
This Legend is found on the 8th floor of the Outback Dungeon. Note: Has the ability to drain rage.
Ocean Park Halloween Bash (海洋公園哈囉喂) is an annual Halloween event held by Ocean Park Hong Kong. It contains haunted attractions and shows, the park area is decorated with Halloween decorations and full of Halloween characters that are dressed up by the officials. The Halloween Bash in Ocean Park started in 2001 and it held during late September to 1 November each year. It has changed to All-Day-and-Night Halloween Celebration in 2013.
History[edit]
In 2001, Ocean Park started its first Halloween Bash.[1] It claimed to be the first theme park holding Halloween celebration in Southeast Asia, with an investment above $15 million. The Halloween Bash period started from 19th to 31 October in its first year. The event aims to arouse more public interest not only by rides, but launching different festive celebrations. In 2001, Ocean Park created three representative halloween mascots: the Pumpkin King, the Witty Witch, and Count Dracula. The four haunted attractions are ‘Mini Maze”, ‘Superstition’, ‘Caverns of Darkness 3D’ and the ‘Underworld’; there are also Halloween events such as horror shows and games.[2]
Haunted Attractions[edit]
Year | Theme | Attractions |
---|---|---|
2015 | 15th anniversary[3][4] | The Walking Dead: Survival (selected the most frightening scenes from among the five seasons of ‘The Walking Dead’ ) 15 Years of Horror(iconic scares and ghosts from yesteryears have came back) |
2014 | Horror-wood Studios[5] | Phantom Studios and Horror-wood Studios Forest of Legends and Forest of Doom Dumb ways to die 2 amazon. (Same area with different setting between day and night) Rigor Mortis LIVE(themed from local movie-Rigor Mortis) H14(first-ever limited-admission) |
2013 | World’s largest giant pumpkin sculptures All Day and Night[6] | Law Lan’s Possessed Possessions( Artist Law Lan is playing the role of a whispering medium ) Murder Factory |
2012 | The “First”[7] | 5D Journey to the Underworld Terror of the Tombs(first haunted attraction featuring both interactive projection technology and a kinetic game) Eagle-eye Exorcist(first interactive Halloween-themed game incorporating eye-tracking technology) |
2011 | The Republic of Halloween[8] | Fear Factory(solo walk-through journey) Nightmare in 3D(featured 3D projection system) Paper Doll Paradise |
2010 | Intensified guest participation[9] | Zombie Hunt(laser tag battle between guest and zombie) Terror Park(first ever haunted attraction that features RFID (Radio-frequency identification) Exploring Burned Alive |
2009 | Hong Kong Local Ghost Stories of Yore[10] | Police Station No.13 High Street Madness Purgatory Express(About the Headless Jane) The Ghastly Minshuku |
2008 | Hong Kong’s seam of myths[11] | The Canton Case(4th dimension audio-visual) The Estate of Horror(Own choice of experience) Deadly Doll Factory The Tomb of Doom(about terracotta army) |
2007 | Ancient ghost stories[12] | Chung Kwai’s Ghost Gourd The Last Stop(funeral procession into the world of the afterlife) Mad Doctor’s Bizarre Lab |
Popularity[edit]
Ocean Park Halloween Bash has annual advertising videos and promotion events to increase popularity. Halloween bash attained its success that more than 150,000 visitors[13] has visited Ocean Park in the first year. The attendance of the event has risen gradually since 2003, it has attracted over 380,000 visitors throughout the month, breaking all records of any October in the Park's 27-year History.[14] Ocean Park Halloween Bash claimed to become one of the largest and most highly attended Halloween events in the world in 2006, about 500,000 visitors[15] attended the great event.
Controversies[edit]
2009[edit]
Some officers who dressed up in Ocean Park Halloween Bash complained the costumes were not washed every day, and they were forced to wear the unsanitary costumes. As a result, some visitors chose not to take photos with them. This “smelly ghost” incident caused some negative comments that year.[16]
2010[edit]
30 viewers complained about the advertisement of Ocean Park Halloween Bash in TVB jade. They criticized the advertisement which made them feel uneasy and horrible, and it preached superstition. At last, the Broadcasting Authority of Hong Kong ruled this complaint unreasonable because the TVB jade had made an adjustment of time on the advertisement.[17]
2011[edit]
Eight youths attended the Ocean Park Halloween Bash and one of them was scared by a staff who dressed up as a clown. A male friend of hers abused the actor and both came into physical conflict. The clown’s mask was broken and his mouth injured. Another officer also stood an assault during persuasion. The police came to the scene and arrested two youths involved.[18]
2012[edit]
A Christian artist, Zac Kao, judged the advertisement of the Ocean Park Halloween Bash, advocated posthumous marriage and promote unhealthy messages. He posted a status in social media to persuade citizens not to attend the event. His persuasion was forwarded over 800 times and gained more than 5000 “likes”. At the same time there were many netizens criticized his opinions.[19]
References[edit]
- ^'Press Release Corporate Information Ocean Park Hong Kong'. www.oceanpark.com.hk. Retrieved 2015-11-04.
- ^'哈囉喂snapshots大重溫之2001 Facebook'. www.facebook.com. Retrieved 2015-11-10.
