Posts Tagged ‘Universal Studios’

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.

HAuNTcon Brings the Fright to St. Louis

Friday, March 2nd, 2012

Hauntrepreneurs® Pioneer Brings Legendary Brand to the March Halloween and Haunted Attraction Show

ST. LOUIS, Mo. - Feb. 24, 2012 – Haunted industry pioneer, Leonard Pickel, brings global fright brandHAuNTcon® to booth #940 at the TransWorld’s National Halloween & Haunted Attractions Show in St. Louis, Mo. at America’s Center, March 8-11.

Open to the public, the 9th Annual Haunted Attraction National Tradeshow and Convention, HAuNTcon® 2012, takes place May 3-7, 2012 at the Monroeville Convention Center near Pittsburg, Pa. “Designed by Haunters, for Haunters,” HAuNTcon® will host over a thousand haunted professionals and Halloween fans of all ages for a not-to-be-missed conference and trade show. Attendees can enjoy over 50 hours of seminars, hands-on workshops and product demonstrations of the latest scare props, techniques, and effects and a program packed with unforgettable networking events, local haunt tours, a decadent costume ball and much more.

“HAuNTcon helps haunters around world the take their vision to the next level by bringing together top industry experts, artists, owners, operators and haunted house fans together to share, learn and inspire each other,” explains HAuNTcon Founder and haunt industry legend Leonard Pickel, “It is the best investment you can make for your haunted event no matter how big or small.”

Leonard Pickel is notorious for his unique and visionary approach to professional haunting called the “Pickel Theory,” covered in literature and media worldwide. Over a million people in the U.S. alone have experienced his work. At his specialized haunt design company, Hauntrepreneurs®, Pickel has developed over 100 attractions for entertainment giants such as The Playboy Mansion, Universal Studios, Madison Scare Garden, Morris Costumes, Six Flags and Paramount amusement parks. His 30 plus years of experience in the haunt entertainment industry have earned him the undisputed title of “The Original Hauntrepreneur”. Pickel is an accomplished author, speaker, innovator, designer, and haunter.

This March, Pickel will be bringing three of his greatest contributions to the fright industry to the St. Louis America’s Center – HAuNTcon®, the premier haunted attraction trade show and convention (at booth #940),Hauntrepreneurs® Inc., leader in design and consulting for dark themed attractions, and FindaHaunt.com, the next generation haunted event locator (at booth #938). Pickel is available in St. Louis for questions and in person meetings .

Showcasing products and services in the haunt and attractions industries, TransWorld’s National Halloween & Haunted Attractions Show brings together buyers and exhibitors from across the nation to the America’s Center in St. Louis.

About HAuNTcon®
HAuNTcon is an acronym for the Haunted Attraction National Tradeshow and Convention. Founded in 2004 by haunted attraction legend Leonard Pickel, it has become a mecca for a lively global community of Halloween, haunted attractions and horror enthusiasts. HAuNTcon’s expo features the latest in fright services and equipment for professional haunters and enthusiast alike often at wholesale prices. To register and for more information, visitwww.hauntcon.com

About Hauntrepeneurs®
Hauntrepreneurs® booth (#942) specializes in design and consulting for dark themed attractions. From concept to completion, it is a full service company that can handle a project of any size and budget. Using a storyline as a road map, Hauntrepreneurs® develops haunt experiences from the inside out giving customers the best value while creating unique high impact attractions. From detailed architectural drawings and storyboarding through construction and set dressing to management training and support, Hauntrepreneurs®, turns haunting dreams into a reality. Visit www.hauntrepreneurs.com to request a bit or for more information

About FindaHaunt.com
The next generation haunted event locator, FindaHaunt.com (booth #938), is first to put the power of Internet mapping to work for haunted business owners and operators nationwide. The user friendly website allows visitors to quickly search and find top haunted destinations in their area. With detailed event descriptions including hours of operation, pricing, directions and more, FindaHaunt.com makes it easy for attraction owners and fans to connect and grow their community. Venues of all sizes get a fair chance without the need to purchase expensive banner ads. Visit www.FindaHaunt.com or e-mail sales@findahaunt.com for details, savings available prior to May 10, 2012.

