Hotel Embrujado

Hotel Embrujado, also known as The Haunted Hotel, is a disorienting madhouse dark ride in Madrid, Spain. It is part of Parque Warner Madrid. The attraction is inspired by the Chateau Marmont[1] and takes place at the fictional Hotel Embrujado in Hollywood, California. The attraction takes riders into a seemingly ordinary banquet hall, and presents the riders with a fictional backstory of a bride left at the altar many years before, who then went towards the supernatural.[2]

Hotel Embrujado
Parque Warner Madrid
AreaMovie World Studios
Coordinates40.229973°N 3.591655°W / 40.229973; -3.591655
StatusOperating
Opening dateApril 6, 2002 (April 6, 2002)
General statistics
Attraction typeMadhouse dark ride
ManufacturerVekoma
DesignerWarner Bros.
Six Flags
ThemeChateau Marmont
Height restriction47 in (119 cm)
Must transfer from wheelchair

Preshow

Guests enter the abandoned hotel ride building through the derelict lobby. The lobby is covered in dust and draped with cobwebs. Walking past old paintings and statues, guests are ushered into the library, which houses the hotel's collection of books, and antiques. When they arrive the lights dim and two busts on either side of a massive mirror, above a fire, come to life and start discussing the disappearance of Eduardo the groom who vanished on his wedding night from the hotel.

"That night, Eduardo took refuge once again here ... among all these books. No wonder, a hotel library is a lonely place, that's why he liked to come here."
"Something has changed in this place, I see the fire but I feel cold, I feel as if Isabel's soul possesses me and is melted with her shadows ... "

As the statues tell the story of Eduardo and his fiancé Isabel, the mirror begins to reflect the past and show the guests what happened. While Eduardo is going on about his reservations about marrying Isabel, guests see the fire from the mirror leap forwards and absorb Eduardo.

The guests are then led into the banquet hall where Eduardo and Isabel were meant to wed. Decaying food, and rats liter the table. At the end, the corpse of Isabel still sits in her wedding dress waiting for Eduardo.

"It's a very special banquet that has not yet started. On a day that will never end. That's why I'm still here, waiting for my beloved. Waiting for Eduardo, for years... decades. With all of my love rotting in my heart."

The corpse of Isabel pulls herself off the table, and recounts her time waiting for Eduardo. While she does, the room starts spinning, guests are turned upside-down. In the end the ghost of Eduardo shows up, but quickly vanishes again. Angry Isabel curses everyone and banishes them from her wedding.

Technical details

The ride system for the Hotel Embrujado employs the haunter swing illusion, which uses optical and physical illusions to give riders a sense that they are repeatedly being turned upside down.[3]

Incidents

On August 13, 2005, 23-year old Francisco Javier Infante, a Spanish man was hit in the head by a ride vehicle after allegedly forcing his way off the attraction. Park emergency personnel applied first aid procedures; the man was in critical condition. He was helicoptered to the hospital, where he later died due to his injuries. [4][5] Infante's family went on to sue the park claiming they were negligent and that the lap bar was loose allowing him to slip out of the ride. [6] When the case went to trial, to was ruled that the death was the parks fault, and charged the maintenance manager a fine of €12,000, along with the supervisor of the security camera's a fine of €3,600. When the case was attempted to be appealed, it was denied. For the sister of the deceased who was with him on the ride, "it has been a great satisfaction"for the family "because it has been proved that the park was responsible" and the accident was not the fault of his brother, "as they claimed."[7]

gollark: Banking apps use this for """security""", mostly, as well as a bunch of other ones because they can.
gollark: Google has a thing called "SafetyNet" which allows apps to refuse to run on unlocked devices. You might think "well, surely you could just patch apps to not check, or make a fake SafetyNet always say yes". And this does work in some cases, but SafetyNet also uploads lots of data about your device to Google servers and has *them* run some proprietary ineffable checks on it and give a cryptographically signed attestation saying "yes, this is an Approved™ device" or "no, it is not", which the app's backend can check regardless of what your device does.
gollark: The situation is also slightly worse than *that*. Now, there is an open source Play Services reimplementation called microG. You can install this if you're running a custom system image, and it pretends to be (via signature spoofing, a feature which the LineageOS team refuse to add because of entirely false "security" concerns, but which is widely available in some custom ROMs anyway) Google Play Services. Cool and good™, yes? But no, not really. Because if your bootloader is unlocked, a bunch of apps won't work for *other* stupid reasons!
gollark: If you do remove it, half your apps will break, because guess what, they depend on Google Play Services for some arbitrary feature.
gollark: It's also a several hundred megabyte blob with, if I remember right, *every permission*, running constantly with network access (for push notifications). You can't remove it without reflashing/root access, because it's part of the system image on most devices.

References

  1. "Haunted Hotel Attraction". Parque Warner.
  2. "Hotel Embrujado | The ride that transforms everything". The Smile of Experiences. Retrieved 2018-10-24.
  3. "Vekoma Rides Manufacturing BV - madhouse". vekoma.com. Retrieved 2014-11-17.
  4. Rolfe, Pamela (August 15, 2005). "Man dies on Warner Bros. ride in Spain". Hollywood Reporter. Archived from the original on March 21, 2018.
  5. Sanchez, Esther (August 14, 2005). "A man dies in Warner Park after suffering an accident in an attraction". Archived from the original on March 22, 2018.
  6. "The family of the deceased in Warner Bros. Park believes that "justice has been done" two years later" (in Spanish). Seville, Spain: Europa Press. 13 August 2007. Archived from the original on 22 February 2019.
  7. "The Provincial Court of Madrid confirms the condemnation of Warner Park for the death of a young man in 2005" (in Spanish). Facua.org. 25 May 2005. Archived from the original on 22 February 2019.
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