Las Vegas enterprise taps 'Star Trek' appeal
October 11, 1997
Web posted at: 1:14 p.m. EDT (1714 GMT)
From Correspondent Dick Wilson
LAS VEGAS (CNN) -- In the glitzy gambling mecca called Las
Vegas, the expected -- sequined showgirls and aging-crooner
lounge acts -- will soon be joined by something unexpected:
"Star Trek, the Experience."
The $70 million entertainment project under construction is
more interactive than a stage show and more detailed than a
theme park, said Tim Chanaud of the Las Vegas Hilton, where the sci-fi complex will be located.
"It's a chance for people to actually become part of an
adventure," he said.
(201K/17 sec. AIFF or WAV sound)
This particular starship is an enterprise that includes the
"Space-quest Casino," as well as a bar, restaurant, shops and
live actors in "Star Trek" garb.
Sophisticated computer-controlled rides and other
entertainment are also part of the package. Its centerpiece
is a computerized shuttle craft that takes visitors into
space with a warp-speed movie on a giant cone-shaped screen.
The 27-seat shuttle car moves in six directions, sometimes
all at once, during the four-minute ride. The ride's
herky-jerky movements are based on motion simulators the U.S.
military uses to train fighter pilots.
"It uses an enormous amount of technology from the military
simulation and civil simulation industry," said Chris Morrow,
vice president of McFadden Systems. "Everything about this
show is under computer control."
McFadden has been shifting the use of such technologies to
entertainment in recent years, Morrow said.
(178K/15 sec. AIFF or WAV sound)
The ride has a story line, but the show's creators are
keeping its plot, climax and denouement under wraps for now.
"You are expecting to go on an attraction, on a ride, and at
an unexpected moment, you are beamed up and have to return to
Las Vegas," production designer Luc Mayrand said. "I won't
tell you much more than that, but you basically disappear.
You go up, take an adventure in the future."
The hotel hopes to have the attraction ready for the crowds
expected in November when the world's largest computer show,
Comdex, comes to town.