About Leonard Pickel
The “Original Hauntrepreneur,” Leonard Pickel, opened his first haunted house in 1976 to become a ground-breaking visionary and legend in the haunted attraction industry. At his specialized haunt design company, Hauntrepreneurs®, Pickel has designed over 100 attractions for entertainment giants such as The Playboy Mansion, Universal Studios, Madison Scare Garden, Morris Costumes, Six Flags and Paramount amusement parks. Over a million people in the U.S. alone have experienced his work firsthand, earning him high acclaim and a passionate following worldwide. A true pioneer, Pickel constantly experiments with new techniques, pushing the boundaries of the art of haunting. Pickel is an accomplished author, speaker, innovator, designer and haunter.

Scare Zone Review: Monsterpalooza

Monday, April 11th, 2011

This past weekend Scare Zone was in Burbank, CA, to attend Monsterpalooza 3. This was the convention’s biggest year yet, with attendance at capacity and the presence of some of the film and haunt industry’s top talents. J. J. Abrams and Guillermo Del Toro were in attendance, just to name a few. The convention also featured a few “scareactors” roaming around who were more than willing to take pictures and offer a few scares here and there. In fact, we were “greeted” by a group of monsters who were roaming the parking lot. This made us yearn for haunt season (how many days until haunts?).

The convention featured the usual crop of vendors selling monster goods ranging from t-shirts, classic DVDs (for those without Netflix), unique masks, props, Freddy claws, and memorabilia. There was also a weekend slate of demonstrations and monster-related seminars. On Friday night we attended the Halloween Horror Nights (HHN) make-up secrets session (“Creating the Fear”), which featured Michael Burnett, Senior Designer and Make-Up/Prosthetics Artist for Universal Orlando (more details on this session coming soon). On Sunday we attended a creature-painting demo by Casey Love and a sculpting presentation by the Shiflett Brothers.

While the vendors and presentations were fun to see, the highlight of the convention was the Museum, which featured life-sized figures and animatronics of our favorite monsters. This darkened exhibit was somewhat scary to walk through as the figures looked as if they were ready to spring to life and attack (at least we were hoping they would).

We were able to attend Friday’s opening evening and returned again Sunday afternoon. We did attempt to visit on Saturday, but they were at capacity and were holding the line until people inside left. Even though we saw everything on Friday evening, we discovered a few new things on Sunday. It seemed that some of the booths weren’t fully set up on Friday night, and each day featured new talent and presentations.

Overall, this was a well-run event, and we’re glad that we were able to attend. We were disappointed that it was so packed on Saturday that they periodically were not allowing people in, so it’s obvious that they need to move to a bigger venue. Unfortunately, that probably won’t happen next year, since the program indicated they would be back in the same location for 2012. Also, we’re not exactly fans of the “buy a celebrity autograph” system. We saw a quite a few celebrities sitting around looking sad and miserable because no one was buying their autographs. People even seemed hesitant to approach them to say “hi” because of the obligation to pay for the interaction. While this is standard practice at conventions, we feel that that it’s awkward and disingenuous. It would make everyone’s time more worthwhile if the celebrities didn’t charge for autographs. Perhaps if instead they sold their pictures and memorabilia and signed the items for free, people would feel more inclined to pay for the interaction. It isn’t as if Eddie Munster’s signature alone has any significant value in the street.

We also feel it would be great for them to expand the museum experience and even offer a haunt. With the presence of Bone Yard Effects, who designs the masks used at HHN Hollywood, plus other local haunt designers and owners in attendance, this would be the perfect venue to provide a sample of what’s in store for the coming haunt season. Of course, we’re addicted to haunts, so we would like to see one everywhere we go. Scare Zone will just have to wait until May, when we will be attending an evening of haunts during the National Haunters Convention in Philadelphia!

See more of our Monsterpalooza pictures HERE.

