On August 27, 2021, following Disneyland Paris' reopening, Walt Disney Studios Park announced that the attraction was set to become part of the Worlds of Pixar area.
History
Disneyland Paris – known as Disneyland Resort Paris at the time – began a placemaking project as early as 2006 to improve and expand the Animation Courtyard area within Walt Disney Studios Park.[1] The project was completed in 2007, and the area was renamed Toon Studio. No official press announcement was given until the launch of the resort's 15th Anniversary Celebration on April 1, 2007.[2][3] The ride then debuted on June 9, 2007 and is the first and only ride at Disneyland Paris to be themed to Finding Nemo.[4]
On Halloween night in 2010, Walt Disney Studios Park was rethemed for the holiday, with most of its popular attractions receiving a halloween re-theming. Crush's Coaster became Crush's Coaster: Avis de Tempête as part of the festivities.
Ride experience
Queue
Guests enter the Toon Backlot of Toon Studio and stumble upon the beached sound stage and film set of Disney·Pixar's Finding Nemo, themed as Sydney Harbour, where Crush and his sea friends invite guests to climb aboard turtle shells for a ride through memorable scenes from the movie.[5]
Ride
The ride starts off with shells "diving" into the ocean. The first part of the attraction is a slow dark ride taking guests to the Great Barrier Reef, where they meet Nemo and Squirt, then to the darkness of the depths, where they encounter voracious glowfish, and finally to the Sunken Submarine surrounded by an army of jellyfish where they meet the sharks and their chief, Bruce.
The second part of the ride's track is a faster rollercoaster in the dark, representing the spiraling, churning East Australian Current itself. The ride ends with the shells returning to Sydney Harbour, with cheers from Crush and his friends.
In a bid to decrease the long queues that frequently plague the ride, Disney conducted preliminary tests during July 2008 at the Crush's Coaster site to investigate the possibility of installing a Fastpass system at the attraction.[7] Fastpass was ultimately not implemented at the ride, though a single riders line subsequently was.
Fastpass was again trialed in January 2018. Crush's Coaster is now part of Disney Premier Access, a paid Fastpass service. [8]