Escape from Tomorrow

Escape from Tomorrow
Escape From Tomorrow poster.jpg
Theatrical release poster
Directed byRandy Moore
Produced bySoojin Chung
Gioia Marchese
Written byRandy Moore
StarringRoy Abramsohn
Elena Schuber
Katelynn Rodriguez
Jack Dalton
Annet Mahendru
Danielle Safady
Alison Lees-Taylor
Music byAbel Korzeniowski
CinematographyLucas Lee Graham
Edited bySoojin Chung
Production
companies
Mankurt Media
Producers Distribution Agency
Distributed byFilmBuff
Cinedigm
Release date
  • January 18, 2013 (2013-01-18) (Sundance)
  • October 11, 2013 (2013-10-11) (United States)
Running time
90 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$650,000
Box office$171,962[1]

Escape from Tomorrow is a 2013 American independent thriller film[2] written and directed by Randy Moore in his directorial debut. It tells the story of an unemployed father having increasingly bizarre experiences and disturbing visions on the last day of a family vacation at the Walt Disney World Resort. It premiered in January at the 2013 Sundance Film Festival and was later a personal selection of Roger Ebert, shown at his 15th annual film festival in Champaign, Illinois. The film was a 2012 official selection of the PollyGrind Film Festival, but at the time filmmakers were still working on some legal issues and asked that it not be screened.[3]

The film drew attention because Moore had shot most of it on location at both Walt Disney World and Disneyland without permission from The Walt Disney Company, owner and operator of both parks. Due to Disney's reputation of being protective of its intellectual property, the cast and crew used guerrilla filmmaking techniques to avoid attracting attention, such as keeping their scripts on their iPhones and shooting on handheld video cameras similar to those used by park visitors.[4] After principal photography was complete, Moore was so determined to keep the project a secret from Disney that he edited it in South Korea. Sundance similarly declined to discuss the film in detail before it was shown. It has been called "the ultimate guerrilla film".[5] Rather than suppressing the film as Moore claimed would happen, Disney chose to ignore it.[6]

It has been compared to the work of Roman Polanski[7] and David Lynch.[4] However, many who saw it expressed strong doubts that the film would be shown to a wider audience due to the legal issues involved and the negative depiction of the parks. At the time of its premiere, Disney stated that it was "aware" of the film; since then the online supplement to Disney A to Z: The Official Encyclopedia has included an entry for the film.[8]

Escape from Tomorrow was released simultaneously to theaters and video on-demand on October 11, 2013, through Producers Distribution Agency, a Cinetic Media company.[9]

Plot

An opening montage of the film shows visitors on the rides at Walt Disney World Resort and the many visuals and animatronics that accompany the rides. It ends with a man losing his head while riding Big Thunder Mountain Railroad.

On the last day of his family's vacation, blue-collar worker Jim White gets fired for reasons unknown during a phone call with his boss at the Contemporary Resort Hotel. Not wanting to ruin his family's vacation, Jim decides to keep it to himself. The family leave their hotel room and takes the monorail to the park alongside two French teenage girls, Isabelle and Sophie, who pique Jim's interest unbeknownst to his wife Emily and their two children Elliot and Sara.

During the rides, Jim has a series of bizarre and disturbing hallucinations, such as the faces of audio-animatronic characters warping and his family verbally abusing him. After an argument with his wife, Jim decides to take Elliot to Space Mountain, which gives Elliot motion sickness, in order to keep track of Isabelle and Sophie. Afterwards, he then takes Sara to visit the Magic Kingdom in pursuit of Sophie and Isabelle while Emily and Elliot return to the hotel.

The son of a wheelchair user, whom Jim spotted earlier, shoves Sara, who scrapes her knee. Jim later takes Sara to a park nurse to have her knee treated. Jim and Sara soon meet a mysterious woman with a glimmering amulet which hypnotises Jim, blacking him out.

Jim regains consciousness mid-coitus with the woman in her room where she claims that the parks' wholesome, costumed princesses are actually part of a secret prostitution ring that services rich Asian businessmen. Increasingly unnerved, Jim and Sara rendezvous with Emily and Elliot at the park's swimming pool. His attempts to converse with Isabelle and Sophie only result in Emily berating him for his sudden interest.

