Disney Infinity is moving away from annual releases

There won’t be a new Disney Infinity game in 2016 — but there will still be a lot of new Disney Infinity content coming. Since its debut in 2013, the toys-to-life series has seen a new release every year, with each new game introducing a new Disney property. The first game mashed together Disney and Pixar films, while the sequel introduced Marvel characters, and last year’s Disney Infinity 3.0 added Star Wars into the mix. But now the company says that it’s shifting away from annual releases, and will instead be focusing on regularly updating the game that’s already out there. “We’re changing our development focus for 2016,” says Disney Infinity VP of production John Vignocchi. “You will not see a Disney Infinity 4.0 this year.”

Disney Infinity

As part of this shift, Vignocchi says that Disney Infinity 3.0 will receive some form of new content to support every single theatrical release from Disney this year. “If it’s happening at the Walt Disney company,” he says, “it’s happening in Disney Infinity.” Some of those updates will be small, such as new characters you can purchase for the game, like the two new figures from the upcoming animated film Zootopia. Others will be much larger, and add more content to the game.

The company plans to launch four play sets this year — Disney Infinity‘s version of expansion packs, which add brand-new worlds to explore and new game elements — with one representing each of the four major groups within the company, including Disney, Pixar, Marvel, and Star Wars. The first new play set is called Marvel Battlegrounds, and it adds arcade-style multiplayer brawling to the game.

To go along with this new release structure, Disney is also launching a new online show, called “Infinity Next,” aimed at keeping players informed of what’s coming up for the game. Much like the Nintendo Direct series, it’s an online, direct-to-the-fans way of sharing news about Disney Infinity. “We wanted to be able to brief them on what’s coming,” says Vignocchi. The first 15-minute-long show aired earlier today, and showed off some of the upcoming Marvel characters, including a new version of Captain America based on the upcoming Civil War movie, who will be playable in Battlegrounds, along with the likes of Black Panther and Ant-Man.

No schedule is in place but additional “Infinity Next” shows are expected periodically throughout the year. According to Vignocchi, with all of the new content updates, by the end of the year Disney Infinity 3.0 will be the biggest Disney video game to date.

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Melbourne schoolgirl Matilda Skinner gets her chance to shine in Disney Under The Stars

IT’S a golden tale that would fit the pages of a classic Disney storybook.

Melbourne schoolgirl Matilda Skinner, 8, has won the opportunity to sing on the same stage as Harrison Craig, Lucy Durack, David Campbell and Ricki-Lee at the Disney Under The Stars show, at Myer Music Bowl, on Saturday.

Matilda, pictured with Harrison, will perform Do You Want To Build A Snowman, from Frozen, with theatre star Durack.

Melbourne schoolgirl Matilda Skinner, pictured with Harrison Craig, will sing in Disney Under The Stars. Picture:Ian Currie

“I’m quite excited and I’ll probably be a bit nervous,” Matilda told Confidential. “My dad and I are practising the song every night. I like the feeling of singing.”

Her father, Curt Skinner, is a former Broadway performer who starred in the hit musical Rent. He started his career singing and dancing at Disneyworld in Florida, and played Aladdin at Disneyland in California.

Curt said: “We haven’t pushed Matilda to be a performer or get into showbiz. But we are really excited for her, and very proud of her.”

He added: “Maybe our family is destined to keep working for Disney somehow.”

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Everything You Need To Know About The Groundbreaking Lead Character In “Zootopia”

Disney

Walt Disney Animation Studios has a long — and supremely lucrative — history of crafting its movies around a princess finding her white knight, from Snow White and the Prince in the studio’s first animated feature in 1937, to Rapunzel and Flynn Rider in 2010’s Tangled.

But Zootopia, the studio’s newest feature film, is noticeably different.

“Audience expectations point towards female characters needing a love interest, and that is not the case,” the movie’s co-writer Phil Johnston told BuzzFeed News in a phone interview. “The more sophisticated we get as storytellers and stray from that old formula that is so tired, the more exciting films are going to get and the more interesting female characters we’ll see in movies.”

Disney

Enter Zootopia’s driven, resilient, and love-interest-free protagonist, Judy Hopps. She’s a small-town bunny who spends her days dreaming of having a rich professional life, not the day her prince will come.

