Friday, October 31, 2014

The Lion King Wikipedia pages part 2




 

Wildlife Express Train
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Jump to: navigation, search


Question book-new.svg
 This article does not cite any references or sources. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (October 2007)


Wildlife Express Train
Animal Kingdom Wildlife Express Train 01.jpg
Wildlife Express Locomotive
 


[hide]Disney's Animal Kingdom

Area
Africa
 Rafiki's Planet Watch

Coordinates
28°21′35″N 81°35′28″WCoordinates: 28°21′35″N 81°35′28″W

Status
Operating

Cost
Included with Park Admission

Soft opening date
April 21, 1998

Opening date
April 22, 1998
 

General statistics

Attraction type
Train

Manufacturer
Severn Lamb

Designer
Walt Disney Imagineering

Model
Rustic train

Theme
Africa

Music
African bongos

Speed
10 mph (16 km/h)

Capacity
2500 LBS riders per hour

Vehicle type
Rustic train

Vehicles
5

Riders per vehicle
50

Rows
3

Duration
12:00

Track gauge
3 ft 4 in (1,016 mm)

Crossings
3

Handicapped/disabled access Wheelchair accessible
 

 Must transfer from wheelchair
 

Assistive listening icon.svg Assistive listening available
 

The Wildlife Express Train to Rafiki's Planet Watch is a short railroad that takes guests at Disney's Animal Kingdom from Harambe, Africa to Rafiki's Planet Watch. On the ride, guests get the chance to see a little of the Animal Kingdom backlot, including animal holding buildings for rhinos and elephants, among other animals. It takes about seven minutes to go from Harambe railway station, Africa to Rafiki's Planet Watch and an additional five to return. The full journey is a 1.2 miles (1.9 km) round-trip.
The railway is part of the fictional Eastern Star Railway, running from Lusaka to Nairobi and Kisangani.
Locomotives[edit]
There are three diesel-hydraulic, steam outline locomotives, built by Severn Lamb of Stratford-upon-Avon, United Kingdom in 1997 before the park's opening the following year. They have a wheel configuration of 2-4-2 and are based on John Aspinall's 2-4-2T engines built for the Lancashire & Yorkshire Railway of England in 1898 at Horwich locomotive works, Lancashire. However, the builder's plates of the locomotives tell a different story, saying that the engines were built in 1926 by Beyer Peacock of Gorton Foundry, Manchester. Their numbers are 02594, 04982 and 00174, the former also being named, R. Baba Harpoor, in honour of Imagineer Bob Harpur.
The railway is built to a 3 ft 4 in (1,016 mm) narrow gauge, a little wider than the 1,000 mm (3 ft 3 3⁄8 in) metre gauge that was used on East African railways. There are two sets of coaches forming the passenger rolling stock, each with five vehicles and each seating around 250 people. These sets include a series of bins on the top of the train that simulate cargo that passengers are taking with them. One set of coaches has these bins green and the other red. This is a way for easy identification between trains.
See also[edit]
 Wikimedia Commons has media related to Wildlife Express Train.
L&YR Class 5 - L&YR 2-4-2T designed by Aspinall and built at Horwich.
Rail transport in Disney Parks

External links[edit]
Walt Disney World Resort - Wildlife Express Train
Walt Disney World Trains



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Categories: Amusement rides by name
Walt Disney Parks and Resorts attractions
Africa (Disney)
Rafiki's Planet Watch
Amusement rides based on rail transport
Railways of amusement parks
3 ft 4 in gauge railways in the United States










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Wildlife Express Train
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search


Question book-new.svg
 This article does not cite any references or sources. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (October 2007)


Wildlife Express Train
Animal Kingdom Wildlife Express Train 01.jpg
Wildlife Express Locomotive
 


[hide]Disney's Animal Kingdom

Area
Africa
 Rafiki's Planet Watch

Coordinates
28°21′35″N 81°35′28″WCoordinates: 28°21′35″N 81°35′28″W

Status
Operating

Cost
Included with Park Admission

Soft opening date
April 21, 1998

Opening date
April 22, 1998
 

General statistics

Attraction type
Train

Manufacturer
Severn Lamb

Designer
Walt Disney Imagineering

Model
Rustic train

Theme
Africa

Music
African bongos

Speed
10 mph (16 km/h)

Capacity
2500 LBS riders per hour

Vehicle type
Rustic train

Vehicles
5

Riders per vehicle
50

Rows
3

Duration
12:00

Track gauge
3 ft 4 in (1,016 mm)

Crossings
3

Handicapped/disabled access Wheelchair accessible
 

 Must transfer from wheelchair
 

Assistive listening icon.svg Assistive listening available
 

The Wildlife Express Train to Rafiki's Planet Watch is a short railroad that takes guests at Disney's Animal Kingdom from Harambe, Africa to Rafiki's Planet Watch. On the ride, guests get the chance to see a little of the Animal Kingdom backlot, including animal holding buildings for rhinos and elephants, among other animals. It takes about seven minutes to go from Harambe railway station, Africa to Rafiki's Planet Watch and an additional five to return. The full journey is a 1.2 miles (1.9 km) round-trip.
The railway is part of the fictional Eastern Star Railway, running from Lusaka to Nairobi and Kisangani.
Locomotives[edit]
There are three diesel-hydraulic, steam outline locomotives, built by Severn Lamb of Stratford-upon-Avon, United Kingdom in 1997 before the park's opening the following year. They have a wheel configuration of 2-4-2 and are based on John Aspinall's 2-4-2T engines built for the Lancashire & Yorkshire Railway of England in 1898 at Horwich locomotive works, Lancashire. However, the builder's plates of the locomotives tell a different story, saying that the engines were built in 1926 by Beyer Peacock of Gorton Foundry, Manchester. Their numbers are 02594, 04982 and 00174, the former also being named, R. Baba Harpoor, in honour of Imagineer Bob Harpur.
The railway is built to a 3 ft 4 in (1,016 mm) narrow gauge, a little wider than the 1,000 mm (3 ft 3 3⁄8 in) metre gauge that was used on East African railways. There are two sets of coaches forming the passenger rolling stock, each with five vehicles and each seating around 250 people. These sets include a series of bins on the top of the train that simulate cargo that passengers are taking with them. One set of coaches has these bins green and the other red. This is a way for easy identification between trains.
See also[edit]
 Wikimedia Commons has media related to Wildlife Express Train.
L&YR Class 5 - L&YR 2-4-2T designed by Aspinall and built at Horwich.
Rail transport in Disney Parks

External links[edit]
Walt Disney World Resort - Wildlife Express Train
Walt Disney World Trains



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Disney's Animal Kingdom

 



 





 







 








 








 








 










 





 



[show]
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Zoos, aquariums, and aviaries

 



























 










 









 










 














 






 



[show]
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The Lion King

 







 





 







 







 













 











 









 










 












 



[show]
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Disneyland railroads

 










 











 



Categories: Amusement rides by name
Walt Disney Parks and Resorts attractions
Africa (Disney)
Rafiki's Planet Watch
Amusement rides based on rail transport
Railways of amusement parks
3 ft 4 in gauge railways in the United States










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Hakuna Matata Restaurant
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search


Hakuna Matata Restaurant


[hide]Disneyland Park (Paris)

Area
Adventureland

Status
Operating

Opening date
April 12, 1992
 

General statistics

Attraction type
Restaurant

Designer
Walt Disney Imagineering

Theme
The Lion King

Previous name
Aux Epices Enchantées (1992-1995)

Hakuna Matata Restaurant is a restaurant located in Adventureland in Disneyland Paris. It is themed to the movie The Lion King.


Contents  [hide]
1 Aux Epices Enchantées
2 Hakuna Matata Restaurant
3 External links
4 References


Aux Epices Enchantées[edit]
Originally, when the park opened in 1992, the restaurant was known as Aux Epices Enchantées (With Enchanted Spices). It is the main building of the African part of Adventureland and features many African artifacts in the setting of a peaceful jungle. Its original meals, however, could be inspired by Africa, Asia or the West Indies.
Hakuna Matata Restaurant[edit]
With the release of the movie The Lion King in 1994, the perfect theme came through to link the restaurant to the Disney universe. As such, it was renamed Hakuna Matata Restaurant around 1995. The building itself remains unaltered though, except for murals of the characters Timon and Pumbaa which were added later.
External links[edit]
Photos Magiques - Restaurant Hakuna Matata

References[edit]



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Disneyland Park (Paris)
Adventureland (Disney)
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Hakuna Matata Restaurant
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search


Hakuna Matata Restaurant


[hide]Disneyland Park (Paris)

Area
Adventureland

Status
Operating

Opening date
April 12, 1992
 

General statistics

Attraction type
Restaurant

Designer
Walt Disney Imagineering

Theme
The Lion King

Previous name
Aux Epices Enchantées (1992-1995)

Hakuna Matata Restaurant is a restaurant located in Adventureland in Disneyland Paris. It is themed to the movie The Lion King.


