Inside this humble warehouse on Apopka Vineland Rd, the gothic towers and ornamentation for Cinderella Castle were created. Eleven years later, the stately king palms standing in front were transplanted, along with others, around Spaceship Earth.
But I guess the question is, why would anyone want to go to a ‘60s UK pub if it isn’t going to be shagadelic? Otherwise, what’s fun or even noteworthy about “1960s British Pub?”
In 10 days, "Bob Gurr: Living By Design" will be at the Newport Beach Film Festival (October 19th). If you haven't seen our film yet, we hope to see you there.
If you have seen it, do us a wee favor and share one of these cover photos with a handy QR code linking to the festival box office.
Ideally, Disney builds “idealized” or cinematic versions of somewhere in time, Main St, Liberty Sq, Hollywood Blvd, World Showcase, Harambe Village all prime examples, all authentic & well-researched but given varying degrees of “stardust.” Main St, more stardust. Harambe Village, less stardust.
…something like that photo. Actually, I’d probably start by getting screen caps from the Austin Powers films bc they were not too far off—they really were the cinematic version of the late 1960s.
I wish I could answer this more succinctly, but Joe Rohde I am not.
…restaurants, shops, and other businesses. These are things I actually do remember from that time period, but to your point, trends and styles tend to get reimagined and “cinema-fied” with each new generation. So if someone asked me to create a cinematic version of a ‘60s pub, I might start with…
The lighting wouldn’t have been that sophisticated, likely those patterns would’ve been painted & lit ultravioletly or laminated on the wall. There would’ve been lava lamps (introduced in the UK) and simpler lighting effects such as mirror balls…probably not typically in a “pub” per se but in…
Both. It’s a complicated answer mired in semantics, but the style in the photo is reminiscent of actual places that were on the vanguard of the mod/psychedelic movement in the ‘60s—thinking of Carnaby Street in London & SoHo districts in NY, LA, and SF—but that became more prevalent in the ‘70s…