Building an entire movie on one’s desire to be professionally accomplished is something live-action films — likeSpotlight, the recent Academy Award winner for Best Picture — have executed to great acclaim. But in the world of mainstream animation, it’s unheard of for a female lead’s only love interest to be her job. To Disney’s credit, no one ever suggested that the film or Judy would be better served by introducing a love interest. “I do think it’s a little bit revolutionary, unfortunately,” Johnston said. “I think it’s an empowering message for girls and boys that she is so passionate and so strong-willed that she is going to get what she wants.”

When Judy is first introduced as a plucky 9-year-old (voiced initially by Della Saba and later, as an adult, by Once Upon a Time star Ginnifer Goodwin), she has her heart set on a life that’s far past her parents’ carrot-farming footsteps. She wants to be a police officer, despite everyone constantly reminding her that there has never been a rabbit cop before.

But Judy’s determination to accomplish her professional goals will not be deterred by her doubters, by her parents (“If you never try anything new, you never fail,” her dad offers), or by society, which is not designed for a little bunny to — literally at times — fill such big shoes.

Disney

But Judy was not originally the main character in Zootopia. Instead, the film was focused on a fox, Nick Wilde, a sketchy con artist (voiced by Jason Bateman). “People weren’t emotionally connecting to him,” co-writer and co-director Jared Bush told BuzzFeed News in a phone interview. “Everybody got Judy immediately. They really understood her character, and people kept saying, ‘Is there any way to make her the main character?’”

They found a way, thanks, in large part, to Goodwin, whom the directors credited with giving Judy her strength, her deeply rooted conviction, and her unyielding drive. “We had Judy written, initially, as more of a swaggery, John Wayne kind of true-blue kind of cop,” director Byron Howard, who also has a “story by” credit on the film, told BuzzFeed News during a phone interview. But when Goodwin read the part, it didn’t sound authentic, so they let the actor take Judy where she felt was right.

Alberto E. Rodriguez / Getty Images

“As soon as we let Ginnifer go with it, Judy became this almost Frank Capra-esque character with a very pure core who sounded intelligent but innocent — someone who is a little naive, but has big aspirations for what they can do in the world,” Howard said. “We looked at Capra’s movies and compared [Judy] to a lot of those Capra characters who have such high expectations of the world around them and these pure philosophies where you see the cynical world poke at them over and over so you wonder if this purity — this character’s heart — can survive the tough world.”

Judy gets her first taste of just how tough the world really is while working as a meter maid, the only job her new boss, Chief Bogo (voiced by Idris Elba), believes she’s capable of. It’s a momentary blow to Judy’s dreams, but as she says, “No one tells me what I can or can’t be,” so she sets out to be the best meter maid possible. While Judy is issuing parking tickets, she unwittingly stumbles upon Nick mid-scam and gets hustled herself, another early ding to her dream. But Judy soon gives Nick a taste of his own medicine and ends up conning him into helping her solve a case that she’s staked her job on.

Disney

Judy’s resilient spirit is another characteristic that makes her such an anomaly for animated female characters. “It was really important for us that she, as our main character, be this underdog that’s trying to achieve something that no one else in her world has tried to do before,” director Rich Moore, who also has a “story by” credit on the film, told BuzzFeed News during a phone interview. “She’s kind of this walking contradiction, and that adds to her struggle. … The rest of this world sees her as this cute little doll, and Nick is always pointing that out to her: ‘You look like a toy that should be back on the shelf of the toy store.’”

And they highlight Judy’s proportions even more by comparing her to all the other animals on the force, like elephants, lions, wolves, and rhinoceroses. “When she’s talking to her chief, there’s that great wide shot of them standing at the door and she’s just this tiny little thing with this massive buffalo lording over her. That composition to me illustrates what she’s up against,” Moore said.

While it remains to be seen what kind of impact Zootopia will actually have when it opens on March 4, Judy Hopps costumes are likely to be big this Halloween, based on the unofficial focus group Johnston recently ran with his 6-year-old daughter. “My daughter [just] saw it for the first time and said, ‘My favorite character is Judy Hopps because she sticks up for people.’ That’s just cool,” he said. “It’s important to me to put strong, smart female characters out into the world for her … I’m so proud of that character and the difference she’s going to make in the world.”