Contents  [hide]
1 Aux Epices Enchantées
2 Hakuna Matata Restaurant
3 External links
4 References


Aux Epices Enchantées[edit]
Originally, when the park opened in 1992, the restaurant was known as Aux Epices Enchantées (With Enchanted Spices). It is the main building of the African part of Adventureland and features many African artifacts in the setting of a peaceful jungle. Its original meals, however, could be inspired by Africa, Asia or the West Indies.
Hakuna Matata Restaurant[edit]
With the release of the movie The Lion King in 1994, the perfect theme came through to link the restaurant to the Disney universe. As such, it was renamed Hakuna Matata Restaurant around 1995. The building itself remains unaltered though, except for murals of the characters Timon and Pumbaa which were added later.
External links[edit]
Photos Magiques - Restaurant Hakuna Matata

References[edit]



[show]
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The Lion King

 







 





 







 







 













 











 









 










 












 



[show]
v ·
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Disneyland Park (Paris)

 










 






















 











 















 














 







 

Stub icon This Disney-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.




 



Categories: Amusement rides by name
The Lion King
Disneyland Park (Paris)
Adventureland (Disney)
Disney stubs





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This page was last modified on 13 September 2014 at 09:56.
Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License; additional terms may apply. By using this site, you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., a non-profit organization.
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The Lion King Celebration
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search


The Lion King Celebration


[hide]Disneyland

Status
Closed

Opening date
June 1, 1994

Closing date
June 1, 1997

Replaced
Aladdin's Royal Caravan

Replaced by
Hercules' Victory Parade
 

General statistics

Attraction type
Parade

Theme
The Lion King

Floats
Six

The Lion King Celebration was a parade based on the animated film The Lion King. It was designed to tell story of Simba, the protagonist of The Lion King, as if it were a tale passed down in Africa for generations.[1] Its parade featured six floats designed around different aspects of Africa, dancers dressed in animal costumes and a Pride Rock float featuring Simba and Nala. The parade ran at Disneyland from June 1, 1994 to June 1, 1997, after which four of the floats were moved to Disney's Animal Kingdom for the Festival of the Lion King show.


Contents  [hide]
1 Production 1.1 Design 1.1.1 Production team


2 Plot
3 References


Production[edit]
During a typical show, a total of 89 cast members performed in The Lion King Celebration. This included 56 dancers, 12 puppeteers, 10 acrobatic pole dancers, 6 musicians and 5 remote control operators.[2]
The Lion King Celebration featured the first use of Audio-Animatronics in a Disneyland parade. It also featured the first use of "Puppetronics", a technique used to create the large, lifelike animal puppets featured on the floats.[3]
Design[edit]
The design of the parade had strong roots in traditional African artwork, featuring vibrant colors, tribal designs and dance routines based on traditional African dances.
African artist Betty LaDuke designed and painted a sculpture of three monkeys that sat behind Nala on the Pride Rock float.[4][5]
Production team[edit]

Role
Staff
Producer Nance Weenick
Production Manager Joey Michaels
Show Director Robert Ponce
Assistant Director/Senior Choreographer/African Dance Consultant Sylvia Hase
Art Director Steve Bass
Music Director Bruce Healy
Writer Tom Childs
Technical Director Ted Carlsson
Choreographer Mark Nordike
Costume Designer Alyja Clegg
Costumer Roseanne Yokoyama

Plot[edit]
Set to a mostly instrumental version of the song "I Just Can't Wait to Be King", the first characters to appear are two rhinoceroses, followed by tribal dancers and drummers and a float featuring Zazu and Rafiki with two giraffes. Zazu and Rafiki introduce the parade as it continues down Main Street, U.S.A..
A herd of gazelle dancers dressed in spandex costumes with hoods precede a float with tribal gazelle designs, pushed along by wildebeest dancers. They are followed by a group of tribal crane dancers, the elephant float and two remote-controlled crocodiles. The elephant float occasionally shoots a stream of water from its trunk. In the first year of the show, the larger "mother" elephant was preceded by a smaller "baby" elephant whose costume was similar to that of the previously mentioned rhinoceroses, only larger. Two pole dancers dressed in tribal bird costumes walk at the sides.
Leopard dancers dance around the Rain Forest float, which features monkey dancers on swings and Pumbaa on the back. Pumbaa talks to Timon, who follows behind chasing three remote-controlled bugs including a scorpion and a rhinoceros beetle.
Two tribal-bird pole dancers lead the Drum Dancer float, which features drummers, dancers and percussionists in colourful, vibrant tribal costumes.
The last float - Pride Rock - is led by a group of zebra and cheetah dancers, two tribal elephant dancers and two tribal bird dancers. Simba stands atop Pride Rock while Nala roars and drums out the beat with her paw at the foot of the float. Above them, Mufasa's face is represented in a spinning sun design. The end of the parade is marked by two tribal zebras holding a rope.
The parade eventually stops and Mufasa's voice is heard telling Simba to take his place in the circle of life. The song "Circle of Life" begins to play and the dancers dance and leap around the floats. At the end, Simba roars and white doves are released from one of the floats, symbolizing hope and peace.
References[edit]
1.Jump up ^ Disneyland Presents The Lion King Celebration: VHS
2.Jump up ^ Disneyland Presents The Lion King Celebration: VHS
3.Jump up ^ Disneyland Presents The Lion King Celebration: VHS
4.Jump up ^ "'Betty LaDuke", Hanson Howard Gallery, (March, 2009),
http://hansonhowardgallery.com/content/artists/laduke/laduke_bio.html
5.Jump up ^ Disneyland Presents The Lion King Celebration: VHS


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The Lion King

 







 





 







 







 













 











 









 










 













 



Categories: Defunct amusement rides
Amusement rides by name
The Lion King
Former Walt Disney Parks and Resorts attractions
Walt Disney Parks and Resorts parades
Audio-Animatronic attractions
Disneyland
Amusement rides introduced in 1994
Amusement rides that closed in 1997



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This page was last modified on 2 August 2014 at 09:48.
Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License; additional terms may apply. By using this site, you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., a non-profit organization.
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 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Lion_King_Celebration












 

The Lion King Celebration
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search


The Lion King Celebration


[hide]Disneyland

Status
Closed

Opening date
June 1, 1994

Closing date
June 1, 1997

Replaced
Aladdin's Royal Caravan

Replaced by
Hercules' Victory Parade
 

General statistics

Attraction type
Parade

Theme
The Lion King

Floats
Six

The Lion King Celebration was a parade based on the animated film The Lion King. It was designed to tell story of Simba, the protagonist of The Lion King, as if it were a tale passed down in Africa for generations.[1] Its parade featured six floats designed around different aspects of Africa, dancers dressed in animal costumes and a Pride Rock float featuring Simba and Nala. The parade ran at Disneyland from June 1, 1994 to June 1, 1997, after which four of the floats were moved to Disney's Animal Kingdom for the Festival of the Lion King show.


Contents  [hide]
1 Production 1.1 Design 1.1.1 Production team


2 Plot
3 References


Production[edit]
During a typical show, a total of 89 cast members performed in The Lion King Celebration. This included 56 dancers, 12 puppeteers, 10 acrobatic pole dancers, 6 musicians and 5 remote control operators.[2]
The Lion King Celebration featured the first use of Audio-Animatronics in a Disneyland parade. It also featured the first use of "Puppetronics", a technique used to create the large, lifelike animal puppets featured on the floats.[3]
Design[edit]
The design of the parade had strong roots in traditional African artwork, featuring vibrant colors, tribal designs and dance routines based on traditional African dances.
African artist Betty LaDuke designed and painted a sculpture of three monkeys that sat behind Nala on the Pride Rock float.[4][5]
Production team[edit]

Role
Staff
Producer Nance Weenick
Production Manager Joey Michaels
Show Director Robert Ponce
Assistant Director/Senior Choreographer/African Dance Consultant Sylvia Hase
Art Director Steve Bass
Music Director Bruce Healy
Writer Tom Childs
Technical Director Ted Carlsson
Choreographer Mark Nordike
Costume Designer Alyja Clegg
Costumer Roseanne Yokoyama

Plot[edit]
Set to a mostly instrumental version of the song "I Just Can't Wait to Be King", the first characters to appear are two rhinoceroses, followed by tribal dancers and drummers and a float featuring Zazu and Rafiki with two giraffes. Zazu and Rafiki introduce the parade as it continues down Main Street, U.S.A..
A herd of gazelle dancers dressed in spandex costumes with hoods precede a float with tribal gazelle designs, pushed along by wildebeest dancers. They are followed by a group of tribal crane dancers, the elephant float and two remote-controlled crocodiles. The elephant float occasionally shoots a stream of water from its trunk. In the first year of the show, the larger "mother" elephant was preceded by a smaller "baby" elephant whose costume was similar to that of the previously mentioned rhinoceroses, only larger. Two pole dancers dressed in tribal bird costumes walk at the sides.
Leopard dancers dance around the Rain Forest float, which features monkey dancers on swings and Pumbaa on the back. Pumbaa talks to Timon, who follows behind chasing three remote-controlled bugs including a scorpion and a rhinoceros beetle.
Two tribal-bird pole dancers lead the Drum Dancer float, which features drummers, dancers and percussionists in colourful, vibrant tribal costumes.
The last float - Pride Rock - is led by a group of zebra and cheetah dancers, two tribal elephant dancers and two tribal bird dancers. Simba stands atop Pride Rock while Nala roars and drums out the beat with her paw at the foot of the float. Above them, Mufasa's face is represented in a spinning sun design. The end of the parade is marked by two tribal zebras holding a rope.
The parade eventually stops and Mufasa's voice is heard telling Simba to take his place in the circle of life. The song "Circle of Life" begins to play and the dancers dance and leap around the floats. At the end, Simba roars and white doves are released from one of the floats, symbolizing hope and peace.
References[edit]
1.Jump up ^ Disneyland Presents The Lion King Celebration: VHS
2.Jump up ^ Disneyland Presents The Lion King Celebration: VHS
3.Jump up ^ Disneyland Presents The Lion King Celebration: VHS
4.Jump up ^ "'Betty LaDuke", Hanson Howard Gallery, (March, 2009),
http://hansonhowardgallery.com/content/artists/laduke/laduke_bio.html
5.Jump up ^ Disneyland Presents The Lion King Celebration: VHS


