, you’ve been counting down the days until haunts open since November 1st. With at least one haunt opening this weekend, and many more opening in the next couple of weeks, we can be sure that haunt owners, creative directors, and other haunt employees all over the country have been working frantically to put the final touches on this year’s events. Here’s a rundown of some of this week’s highlights:

 Howl-O-Scream at Busch Gardens Williamsburg is the first major event to open this year: the haunt doors creak open on Friday, September 14.

 Disneyland and the Magic Kindgom at Walt Disney World are in full Halloween mode with “Halloween Time,” featuring Space Mountain Ghost Galaxy and Haunted Mansion Holiday at Disneyland and Mickey’s Halloween Party at both parks.

Halloween Horror Nights Orlando hosted a media preview event this week. Check out Horror Night Nightmare’s extensive photo coverage of the event on Facebook.

 Halloween Horror Nights Hollywood gave a behind-the-scenes tour of its new Silent Hill maze. Watch Theme Park Adventure’s video of the tour on YouTube.

 Knott’s Scary Farm has posted some more construction photos, including a look at the detailed sets going into Pinocchio Unstrung. Check them out here.

 Comikaze Expo is taking place this weekend at the Los Angeles Convention Center. Get some exercise by running from hordes of zombies at the Zombie Apocalypse.

Scare Zone kicks off the 2012 haunt season by visiting Disneyland’s Halloween Time this weekend and Halloween Horror Nights next weekend. Be sure to check back often for our timely reviews and tips on all the Southern California events this year!

Universal Orlando Reveals Full Line-Up for 2012 Halloween Horror Nights

Thursday, August 30th, 2012

The wait is finally over! Universal Orlando has finally revealed all of the mazes for their 2012 event. As expected, there will be only 7 mazes this year, 1 fewer than in 2011. Scare Zones have yet to be announced. While we’re slightly disappointed that they’re down a maze and 4 of them share either an identical or similar theme with HHN Hollywood, we still plan taking the trip over to see if we can survive what’s inside (and compare with Hollywood).

*UPDATE 8/31* Here’s a look at the  never before seen TV commercial for this year’s event, just for you…

Mazes

Gothic

The Catedral de Caementum Animus is, by day, undergoing a building-wide architectural refurbishment. By night, the many stone gargoyles that keep watchful eye over the sanctuary come to life with the mission of protecting this sacred place against intrusion.

Dead End 

If enough people believe in something, perception can become reality. In Carey, Ohio, the perception was that countless horrific acts had occurred in the old Hartford Mansion. The reality was that the curse which befell the house was far worse than any story ever told.

Universal’s House of Horrors

This is no remake. No sequel. No re-imagining. These are Universal’s classic monsters of fear, who have terrified audiences from the Silver Screen. They have been waiting within silver celluloid to be resurrected. The flash of a lightning strike cuts the darkness that surrounds, and terror’s true faces take back what is theirs…

The Walking Dead: Dead Inside

There is strength in numbers and you must band together to make it through many of the iconic settings made famous by the critically-acclaimed AMC hit, The Walking Dead. As the city is crawling with hordes of “walkers,” the issue of your becoming one of them is not a question of if, but when.

Welcome to Silent Hill

In the eerie and desolate town of Silent Hill, ash falls from the sky and the physical laws of nature no longer apply. If you dare to venture into this alternate dimension, there is only one law of nature with which you must concern yourself: survival.

Alice Cooper: Welcome to My Nightmare

Journey into legendary rocker Alice Cooper’s twisted mind and witness the natural melding of horror and Cooper’s four decades-long career. Here you will follow Steven, the iconic character from many of Cooper’s works, as you come face to face with a myriad of tormentors who threaten an already-decaying sense of sanity.

Penn & Teller: New(kd) Las Vegas

World-renowned magicians Penn & Teller have accidentally nuked Las Vegas, but don’t worry, it’s nothing a fresh coat of paint and a truckload of BS can’t fix! Come on down to New Vegas, where all that glitters isn’t gold, and in fact probably has fatal levels of radioactivity.

Shows

Bill and Ted’s Excellent Halloween Adventure

Party on as those two most excellent dudes return to skewer the biggest names in entertainment and pop culture.

20 Penny Circus

The 20 Penny Circus brings its “Magic For People With Questionable Taste” to an unsuspecting Halloween Horror Nights audience.

Penn and Teller Bring Their Tricks to HHN Orlando

Saturday, August 4th, 2012

Universal Studios Florida has announced a brand new house for Halloween Horror Nights 2012 (and finally one that is not a clone of one of the Hollywood mazes):

Penn and Teller New(ek) Las Vegas

Prepare to experience the lights and allure of Las Vegas…with a toxic twist. One of Penn and Teller’s tricks has gone awry and left the city covered in nuclear ooze. Do you think you will survive a trip to “New(kd) Las Vegas?”

This house will be in 3D, and you can expect a lot of brightly colored “toxic” sets. We hope that they capitalize on the “magic” element and put a lot of fun tricks and surprises in the attraction. See Penn provide a few details in the video below.

This house is exclusive to HHN Orlando and will not be featured in Hollywood.