Luke & I also have a fondness for lists, so I thought it would be fun to, using the rides at the parks, list out some of my favorite things for posterity on this movie-related topic, something that weirdly we have never really talked about on this blog despite many, many discussions of Disney itself.
Let's start with ranking the parks themselves. For the uninitiated, there are Disney parks on three different continents, twelve in all (and this isn't counting the water parks): two in California, four in Florida, two in Tokyo, one in Hong Kong, one in Shanghai, and two in Paris. I have been to all but four of these (the four in Asia-I have never actually been to Asia, possibly the single biggest gap in my world-traveling). Here's how I would rank them:
- Disneyland
- Magic Kingdom
- Animal Kingdom
- EPCOT
- Disneyland Park (Paris)
- Hollywood Studios
- Walt Disney Studios Park (now called Disney Adventure World)
- Disney's California Adventure
Here's a few caveats. First, I want to clarify the last time I went to some of these. The California parks were in the Fall of 2022, the Orlando parks was in the Spring of 2025, and the Paris parks was in the Fall of 2025. That sounds recent, but it does matter. For example, the Frozen world at Walt Disney Studios Park (which was what it was called when I went there) wasn't there yet-this was a huge update to the parks, adding both an Adventure Way (which will focus on The Lion King and Tangled as part of the rides), and then a huge "World of Frozen" similar to the one in EPCOT. The really cool thing about these parks (and one of many reasons why I love them) is that they are constantly evolving. It can be frustrating (you want to have the same experience, and then they tear down Muppetvision), but it also means that it's ephemeral and kind of beautiful, in some ways like watching a movie-you only get the same experience once, even if you go a hundred times.
I will point out because this is a bit US heavy, what I'm looking for in these parks. My favorite thing about these parks, and why I think they are something that adults have latched onto is their immersive quality. These places are for children, ultimately...but they are done so well as to attract adults. You feel like you are walking into the actual world itself. Disneyland, because it's so large & has so many of my favorite worlds, stays on top, as it has things like the Star Wars or Adventureland worlds to lean in on that feel like you've gone into the movie itself. I have spent my whole life wanting to walk into the Death Star or ride with Jack Sparrow...getting to do that, even as a proxy, is what I'm happy about doing.
All right, let's get to the rides. I will put both my favorite ride in each park, and then my Top 20 favorite rides overall:
- Animal Kingdom: Expedition Everest
- Hollywood Studios: Rise of the Resistance
- Magic Kingdom: Pirates of the Caribbean
- EPCOT: Remy's Ratatouille Adventure
- Disneyland: Pirates of the Caribbean
- California Adventure: Radiator Spring Racers
- Disneyland Park: Phantom Manor
- Walt Disney Studios Park: Remy's Ratatouille Adventure
And the Top 20 (this was TOUGH...if a ride is largely the same in different parks I'm counting it together so as not to get repetitive, even if there are slight nuances between some of them):
- Pirates of the Caribbean
- Star Wars: Rise of the Resistance
- Haunted Mansion/Phantom Manor
- Expedition Everest
- Avatar: Flight of Passage
- Space Mountain
- Remy's Ratatouille Adventure
- Peter Pan's Flight
- Big Thunder Mountain Railroad
- Tiana's Bayou Adventure
- Tron Lightcycle Run
- Tower of Terror
- Radiator Springs Racers
- Jungle Cruise
- Snow White's Enchanted Wish
- Crush's Coaster
- Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind
- It's a Small World
- Frozen Ever After
- Buzz Lightyear's Space Ranger Spin
Honestly-this is a weird blend of nostalgia (for the rides I did as a kid) and me admitting that there are some rides that probably are better now. Comparing something that is dripping in nostalgia, wonder, & an old kind of magic like Pirates of the Caribbean with the technical insanity of Rise of the Resistance is, well, honestly foolish (much like picking Best Picture at the Oscars, so this feels quite appropriate for this blog), but I feel good with this as my list, though there's a half dozen more dark rides I could put in here (I would be genuinely happy if there was an entire park just filled with dark rides of every Disney movie you can think of, and not even one ride that goes more than 3 miles per hour). Special mention for Muppetvision and Honey, I Shrunk the Audience, both rides that are no longer standing that might've made the cut were they still standing.
And that's where I'm going to leave it-share your favorites from the Disney theme parks below (particularly if you have tips for China or Japan!), and wish my brother a very happy birthday!