Monsterpalooza event rating: 4.5 Skulls out of 5

Everybody Loves John Murdy

Monday, October 25th, 2010

John Murdy, creative director of Universal Studios’ Halloween Horror Nights in Hollywood, has been receiving a lot of press this year. HHN is growing like crazy, and with almost every night selling out this year, it’s no wonder so many newspapers and web sites are seeking him out for an interview. Also, he seems like just a generally nice guy. And if you follow him on Twitter, you know that he always makes an effort to respond to fan messages.

Here’s what we’re sure is only a partial list of the stories featuring him this year:

Boy and His Monsters Make Good (O.C. Register, October 13)

John Murdy on How Movies Influence Halloween Horror Nights (Insidethemagic.com, October 22)

John Murdy Talks Halloween Horror Nights 2010 (theRealmCast.com, October 19)

Review of Universal Halloween Horror Nights Plus Creative Director John Murdy (examiner.com, September 28)

Creative Director John Murdy Talks Vampires (artistdirect.com, September 23)

Murdy, John (DreadCentral.com, October 19)

An Interview With John Murdy and Patrick Ian Moore (Static Multimedia, October 1)

Universal Studios Hollywood’s Halloween Horror Nights Filled with Mazes and Monsters (LA Times, October 9)

New L.A. Times Article on HHN Hollywood

Monday, October 11th, 2010

The L.A. Times has published an interesting piece on Universal’s Halloween Horror Nights in Hollywood. It focuses a lot on John Murdy, Creative Director, and talks about what goes into the extreme production behind the event. It also provides a view into the world of the scareactors, some of whom are “killed” every 30 seconds or so, all night long. It does sound like a tiring job.

Check out the article here.

HHN Orlando Review

Sunday, September 26th, 2010

InsidetheMagic.com has posted a review of all the mazes and scare zones at Halloween Horror Nights in Orlando, which opened this Friday. It sounds like Catacombs and Legendary Truth were the standout mazes of the night. Check out the site for great info and some video from the event.

Also, here’s a video that captures images from all of the scare zones:

Scare Zone Trip Report: HHN Hollywood

Saturday, September 25th, 2010

If you were following our tweets last night, you already know that opening night at HHN Hollywood was a bit of a disaster, at least for us. We can’t really fault the haunt exactly. It was more an issue of Universal Studios operations and crowd control, and probably just some bad luck. We’ll be returning with our Killer Deals Nights pass, so we hope to have a better experience, but we wanted to let you know what you can expect, especially for those who might be attending tonight or Sunday.

Getting Into the Park

What a mess! We did take our own advice and arrive early, but unfortunately, shoddy service at Johnny Rocket’s in City Walk seriously delayed us. We were still at the gates before official opening; however, the security line was excruciatingly slow. It took us almost a half-hour just to get through the metal detectors. They were thoroughly searching everyone.

If you have a Killer Deals Nights pass, be prepared to wait even longer before getting inside. You must get your pass processed before you enter the park at the Guest Relations booth near the entrance. This was another 45-minute wait for us. Slowing things down even more is the fact that the line is not just for pass processing—apparently it’s also for people who have problems with the tickets they bought. It would make a lot more sense to separate problem tickets from pass processing, and they should also allow you to enter the park first and then come back any time before closing that night to have the pass processed. That would make sense, right? Instead, Universal seems to be punishing the people who bought the pass rather than treating them like guests who will be bringing returning business. Shame on you, Universal. This is customer service 101. Call Disney; ask them how it works.

Park Entrance

Inside the Park

Wait times were looooong last night. Longer than we ever experienced last year on any the four nights we attended. We saw wait times as long as 90 minutes for some mazes (House of 1000 Corpses always had the longest wait; Friday the 13th was always pretty short for some reason). The long lines meant that we made it through only 3 of the 5 mazes. We eventually grew weary of dealing with the horrible people who seemed to surround us in every line, so we gave up on the mazes and rode the rides instead (all of which had much shorter lines, about an average of 20 minutes for every non-maze attraction).