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How Disney is screwing families

SO much for calling it the Happiest Place on Earth.

If you’re planning a trip to popular Walt Disney World or Disneyland with the kids anytime soon, you might have to shell out some big bucks.

In a move to level out demand during peak attendance periods, Disney has introduced seasonal surge pricing for its US theme parks. The changes, which most notably affect rates for one-day tickets, will alter admission fees depending on the time of year when patrons visit. And it could deter them from making the trek in the first place.

One-day park tickets now come in three price tiers: value, regular and peak. And each park has different rates. At Florida’s sprawling Walt Disney World, one-day, one-park tickets for the Magic Kingdom now cost $US124 US ($AUD174) for peak days — a pretty big hike from its previous $146 charge. Meanwhile, peak pricing for the same ticket into Epcot, Animal Kingdom and Hollywood Studios will now run you $159 — a $24 climb from its former price.

Peak days include the year’s most popular travel holidays, such as July Fourth, Thanksgiving and Christmas. But it also encompasses spring break and summer weekends, when many families also choose Disney as a fun vacation destination.

Regular-tier prices — say for a trip sometime in April — for a one-day ticket are $154 for Magic Kingdom access and $142 at the three other Florida parks. Value prices, on off-days, will grant you $147 entry into Magic Kingdom and $135 for the others.

Sure, the value category will help you spend less, but there are only 83 value days remaining this year, and they’re all weekdays during school months. And that’s not ideal for parents, teachers or kids.

California’s Disneyland and Disney California Adventure have also promised similarly styled price hikes. One-day, one-park tickets at these theme parks will run $166 for peak, $147 for regular and $133 for value. The former charge was $138 for all days of the year.

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Disney World’s first permanent employee dies

ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) —

An attorney who was the first permanent employee at Walt Disney World and helped pave the legal way for the resort’s development has died.

The Orlando Sentinel reports that Phil Smith died last week from complications from kidney disease. He was 83.

Smith came to Disney in 1965 as the company was secretly buying up more than 40 square miles of land in the Orlando area.

Disney’s Miami law firm connected the company with Smith, who at first didn’t know who he would be representing given the secretive nature of Disney’s land purchase.

Smith helped create the Reedy Creek Improvement District, Disney World’s private government that controls planning, building and emergency services.

Smith retired in the early 1990s as Disney’s senior vice president of administration and support.

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Disney World cuts 10 Citizens of Hollywood

Ten “Citizens of Hollywood,” the actors who portray old-time Tinseltown characters at Walt Disney World, will lose their jobs in April.

The cuts mean the group that performs at Disney’s Hollywood Studios will shrink by a third.

A spokeswoman for the Actors’ Equity Association, which represents the performers, confirmed Monday 10 of the 29 will not have their contracts renewed.

Nine of the performers who will lose their jobs currently work at Disney full-time, union spokeswoman Maria Somma said. One works part-time.

A Disney spokeswoman said other entertainment will be coming to the park.

Other cuts have gone into effect as well at Disney World.

Earlier this month, a subsidiary of the Walt Disney Co. laid off about 100 painters working at the resort.

Some character experiences have been slightly shortened, according to a union representative.

Disney had scheduled the Main Street Electrical Parade only once a night during March, typically one of the resort’s busiest times, but has recently changed the schedule to bring back twice-nightly performances during half the month.

Disney’s Hollywood Studios has closed several attractions as it makes way for a major makeover of the park that will include Star Wars and Toy Story lands. It has brought in some other Star Wars features and entertainment in the meantime. That will include “Star Wars: A Galaxy Far, Far Away” stage show debuting in April.

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The Walt Disney Company: China Economy Not a Concern for Shanghai Resort

Shanghai Disneyland

RENDERING OF SHANGHAI DISNEYLAND. IMAGE SOURCE: DISNEY.

Disney‘s (NYSE:DIS) grand opening of its Shanghai Disnelyland resort is just three and a half months away. With Parks and Resorts revenue representing over a fourth of the media company’s revenue, and considering the sheer size of the China market, investors are watching Disney’s important international park opening closely.

One key question some investors may have is whether or not management is concerned with the timing of economic headwinds in China ahead of the company’s Shanghai resort debut on June 16. But management appears undeterred.