[show]
v ·
 t ·
 e
 

The Lion King

 







 





 







 







 













 











 









 










 













 



Categories: Defunct amusement rides
Amusement rides by name
The Lion King
Former Walt Disney Parks and Resorts attractions
Walt Disney Parks and Resorts parades
Audio-Animatronic attractions
Disneyland
Amusement rides introduced in 1994
Amusement rides that closed in 1997



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This page was last modified on 2 August 2014 at 09:48.
Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License; additional terms may apply. By using this site, you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., a non-profit organization.
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 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Lion_King_Celebration










 

Festival of the Lion King
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search



 This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (October 2013)

Festival of the Lion King
Disney-Animal-Kingdom-Lion-King-8464.jpg

[hide]Disney's Animal Kingdom

Area
Camp Minnie Mickey (1998-2014)
Africa (2014-present)

Status
Operating

Opening date
April 22, 1998 (Camp Minnie-Mickey)
 June 1, 2014 (Africa) (reopened)

Closing date
January 5, 2014 (Camp Minnie-Mickey)
 


[hide]Hong Kong Disneyland

Area
Adventureland

Status
Operating

Opening date
September 12, 2005
 

General statistics

Attraction type
Musical

Theme
The Lion King

Festival of the Lion King, an original interpretation of the Disney animated film The Lion King, is a live stage musical performed in Disney's Animal Kingdom at Walt Disney World, Florida and in Adventureland at Hong Kong Disneyland. The show uses songs, dance, puppetry and visual effects to portray a tribal celebration in an African savanna setting filled with lions, elephants, giraffes, birds, zebras and gazelles. In this theater environment, Festival of the Lion King is a traveling celebration presented by Simba and his friends (including a band of four human singers). The show is in the form of a revue, and not a condensed version of either the film or Broadway show. The show features Elton John and Tim Rice's award-winning music from the movie.


Contents  [hide]
1 Disney's Animal Kingdom version
2 Hong Kong Disneyland version
3 Soundtrack
4 See also
5 References
6 External links


Disney's Animal Kingdom version[edit]

 

 An actress in the Warthog section of the performance at the Animal Kingdom.
The show is presented inside an enclosed theater in Disney's Animal Kingdom. Guests sit in four sections, each designated with an animal name: Warthog, Elephant, Giraffe and Lion. These animals are represented by large puppets on four parade-style floats, which were originally built for Disneyland's The Lion King Celebration parade. Guests are asked to make a noise corresponding to their animal at certain times during the show and children are sometimes pulled out of the audience to dance.The show is hosted by four performers dressed in costumes inspired by traditional African dress. Each has a Swahili name: Kiume (meaning "masculine and strong"), Nakawa (meaning "good-looking"), Kibibi (meaning "princess"), and Zawadi (meaning "the gift").

The story of the movie is not followed, being replaced instead with a circus style show featuring music from the films. Acts include acrobatic 'Tumble Monkeys', an Adagio (acrobatics) featuring performers dressed as birds Maji and Moto (Swahili for water and fire), a fire knife hyena, and an ensemble cast of dancers, puppeteers, and stilt walkers. The cast also performs annually for the Walt Disney World Christmas Day Parade which is filmed at the Magic Kingdom and is broadcast on Christmas Day on ABC.
A new themed land called Avatar Land (based on James Cameron's Avatar (2009 film) and its upcoming sequels) is replacing the Camp Minnie-Mickey area of the park. Camp Minnie-Mickey closed permanently on January 5th, 2014 so that construction could begin on Avatar Land. Because of Festival of the Lion King's popularity the show went into hiatus so Imagineers could build a new theater called the Harabe Theater in an unused area in the Africa section of the park (right behind the Tusker House Restaurant). After a year of construction the Harabe Theater was completed in May 2014. The show reopened on June 1st, 2014 in its newly built Harabe Theater location.
Hong Kong Disneyland version[edit]

 

 Musical at Hong Kong Disneyland
The show is featured in the "Theater in the Wild" in Adventureland. Similar to the theater setting in Disney's Animal Kingdom, guests sit in four different sections, each with an animal name: Warthog, Elephant, Giraffe and Lion. The show in Hong Kong has been arranged to a simplified version of the story of The Lion King along with the songs in the movie. The performance is mainly in English, but two actors dressed as monkeys summarize and translate Rafiki's lines into Cantonese in order to accommodate guests who do not speak English. Simplified Chinese subtitles, for Mainland Chinese visitors, are also projected onto the screens above each seating section. The show is presented to Simba by Rafiki (portrayed by a female actress, as in the Broadway musical) as a re-telling of Simba's life. Simba is represented by a large, elaborate puppet on a parade-style float decorated as a tribal-styled Pride Rock.

In contrast to the Simba of the Animal Kingdom production the puppet in this production wears red and black tribal bracelets and has braids in his mane.
Soundtrack[edit]



 
"Celebration Finale", from the soundtrack CD







Clip from "Celebration Finale (Hakuna Matata/Can You Feel the Love Tonight/Be Prepared/I Just Can't Wait to Be King/Circle of Life)".
 

Problems playing this file? See media help.
A soundtrack CD was released in 2001, titled "Festival of The Lion King (Disney's Animal Kingdom at Walt Disney World)"
Tracklisting:
1.Circle of Life - 1:40
2.I Just Can't Wait to Be King - 2:40
3.Hakuna Matata - 2:04
4.Tumble Monkeys (Sing, Sing, Sing/Playmates/Snake Charmer/Caravan/Hakuna Matata/Yes! We Have No Bananas/Hawaiian War Chant) - 3:56
5.Be Prepared - 3:00
6.Can You Feel the Love Tonight/Circle of Life (Medley) - 4:45
7.The Lion Sleeps Tonight - 2:28
8.Celebration Finale (Hakuna Matata/Can You Feel the Love Tonight/Be Prepared/I Just Can't Wait to Be King/Circle of Life) - 3:45
9.Circle of Life (Bows) - 0:34
10.I Just Can't Wait to Be King (Instrumental Reprise) - 2:34

See also[edit]
Disney's Animal Kingdom attraction and entertainment history
Hong Kong Disneyland attraction and entertainment history

References[edit]

External links[edit]
Walt Disney World Resort - Festival of the Lion King
HKDL Festival of the Lion King full show






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Festival of the Lion King
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search



 This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (October 2013)

Festival of the Lion King
Disney-Animal-Kingdom-Lion-King-8464.jpg

[hide]Disney's Animal Kingdom

Area
Camp Minnie Mickey (1998-2014)
Africa (2014-present)

Status
Operating

Opening date
April 22, 1998 (Camp Minnie-Mickey)
 June 1, 2014 (Africa) (reopened)

Closing date
January 5, 2014 (Camp Minnie-Mickey)
 


[hide]Hong Kong Disneyland

Area
Adventureland

Status
Operating

Opening date
September 12, 2005
 

General statistics

Attraction type
Musical

Theme
The Lion King

Festival of the Lion King, an original interpretation of the Disney animated film The Lion King, is a live stage musical performed in Disney's Animal Kingdom at Walt Disney World, Florida and in Adventureland at Hong Kong Disneyland. The show uses songs, dance, puppetry and visual effects to portray a tribal celebration in an African savanna setting filled with lions, elephants, giraffes, birds, zebras and gazelles. In this theater environment, Festival of the Lion King is a traveling celebration presented by Simba and his friends (including a band of four human singers). The show is in the form of a revue, and not a condensed version of either the film or Broadway show. The show features Elton John and Tim Rice's award-winning music from the movie.


Contents  [hide]
1 Disney's Animal Kingdom version
2 Hong Kong Disneyland version
3 Soundtrack
4 See also
5 References
6 External links


Disney's Animal Kingdom version[edit]

 

 An actress in the Warthog section of the performance at the Animal Kingdom.
The show is presented inside an enclosed theater in Disney's Animal Kingdom. Guests sit in four sections, each designated with an animal name: Warthog, Elephant, Giraffe and Lion. These animals are represented by large puppets on four parade-style floats, which were originally built for Disneyland's The Lion King Celebration parade. Guests are asked to make a noise corresponding to their animal at certain times during the show and children are sometimes pulled out of the audience to dance.The show is hosted by four performers dressed in costumes inspired by traditional African dress. Each has a Swahili name: Kiume (meaning "masculine and strong"), Nakawa (meaning "good-looking"), Kibibi (meaning "princess"), and Zawadi (meaning "the gift").

