| Stolen Kingdom | |
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| Directed by | Joshua Bailey |
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| Music by | Brendan Canty |
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Running time | 74 minutes |
| Country | United States |
| Language | English |
Stolen Kingdom is a 2025 American documentary film directed by Joshua Bailey. It covers notable figures in the urban exploring community at Walt Disney World and the disappearance of the Buzzy animatronic from the Cranium Command Pavilion at Walt Disney World Resort's Epcot theme park in 2018.
Stolen Kingdom covers the reported theft of the Buzzy animatronic from the Cranium Command Pavilion at Walt Disney World Resort's Epcot theme park. [1] [2] [3] [4] It begins with other urban exploration at Walt Disney World, notably two explorers who documented the closing of the Horizons (Epcot) attraction who went by the pseudonyms "Hoot" and "Chief". Other famous abandoned locations covered include Disney's River Country and Discovery Island (Bay Lake). The film features interviews with prominent figures in the Disney urban exploration community, including Patrick Spikes. [5] [6]
Stolen Kingdom premiered at February 16, 2025, at the Big Sky Documentary Film Festival. [7] It also played at the 2025 Slamdance Film Festival [8] and as the opening night film at both the 2025 Florida Film Festival and Sidewalk Film Festival. [9] [10]
Stolen Kingdom is the directorial debut of Joshua Bailey and was produced by Bailey, Brandon Pickering, Colin Alexander, and Sam Fraser. [11] [12] [13] Jake Williams' production company Bright Sun Films co-produced the film. [9] [14] Cinematography was by Brandon Pickering. [15] The film was shot throughout 2021, with Patrick Spikes being the first interview. [6]
Brendan Canty, drummer of Fugazi, composed original score for the film.
Simon Thompson of Forbes said of the film: "skillfully made with a well-crafted narrative, this answers questions you were afraid to ask and takes you places you probably dreamt of going - but didn't want to suffer the consequences." [16]
Jim Vorel of Paste (magazine) said "Frankly, it’s impressive just how much law-breaking the filmmakers of Stolen Kingdom manage to get these various figures to confess on camera in the course of its tidy runtime" [17]