A trivia item known to most hardcore fans is the fact that the term "doombuggy" occurs only in the "breakdown spiel," when riders are told to remain seated in their halted "dooooombuggy," as X Atencio pronounces it (that's his voice). Theoretically, you could ride the HM your entire life and never hear the word.
Breakdown Spiel
Less well-known is the fact that "doombuggy" was used in press releases given out for the grand opening, so it's been an official term since Day One. It's a pun on "dune buggy," of course, firmly dating the whole business to the late 60's.
That is soooo groovy
Yes, but what is a doombuggy supposed to be? When it comes to conveyance vehicles, the Haunted Mansion is admittedly inferior to the Pirates of the Caribbean. The small boats you use to sail through an imaginary Caribbean port town are perfectly suited to the world you are entering, requiring minimal suspension of disbelief. That's how you would do it, if you were really in a position to do it. But I've never heard of a real haunted house with a string of pods snaking through it.
The Ghost Host refers to them as carriages, but I'm not inclined to take that too literally. If they're carriages, where are the wheels? Like the prohibition against flash photography and the mention of safety bars, it's a concession to reality that you're supposed to tolerate as part of the price of having an experience like this. Guests need to be informed in advance that they're going to be getting into a vehicle and had better be ready to pair up with "two or three loved ones." "Carriage" is just about as neutral a term as you could expect under such circumstances. What else could he call them? "Vehicles"? "Conveyances"?
But within the imaginative world of the HM, the doombuggy must be something, right? I've heard it all. "It's a hearse." "It's a coffin." "It's what he says it is, a carriage." "It's a chair."
None of these is satisfactory. If they had wanted them to be little hearses, it would have been easy enough to supply some appropriate decoration. That's what they did, for example, for the Haunted Castle at the Boardwalk in Santa Cruz, California:
(pix by RegionsBeyond)
Well, are they coffins, then? X. Atencio's first impulse, as a matter of fact, had been to outfit the omnimovers like coffins:
You've got the same problem. If they're supposed to be coffins, why don't they look like coffins? Could they be chairs, then? They do bear a certain resemblance to what they call porter chairs:
But gimme a break, you're floating through a house in an armchair? That's a bit . . . much. And if
such were the case the GH could very well have invited you to "take a seat in the chair" provided.
What they really are is exactly what they look like: nothing! They're shapeless, featureless blobs, painted flat black, which in itself is a sure sign that you're not supposed to "see" them at all.
Nope. Don't see nuthin'. Blank. Zip. Nothing there.
To illustrate the idea, I like to point to Bunraku, a traditional form of Japanese puppetry. The puppeteers are in full view, but dressed and hooded in black. By the second act, the puppeteers often dispense with the hoods, because by then you no longer "see" them.
They often have several puppeteers working the same puppet, as in this 1935 photo.
Doesn't matter. They aren't there.
"Dum de dum dum, you can't seeeee us!"
It's really the same principle as ignoring the plainly visible strings on a marionette, just a more extreme application. That's how it is with the doombuggy, except that you're the puppet. Gulp.
Notice how, in this famous Claude Coats concept sketch, the back of the doombuggies is already "invisible" before you've even left the area. The "E" Ticket Magazine recognized this concept clearly enough, referring to the doombuggies as "colorless" cars and "nearly invisible vehicles" (#16/Summer 1993, p 5).
The earliest known reference to the conveyance system is in a press release from early in 1969, announcing the opening of the ride later that summer. I have here a March 23rd clipping that says that the Mansion will provide "perpetual levitation for moving guests through the haunted halls...." There's your official explanation. Okay, you're only "levitating" if you can't see anything holding you up, am I right? No one would use the word "levitation" with reference to riding in a carriage or some other kind of visible conveyance, so apparently you're to imagine that you're being carried by some mysterious and invisible force.
We're getting carried away here.