The 10,000-foot view is what matters
The resort is just as important to the company as is to investors. It is Disney’s “most important single new initiative” for its Parks and Resorts segment, said Disney COO Tom Staggs, who continues to play a critical role in overseeing the Shanghai Disneyland even after being named COO about a year ago, during the company’s first fiscal quarter earnings call of 2016 (via Reuters transcript).

The stakes are high for the park to be an excellent performer for the company. Disney has invested heavily in Disneyland Shanghai. Staggs even dubbed referred to it as “one of the most extraordinarily creative and innovative projects in the history of [Disney].”

But could economic headwinds become a hurdle for Disney’s Shanghai at least initially?

Staggs isn’t concerned. The focus for Disney, he explains goes much further than near-term economic struggles.

“This is a very long-term proposition, so what’s going on in the economy at any given moment is not a big concern for us,” explained Staggs during a recent Wall Street Journal interview.” We look at the trends over the long term and continue to be as bullish as we’ve ever been in terms of the number of income-qualified people, the prospect for continued growth of the middle class in China, etc.

While Staggs said during the WSJ interview Disney was hoping for a big initial reception, he emphasized that the company builds parks “for generations.”

“We won’t judge where we are a week out, a month out, or even a year or two out,” he said.

Planning for a big launch
The company’s bet on a big opening is evident. Disney’s resorts and parks operating income benefited from growth in domestic operations during the company’s most recent quarter but growth was partially offset by lower operating income in Disneyland Paris “as well as pre opening spending at Shanghai,” Staggs explained in Disney’s earnings call.

Peter Pans Flight Disney Shanghai Resort

RENDERING OF PETER PAN’S FLIGHT RIDE AT SHANGHAI DISNEYLAND. IMAGE SOURCE: DISNEY.

Though the company isn’t jumping in to Shanghai Disneyland blindly; management has reason to believe the opening will be a hit. A recent announcement that tickets will go on sale on March 28 was “incredibly well-received in China,” Staggs said during Disney’s earnings call. “[T]he anticipation is palpable and growing,” he explained.

Staggs predicts Shanghai Disneyland represents “an attractive and profitable place to deploy Disney’s capital for the long term,” he said in the first-quarter call.

If Shanghai turns out to be what management expects, investors will likely welcome the international resort with open arms as it begins to contribute to Disney’s revenue and bottom line.

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Make-a-Wish from Disney: 23 years later, she’ll help grant other kids’ wishes

ORANGE, Calif. — Her goal in life is to grant wishes like a princess in a fairy tale.

What better way to pay back the wish that was granted to her more than two decades ago?

Ayesha Kazim, 30, of Orange, Calif., recently signed up to volunteer at Make-A-Wish. She works for Disney (a fitting job for someone who dreams of granting wishes) in the online travel department. She’s awaiting her first Make-A-Wish assignment. She already has figured out what she’s going to tell the first person she meets with a life-threatening illness.

“I’m here,” she will say. “My parents didn’t think I would be here. So don’t ever give up.”

Disney said it will donate $5—up to $1 million—for every picture shared on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram that shows someone wearing mouse ears. Kazim had her picture taken in mouse ears at Disneyland, where she was telling her story to offer hope to people who may be going through similar horrors to those she endured as a child.

Kazim carries a scrapbook with a kindergarten photo of her holding a book under her right arm and smiling. She remembers the pain.

“I couldn’t hold that book with my left arm,” she said. She was living in Olney, Md., at the time, and she remembers wearing a purple sweatsuit when the phone call came with her test results. She was rushed to a hospital in Washington, where she had the first of five operations.

That scrapbook also holds a drawing a doctor made of the tumor. When she was 5, she got a diagnosis of rhabdomyosarcoma, a rare cancer of the muscle tissue.

Doctors gave her parents a best- and worst-case scenario. At best, she might live to see her 16th birthday. At worst, she had about six months to live.

She went through chemotherapy and radiation, and by the time she was 7, the cancer had spread to her shoulder. She had lost all her hair, and her brother pushed her in a wheelchair. She remembers her father praying in the hospital.

Her family grimly braced itself for what would happen next.

It was at one of the low points that Kazim’s family was connected with Make-A-Wish. She wanted to go visit a Disney park in Europe but she told she couldn’t stray very far from her hospital.