The family later visit Epcot but the tension between Jim and Emily comes to a head after a drunk Jim vomits while on the Gran Fiesta Tour. Spotting Sophie and Isabelle again, Emily argues with Jim about his obvious interest in them and slaps Sara out of frustration.

Embarrassed, Emily returns to the hotel with Elliot, leaving Jim and Sara to ride on the Soarin' attraction where Jim imagines a beautiful topless woman superimposed over the ride's video footage of landscapes. After the ride, Sophie approaches and invites Jim to come with her and Isabelle. When Jim refuses, Sophie spits on his face and walks off. Jim notices that Sara has disappeared and frantically searches for her until park guards use a taser to knock him unconscious.

Jim awakens in a secret detention facility under Epcot's Spaceship Earth where he sees video screens displaying pictures of the woman he imagined on the Soarin' ride and other images of events that happened earlier. A scientist enters and activates a Spaceship Earth resembling helmet, which covers Jim's head and scans him while images of what the scientist refers to as "the real Jim" appear on the screens, being himself dressed differently and apparently part of another family.

The scientist discusses Jim's flights of fantasy and imagination, and reveals that he is part of the experiment by the Siemens Corporation ever since he first went to the theme park as a child with his father. His boss is in on the conspiracy and his firing was all part of the plan along with the closure of the Buzz Lightyear ride just as he and Elliot approached the boarding area, much to Elliot's distress. The scientist also tells Jim that he had turned in Elliot to them, like Jim's father had done to him as a child.

After damaging the instrument panel with a medical ointment and decapitating the scientist, who turns out to be an android, Jim escapes the laboratory through a sewer. While searching for Sara through a crowd of park-goers watching the fireworks display, Jim trips next to the wheelchair-using man from earlier and attacks him. After realizing that he is causing a scene and doubts the man's involvement, he returns to the room of the woman, where he discovers she has captured Sara, now wearing a Snow White costume. The woman rambles about her time as a character princess and tells him how bad things happen everywhere, including the decapitation at the park. She again hypnotizes Jim with the necklace but Sara pulls it off and smashes it, freeing Jim from her spell and leading her and Jim to escape.

Jim returns to his hotel room and puts his family to bed. He suddenly begins to suffer from digestive distress, and vomits up a large amount of blood and hairballs, which he recognizes as symptoms of cat flu. Jim begins to panic and bleed uncontrollably in the bathroom until Elliot enters and closes the door, leaving a begging Jim to die.

The next morning, a distressed Emily finds Jim's dead body, which now has cat eyes and a grinning face. Cleaning staff arrive to remove all proof and also fill Elliot's head with false memories of riding the Buzz Lightyear attraction. Meanwhile, the valet from the video screens greets the "real Jim", accompanied by the fantasy woman and a young girl, before they check into the hotel as the valet watches a white van, with Jim's body in it, drive away.

Cast

  • Roy Abramsohn as Jim White, a repressed middle-aged father of two
  • Elena Schuber as Emily, Jim's frustrated wife
  • Katelynn Rodriguez as Sara, Jim and Emily's daughter
  • Jack Dalton as Elliott, Jim and Emily's son
  • Danielle Safady as Sophie, French teen girl
  • Annet Mahendru as Isabelle, French teen girl
  • Alison Lees-Taylor as the Other Woman
  • Lee Armstrong as the Man on Scooter
  • Amy Lucas as the Nurse
  • Zan Naar as the Fantasy Woman/New Wife
  • Stass Klassen as The Scientist
  • Trevor McCune as Valet

Background

Moore, a native of Lake Bluff, Illinois,[10] frequently visited his father in Orlando following his parents' divorce. The two often spent time together at Walt Disney World nearby. "It was a special, physical place, and it became an emotional space," he told Filmmaker. He added: "Obviously, I have a lot of father issues that I can't separate from that place."[11] Later, their relationship deteriorated.[12]

He decided to pursue a career in film. After attending two other film schools, he graduated from Full Sail University in another Central Florida town, Winter Park, as the class valedictorian. He moved to Southern California and began working as a story editor, primarily doing uncredited rewrites.[10]