The story of the movie is not followed, being replaced instead with a circus style show featuring music from the films. Acts include acrobatic 'Tumble Monkeys', an Adagio (acrobatics) featuring performers dressed as birds Maji and Moto (Swahili for water and fire), a fire knife hyena, and an ensemble cast of dancers, puppeteers, and stilt walkers. The cast also performs annually for the Walt Disney World Christmas Day Parade which is filmed at the Magic Kingdom and is broadcast on Christmas Day on ABC.
A new themed land called Avatar Land (based on James Cameron's Avatar (2009 film) and its upcoming sequels) is replacing the Camp Minnie-Mickey area of the park. Camp Minnie-Mickey closed permanently on January 5th, 2014 so that construction could begin on Avatar Land. Because of Festival of the Lion King's popularity the show went into hiatus so Imagineers could build a new theater called the Harabe Theater in an unused area in the Africa section of the park (right behind the Tusker House Restaurant). After a year of construction the Harabe Theater was completed in May 2014. The show reopened on June 1st, 2014 in its newly built Harabe Theater location.
Hong Kong Disneyland version[edit]

 

 Musical at Hong Kong Disneyland
The show is featured in the "Theater in the Wild" in Adventureland. Similar to the theater setting in Disney's Animal Kingdom, guests sit in four different sections, each with an animal name: Warthog, Elephant, Giraffe and Lion. The show in Hong Kong has been arranged to a simplified version of the story of The Lion King along with the songs in the movie. The performance is mainly in English, but two actors dressed as monkeys summarize and translate Rafiki's lines into Cantonese in order to accommodate guests who do not speak English. Simplified Chinese subtitles, for Mainland Chinese visitors, are also projected onto the screens above each seating section. The show is presented to Simba by Rafiki (portrayed by a female actress, as in the Broadway musical) as a re-telling of Simba's life. Simba is represented by a large, elaborate puppet on a parade-style float decorated as a tribal-styled Pride Rock.

In contrast to the Simba of the Animal Kingdom production the puppet in this production wears red and black tribal bracelets and has braids in his mane.
Soundtrack[edit]



 
"Celebration Finale", from the soundtrack CD







Clip from "Celebration Finale (Hakuna Matata/Can You Feel the Love Tonight/Be Prepared/I Just Can't Wait to Be King/Circle of Life)".
 

Problems playing this file? See media help.
A soundtrack CD was released in 2001, titled "Festival of The Lion King (Disney's Animal Kingdom at Walt Disney World)"
Tracklisting:
1.Circle of Life - 1:40
2.I Just Can't Wait to Be King - 2:40
3.Hakuna Matata - 2:04
4.Tumble Monkeys (Sing, Sing, Sing/Playmates/Snake Charmer/Caravan/Hakuna Matata/Yes! We Have No Bananas/Hawaiian War Chant) - 3:56
5.Be Prepared - 3:00
6.Can You Feel the Love Tonight/Circle of Life (Medley) - 4:45
7.The Lion Sleeps Tonight - 2:28
8.Celebration Finale (Hakuna Matata/Can You Feel the Love Tonight/Be Prepared/I Just Can't Wait to Be King/Circle of Life) - 3:45
9.Circle of Life (Bows) - 0:34
10.I Just Can't Wait to Be King (Instrumental Reprise) - 2:34

See also[edit]
Disney's Animal Kingdom attraction and entertainment history
Hong Kong Disneyland attraction and entertainment history

References[edit]

External links[edit]
Walt Disney World Resort - Festival of the Lion King
HKDL Festival of the Lion King full show






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Categories: Defunct amusement rides
Amusement rides by name
The Lion King
Walt Disney Parks and Resorts entertainment
Hong Kong Disneyland
Adventureland (Disney)
Camp Minnie-Mickey
Africa (Disney)
Amusement rides introduced in 1998
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The Legend of the Lion King
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search



 This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (August 2012)

The Legend of the Lion King


[hide]Magic Kingdom

Area
Fantasyland

Status
Closed

Opening date
July 8, 1994

Closing date
February 23, 2002

Replaced
Magic Journeys (1987–1993)

Replaced by
Mickey's PhilharMagic
 


[hide]Disneyland Paris

Area
Discoveryland

Status
Closed

Opening date
June 26, 2004

Closing date
2009
 

General statistics

The Legend of The Lion King is the name of former attractions hosted at both Magic Kingdom in Walt Disney World in Florida and in Disneyland Paris. Although both shows were inspired by the hit Disney film The Lion King they took on two different performance styles. The Legend of the Lion King Show at Magic Kingdom in Walt Disney World Resort was a stage performance retelling the story of the film using life size puppets, while the show at Disneyland Paris was a Broadway inspired performance that used human actors and featured popular songs from the movie.[1] Even though neither shows exists anymore, curious fans can see footage from the shows on internet and note the differences.


Contents  [hide]
1 Legend of the Lion King at Walt Disney World
2 Legend of the Lion King at Disneyland Paris
3 References
4 See also


Legend of the Lion King at Walt Disney World[edit]
The show debuted in Walt Disney World's Magic Kingdom on July 8, 1994; taking place in the same theater that is currently being used for Mickey's PhilharMagic show in Fantasyland. The Legend of The Lion King replaced the 3-D movie Magic Journeys, which was shown in the Fantasyland Theater for 6 years from December 1987 through December 1993.[2] This show featured what Disney describes as “Disney Humanimals” which are “larger-than-life figures that look just like their animated film counterparts”.[3] The Mufasa Disney Humanimal measured seven feet long from tail to tip, six feet tall, and was perched upon an 18-foot Pride Rock that rose from below the stage.[3] The stage for show was 125-feet wide and was bigger than the seating area in order to permit the use of giant sets.[3] The attraction closed on February 23, 2002, to be replaced by Mickey's PhilharMagic.
Legend of the Lion King at Disneyland Paris[edit]
The Legend of the Lion King at Disneyland Paris ran from 2004 to 2009 and played at the Videopolis Theater located in Discoveryland.[4] This Broadway style show has similar flavors of the hit musical and the Festival of the Lion King at the Disney's Animal Kingdom Park with its elaborate costumes and dance numbers. The show ran 30 minutes long had performances in both English and French.[5]
References[edit]
1.Jump up ^ The Lion King (franchise)
2.Jump up ^ Kurtti, Jeff (1996). Since the World Began: Walt Disney World, The First 25 Years. New York, New York: Hyperion. p. 65. ISBN 0-7868-6248-3
3.^ Jump up to: a b c
http://disneyparks.disney.go.com/blog/2011/07/vintage-walt-disney-world-legend-of-the-lion-king/
4.Jump up ^ Videopolis (Disneyland Paris)
5.Jump up ^
http://www.magicalkingdoms.com/dlp/parks/lolk.html
See also[edit]
http://www.dlrpmagic.com/guidebook/disneyland-park/entertainment/thelegendofthelionking/


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The Legend of the Lion King
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search



 This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (August 2012)

The Legend of the Lion King


[hide]Magic Kingdom

Area
Fantasyland

Status
Closed

Opening date
July 8, 1994

Closing date
February 23, 2002

Replaced
Magic Journeys (1987–1993)

Replaced by
Mickey's PhilharMagic
 


[hide]Disneyland Paris

Area
Discoveryland

Status
Closed

Opening date
June 26, 2004

Closing date
2009
 

General statistics

The Legend of The Lion King is the name of former attractions hosted at both Magic Kingdom in Walt Disney World in Florida and in Disneyland Paris. Although both shows were inspired by the hit Disney film The Lion King they took on two different performance styles. The Legend of the Lion King Show at Magic Kingdom in Walt Disney World Resort was a stage performance retelling the story of the film using life size puppets, while the show at Disneyland Paris was a Broadway inspired performance that used human actors and featured popular songs from the movie.[1] Even though neither shows exists anymore, curious fans can see footage from the shows on internet and note the differences.


Contents  [hide]
1 Legend of the Lion King at Walt Disney World
2 Legend of the Lion King at Disneyland Paris
3 References
4 See also


Legend of the Lion King at Walt Disney World[edit]
The show debuted in Walt Disney World's Magic Kingdom on July 8, 1994; taking place in the same theater that is currently being used for Mickey's PhilharMagic show in Fantasyland. The Legend of The Lion King replaced the 3-D movie Magic Journeys, which was shown in the Fantasyland Theater for 6 years from December 1987 through December 1993.[2] This show featured what Disney describes as “Disney Humanimals” which are “larger-than-life figures that look just like their animated film counterparts”.[3] The Mufasa Disney Humanimal measured seven feet long from tail to tip, six feet tall, and was perched upon an 18-foot Pride Rock that rose from below the stage.[3] The stage for show was 125-feet wide and was bigger than the seating area in order to permit the use of giant sets.[3] The attraction closed on February 23, 2002, to be replaced by Mickey's PhilharMagic.
Legend of the Lion King at Disneyland Paris[edit]
The Legend of the Lion King at Disneyland Paris ran from 2004 to 2009 and played at the Videopolis Theater located in Discoveryland.[4] This Broadway style show has similar flavors of the hit musical and the Festival of the Lion King at the Disney's Animal Kingdom Park with its elaborate costumes and dance numbers. The show ran 30 minutes long had performances in both English and French.[5]
References[edit]
1.Jump up ^ The Lion King (franchise)
2.Jump up ^ Kurtti, Jeff (1996). Since the World Began: Walt Disney World, The First 25 Years. New York, New York: Hyperion. p. 65. ISBN 0-7868-6248-3
3.^ Jump up to: a b c
http://disneyparks.disney.go.com/blog/2011/07/vintage-walt-disney-world-legend-of-the-lion-king/
4.Jump up ^ Videopolis (Disneyland Paris)
5.Jump up ^
http://www.magicalkingdoms.com/dlp/parks/lolk.html
See also[edit]
http://www.dlrpmagic.com/guidebook/disneyland-park/entertainment/thelegendofthelionking/


[show]
v ·
 t ·
 e
 

The Lion King

 







 





 







 







 













 











 









 










 













 



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Amusement rides by name
The Lion King
Amusement rides introduced in 1994
Amusement rides that closed in 2002
Amusement rides introduced in 2004
Amusement rides that closed in 2009






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Circle of Life: An Environmental Fable
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search

This article is about the edutainment film shown at Epcot. For the song, see Circle of Life.


