I'll be honest - I'm sort of "unloading" a whole bunch of not-very-exceptional scans of slide from Universal Studios (Hollywood) today, circa June 1987; I have a decent number of USH slides, but a lot of them are kind of "meh". Still... worth a look, I hope.
This looks like the "Court of Miracles" area of "Little Europe". It's easy to imagine an angry mob of torch-bearing peasants chasing after Frankenstein's monster, isn't it? The original sets that were used in those 1930's Universal monster movies burned in a 1967 fire, so these are recreations. Still, one of my favorite parts of the tour.
OK, I admit it; I'm going to need some help on some of these! You guys (and gals) are so smart. And good-looking. Our Glamour Tram passed this spaceship, I wonder if it had anything to do with Battlestar Galactica (which is generally agreed to be the Greatest Movie Ever)? In case you are wondering what those mysterious cylindrical shapes are to the right...
... we see that it is a a selection of aircraft noses. Place them in front of a blue backdrop, bounce them up and down a little, and voila - MOVIE MAGIC. It's hard to tell from this strangely murky photo, but it appears that we are headed toward a quaint little town.
Why, it's a ramshackle village, located on what was formerly called "Singapore Lake", but it was changed to "Jaws Lake". I'm sure there's no significance to that name. (Parts of this town represented "Cabot Cove" from "Murder, She Wrote", which is almost as good as "Matlock").
I think I see the fin of a largemouth bass! Much to the shock of everybody, the fisherman in that small boat would be dragged underwater, and a fountain of bright pink blood would spew forth. I wonder what they used as "blood", since they repeated that effect over and over and the lake remained a soupy green?
Aieeeee! Hold me, grandma! Look at those rows of razor sharp teeth.
I threw a nearby kid overboard, so I think we're safe for now. Young Napoleon Dynamite is looking to me with gratitude.
Here's one last look at Jaws Lake. Next year we are going to Godzilla Lake instead. No sharks there, or so I've heard.
A long-lived feature of the tram tour is a stop in a sleepy Mexican village that is plagued with flash floods every few minutes. Why, I just saw it a few months ago! Instead of posting four boring individual photos, I decided to try to make a sequential animated gif, which came out OK in spite of its imperfections.
Here endeth Part One! I hope you enjoyed your visit to Universal Studios.