Incidentally, you're not being carried by the Ghost Host himself. Remember, he leaves you at the end of the Séance ("I'll see you all a little later...") and finds you again near the end of the ride ("Ah, THERE you are..."). Whoever or whatever is doing it, eventually you are levitated outside through an attic window onto a small porch, and then you are dropped off the roof. You fall to the ground through a tangle of bare trees. Actually the ghosts are only teasing, and the so-called "fall" is apparently meant only to scare you, because you find yourself gently upborne by that same unseen force, landing uninjured.
We know that you "fall." Frank Allnutt, WED public relations manager when the HM opened, said so in a ride summary dated April 8, 1969:
Mortal visitors escape "outside" the mansion, only to suddenly "fall" backwards off the roof. They descend past grasping, demon trees, then find a terrified night watchman and his dog, standing, frozen with fright, at the gates of a misty cemetery.
There is some uncertainty about whether you "die" from the fall and join the party or not. Some people think so, but I doubt it. The spirits continue to either ignore you or have fun trying to scare you (the pop-ups). In other words, you're still not one of "them," not yet, anyway.
So pay no attention to that man behind the curtain. There's nothing there, even if it's nothing with a safety bar attached.
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I still say they're supernatural carriages, drifting along "wheel-lessly."
ReplyDeleteTake away the horse and wheels from the carriage in this photo, and you basically have the Doom Buggy:
http://rightproadvisors.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2008/10/horse-buggy.jpg
Plus, the hitchhiking ghosts scene would imply that you're in a vehicle.
Note that in the record, in which the characters do walk through the mansion, the hitchhikers aren't even mentioned.
Bunraku is interesting because I found myself both watching and unwatching the puppeteers. I was in Japan last November and went to Gion Corner in Kyoto, which is where the middle Bunraku picture is from. And I did notice the men, maybe because it was relatively new to me and I "knew" to look for them. As I said though, while consciously watching them, I was also unconsciously not. It's... interesting...
ReplyDeleteAnyways, I think you're spot on with how you're not supposed to notice the Doombuggies. They're nothing. Stop looking at them! ^_^
Stop looking at what?
ReplyDeleteTo me, the doom buggies are inseparable from the ride. It is a mostly smooth and silent, which helps you float along. Also, it is one of the few ride vehicles where you are forced to see a specific perspective. And it is an awfully tight squeeze if you are over 5'10".
ReplyDeleteSince the Ghost Host mentions it specifically at the beginning of the spiel, it has always been an integral part of the attraction. Sort of like it is keeping you safely ensconced while riding.
Great article!
They're like death coaches specifically designated to give tours through the mansion.
ReplyDeleteIt may be worth mentioning that the doombuggies play no role in the "Story and Song" narrative. Mike and Karen could have boarded some sort of mysterious carriage during their tour, but they do not. They walk up the stairs.
ReplyDeleteThe absolute lack of any decorative features or any identifiable shape, plus the flat black paint job, are the things that most convince me that they're supposed to be "invisible." And the GH's (and X's) references to them do not go one whit beyond the absolute minimum required by the logistics of the ride. That's just my take; your mileage may vary.
Fantastic post.
ReplyDeleteI don't like to think that you "die" after the attic. I feel like that wouldn't be in the theme of the rest of the attraction... Then, what happens after you walk out of the attraction? You're suddenly alive? Killing the guests makes for a weak storyline. I guess Toad's okay with that.
LOVE that Claude Coats boarding artwork.
It's a fair point that the hitchhiking ghosts play off of urban legends that involve vehicles. The gag itself goes back to Ken Anderson (as we've seen), with people walking along and seeing ghosts accompanying them in the mirrors. Similarly, X's skeletal ghost in a coffin-like vehicle is using the same gag but also without allusion to the rich store of HHG urban legends. Reportedly, the idea of making this mirror gag based on those stories was a pretty late idea that came from a female employee (not an "official" Imagineer), and everyone instantly saw what a good idea it was and went with it. It may be that the price for doing so was to introduce a slight inconsistency, an acknowledgment that you are indeed in some kind of vehicle, despite all the features that encourage you to ignore it as a big nothing!