 This article includes a list of references, related reading or external links, but its sources remain unclear because it lacks inline citations. Please improve this article by introducing more precise citations. (November 2010)

Circle of Life: An Environmental Fable
Circle of Life - An Environmental Fable.jpg

[hide]Epcot

Area
The Land pavilion

Coordinates
28°22′27.76″N 81°33′7.94″WCoordinates: 28°22′27.76″N 81°33′7.94″W

Status
Operating

Opening date
January 21, 1995
 

General statistics

Attraction type
Theater

Designer
Walt Disney Imagineering

Audience capacity
428 per show

Duration
12:22

Sponsor
Nestlé (1995-2009)

Handicapped/disabled access Wheelchair accessible
 

Assistive listening icon.svg Assistive listening available
 

Circle of Life: An Environmental Fable is a 70 mm film shown in the Harvest Theater in The Land pavilion at Epcot in Walt Disney World, Orlando, Florida. It opened on January 21, 1995 replacing Symbiosis. Compared to its predecessor, Circle of Life is more an edutainment attraction and more kid-friendly.
In the film Timon and Pumbaa from The Lion King are chopping down trees and clogging up rivers to build the Hakuna Matata Lakeside Village. Simba comes to them and explains how their actions are harmful to nature. This lesson is explained with live-action footage, some left over from Symbiosis.


Contents  [hide]
1 Production
2 Plot
3 Cast
4 Critical reception
5 References
6 See also
7 External links


Production[edit]
WDWNT the Magazine Issue explained "The incredibly boring Symbiosis film would be replaced in 1995 with “Circle of Life: An Environmental Fable.” Footage was recycled from Symbiosis into the new film, but by adding animated sequences and a character-driven narrative to the film (inspired by The Lion King)", adding "The 1990s were a decade in which conservation became a hot-button topic, and Circle of Life was there to keep Epcot’s finger on the pulse, so much so that the film holds up quite well and covers environmental issues still facing us 17 years later. "[1]
Plot[edit]
The film opens with Mufasa's voice saying that each and every one of us is connected in the great circle of life. After that comes a montage of animals and some clips left over from the previous attraction, Symbiosis, to the song Circle of Life. The main story focuses on Simba. Simba, now king of the Pride Lands sees Timon and Pumbaa clogging up rivers to build a non-ecological resort called Hakuna Matata Lakeside Village. Simba shows them that other creatures nearby need water as well, but Timon and Pumbaa see their plan as compensation. Simba decides to show them how another creature (man) is similarly forgetting how each and every one of us is connected in the great circle of life. He explains to them that at first, their amounts were small, so they only took what they needed to survive, which at that time wasn't much. However, as human population increased, necessities for living space, power, and food in turn increased. Timon and Pumbaa are initially excited by man's developments, but Simba shows them the price that came with the humans' necessities. He explains that humans have also caused harm to the environment with their excessive needs through activity such as deforestation, endangerment of species, and pollution. He says that once humans realized what they were destroying, they began to repair the damages through recycling, alternative energy sources, and conservation programs. He explains that humans have also helped other creatures in nature by studying them to learn their needs. Touched, Timon and Pumbaa decide to help the humans give back to nature, but Simba shows them that they already can at home. Timon and Pumbaa unclog the rivers, thus giving the water back to the other creatures on the savannah. The film ends with a shorter montage to the end of the title song.
Cast[edit]
James Earl Jones as Mufasa
Cam Clarke as Simba
Nathan Lane as Timon
Ernie Sabella as Pumbaa
Carmen Twillie as Circle of Life singer

Critical reception[edit]
Total Orlando described it as "light and easy...amusing and enjoyable...'edutainment'", adding "10 out of 10 to Disney for making a fairly dull subject seem fun". It noted it was a fun way to get kids interested in the environment and concluded "it's not on our 'must see list' but it's ok if you are in that area and you've done most of the main parts of Epcot". The site awarded the short film 3/5 stars.[2]
References[edit]
1.Jump up ^ http://wdwnt.com/magazine/WDWNTtheMagazineIssue19.pdf
2.Jump up ^ http://www.totalorlando.com/parkshowsandexhibits-8-324-The_Circle_of_Life.html
See also[edit]
Epcot attraction and entertainment history

External links[edit]
Walt Disney World Resort - Circle of Life
Circle of Life: An Environmental Fable at the Internet Movie Database
"Circle of Life". WDWHistory.com. Retrieved April 11, 2006.



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Circle of Life: An Environmental Fable
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search

This article is about the edutainment film shown at Epcot. For the song, see Circle of Life.


 This article includes a list of references, related reading or external links, but its sources remain unclear because it lacks inline citations. Please improve this article by introducing more precise citations. (November 2010)

Circle of Life: An Environmental Fable
Circle of Life - An Environmental Fable.jpg

[hide]Epcot

Area
The Land pavilion

Coordinates
28°22′27.76″N 81°33′7.94″WCoordinates: 28°22′27.76″N 81°33′7.94″W

Status
Operating

Opening date
January 21, 1995
 

General statistics

Attraction type
Theater

Designer
Walt Disney Imagineering

Audience capacity
428 per show

Duration
12:22

Sponsor
Nestlé (1995-2009)

Handicapped/disabled access Wheelchair accessible
 

Assistive listening icon.svg Assistive listening available
 

Circle of Life: An Environmental Fable is a 70 mm film shown in the Harvest Theater in The Land pavilion at Epcot in Walt Disney World, Orlando, Florida. It opened on January 21, 1995 replacing Symbiosis. Compared to its predecessor, Circle of Life is more an edutainment attraction and more kid-friendly.
In the film Timon and Pumbaa from The Lion King are chopping down trees and clogging up rivers to build the Hakuna Matata Lakeside Village. Simba comes to them and explains how their actions are harmful to nature. This lesson is explained with live-action footage, some left over from Symbiosis.


Contents  [hide]
1 Production
2 Plot
3 Cast
4 Critical reception
5 References
6 See also
7 External links


Production[edit]
WDWNT the Magazine Issue explained "The incredibly boring Symbiosis film would be replaced in 1995 with “Circle of Life: An Environmental Fable.” Footage was recycled from Symbiosis into the new film, but by adding animated sequences and a character-driven narrative to the film (inspired by The Lion King)", adding "The 1990s were a decade in which conservation became a hot-button topic, and Circle of Life was there to keep Epcot’s finger on the pulse, so much so that the film holds up quite well and covers environmental issues still facing us 17 years later. "[1]
Plot[edit]
The film opens with Mufasa's voice saying that each and every one of us is connected in the great circle of life. After that comes a montage of animals and some clips left over from the previous attraction, Symbiosis, to the song Circle of Life. The main story focuses on Simba. Simba, now king of the Pride Lands sees Timon and Pumbaa clogging up rivers to build a non-ecological resort called Hakuna Matata Lakeside Village. Simba shows them that other creatures nearby need water as well, but Timon and Pumbaa see their plan as compensation. Simba decides to show them how another creature (man) is similarly forgetting how each and every one of us is connected in the great circle of life. He explains to them that at first, their amounts were small, so they only took what they needed to survive, which at that time wasn't much. However, as human population increased, necessities for living space, power, and food in turn increased. Timon and Pumbaa are initially excited by man's developments, but Simba shows them the price that came with the humans' necessities. He explains that humans have also caused harm to the environment with their excessive needs through activity such as deforestation, endangerment of species, and pollution. He says that once humans realized what they were destroying, they began to repair the damages through recycling, alternative energy sources, and conservation programs. He explains that humans have also helped other creatures in nature by studying them to learn their needs. Touched, Timon and Pumbaa decide to help the humans give back to nature, but Simba shows them that they already can at home. Timon and Pumbaa unclog the rivers, thus giving the water back to the other creatures on the savannah. The film ends with a shorter montage to the end of the title song.
Cast[edit]
James Earl Jones as Mufasa
Cam Clarke as Simba
Nathan Lane as Timon
Ernie Sabella as Pumbaa
Carmen Twillie as Circle of Life singer

Critical reception[edit]
Total Orlando described it as "light and easy...amusing and enjoyable...'edutainment'", adding "10 out of 10 to Disney for making a fairly dull subject seem fun". It noted it was a fun way to get kids interested in the environment and concluded "it's not on our 'must see list' but it's ok if you are in that area and you've done most of the main parts of Epcot". The site awarded the short film 3/5 stars.[2]
References[edit]
1.Jump up ^ http://wdwnt.com/magazine/WDWNTtheMagazineIssue19.pdf
2.Jump up ^ http://www.totalorlando.com/parkshowsandexhibits-8-324-The_Circle_of_Life.html
See also[edit]
Epcot attraction and entertainment history

External links[edit]
Walt Disney World Resort - Circle of Life
Circle of Life: An Environmental Fable at the Internet Movie Database
"Circle of Life". WDWHistory.com. Retrieved April 11, 2006.



