It's only Molly Crowe and ToTT that you can do alone.Can you do sub species alone. I thought you ca only do molly and TotT
If you can ever get through to them to book it that is :/It's only Molly Crowe and ToTT that you can do alone.
I've noticed this. I remember it was good, and that Molly Crowe sounded a little like 13, but I can't remember the actual musicIn fact... Thinking about it... None of the music seemed to stick? I'm back there this Saturday (WOOHOO) so I'll see what happens then! Maybe it just wasn't loud enough, or I was nattering too much
New thing on YouTube relating to the Haunting of Molly Crowe and Terror of the Towers:
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=gUoKkxp9B1
I made a mistake. The video there is the one already posted. This is the Molly Crowe one on Alton Towers YouTube.What's that got to do with Molly Crowe?
anybody know what the Qs are like of late? Thinking of going again this weekend but don't want to be waiting ages on a timed slot. It's ridiculous. Hope they've sorted it out
Thanks, it was last Sunday we went and booked the earliest slot we could at 1pm, we still waited a good while for TOTT despite there hardly being any queue, the throughput on that and Molly was dire still, Sub Species seemed fine.Was it Saturday you visited? They were having capacity issues with the mazes on Saturday but these have now been fixed, from Sunday onwards maze queues have been short. Assuming ticket sales remain limited over the weekend queues shouldn't really build much above 20 minutes.
The thing I'm a bit confused about with regards to Molly Crowe is that in the promotional material she is a teenage girl (a bit like the Thirteen girl) whereas in the story of the maze and the poem she is supposed to be a young toddler/baby. I get that they may not be able to find a toddler to play the part in the adverts, but surely the poem, story and visuals could work better together to avoid juxtaposition.
So, in the poem it's a 4 year old, in the advert she's a teenager, and in the maze it's an adult (though obviously they can't use a child for this). How's that for juxtaposition then.The thing I'm a bit confused about with regards to Molly Crowe is that in the promotional material she is a teenage girl (a bit like the Thirteen girl) whereas in the story of the maze and the poem she is supposed to be a young toddler/baby. I get that they may not be able to find a toddler to play the part in the adverts, but surely the poem, story and visuals could work better together to avoid juxtaposition.