Join Marlin, Dory, Crush and Nemo on a journey 20,000 leagues under the sea, on Disneyland's Finding Nemo Submarine Voyage! Filmed February 7, 2023 at the Disneyland Resort in Anaheim, California.
I got stuck in this ride right after the volcano bit and we had to reverse through the whole ride with the lights off and no bubbles. Only rooms that were lit up were the jellyfish and anglerfish rooms where you could see it was just an otherwise empty white room. Watching this again was scarier than any horror movie!
I went on this attraction with my parents twice before COVID-19 entered the picture. We boarded the Scout submarine which reminded us of a little bit of the inscription on the 1975 International Harvester Scout II car named Christine that's parked securely in our garage at home. I told a cast member about it and he was shocked to hear that. 🤣
@@zoltanwilson4277 Walt footsteps tour magic of 100th birthday party anniversary celebration party years do you know what Walt Disney saved by daylight savings account opening up the best way to get
This ride was a real acid trip, and on top of it the deep ocean intimidates me and I'm slightly claustrophobic. Not saying it's bad, just that I likely won't do it again.
@@coltonandjen you can actually see the surface line but it's such a good effect it actually feels like you're going deeper and deeper. I have thalassophobia and if I ever went to a disney park I don't think I could bring myself to ride this one 😅
Do people who don't know anything about submarines think that it's normal to have bubbles all over the place? Or, what's their in-universe explanation?
I prefer the original version pre CGI stuff with the crazy looking Sea Serpent towards the end of the ride. The original ride just seemed more "realtistic" rather then just following a kids cartoon.