For a small business, yes, they would have likely called to check, as you say.
But for a huge amusement park--there would be no reason to expect them to be closed.
Real life example involving me, years ago. I planned a trip that included a couple of days in Texas, watching the Astros and then the Rangers play baseball. I had gotten schedules from a national newspaper and planned it all months before leaving.
Sometime later, I found out the schedule for Houston was reversed and they were not at home during the week I was to be in the area. I changed plans, rebooked motels and planned to spend two days in Arlington, with one day spent at the huge waterpark, then called Wet and Wild, before going to the Rangers game that night.
I had a Griswold-like moment, pulling up to the gates of Wet and Wild ready for a day of sliding and swimming to see that beginning that very day, a Monday in mid-August, they began their fall schedule of only being open on weekends. I learned that school in that part of Texas begins the second week of August, prompting the change in schedules.
Where I come from, school by law begins after Labor Day. It never dawned on me that a summertime water park would stop being open daily weeks before Labor Day. Certainly not in Texas, where it is still ridiculously hot much later than in the north, where I'm from.
Obviously, calling ahead would have ruined the movie plot. But realistically, I don't think it odd that Clark would not have phoned Walley World to make sure they would be open during the summer for his family. He would have no reason to think they might be closed.
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