Beauty and the Beast Sing Along EPCOT

Walt Disney World

EPCOT

Minimum Height: Any Height

Accessibility: May Remain in Wheelchair/ECV, Assistive Listening, Audio Description,

Current Wait: 0 minutes

Beauty and the Beast Sing Along EPCOT

Settle in at a cozy French cinema for a 15-minute film featuring songs from the animated classic, Beauty and the Beast.

“Once upon a time, in a far away land, a young prince lived in a shining castle.”

This pavilion is a bit confusing as it has one theater dedicated to two very different attractions. They both feature films, but that’s where the comparison ends. During the daylight hours, the theater primarily hosts the Beauty and the Beast Sing-Along, which is perhaps a great respite from the Florida sun, but it’s clearly aimed at younger guests and adults may only darken its door to get a quick catnap as their kids sing along to some of their favorite tunes with Belle and company. It’s safe to assume that there aren’t any true surprises, so guests should take a moment to relax and realign themselves before venturing back out into the sweltering heat.

“We must go.”

Present since the opening of EPCOT, Impressions de France is a delightful mainstay featuring five movie screens, and even though its film is a bit tattered and the scenes are clearly of another era, it has a certain charm to it that is greatly elevated by its soundtrack composed and compiled by Disney Legend, Buddy Baker. Beginning with the light, playful sounds of “Aquarium” from Camille Saint-Saëns’s Carnival of the Animals to a rousing finish with the same composer’s “Symphony no. 3 (Organ Symphony),” blaring as the elevator on the Eiffel Tower ascends to its peak position to look out over the city. The sheer beauty of this film never takes a pause. 

Viewers are treated to breathtaking shots amid a hot air balloon festival, gliding up the Loire River to witness the majesty of Chateau de Chenonceau, stepping into the middle of a wedding ceremony in a small church in Brittany, and so much more. Watching an elderly couple walk their dog along the cliffs of Normandy will spark a bit of wanderlust in viewers who may just want to sample the enticing pastries that await in the local markets. The sites just keep on coming, and even to the unfamiliar, France is clearly beckoning the adventurous and/or casual traveler.

Reality Check:

Another composer featured in Impressions de France is Paul Dukas, who guests might know as the creator of “The Sorceror’s Apprentice,” featured in the 1940 Disney film, Fantasia.

Though translations differ slightly, the main poem featured in Impressions de France is Baudelaire’s “The Voyage,” which reads: 

“But the true voyagers are only those who leave
Just to be leaving; hearts light, like balloons,
They never turn aside from their fatality
And without knowing why they always say: ‘We must go!’”

The structure that appears nearly halfway through the film is Mont-Saint-Michel, which is a tidal island that remained unharmed during the Hundred Years War. It currently has a population of 29 residents.