We’re not sure what was going on last night, but the crowd was really the worst we have seen at a haunt, second only to the Queen Mary 2 years ago, which made us stop attending that one. We suspect it had to do with all the discounts out there. Aside from the volume of the crowd, the people were just…annoying. The crowd was definitely younger than what we’ve seen in the past, too.

Mazes

Castle Vampyre (1.5 out of 5 skulls)

About what you’d expect. They took the House of Horrors and threw some vampires into it. Despite creating an elaborate back story and a companion comic book, none of that came through in the maze. You still had the Chucky room, but with a vampire in it. You had the Phantom of the Opera mannequin, but with a vampire underneath him, and so on. The scareactors were trying their best, though, and we liked the makeup and costuming.

Friday the 13th (4 out of 5 skulls)

This maze is awesome. I rate it better than the Friday the 13th mazes from 2007 and 2008. There were a lot of great scare setups, and some gruesome, gory scenes. HHN struck the right balance between suspense, humor, and scares and has created a great maze for this year. Yes, some of it was recycled and retooled from previous years, but for the most part, it did feel new.

Entrance to the Friday the 13th Maze

House of 1000 Corpses (3.5 out of 5 skulls)

It’s hard to rate this one, because this is where we had the worst line experience, which put us in a bad mood before we even set foot inside. Rude, annoying teenagers were abundant in this line. We could not escape them—now we know how Bill and friends felt inside the Firefly house, waiting for their car to get fixed, right before they were tortured to death.

Anyway, once we finally got to the front (after the longest 80-minute wait of our lives), we were very impressed with the façade of the maze. They did a great job on that. The maze itself is incredibly long, and the sets are very detailed. The 3D effects were not as impressive as they sounded. I’m not even sure what was supposed to be in 3D. They had a lot of neon orange in the rooms, so I suppose that was supposed to jump out at you. The effect was underwhelming. I actually liked the maze better without my glasses on, as the glasses just distract from the detail of the sets.

The maze lacked scareactors at the beginning; we went through several rooms without a single actor. Later on, scareactors were prevalent, and they had a lot of energy. HHN did a great job casting; Otis and Baby were very near-dead ringers for the original characters. The costumes and makeup were great all around.

Facade of House of 1000 Corpses

OUR TIPS

1. Get there even earlier than you already planned, especially if you intend to get a Killer Deals pass processed this weekend.
2. See House of 1000 Corpses first; it had the longest line all night.
3. Skip Castle Vampyre when you get there and circle back later; it had a 5-minute wait by the end of the night.
4. Don’t skip the King Kong Express. This attraction is outstanding, and definitely worth seeing.

Carnival Barker Near the Entrance

We’ll report on Saw: Game On and Nightmare on Elm Street, plus the scare zones, when we go back for a second trip. We will also be adding more (and better photos) to this post soon.

Our next stop is Knott’s Halloween Haunt this Sunday. We’ll be tweeting live once again. Be sure to follow us.

Retro Terror: Dead Silence

Monday, September 20th, 2010

While the movie fell short of being a big horror hit, the maze at 2007 Halloween Horror Nights at Universal Orlando (Carnival of Carnage) ended up being our favorite maze. The two story sets, great lighting effects, eerie soundtrack, and sneaky Scareactors all combined to offer one of the most suspenseful and scariest mazes of the 2007 season.

Don’t be scared… check out this flashback video of Dead Silence.

HHN Orlando: Fear Revealed

Saturday, September 18th, 2010

Universal Orlando has new videos featuring all of the icons for the past 2o years “pleading their allegiance” to Fear, the icon and evil force behind this year’s 20th anniversary haunt. These are very creative videos, and they set the tone for how all the past years’ icons are interrelated and ready to unite to scare us all to death.

Sneak Peek: Halloween Horror Nights: XX TV Commercial

Thursday, September 2nd, 2010

It seems that the announcements and commercials for Universal Orlando’s HHN have been coming in late this year. Very odd since this is a big anniversary year. Nonetheless, finally here is the new HHN commercial for 2010. It’s set for wide release this weekend. Let us know what you think about it.

 

HHN 2010 Commercial