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Epcot

 







 


















 



 
















 



 














 








 



Categories: Amusement rides by name
Amusement rides introduced in 1995
The Lion King
Walt Disney Parks and Resorts attractions
Epcot
Films with live action and animation
Environmental films
Amusement rides based on film franchises
Walt Disney Parks and Resorts films
Future World (Epcot)








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The Lion King 1½ (video game)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search



 This article needs more links to other articles to help integrate it into the encyclopedia. Please help improve this article by adding links that are relevant to the context within the existing text. (August 2014)
The Lion King 1½ is a 2003 Game Boy Advance video game based on the film The Lion King 1½, the third entry in The Lion King film series. It was developed by Vicarious Visions and published by Disney Interactive on September 30, 2003.
Critical reception[edit]
On Metacritic, the game has a rating of 64% based on 4 reviews.[1]
GameZone said "Teamwork and well-balanced gameplay put kids at the controls of another enjoyable Disney romp".[1] Nintendojo wrote "The Lion King 1.5 isn’t a bad game. I actually thought it was a lot of fun. It is well-animated and entertaining, but it was just unforgivably easy".[1] GBA Central said "The bottom line is that the title caters more to children than does to adults and it presents some great fun for any child. If you are in need of a challenge and something different, The Lion King 1½ may not satisfy."[1] Nintendo Power wrote "Intuitive play control and simple level design make the game appropriate for players of all skill levels".[1]
References[edit]
1.^ Jump up to: a b c d e "Disney's The Lion King 1½ for Game Boy Advance Reviews - Metacritic". metacritic.com. Retrieved 2014-09-01.


[hide]
v ·
 t ·
 e
 

The Lion King

 

Films
The Lion King (1994) ·
 The Lion King II: Simba's Pride (1998) ·
 The Lion King 1½ (2004)
 
 

Theater
The Lion King (1997)
 
 

Television and short films
Timon & Pumbaa (1995-9) ·
 Disney's House of Mouse (2001-3) ·
 Wild About Safety
 
 

Characters
Simba ·
 Timon and Pumbaa ·
 Scar
 
 

Music


The Lion King (inspired by)
"Circle of Life" ·
 "I Just Can't Wait to Be King" ·
 "Be Prepared" ·
 "Hakuna Matata" ·
 "Can You Feel the Love Tonight"
 
 

The Lion King II and 1½
"He Lives in You" ·
 "We Are One" ·
 "My Lullaby" ·
 "Upendi" ·
 "Not One of Us" ·
 "Love Will Find a Way" ·
 "Digga Tunnah"
 
 

The Lion King musical
"The Morning Report" ·
 "Endless Night" ·
 "The Madness of King Scar" ·
 "Shadowland"
 

 

Video games
The Lion King (1994) ·
 Disney's Animated Storybook: The Lion King (1994) ·
 Disney's The Lion King Activity Center (1995) ·
 Timon & Pumbaa's Jungle Games (1996) ·
 The Lion King: Simba's Mighty Adventure (2000) ·
 The Lion King 1½ (2003)
 
 

Attractions
Circle of Life: An Environmental Fable ·
 The Legend of the Lion King ·
 Festival of the Lion King ·
 The Lion King Celebration ·
 Hakuna Matata Restaurant ·
 Affection Section ·
 Habitat Habit!: The Lion King ·
 Wildlife Express Train
 

 



Categories: Disney video game stubs
Game Boy Advance








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The Lion King 1½ (video game)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search



 This article needs more links to other articles to help integrate it into the encyclopedia. Please help improve this article by adding links that are relevant to the context within the existing text. (August 2014)
The Lion King 1½ is a 2003 Game Boy Advance video game based on the film The Lion King 1½, the third entry in The Lion King film series. It was developed by Vicarious Visions and published by Disney Interactive on September 30, 2003.
Critical reception[edit]
On Metacritic, the game has a rating of 64% based on 4 reviews.[1]
GameZone said "Teamwork and well-balanced gameplay put kids at the controls of another enjoyable Disney romp".[1] Nintendojo wrote "The Lion King 1.5 isn’t a bad game. I actually thought it was a lot of fun. It is well-animated and entertaining, but it was just unforgivably easy".[1] GBA Central said "The bottom line is that the title caters more to children than does to adults and it presents some great fun for any child. If you are in need of a challenge and something different, The Lion King 1½ may not satisfy."[1] Nintendo Power wrote "Intuitive play control and simple level design make the game appropriate for players of all skill levels".[1]
References[edit]
1.^ Jump up to: a b c d e "Disney's The Lion King 1½ for Game Boy Advance Reviews - Metacritic". metacritic.com. Retrieved 2014-09-01.


[hide]
v ·
 t ·
 e
 

The Lion King

 

Films
The Lion King (1994) ·
 The Lion King II: Simba's Pride (1998) ·
 The Lion King 1½ (2004)
 
 

Theater
The Lion King (1997)
 
 

Television and short films
Timon & Pumbaa (1995-9) ·
 Disney's House of Mouse (2001-3) ·
 Wild About Safety
 
 

Characters
Simba ·
 Timon and Pumbaa ·
 Scar
 
 

Music


The Lion King (inspired by)
"Circle of Life" ·
 "I Just Can't Wait to Be King" ·
 "Be Prepared" ·
 "Hakuna Matata" ·
 "Can You Feel the Love Tonight"
 
 

The Lion King II and 1½
"He Lives in You" ·
 "We Are One" ·
 "My Lullaby" ·
 "Upendi" ·
 "Not One of Us" ·
 "Love Will Find a Way" ·
 "Digga Tunnah"
 
 

The Lion King musical
"The Morning Report" ·
 "Endless Night" ·
 "The Madness of King Scar" ·
 "Shadowland"
 

 

Video games
The Lion King (1994) ·
 Disney's Animated Storybook: The Lion King (1994) ·
 Disney's The Lion King Activity Center (1995) ·
 Timon & Pumbaa's Jungle Games (1996) ·
 The Lion King: Simba's Mighty Adventure (2000) ·
 The Lion King 1½ (2003)
 
 

Attractions
Circle of Life: An Environmental Fable ·
 The Legend of the Lion King ·
 Festival of the Lion King ·
 The Lion King Celebration ·
 Hakuna Matata Restaurant ·
 Affection Section ·
 Habitat Habit!: The Lion King ·
 Wildlife Express Train
 

 



Categories: Disney video game stubs
Game Boy Advance








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The Lion King: Simba's Mighty Adventure
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search



 
[hide]This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page.




The topic of this article may not meet Wikipedia's notability guidelines for products and services.
 (August 2009)





This article needs additional citations for verification.  (August 2009)





This article may be written from a fan's point of view, rather than a neutral point of view.  (August 2009)


 


The Lion King: Simba's Mighty Adventure
Gba-tlk-sma.jpg
North American Game Boy Color cover art
Developer(s) Activision, Torus Games, Paradox Development
Publisher(s) Disney Interactive
Platform(s) Game Boy Color, PlayStation
Release date(s) PlayStation NA December 22, 2000
EU March 9, 2001
Game Boy Color NA December 29, 2000
EU March 9, 2001

Genre(s) Platform game, Adventure
Mode(s) Single player
Distribution CD-ROM

The Lion King: Simba′s Mighty Adventure is a video game based on Walt Disney Pictures′s animated film The Lion King. The title was published by Activision in 2000, and was released on Game Boy Color and PlayStation. Unlike the previous The Lion King video game, it adhered more closely to the events in the film and the storyline carried on into The Lion King II: Simba's Pride, with Simba having to battle his evil uncle Scar, rescue his daughter Kiara (the main protagonist from The Lion King II: Simba's Pride), and finally battle Zira.
This game was the only console-based platform game to involve The Lion King II: Simba's Pride. All other games based on the title were educational or puzzle games and were released on the PC.


Contents  [hide]
1 Gameplay 1.1 Game Boy Color
1.2 PlayStation

2 Graphics and sound 2.1 Game Boy Color
2.2 PlayStation

3 Reception
4 References


Gameplay[edit]
The game's gameplay varied between the two consoles.
Game Boy Color[edit]
The game is mostly a side-scrolling platform game with occasional levels where the camera is top-down. The gameplay is very similar to the first The Lion King video game, in which the player takes control of Simba and must leap and run between platforms while fighting enemies and avoiding pitfalls. During levels Simba can collect pawprint-shaped tokens which add to the overall score.
PlayStation[edit]
Due to the PlayStation console's 3D graphics capabilities the gameplay became slightly more varied. Simba's capabilities are identical to the first The Lion King video game in which he can growl, leap, roll and run.
Graphics and sound[edit]
Game Boy Color[edit]
In the Game Boy Color version of the game there was only one piece of music used on every level. Some of the animation for both adult Simba and cub Simba was recycled from the previous The Lion King video game.
PlayStation[edit]
In the PlayStation version, voices, music and sound effects from the film were used. Clips from the film are placed between levels although many of the lines were redubbed by other Lion King related actors, including but not limited to Cam Clarke, Jim Cummings, and Kevin Schon.
Reception[edit]
The PlayStation release of the game generally received good reviews but was criticized for being too short and for repetitive level designs.[1]
References[edit]
1.Jump up ^ "The Lion King: Simba's Mighty Adventure On GameVortex.com". Retrieved 2009-11-06.