- ^'Press Release Corporate Information Ocean Park Hong Kong'. www.oceanpark.com.hk. Retrieved 2015-11-04.
- ^'海洋公園哈囉喂全日祭 無間驚喜全日制!'. halloween.oceanpark.com.hk. Retrieved 2015-11-08.
- ^'Ocean Park H14'. Cover Magazine. Retrieved 2015-11-04.
- ^'Press Release Corporate Information Ocean Park Hong Kong'. www.oceanpark.com.hk. Retrieved 2015-11-04.
- ^'Press Release Corporate Information Ocean Park Hong Kong'. www.oceanpark.com.hk. Retrieved 2015-11-04.
- ^'Halloween 2011 at Ocean Park Hong Kong'. InPark Magazine. Retrieved 2015-11-04.
- ^'Halloween, With Chinese Characteristics'. WSJ Blogs - Scene Asia. Retrieved 2015-11-04.
- ^'Press Release Corporate Information Ocean Park Hong Kong'. www.oceanpark.com.hk. Retrieved 2015-11-04.
- ^'Press Release Corporate Information Ocean Park Hong Kong'. www.oceanpark.com.hk. Retrieved 2015-11-04.
- ^'Press Release Corporate Information Ocean Park Hong Kong'. www.oceanpark.com.hk. Retrieved 2015-11-04.
- ^'Press Release Corporate Information Ocean Park Hong Kong'. www.oceanpark.com.hk. Retrieved 2015-11-10.
- ^'Press Release Corporate Information Ocean Park Hong Kong'. www.oceanpark.com.hk. Retrieved 2015-11-10.
- ^'Press Release Corporate Information Ocean Park Hong Kong'. www.oceanpark.com.hk. Retrieved 2015-11-10.
- ^'鬼咁臭遊客受罪 - 東方日報'. orientaldaily.on.cc. Retrieved 2015-11-04.
- ^'Complaints Referred to the BACC Endorsed by the BA in November and December 2010_30462'. ba_archives.ofca.gov.hk. Retrieved 2015-11-04.
- ^'海洋公園人打鬼 護花打爆嘴'. Apple Daily 蘋果日報. Retrieved 2015-11-04.
- ^'國度復興報(香港版)網站 - 新聞區'. www.krt.com.hk. Retrieved 2015-11-04.
The Shakespeare Code
The temptation to write historical figures into Doctor Who is understandably irresistible to the average scriptwriter. Moored down on Earth by budgetary constraints and needing an instant hook into a given historical period, it makes easy shorthand for viewers.
When it works, it buys into the gallivanting rompy ethos of the ‘Who, like Queen Victoria in Tooth and Claw. When it doesn’t work, it really doesn’t. And that’s what happened this week.
Getting the eternally awesome Dean Lennox Kelly (him out of Shameless) to play Shakespeare was a great idea. Turning him into a decontextualised quotation-spouting service was hideous. You do have to admire the ways the episode was built up around trying to avoid this shabby starting point. Yeah, the Globe Theatre played home a cross-section of society! Gosh, even the Doctor thinks Will’s a genius, and he thinks all humans are unbelievably stupid (or all incredibly amazing, depending on the circumstance)! My, isn’t he quite the dashing gad about town!
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Maybe it’s something about literary figures, seeing as Dickens was similarly reduced to a mess. Here’s an idea – perhaps trying to shoehorn intellectual figures from cultural history into bit players in a TV series isn’t going to work.
After all, the best Who Redux historical episodes have been icon-free – The Empty Child/ Doctor Dances double didn’t have Churchill battling gas-mask zombies, The Girl in the Fireplace didn’t enlist Marie Antoinette as a throwaway heroine.
Plus, I know it was only a throwaway comment, but must every episode include some ambiguous sexuality in a lame attempt to hit Middle England’s outrage buttons? This week, the Willster hits on the Doc. Next week it’s carbound elderly lesbians. Captain Jack will soon be back leering at everything with, or quite possibly without, a pulse. By mid-series we’ll be up to our elbows in bestiality, so to speak.
The good points: the witches were actually quite good. Plenty of people have slagged them off as not being big and scary enough. Well, we did have some cracking SS rhino police last week, and the Daleks are back in a fortnight. Not every nemesis can live up to the ‘it makes children want to hide behind the sofa’ legend of clip show yore. A bit of pacing was much needed.
The witches did, however, commit the new Doctor Who compulsory rule of mentioning Rose. You’d never know she had left as the Doctor can’t go five minutes without his eyes misting over because someone mentions roses, or old travelling partners, or that he must have lost some ‘thing’ recently. For goodness sake, he can save the world on a weekly basis, but the man wouldn’t last a full episode of Star Psychic with Sally Morgan.
The Shakespeare Code did also help to put the creakingly awful CGI of earlier series in the past, providing full-on wowtasms every time we got a shot of Elizabethan London. Plus this episode quite gloriously had Super Hans from Peep Show in it. But in the end, these were really just the frilly ruffs to a centrally daft Shakespeare. Let’s hope someone hides the writers’ Penguin Guide to Literature before the series continues.