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・ The Twilight Samurai
・ The Twilight Singers
・ The Twilight Tomb
・ The Twilight Years
・ The Twilight Zone
・ The Twilight Zone (1959 TV series)
・ The Twilight Zone (1959 TV series) (season 1)
・ The Twilight Zone (1959 TV series) (season 2)
・ The Twilight Zone (1959 TV series) (season 3)
・ The Twilight Zone (1959 TV series) (season 4)
・ The Twilight Zone (1959 TV series) (season 5)
・ The Twilight Zone (1985 TV series)
・ The Twilight Zone (2002 TV series)
・ The Twilight Zone (radio series)
・ The Twilight Zone (Rush song)
The Twilight Zone Tower of Terror
・ The Twilights
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・ The Twin (film)
・ The Twin (novel)
・ The Twin Atlas
・ The Twin Diamonds
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・ The Twinkie Squad
・ The Twinkle in God's Eye
・ The Twinkle Tales
・ The Twinkler


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The Twilight Zone Tower of Terror : ウィキペディア英語版
The Twilight Zone Tower of Terror

The Twilight Zone Tower of Terror, commonly known as Tower of Terror, is an accelerated drop tower dark ride located at Disney's Hollywood Studios, Disney California Adventure, Tokyo DisneySea and Walt Disney Studios Park in Paris. Exempting the Tokyo version, all the attractions are based upon Rod Serling's CBS television anthology series, ''The Twilight Zone'', and take place in the fictional Hollywood Tower Hotel, in Hollywood, California. The Tokyo version, which features an original storyline not derived from ''The Twilight Zone'', takes place in the fictional Hotel Hightower. Nevertheless, all four versions place riders in a vehicle themed as a seemingly ordinary hotel elevator, and present riders with a fictional back story in which people mysteriously disappeared from a hotel elevator under the influence of some supernatural element many years prior.
The original version of the attraction opened at Disney's Hollywood Studios (at Walt Disney World in Florida) in July 1994, and was the basis of the 1997 made-for-television movie ''Tower of Terror'' where several scenes were shot at the actual attraction. A decade later, Disney began plans to add similar versions of the attraction at their newest parks at the Disneyland Resort in California, Tokyo Disney Resort in Japan, and Disneyland Resort Paris; in California and Paris, Disney sought to use the popular attraction to boost attendance at the respective resorts' struggling new theme parks. The California and Tokyo versions of Tower of Terror opened in 2004〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://www.towerofterror.org/secrets/disneys-california-adventure-tower-terror-secrets )〕 and 2006,〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://www.towerofterror.org/secrets/tokyo-disney-tower-terror-secrets )〕 respectively, while financial problems delayed the opening of the Paris version until 2008.〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://www.ultimaterollercoaster.com/news/stories/20050124_01.shtml )
The Tower of Terror buildings are among the tallest found at their respective Disney resorts. At , the Florida version is the second tallest attraction building at the Walt Disney World Resort, shorter only than Expedition Everest's . At the Disneyland Resort, the structure is the tallest attraction at the resort, as well as one of the tallest buildings in Anaheim.〔(Tallest Buildings in Orange County )〕 At Disneyland Paris it is the second tallest attraction.
==Queue and pre-show==
In the American and European versions of the attraction, guests enter the Hollywood Tower Hotel through the front gate. Throughout the entire queue area in most parks, typical 1930s jazz music can be heard, hauntingly echoing through a cracked, serpentine pathway which leads to the hotel. The outdoor queue winds through the overgrown gardens of the hotel, past signs pointing to the stables, bowling green, tennis courts and swimming pools. The queue meanders to the west of the hotel entrance, past disheveled and crumbling statuary and a vine-covered pavilion. Eventually it leads to the lobby from the left. Inside the doors, the Hollywood Tower Hotel appears frozen in time, everything in it draped in decades' worth of dust and decay. There is a yellowed copy of the ''Los Angeles Examiner'' dated October 31, 1939, a table set with tea and stale pastries, several suitcases abandoned near the front desk, a long-extinguished fireplace, an unfinished game of Mahjong at a table accompanied by a few rancid cocktails, a concierge desk with a hat and cane left behind, and a cobwebbed owl sculpture surrounded by a circle of dead flowers acting as the centerpiece of the lobby. In the California and Paris versions, the game of Mahjong was replaced with an unfinished game of cards.
Behind the front desk are the elevators; the sliding doors of one are partially detached from their grooves. A sign in front of the elevator still reads "Out of Order." Everything in the hotel has apparently been preserved ever since it closed that fateful night all those years ago. Guests are informed that their rooms are not quite ready; in the meantime, guests are ushered into the hotel library. The library is home to not only books, but also the hotel's collection of antiques and exotic curiosities, an old television set, and various pieces of ''Twilight Zone'' memorabilia scattered about the room. Through the window, guests may observe a fierce thunderstorm raging outside.
With a bolt of lightning the power suddenly goes out, save for the television which crackles into life, apparently of its own accord, with the opening sequence from Season 4 and Season 5 of ''The Twilight Zone'' plays, followed by a supposedly "lost" episode hosted by Rod Serling (which is actually a modified re-themed introduction taken from the show's third season's eighth episode "It's a Good Life.") With the benefit of Disney's use of numerous Twilight Zone audio samples, Serling fills in some of the blanks regarding the closure of the Hollywood Tower Hotel back in 1939. The episode shows the hotel on that night all those years ago. A ferocious thunderstorm has enveloped the building and grounds. The episode then cuts to the lobby, where singer Carolyn Crosson, her boyfriend Gilbert London, child actress Sally Shine (who is modeled after child actress Shirley Temple) and her nanny Emeline Partridge accompanied by a hotel bellhop Dewey Todd board the elevator. None of the names of the characters are mentioned or referenced in the pre-show.
The elevator ascends normally at first, but then, the lightning bolt strikes the hotel, causing an entire wing and the guests to vanish, and causing the elevator to drop rapidly and crash, sending all five people into the Twilight Zone. The lightning strike explains the missing front wing with burn marks across the face of the hotel, allowing those outside the hotels to periodically see the elevators ascending and dropping. Taking the episode back to the present, Serling comments that the storm outside is similar to the one that sent the fateful five into the Fifth Dimension. He also explains that the only elevator in the hotel still in working condition is the maintenance service elevator located in the basement at the boiler room. He invites the guests, "if they dare", to board the elevator and discover the secret of the Hollywood Tower Hotel and make each of them a star of ''The Twilight Zone''. The television then turns off and is followed by a brief moment of darkness. With that, a back exit from the library opens. The guests exit into and move through the boiler room, past quietly humming boilers, furnaces and engines, at the end of which they are directed by a "bellhop" to a row to stand on, a marker, awaiting the service elevator's arrival.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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