So she choose Disney World, which was a two-hour flight away.

“This was going to be our last trip as a family,” she said. “To think about it that way is terrifying.”

It wasn’t the end. It was the beginning.

Kazim remembers eating peanut butter ice cream with Reese’s Pieces for breakfast. She remembers how nice everyone was to her and her family—her father, Fazlur; her mother, Seeta; a brother, Ijaz; and a sister, Samina.

“It was a magical trip,” she said. “My dad said he didn’t realize how compassionate people could be.”

She remembers Chip and Dale, the chipmunk characters, pushing her wheelchair. She rode Space Mountain 10 times in a row.

“I never thought about why we were there,” she said. “We were just there. My whole family acted normal, and it was perfect.”

Something else happened to Kazim on that trip. She fell in love with Disney and Make-A-Wish.

“That trip reaffirmed what my parents taught me about charity, caring and giving,” she said. “That’s what Disney is all about—hopes and wishes and dreams coming true”

Kazim has been cancer-free since she was 7. She still has trouble moving her left arm, but she’s doing physical therapy to help her deal with the pain.

And in July 2012, her boyfriend, Suresh Francis, proposed to her at Walt Disney World in Cinderella’s Castle.

Kazim and her husband live in Orange, just a few miles from Disneyland. Working at Disney has fulfilled one of her lifelong dreams.

Occasionally, she will handle the travel arrangements of a child with cancer.

“I say, ‘Oh, my God, I had cancer, too,’” she said. “I make a connection with them. And when they say this might be our last trip, I tell them, “Once you get here, everything is going to be fine.’”

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Disney-themed aeroplane unveiled by airline

The vehicle has been named the ‘Plane of Dreams’ and will be used for guests travelling on international long-distance routes.
The beautiful plane is decorated with a number of famous Disney characters like Mickey Mouse, Donald Duck and even Cinderella Castle. (Photo: Instagram/ @paulambhall)

 The beautiful plane is decorated with a number of famous Disney characters like Mickey Mouse, Donald Duck and even Cinderella Castle. (Photo: Instagram/ @paulambhall)

Now here’s a piece of news that will give your Disney dream wings – Walt Disney World collaborated with Brazilian airline TAM to unveil a colourful character-themed plane recently. The special Boeing 767-300 was given its attractive Disney avatar after working on it for 10 eight-hour days.

The beautiful plane is decorated with a number of famous Disney characters like Mickey Mouse, Donald Duck and even Cinderella’s Castle. The vehicle has been named the ‘Plane of Dreams’ and will be used for guests travelling on international long-distance routes.

But it’s not just the plane – even the flight attendants’ uniforms and the food service will feature special elements from the theme, according to the Daily Mail.

Here’s When a Disney Park Ticket Will Cost You Less

New demand pricing makes it cheaper to visit on typically slow days.

Disney unveiled new single-day ticket prices on Saturday for the company’s U.S. theme parks, switching to a three-tiered system that charges visitors more on the year’s busiest days and less during typically slower periods.

The shift to demand-based pricing is designed to help spread out crowds at Walt Disney World in Florida and at Disneyland Resort in California, Disney DIS -0.36% said in a blog post.

Starting Sunday, a one-day ticket to Walt Disney World’s Magic Kingdom will cost $105 on “value” days during slower periods, such as September. The cost for “regular” days will be $110. For “peak” days over major holiday periods, spring break and parts of the summer, the price will be $124.

At Disneyland, the cost of admission to one park will be $95, $105, and $119 for value, regular and peak days, respectively. Value days will be most weekdays during the school year, while peak times are around holidays and weekends in July and December.

The previous one-day ticket prices were $105 at the Magic Kingdom and $99 at Disneyland.

The number of visitors to Disney’s U.S. parks set records in the October through December quarter, rising 10% from a year earlier, the company said in its quarterly earnings report.

The busiest days create frustrations for visitors such as long lines and temporary gate closures when parks get too full. The company is expanding the parks with new attractions based on popular franchises such as Star Wars and Frozen.

Disney said it will post eight- to 11-month calendars online that list which days fall in each pricing period.

Flexible pricing applies to one-day tickets only, it said, while charges for multiday tickets will not change based on attendance levels.

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