Here is a video: <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D8_VmWWRJgE" rel="nofollow">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D8_VmWWRJgE</a>
When I performed at Disney, they were super strict about not taking any images of ‘behind the scenes’ Disney, e.g. characters with their costume half off, tinker bell smoking, etc.<p>It’s curious that they would publish something like this without glossing over the silence-of-the-lambs imagery to make it fit more with the Disney iconography.
The article doesn't mention why they're doing it - I hope it's for returning to their roots of real animatronics at the theme parks.<p>Universal went further down the 3D / Simulator ride route than Disney and it's fun, but it's a bit less "magic". In a world of screens, I want a trip to a theme park to be real.
It seems organic, but still a bit slow on the head and neck movement. I honestly wonder if doing this "dry" without the internal lubrication of bodily wetness is going to prevent more natural quick jerky head turns.