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The Lion King

 







 





 







 







 













 











 









 










 













 



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The Lion King: Simba's Mighty Adventure
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search



 
[hide]This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page.




The topic of this article may not meet Wikipedia's notability guidelines for products and services.
 (August 2009)





This article needs additional citations for verification.  (August 2009)





This article may be written from a fan's point of view, rather than a neutral point of view.  (August 2009)


 


The Lion King: Simba's Mighty Adventure
Gba-tlk-sma.jpg
North American Game Boy Color cover art
Developer(s) Activision, Torus Games, Paradox Development
Publisher(s) Disney Interactive
Platform(s) Game Boy Color, PlayStation
Release date(s) PlayStation NA December 22, 2000
EU March 9, 2001
Game Boy Color NA December 29, 2000
EU March 9, 2001

Genre(s) Platform game, Adventure
Mode(s) Single player
Distribution CD-ROM

The Lion King: Simba′s Mighty Adventure is a video game based on Walt Disney Pictures′s animated film The Lion King. The title was published by Activision in 2000, and was released on Game Boy Color and PlayStation. Unlike the previous The Lion King video game, it adhered more closely to the events in the film and the storyline carried on into The Lion King II: Simba's Pride, with Simba having to battle his evil uncle Scar, rescue his daughter Kiara (the main protagonist from The Lion King II: Simba's Pride), and finally battle Zira.
This game was the only console-based platform game to involve The Lion King II: Simba's Pride. All other games based on the title were educational or puzzle games and were released on the PC.


Contents  [hide]
1 Gameplay 1.1 Game Boy Color
1.2 PlayStation

2 Graphics and sound 2.1 Game Boy Color
2.2 PlayStation

3 Reception
4 References


Gameplay[edit]
The game's gameplay varied between the two consoles.
Game Boy Color[edit]
The game is mostly a side-scrolling platform game with occasional levels where the camera is top-down. The gameplay is very similar to the first The Lion King video game, in which the player takes control of Simba and must leap and run between platforms while fighting enemies and avoiding pitfalls. During levels Simba can collect pawprint-shaped tokens which add to the overall score.
PlayStation[edit]
Due to the PlayStation console's 3D graphics capabilities the gameplay became slightly more varied. Simba's capabilities are identical to the first The Lion King video game in which he can growl, leap, roll and run.
Graphics and sound[edit]
Game Boy Color[edit]
In the Game Boy Color version of the game there was only one piece of music used on every level. Some of the animation for both adult Simba and cub Simba was recycled from the previous The Lion King video game.
PlayStation[edit]
In the PlayStation version, voices, music and sound effects from the film were used. Clips from the film are placed between levels although many of the lines were redubbed by other Lion King related actors, including but not limited to Cam Clarke, Jim Cummings, and Kevin Schon.
Reception[edit]
The PlayStation release of the game generally received good reviews but was criticized for being too short and for repetitive level designs.[1]
References[edit]
1.Jump up ^ "The Lion King: Simba's Mighty Adventure On GameVortex.com". Retrieved 2009-11-06.



[show]
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The Lion King

 







 





 







 







 













 











 









 










 













 



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Video games set in Africa
Platform games










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Timon & Pumbaa's Jungle Games
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search



 
[hide]This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page.




The topic of this article may not meet Wikipedia's notability guidelines for products and services.
 (August 2009)



Question book-new.svg

This article does not cite any references or sources.  (November 2006)


 


Timon & Pumbaa's Jungle Games
Timon & Pumbaa's Jungle Games Coverart.png

Developer(s) Tiertex (SNES)
7th Level (PC)
Publisher(s) THQ (SNES)
Disney Interactive (PC)
Platform(s) Super NES, Microsoft Windows
Release date(s) Windows
 December 15, 1995
SNES
NA 1997
PAL March 26, 1998

Genre(s) Party
Mode(s) Single player, multiplayer
Distribution 12-megabit ROM Cartridge, CD-ROM

Timon & Pumbaa's Jungle Games is a Super NES and PC (released on PC under the Disney Gamebreak brand) game.
Summary[edit]
The game contains five mini-games that feature Timon, Pumbaa and other jungle animals from The Lion King. The object in this game is to have fun while Timon and Pumbaa entertain the player with glimpses of jungle living, especially when certain mini-games require the player to consume insects.
The games are: Jungle Pinball (self-explanatory), Burper (a shooter type game, using Pumbaa to belch gas), Hippo Hop (concept similar to Frogger), Bug Drop (based on Puyo Puyo), and Slingshooter (a slingshot game) accessible directly from the menu.
The PC version featured a full voiceover, complete with humorous introductions to games. The SNES version lacks Bug Drop (as it was released as a stand-alone cart in the form of Kirby's Avalanche) and does not feature the voiceovers, but has some sound effects from the PC version intact, although in lower quality.
See also[edit]
List of Disney video games by genre



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Categories: The Lion King video games
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Timon & Pumbaa's Jungle Games
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Timon & Pumbaa's Jungle Games
Timon & Pumbaa's Jungle Games Coverart.png

Developer(s) Tiertex (SNES)
7th Level (PC)
Publisher(s) THQ (SNES)
Disney Interactive (PC)
Platform(s) Super NES, Microsoft Windows
Release date(s) Windows
 December 15, 1995
SNES
NA 1997
PAL March 26, 1998

Genre(s) Party
Mode(s) Single player, multiplayer
Distribution 12-megabit ROM Cartridge, CD-ROM

Timon & Pumbaa's Jungle Games is a Super NES and PC (released on PC under the Disney Gamebreak brand) game.
Summary[edit]
The game contains five mini-games that feature Timon, Pumbaa and other jungle animals from The Lion King. The object in this game is to have fun while Timon and Pumbaa entertain the player with glimpses of jungle living, especially when certain mini-games require the player to consume insects.
The games are: Jungle Pinball (self-explanatory), Burper (a shooter type game, using Pumbaa to belch gas), Hippo Hop (concept similar to Frogger), Bug Drop (based on Puyo Puyo), and Slingshooter (a slingshot game) accessible directly from the menu.
The PC version featured a full voiceover, complete with humorous introductions to games. The SNES version lacks Bug Drop (as it was released as a stand-alone cart in the form of Kirby's Avalanche) and does not feature the voiceovers, but has some sound effects from the PC version intact, although in lower quality.
See also[edit]
List of Disney video games by genre



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Categories: The Lion King video games
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The Lion King (video game)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search



 This article's tone or style may not reflect the encyclopedic tone used on Wikipedia. See Wikipedia's guide to writing better articles for suggestions. (December 2007)

[hide]The Lion King
The Lion King
Cover art (Sega Genesis)

Developer(s) Westwood Studios, Inc., Virgin Interactive, Dark Technologies
Publisher(s) Virgin Interactive, Sega, Walt Disney Computer Software
Director(s) Louis Castle
Producer(s) Louis Castle
 Patrick Gilmore
 Paul Curasi
Designer(s) Seth Mendelsohn
Programmer(s) Barry Green
 Rob Povey
Artist(s) John Fiorito
 Alex Schaeffer
 Christina Vann
 Ann-Bettina Colace
Composer(s) Matt Furniss (Mega Drive/Genesis)
Frank Klepacki
 Dwight Okahara
 Patrick Collins (SNES)
Platform(s) Sega Mega Drive/Genesis, Super NES, NES, Game Boy, PC, Amiga, Game Gear, Sega Master System
Release date(s) Super Nintendo and Sega Mega Drive JP December 9, 1994
NA December 8, 1994
PAL December 8, 1994

Genre(s) Platform game
Mode(s) Single player
Distribution 8 megabit cartridge, 16 megabit cartridge, Floppy disk, CD-ROM

The Lion King is a video game based on Disney's popular animated film. The title was published by Virgin Interactive in 1994, and was released on SNES, NES, Game Boy, PC, Sega Mega Drive/Genesis, Amiga, Master System and Game Gear. The NES and Master System versions of the game were never released in North America because this is the final game for the former system released in Europe. A PlayStation launch title was going to be released in Japan but was cancelled for unknown reasons. The game follows Simba's journey from a young carefree cub to the battle with his evil uncle Scar as an adult.