In Hollywood, he married and started a family. Much like his own father, he frequently took his own children to Disneyland. "It wasn't until our first family trip together that this very visceral emotional landscape of my past, that I had by now nearly all but forgotten, hit me again like [a] bullet."[13] On the family's first trip to Walt Disney World, the emotions grew stronger. "[I]t was like he was there as a ghost. We were going on the same rides I used to go on with him, but now we're no longer talking anymore."[12]

His wife, a native of the former Soviet Union who had no memories or expectations like his, saw things with fresh eyes. Moore said "She's a nurse and goes between floors at hospitals. At one point she turned to me at some princess fair or something and said, 'This is worse than working the psych [ward] at the hospital.'"[12]

He read Neal Gabler's biography of Walt Disney and took the children to Disneyland more frequently.[12] "I became obsessed with finding a connection," he recalled later.[13] He wrote the screenplay for Escape from Tomorrow in a month along with two others.[12] An inheritance from his grandparents provided the bulk of the film's budget,[4] which he put at around $650,000, triple what he had originally planned.[12]

Production

To me this is the future. Cameras in your hand. Cameras in your glasses. Anyone can be shooting at any time.
And I think it will explode
.

—Randy Moore[4]

"There was nowhere else to do it," Moore says of his decision to use Disney World as a setting and shoot at the parks. Disney, which has a reputation for aggressively protecting its intellectual property, has been tolerant of visitors uploading videos of their visits to YouTube and elsewhere since most of those user-created videos project a positive image of the parks. But Moore did not expect to get permission from Disney to shoot there given his negative, surrealistic portrayal of the park.[14]

Instead he used guerrilla filmmaking techniques, which sometimes call for using locations without getting permission. Escape from Tomorrow is not the first film made in whole, or part, this way at the Disney parks. In 2010, the British street artist Banksy shot a scene for Exit Through the Gift Shop in one of the parks with his collaborator Mr. Brainwash. They managed to smuggle the footage out after being detained and questioned by park security. The following year, a viral found footage short, Missing in the Mansion,[15] filmed in the Haunted Mansion, was distributed online without interference from Disney.[16]

Extensive pre-production was necessary. The unique nature of the film shoot dictated steps not normally taken in filmmaking, such as charting the position of the sun weeks in advance since they could not use lighting equipment. Scenes were rehearsed and blocked in hotel rooms, rather than the actual locations.[16] "We must have walked through the entire movie at least eight or nine times during multiple scouting trips before we ever rolled camera," Moore says.[13]

Before principal photography, the cast and crew bought season passes to both the Disneyland and Walt Disney World resorts. They spent ten days in Florida, then returned to California for two weeks at Disneyland, making the parks depicted in the film a combination of both resorts.[16] Actors and crew entered the parks in small groups to avoid attracting attention.[14] "At one point, I even made the camera department shave off their facial hair and dress in tourist attire, which almost provoked a mutiny," says Moore.[13] Despite the actors wearing the same clothes for days on end, Moore told the Los Angeles Times, park personnel never appeared to notice them,[4] save for one day near the end of filming when Disneyland security thought they were paparazzi harassing a celebrity family.[16]

A black camera with a short lens barrel and large hand grip on the left. "Canon" is visible above the lens, and "EOS 5D" on the right.
A Canon EOS 5D Mark II

The film was shot using the video mode of two Canon EOS 5D Mark II and one Canon EOS 1D Mark IV digital single-lens reflex cameras, which helped the filmmakers look more like typical park visitors.[16] To compensate for their inability to control the lighting, the film was shot in monochrome mode. "[W]e were shooting with really fast lenses wide open, so our depth of field was razor thin. Black and white helped us enormously with focus and composition, since we were doing almost everything in camera and didn't use a focus puller," Moore recalled. It was an irreversible choice. "[B]ecause the 5D doesn't shoot RAW, we customized settings in its monochromatic mode and couldn't go back to color, even if we had wanted to."[13] Moore was comfortable with the result because of the surrealistic, dreamlike quality it created, forcing viewers to see the familiar sights of the Disney parks in a new way.[16]

Actors and crew used their iPhones to communicate and store information such as the script—that way, they looked like guests casually using their phones.[4] The phones were also used to record sound, in addition to digital recorders taped to each actor's body that were left running all day.[16] For day scenes, Moore felt comfortable risking only three or four takes of each scene, but found he could do more at night.[13]

