Although many who saw it at the Sundance Film Festival expressed strong doubts that the film would be shown to a wider audience due to the legal issues involved and the negative depiction of the parks, The Walt Disney Company did not prevent the film from being released. It has been compared to the work of Roman Polanski and David Lynch. Rather than suppressing the film as Moore claimed would happen, Disney chose to ignore it. It has been called "the ultimate guerrilla film". Sundance similarly declined to discuss the film in detail before it was shown. After principal photography was complete, Moore was so determined to keep the project a secret from Disney that he edited it in South Korea. Due to Disney's reputation of being protective of its intellectual property, the cast and crew used guerrilla filmmaking techniques to avoid attracting attention, such as keeping their scripts on their phones and shooting on handheld video cameras similar to those used by park visitors. The film drew attention because Moore had shot most of it on location at both Walt Disney World Resort and Disneyland Park without permission from The Walt Disney Company, owner and operator of both properties. The film was a 2012 official selection of the PollyGrind Film Festival, but at the time filmmakers were still working on some legal issues and asked that it not be screened. It premiered in January at the 2013 Sundance Film Festival and was later a personal selection of Roger Ebert, shown at his 15th annual film festival in Champaign, Illinois. It tells the story of a unemployed father having increasingly bizarre experiences and disturbing visions on the last day of a family vacation at the Walt Disney World Resort. Escape from Tomorrow is a 2013 American independent horror film written and directed by Randy Moore in his directorial debut.
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