ReplyDeletePerhaps we might assume that as we get out of the Mansion we mount some kind of carriage (or our own car, for that matter), which is when the HHG come in.
DeleteYes, theoretically you could ride the Mansion without hearing the term "doombuggy", but as the ride gets stuck so often, it's almost impossible to avoid.
ReplyDeleteIs it possible that it is YOU they are hitching a ride in?
ReplyDeleteIf that were the intention, you'd expect to find something like it in traditional legends about ghostly hitchhikers.
ReplyDeleteHello,
ReplyDeletecould you please let me know where comes from the bunraku photography from 1935 you add here?
Thanks!
I'm afraid I can't remember where exactly I found it. It can be seen in several places on the internet. Here's another one that gives the date as 1935:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.chinahistoryforum.com/index.php?/topic/28245-old-photos/
Someone said something about Toad... I do know You are supposed to be in Toad's crazy dream in that ride, so the Hell thing kinda makes sense. Like you wake up from a dream and hey, no Hell anymore!
ReplyDelete-Mel
Is it just me, or has anyone else noticed the important fact that when you look up at the outside of the mansion as you "fall" through the window into the graveyard, the mansion is a completely different architectural building than the real Antebellum building facade. I'm not sure what style the mansion is when looking up at it from the caretaker's angle, but it certainly ain't the Anderson/Shipley Antebellum mansion. Maybe... Victorian?
ReplyDeleteOoops. I wonder who is responsible for that major continuity screwup.
That topic is tackled in the post, "The Ghostland Around Us, Beneath Us."
DeleteIt's pretty ambiguous (I'm guessing on purpose) whether or not you "die" in the Haunted Mansion. The woman at the end says ""Hurry back... hurry back," she pleads. "And don't forget your death certificate! We're just... dying... to have you..." And then the sign says "Dead End: Prepare to exit to the living world."
ReplyDeleteSo, are you a ghost who returns to the "living world" long enough to visit the local government office and carry back proof of death? Or are you living the entire time, and the ghosts are only biding their time until your actual demise allows you to join them "for real"?
Before my childhood 70s trip to Disneyland, I had seen a brochure mentioning the mansion. I think I was most excited about this one, even then, but in my mind I visualized a dune buggy rolling through a haunted house. There was simply nothing else I could think of. (Wonder Bug was probably on TV then, or had been.) I guess I never thought about what the younger generation thinks of that term, no doubt, "what is a doombuggy" will send them here...
ReplyDeleteOne interesting way to support the theory that there is nothing there is the fact that the Doombuggy is only mentioned when you need to know that it exists. You hear about it right before you load it, using the nondescript name, right when it breaks down or stops, just so you don’t panic, and finally at the end they gently ease you back to reality through the Hitchhiking Ghost. The Hitchhiking Ghost come right at the end of the ride, when you have fully forgotten about your “carriage,” and act as a transition, they destroy the illusion of floating in nothing ness (which is necessary to avoid guest from riding the attraction for eternity), and yet they still remind guest that ghost do exist through one final trick. The Ghost Host also takes this moment to remind you about the safety bar, something he only mentioned once before…. Personally I find the “there’s nothing there theory” very accurate to how they make you feel throughout the attraction, because the first few times I rode the ride, I only remembered that they exist and to exit because a voice I didn’t recognize surprised me by speaking in place of the Ghost Host and it told me to exit with my left foot first. Basically they had to shock me into reality so that I would exit.
ReplyDeleteFurther evidence of the levitation: in a 1969 Vacationland issue (thank you Doombuggie library) about the Mansion's soon-to-be opening, it is said that "demonized doors, elastic rooms, floating furniture and a perpetual levitation system are being installed,"
ReplyDeleteI in no way believe that there is a direct connection from doombuggie tooPorter's chair But its one I cant get out of my head either.
ReplyDeletehttps://www.ebay.com/itm/Black-Finish-Porter-Chair-w-Black-Vinyl-Balloon-Bonnet-Canopy-Dome-Throne-/352542291220?oid=331081026111