A black-and-white image of a young girl on the left and a middle-aged man sitting on a bench with a patterned background and others doing the same behind them. She is looking at him while he appears to grimace
Sara (left) and Jim (right) riding It's a Small World

Scenes involved riding on eight recognizable attractions in the parks. One required waiting in a long line for the Buzz Lightyear ride at Disneyland, and the actors rode It's a Small World at least 12 times to get the scene right. "I was surprised the ride operators weren't a little more savvy," Moore told The New York Times. For a scene where two characters pass on the People Mover, Moore had the actors ride it for hours while he worked out the timing.[14]

After the location filming, production went back to soundstages for interiors. Some scenes were shot against a green screen background for second unit footage of other locations to be substituted, allowing the use of crane shots.[11] With the photography done, Moore took the film to South Korea to edit to prevent Disney from finding out; he also refused to tell most of his close friends what he was doing.[4] Visual effects were done by the same company there that had done them for the 2006 South Korean monster film, The Host.[16]

The post-production tasks were as challenging as the production itself. Sound editors had to listen to the entire uncut tracks from the recorders taped to the actors' bodies in order to find the dialogue. Content proprietary to Disney, such as the lyrics to "It's a Small World" and footage from Soarin', was removed from the film to avoid copyright infringement.[16] Composer Abel Korzeniowski contributed a light, airy score similar to those used in Hollywood's Golden Age.[4]

Sundance

Moore submitted the completed film to the Sundance Film Festival, where many independent films seek distributors. He had little hope that it would be accepted due to the festival's corporate sponsors. But Trevor Groth, the festival's new director of programming, was "blown away" by Escape from Tomorrow, and accepted it for the festival's non-competitive "Next" category, for films that transcend the limitations of the low budgets common to most independent films.[4]

When the 2013 festival began in Park City, Utah, the secrecy about the movie continued. The festival's website only identified the setting as a theme park.[10] Nan Chalat-Noaker, critic for the Park Record, recalls that the festival and even the film's publicist were unwilling to share further details about the film, but strongly urged critics to see it. In her review, she declined to identify the setting of the film by name, although she dropped broad hints, out of fear it would alert Disney's lawyers. The premiere, on the festival's first night, was not fully attended; when word got out to the attendees, all the other shows were effectively sold out.[17]

Reception

On review aggregation website Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 56% based on 87 reviews, with an average rating of 6/10. The site's critical consensus reads: "Conceptually audacious but only intermittently successful in execution, Escape From Tomorrow is nonetheless visually inventive and darkly surreal."[18] On Metacritic, the film has a score of 58 out of 100, based on 27 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews".[19]

Before the Martin Luther King Day weekend was over, Escape from Tomorrow was being widely discussed by festival attendees. The New York Times and the Los Angeles Times both ran articles about the film and Moore. Much of the attention focused on the audacity of the filmmaking. Movies.com reported that people were already calling it "the ultimate guerrilla film".[5] On the night of the premiere, Drew McWeeny wrote:

It is not possible that this film exists. It is not possible that they shot long scripted sequences on the actual rides. It is not possible that I just saw a film in which it is suggested and then shown that the various Disney princesses all work as high-priced hookers who sell their wares to wealthy Asian businessmen. It simply cannot be true.

I grew up in Florida, and I have been going to Walt Disney World my entire life. I worked at that park. I've been there as a child, as a teenager, as an employee, and as a parent. I've done Disney sitting on my father's shoulders, and I've done the Disney parks with my kids sitting on my shoulders. It is a huge part of my DNA, and I can tell you that there is no way Randy Moore pulled off what I saw tonight. It is a film that should not exist by any rational definition.

