I walk you through the mansion, hope you like this ! i dont get paid to do anything you see in my videos ......i just do this as a hobby ...........thanks for watching !!
@@ghostsofVTurbexSkysthelimitvid the truth is though, I actually was obsessed with the haunted mansion as a kid, but for some reason, it still scared me
I'm shocked and disappointed in myself that I've had the movie DVD for all these years and I never ONCE checked out the Special Features menu in order to come across this! Little 5 year old me would've loved this! I should dust off my DVD copy of The Haunted Mansion and try to find this virtual tour. This is so nostalgic.
6:31 | In the Gracey Manor foyer, at the grand staircase behind the foyer's clock passageway, there's the portrait of the Carnival Scene (a.k.a. The Minuet). This painting was originally done by Giovanni Domenico Tiepolo. As a changing portrait, "The Minuet" transforms into hell (the Inferno). This painting was entitled "The Armageddon", created by Gunnar Ahmer, according to the Ghost Relations Department blog. While these images don't match perfectly when they change, however, they're still similar. The original area for the paintings themselves was not in a portrait hall like what we see at Disneyland, and that portrait was not even displayed in the film.
6:37 | Also, next to the portrait of Juliette Récamier (a portrait that transform into an orange tiger), there's another portrait. It's the portrait of View of Brest Harbour (in French: "Vue de la rade de brest"), originally done by Jean-François Hue. That portrait looks different than the Flying Dutchman changing portrait from the Disney Theme Park Attraction, but in the film version of The Haunted Mansion, the portrait of View of Brest Harbour transforms into a ship that was set on fire at night.