Contents  [hide]
1 Gameplay 1.1 Cub Simba
1.2 Adult Simba
1.3 Timon and Pumbaa

2 Graphics and sound
3 Reception
4 See also
5 References
6 External links


Gameplay[edit]
The game is a side-scrolling platform game, with the controlled character having to leap, climb, run and descend from platform to platform. There is an exception during the level The Stampede, where Simba is running towards (or in the Game Boy version, running with the camera looking straight down on top of him, while the Game Gear version is a side scrolling platformer like the other stages) the camera dodging wildebeest and leaping over rocks.
In most versions of the game two bars appear on the HUD. To the left is the roar meter, which must be fully charged for Simba's roar to be effective. To the right is the health bar which decreases when Simba is hurt. At the bottom left of the screen is a counter showing how many lives Simba has remaining. Bugs of various shapes and sizes can be collected, restoring health or granting bonuses. Some rare health-damaging bugs also exist.
The player controls Simba (first as a cub, then later as an adult) in the main levels and either Timon or Pumbaa in the bonus levels.
Cub Simba[edit]
Cub Simba can roar, jump on enemies and roll. All three are used to combat enemies and have different effects. Rolling can also be used to access hidden areas and dodge attacks.
Adult Simba[edit]
Adult Simba is stronger, can slash and maul, and he can throw enemies to the side instead of just jumping on them. He also has a more formidable roar, but can no longer roll.
Timon and Pumbaa[edit]
During the course of the game there are two bonus stages. In the first bonus stage, players control Pumbaa, eating bugs dropped by Timon without letting any good ones touch the floor. In the second bonus stage, players control Timon, searching the area for bugs within a time limit. Both will end prematurely if they come into contact with a bad bug (a spider).
Graphics and sound[edit]
The sprites and backgrounds were drawn by Disney animators themselves at Walt Disney Feature Animation, and the music was adapted from songs and orchestrations in the soundtrack.
The Sega Genesis version of the game does not have background vocals unlike the Super Nintendo version, but the Super Nintendo version has less background particles than the Genesis version. This is evident in the Elephant Graveyard and Stampede levels, as well as on the title screen. The MS-DOS version contains background vocals when the game is played with a SoundBlaster sound card. The vocals are missing when the game is using an AdLib sound card due to AdLib's inability to play digital sound.
The Windows 3.1 version relied on the WinG graphics engine, but a series of Compaq Presarios were not tested with WinG, which caused the game to crash while loading.[1] The crashes caused game developers to be suspicious of Windows as a viable platform and instead many stuck with MS-DOS. To prevent further hardware/software compatibility issues, Direct X was created. This also led to the Windows 95 port of Doom to try to regain developers' faith in Windows.[2]
Reception[edit]
The Lion King received mostly positive reviews, including an 8/10 from Electronic Gaming Monthly, and sold well, including 1.27 million units of the SNES version in the United States.[3] Gameplayers awarded the game Sega Genesis Game of the Year over Sonic the Hedgehog 3 and Sonic and Knuckles and wrote on their November 1994 issue that "even on the easy setting, the game is hard for an experienced player".
See also[edit]
List of Disney video games by genre

References[edit]
1.Jump up ^ The 25 Worst Tech Products of All Time, PCWorld
2.Jump up ^ Kushner, David (2003). Masters of Doom: How Two Guys Created An Empire And Transformed Pop Culture. Random House. 89. ISBN 0-375-50524-5.
3.Jump up ^ "US Platinum Videogame Chart". The Magic Box. Retrieved August 13, 2005.

External links[edit]
The Lion King at MobyGames



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The Lion King

 







 





 







 







 













 











 









 










 












 



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Westwood Studios

 






 










 







 






 







 







 
























 








 








 



Categories: The Lion King video games
1994 video games
Amiga games
DOS games
Game Boy games
Game Boy platform games
Sega Game Gear games
Mobile games
Nintendo Entertainment System games
Sega Genesis games
Sega Master System games
Super Nintendo Entertainment System games
Virgin Interactive games
Westwood Studios games
Video games set in Africa
Amiga 1200 games






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 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Lion_King_(video_game)















 

The Lion King (video game)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search



 This article's tone or style may not reflect the encyclopedic tone used on Wikipedia. See Wikipedia's guide to writing better articles for suggestions. (December 2007)

[hide]The Lion King
The Lion King
Cover art (Sega Genesis)

Developer(s) Westwood Studios, Inc., Virgin Interactive, Dark Technologies
Publisher(s) Virgin Interactive, Sega, Walt Disney Computer Software
Director(s) Louis Castle
Producer(s) Louis Castle
 Patrick Gilmore
 Paul Curasi
Designer(s) Seth Mendelsohn
Programmer(s) Barry Green
 Rob Povey
Artist(s) John Fiorito
 Alex Schaeffer
 Christina Vann
 Ann-Bettina Colace
Composer(s) Matt Furniss (Mega Drive/Genesis)
Frank Klepacki
 Dwight Okahara
 Patrick Collins (SNES)
Platform(s) Sega Mega Drive/Genesis, Super NES, NES, Game Boy, PC, Amiga, Game Gear, Sega Master System
Release date(s) Super Nintendo and Sega Mega Drive JP December 9, 1994
NA December 8, 1994
PAL December 8, 1994

Genre(s) Platform game
Mode(s) Single player
Distribution 8 megabit cartridge, 16 megabit cartridge, Floppy disk, CD-ROM

The Lion King is a video game based on Disney's popular animated film. The title was published by Virgin Interactive in 1994, and was released on SNES, NES, Game Boy, PC, Sega Mega Drive/Genesis, Amiga, Master System and Game Gear. The NES and Master System versions of the game were never released in North America because this is the final game for the former system released in Europe. A PlayStation launch title was going to be released in Japan but was cancelled for unknown reasons. The game follows Simba's journey from a young carefree cub to the battle with his evil uncle Scar as an adult.


Contents  [hide]
1 Gameplay 1.1 Cub Simba
1.2 Adult Simba
1.3 Timon and Pumbaa

2 Graphics and sound
3 Reception
4 See also
5 References
6 External links


Gameplay[edit]
The game is a side-scrolling platform game, with the controlled character having to leap, climb, run and descend from platform to platform. There is an exception during the level The Stampede, where Simba is running towards (or in the Game Boy version, running with the camera looking straight down on top of him, while the Game Gear version is a side scrolling platformer like the other stages) the camera dodging wildebeest and leaping over rocks.
In most versions of the game two bars appear on the HUD. To the left is the roar meter, which must be fully charged for Simba's roar to be effective. To the right is the health bar which decreases when Simba is hurt. At the bottom left of the screen is a counter showing how many lives Simba has remaining. Bugs of various shapes and sizes can be collected, restoring health or granting bonuses. Some rare health-damaging bugs also exist.
The player controls Simba (first as a cub, then later as an adult) in the main levels and either Timon or Pumbaa in the bonus levels.
Cub Simba[edit]
Cub Simba can roar, jump on enemies and roll. All three are used to combat enemies and have different effects. Rolling can also be used to access hidden areas and dodge attacks.
Adult Simba[edit]
Adult Simba is stronger, can slash and maul, and he can throw enemies to the side instead of just jumping on them. He also has a more formidable roar, but can no longer roll.
Timon and Pumbaa[edit]
During the course of the game there are two bonus stages. In the first bonus stage, players control Pumbaa, eating bugs dropped by Timon without letting any good ones touch the floor. In the second bonus stage, players control Timon, searching the area for bugs within a time limit. Both will end prematurely if they come into contact with a bad bug (a spider).
Graphics and sound[edit]
The sprites and backgrounds were drawn by Disney animators themselves at Walt Disney Feature Animation, and the music was adapted from songs and orchestrations in the soundtrack.
The Sega Genesis version of the game does not have background vocals unlike the Super Nintendo version, but the Super Nintendo version has less background particles than the Genesis version. This is evident in the Elephant Graveyard and Stampede levels, as well as on the title screen. The MS-DOS version contains background vocals when the game is played with a SoundBlaster sound card. The vocals are missing when the game is using an AdLib sound card due to AdLib's inability to play digital sound.
The Windows 3.1 version relied on the WinG graphics engine, but a series of Compaq Presarios were not tested with WinG, which caused the game to crash while loading.[1] The crashes caused game developers to be suspicious of Windows as a viable platform and instead many stuck with MS-DOS. To prevent further hardware/software compatibility issues, Direct X was created. This also led to the Windows 95 port of Doom to try to regain developers' faith in Windows.[2]
Reception[edit]
The Lion King received mostly positive reviews, including an 8/10 from Electronic Gaming Monthly, and sold well, including 1.27 million units of the SNES version in the United States.[3] Gameplayers awarded the game Sega Genesis Game of the Year over Sonic the Hedgehog 3 and Sonic and Knuckles and wrote on their November 1994 issue that "even on the easy setting, the game is hard for an experienced player".
See also[edit]
List of Disney video games by genre

References[edit]
1.Jump up ^ The 25 Worst Tech Products of All Time, PCWorld
2.Jump up ^ Kushner, David (2003). Masters of Doom: How Two Guys Created An Empire And Transformed Pop Culture. Random House. 89. ISBN 0-375-50524-5.
3.Jump up ^ "US Platinum Videogame Chart". The Magic Box. Retrieved August 13, 2005.

External links[edit]
The Lion King at MobyGames



[show]
v ·
 t ·
 e
 

The Lion King

 







 





 







 







 













 











 









 










 












 



[show]
v ·
 t ·
 e
 

Westwood Studios

 






 










 







 






 







 







 
























 








 








 



Categories: The Lion King video games
1994 video games
Amiga games
DOS games
Game Boy games
Game Boy platform games
Sega Game Gear games
Mobile games
Nintendo Entertainment System games
Sega Genesis games
Sega Master System games
Super Nintendo Entertainment System games
Virgin Interactive games
Westwood Studios games
Video games set in Africa
Amiga 1200 games






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Create account
Log in




Article

Talk





 



Read

Edit

View history










 






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Random article
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Cite this page


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Create a book
Download as PDF
Printable version


Languages

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Español
Français
Italiano
Nederlands
Polski
Português
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Edit links
This page was last modified on 27 August 2014 at 12:39.
Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License; additional terms may apply. By using this site, you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., a non-profit organization.
Privacy policy
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 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Lion_King_(video_game)









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