And yet... not only does it exist, but it's fascinating.[20]

He allowed that it was "undisciplined at times, rough around the edges in places, technically uneven, and there's no sense of pacing to it at all. Even so," he concluded, "there is a sort of naive charm that makes it impossible to look away."[20]

Other critics concurred that the film had artistic merit. "[W]atching Moore's noir tale is like being super-glued to your seat while getting poked in the eye," Chalat-Noaker wrote. "It's both fascinating and repelling."[17] Stephen Zeitchik of the Los Angeles Times called it "one of the strangest and most provocative movies this reporter has seen in eight years attending the Sundance Film Festival".[4] At Indiewire, Eric Kohn wrote that "Moore portrays Disney World as the ultimate horror show – and gets the point across in nearly every scene".[21]

While they conceded the film's audacious production made it worth their time to watch, other critics found flaws.[22] "It's not a great film. The story has some good ideas, but the execution is uneven," wrote Peter Sciretta at /Film, while still recommending it as "unlike anything you've seen before [or will] see again".[16] Similarly, CraveOnline's William Bibbiani "wouldn't have missed it for the world" but qualified it by noting that the film often lacked "cohesion and clarity".[23]

Kyle Smith of the New York Post had the most negative assessment, calling it "more fun to discuss than to sit through". While he found the guerilla filmmaking aspect of it "intriguing", all it amounted to for him was "a couple of amusingly surreal moments" that could have taken place at any sufficiently large amusement park: "Even Disney-hating hipsters are going to be disappointed; the film is a pure festival play that is more or less unreleasable unless theater owners start selling weed along with popcorn."[24]

A.O. Scott of The New York Times and Michael O'Sullivan of The Washington Post each also gave a negative review for this film. "None of it is as scary or as funny as it should be," the former wrote, "and what starts out as a sly thumb in the eye of corporate power ends up as a muddled and amateurish homage to David Lynch".[25][26]

Legal issues

Many journalists who saw the film at Sundance speculated that it was likely that Disney would take legal action to prevent the film from being shown outside the festival, or perhaps even during it. "Disney's lawyers are probably climbing onto helicopters and planning a raid on Park City right now," wrote McWeeny.[20] Critics urged others present to see it before it was too late, and commented that it was questionable if those not present at the festival would ever have an opportunity to see it.[21][23]

However, others noted that if Disney had attempted to block the film's release, it was unclear on what legal grounds it could be done. Moore took care to avoid direct copyright infringement of songs or films played as part of attractions, and intellectual property law is less clear on the other aspects of the film. Science fiction writer Cory Doctorow, who distributed his first novel, Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom, set in a 22nd-century Disney World, under a Creative Commons license, believes there's at most "a possible trademark claim, and I suppose that Disney could conceivabl[y] bring suit for violating the park's terms of use, but these are much harder cases to make than copyright."[27]

Columbia Law School professor Tim Wu did not think Disney would have any defensible intellectual property claim. "Though the filmmakers may have committed trespass when they broke Disney World's rules and if it violated the terms of entry on their tickets, the film itself is a different matter," he wrote on The New Yorker's blog. "As commentary on the social ideals of Disney World, it seems to clearly fall within a well-recognized category of fair use, and therefore probably will not be stopped by a court using copyright or trademark laws."[28]

Despite the film's repeated use of Disney's characters and iconography, Wu explained, trademark law was not sufficient. "Disney does not have some kind of general intellectual-property right in Disney World itself." To make a trademark-infringement case against Moore, he continued, Disney would have to convince a court that the use of its protected imagery in the movie could reasonably lead viewers to believe that it had a role in the film's production, and he did not think that was a plausible argument. "The scene where a Disney Princess attempts to crush a child seems to eliminate that possibility."[28]

As for copyright, Wu saw Moore's use of the Disney parks as transformative:

... [H]is use of Disney World is not as simple window dressing; he transforms it into something gruesome and disturbing—a place where, for example, guests are sometimes tasered and have their imaginations purged ... It might be a violation if Moore had made a film designed for viewers who wanted to see Disney World but were too lazy to go to Florida. Escape from Tomorrow, however, is clearly no substitute for buying a ticket.[28]

As such, he saw the film as offering artistic commentary on the cultural impact of Disney, and thus clearly falling under fair use. Wu likened it to a 1990s case brought by Mattel against artist Thomas Forsythe, after he sold some of his photographs depicting another American icon, Barbie, being eaten by vintage appliances as a way of calling attention to the toy doll's role in promoting the objectification of women in American culture. Not only did the court dismiss Mattel's complaint, "[t]he judges were so annoyed by the lawsuits that they awarded attorney's fees of nearly two million dollars to the artist ... A judge has to think of the First Amendment when asked to ban art work."[28]

In his /Film review, Sciretta raised another issue:

Intellectual property and copyrights aside, many people appear in this film who have never signed a release. Real families and children are seen in the background of almost every shot. None of them gave permission or knew they were being filmed for a feature film.[16]

At Slate, Aisha Harris allowed that this was a possibility, especially if children were filmed without their parents' consent, but noted "the law on that issue is not black and white either."[29]

Response by Disney

Disney did not return reporters' calls or emails for comment, nor took any legal action during the festival, although it confirmed to CNN that it was "aware" of the movie.[30] Despite critical apprehension that the film would never be shown outside the festival, some observers saw the situation as more complex. Were Disney to attempt to forcefully suppress the film, that effort could serve to draw even more attention to it,[14] a phenomenon known as the Streisand effect.[31] Even if Disney were to successfully prevent official distribution, the film could easily be pirated and distributed over the Internet. In his Post review, Smith suggested that Disney prevent this by taking the opposite course, simply ignoring Escape from Tomorrow and letting the attention dissipate by itself.[32]

Michael Ryan, director of The YoungCuts Film Festival, noted that there was a precedent for the film in the Air Pirates lawsuit, in which Disney spent eight years in court with some underground cartoonists who had published an underground comix parody in which Mickey Mouse and the other Disney characters engaged in explicit sex and used illegal drugs, among other behavior they avoided in Disney's own narratives. He suggested that Disney buy the rights and release the film itself, which it could easily do as its announced interest would guarantee it a monopsony on the film since no other distributor would want to match Disney's deep pockets or its feared legal response. As a Disney release, Escape from Tomorrow would have a large potential audience of both Disney enthusiasts and antagonists, Disney would be making money from property it already owns instead of someone else and the company's apparent willingness to go in the joke would take some of the satiric edge off.[31]

Moore expressed hope that the film could be shown and released, even if it meant a legal battle.

It depends on how good a case lawyers can make for it. If they say I have a chance, I'll definitely fight for it. I worked on it really hard for three years and it took a lot out of me. Just to let it disappear would be a waste of time.[12]

Since the film's release Disney has acknowledged it in another way. The online supplement to Disney A to Z: The Official Encyclopedia includes an entry for Escape from Tomorrow, describing it as "An independent surrealistic cult film surreptitiously filmed at Walt Disney World and Disneyland."[8]

According to The Hollywood Reporter, Disney chose to avoid responding to the film altogether, rather than seeking legal action, in an effort to prevent increased publicity.[33]

Awards

Award Category Nominee Result Ref(s)
IFMCA Award Composer of the Year Abel Korzeniowski for Romeo & Juliet and Escape from Tomorrow Won [34]
Best Original Score for a Fantasy/Science Fiction/Horror Film Abel Korzeniowski Nominated
Film Music Composition of the Year "The Grand Finale", music by Abel Korzeniowski Nominated

References

  1. ^ "Escape from Tomorrow". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved March 5, 2018.
  2. ^ Buchanan, Jason. "Escape From Tomorrow (2013)". AllMovie. Retrieved March 23, 2021.
  3. ^ "Chiller | Scary Good". Fearnet.com. Retrieved August 16, 2016.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Zeitchik, Steven (January 19, 2013). "Sundance 2013: How did a newbie make an unapproved film in Disney parks?". The Los Angeles Times. Retrieved January 21, 2013.
  5. ^ a b Davis, Erik (January 21, 2013). "'Escape from Tomorrow' Cinematographer Explains How He Shot an Entire Movie Secretly in Disney Parks". Retrieved January 24, 2013.
  6. ^ Jones, J.R. (October 23, 2013). "All the Disney World's a stage in Escape From Tomorrow". Chicago Reader. Retrieved November 17, 2013.
  7. ^ Goss, William (January 20, 2013). "Sundance Review: 'Escape From Tomorrow' Takes Viewers On A Mind-Melting Vacation from Hell". IndieWire. Retrieved January 24, 2013.
  8. ^ a b "Disney A to Z: Escape from Tomorrow (film)". D23: The Official Disney Fan Club. August 7, 2013. Retrieved August 7, 2013.(subscription required)
  9. ^ Zeitchik, Steven (August 19, 2013). "Guerilla Disney film 'Escape From Tomorrow' headed to theaters". Retrieved August 19, 2013.
  10. ^ a b c "Escape From Tomorrow". Sundance Film Festival. 2013. Retrieved January 22, 2013.
  11. ^ a b Macaulay, Scott (January 19, 2013). "The Outlaw Pleasures of Escape from Tomorrow". Filmmaker. Retrieved January 22, 2013.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g Kohn, Eric (January 27, 2013). "Sundance 2013: 'Escape From Tomorrow' Director Randy Moore Says "I'm a Product of Disney World"". IndieWire. Retrieved January 28, 2013.
  13. ^ a b c d e f Schoenbrun, Dan (January 19, 2013). "Five Questions with Escape from Tomorrow Director Randy Moore". Filmmaker. Retrieved January 22, 2013.
  14. ^ a b c d Barnes, Brooks (January 21, 2013). "It's a Grim World, After All". The New York Times. Retrieved January 21, 2013.
  15. ^ "Missing in the Mansion". Daws Brothers Studios. 2011. Retrieved January 22, 2013.
  16. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Sciretta, Peter (January 21, 2013). "'Escape From Tomorrow': A Feature Film Shot in Disney Theme Parks Without Disney's Permission [Sundance 2013 Review]". /Film. Retrieved January 22, 2013.
  17. ^ a b Chalat-Noaker, Nan (January 19, 2013). ""Escape" takes audience on horror-filled roller coaster ride". Park Record. Park City, UT: MediaNews Group. Archived from the original on April 10, 2013. Retrieved January 23, 2013.
  18. ^ "Escape From Tomorrow (2013)". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved December 16, 2019.
  19. ^ "Escape from Tomorrow reviews". Metacritic. Retrieved January 17, 2016.
  20. ^ a b c McWeeny, Drew (January 19, 2013). "'Escape From Tomorrow' is a surrealist treat that will give Disney's lawyers nightmares". HitFix. Archived from the original on January 23, 2013. Retrieved January 23, 2013.
  21. ^ a b Kohn, Eric (January 18, 2013). "Sundance Review: 'Escape From Tomorrow' Is a Surreal Indictment of Disneyfied Society That Disney Will Never Let You See". Indiewire. Retrieved January 23, 2013.
  22. ^ Movie Review - 'Escape from Tomorrow' - An Decidedly Un-Disneyfied Day At The Theme Park : NPR
  23. ^ a b Bibbiani, William (January 22, 2013). "Sundance 2013 Review: Escape from Tomorrow". CraveOnline. Archived from the original on January 25, 2013. Retrieved January 23, 2013.
  24. ^ Smith, Kyle (January 21, 2013). "Sundance review: 'Escape from Tomorrow'". New York Post. Retrieved January 23, 2013.
  25. ^ Scott, A.O. (October 10, 2019). "Whoa, Are Snow White and Mulan Really Working the Street?". The New York Times. Retrieved October 23, 2019.
  26. ^ The Washington Post
  27. ^ Doctorow, Cory (January 21, 2013). "More on "Escape From Tomorrow," the guerrilla art-house movie shot at Walt Disney World and Disneyland". Boing Boing. Retrieved January 23, 2013.
  28. ^ a b c d Wu, Tim (January 22, 2013). "It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad Disney World". The New Yorker. Retrieved January 23, 2013.
  29. ^ Harris, Aisha (January 23, 2013). "Will Disney Let You See This Movie?". Slate. Retrieved January 23, 2013.
  30. ^ Carey, Matthew (January 24, 2013). "Why Disney might want to 'Escape From Tomorrow'". CNN. Retrieved January 24, 2013.
  31. ^ a b Ryan, Michael (January 23, 2013). "Escape From Tomorrow' and The Air Pirates". SoundOnSight.org. Retrieved January 24, 2013.
  32. ^ Sundance review: 'Escape from Tomorrow' - New York Post
  33. ^ Abramovitch, Seth (September 18, 2013). "Disney's Non-Strategy Strategy to Combat Unauthorized Disneyland Horror Movie". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved September 18, 2013.
  34. ^ "Abel Korzeniowski receives IFMCA Awards for Romeo & Juliet, Composer of the Year". March 24, 2014.

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