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Filmed in Hawaii – Kong: Skull Island (2017)

Filmed in Hawaii – Kong: Skull Island (2017)

There have been many versions of 1933’s King Kong, the classic story about a giant ape who falls for a human woman. The best known are 2005’s epic re-imagining of the same name and 2017’s action-packed Kong: Skull Island. And while each movie is a different take on the story, there’s just as big a contrast between their backdrops.

Like the original, they both take place on “Skull Island” – a fictional prehistoric land in the Pacific. To bring to life the vast ancient jungle of his 2005 movie, director Peter Jackson largely made use of movie studios in New Zealand. But the lush and tropical backdrop of Jordan Vogt-Roberts’ Kong: Skull Island was filmed in various real-world locations, including Oahu in Hawaii.

During the “Premier Movie Sites Tour” my wife and I went on during our Hawaiian honeymoon, we realized why Oahu’s Kualoa Ranch doesn’t offer helicopter excursions. As our tour bus made its way along a dark jungle trail, we saw the rusting wreckage of a military chopper. It turned out to be the one Kong smashes out of the sky in the 2017 movie’s aerial attack sequence.

The rusting wreckage of a military chopper in Kong: Skull Island movie
The rusting wreckage of a military chopper in Kong: Skull Island movie

Shortly afterwards, we were fortunate enough to spend some time in the company of some of the movie’s stars. But I’m not talking about Samuel L. Jackson or Brie Larson. While Kualoa Ranch also served the Jurassic Park movies, it’s actually Kong: Skull Island that has left behind a scattering of dinosaur fossils here.

In the movie, the characters enter a foggy skeleton graveyard where they’re ambushed by deadly monsters known as “Skullcrawlers”. In reality, this collection of skulls and bones couldn’t sit in a more gorgeous clearing. Located in the majestic Ka’a’awa Valley – understandably nicknamed “Jurassic Valley” – it’s a place where visitors can do some skull-crawling of their own.

Skulls and bones of Ka'a'awa Valley (Jurassic Valley)
Skulls and bones of Ka’a’awa Valley (Jurassic Valley)

In that same scene, a terrified soldier mounts a machine gun on top of a triceratops’ skull, only to meet a sticky end. My wife, however, relaxed and content, struck a pose from the top of the same horned skull. Then it was into the skull of one of Kong’s relatives so that we could see our breath-taking surroundings through their eyes. And for a pretty neat picture, of course.

Posing inside the eye of a large dinosaur skull
Posing inside the eye of a large dinosaur skull

Other Oahu locations included Waikane Valley’s Ohulehule Forest Conservancy, which also doubled as the movie’s dense rain forests, broad valleys and rugged mountains. Even Honolulu’s Chinatown district was called upon for scenes beyond the movie’s main island setting. Remarkably, it was transformed into a 1970’s Saigon in Vietnam.

Main street of Chinatown in Honolulu, Oahu

This isn’t the first time Hawaii has been used for Skull Island, though. Scenes from 1976’s King Kong were filmed in the vibrant valleys of Honopū and Kalalau (and on their respective beaches) along Kauai’s mystical Na Pali Coast. While we may know this part of Kauai as nothing short of paradise, in the movie it played the face of a forbidding land of monsters discarded by time.

Hawaii has felt the impact of more than just one monster over the years, too, having also served 2014’s Godzilla, Kong: Skull Island’s predecessor. Back then, the 400-foot beast made waves at Honolulu’s Waikiki Beach. There were no signs of damage when we arrived three years later to start our honeymoon, but one of his giant footprints can still be found back in Jurassic Valley.

Majestic Ka'a'awa Valley of Kualoa Ranch, Oahu
Majestic Ka’a’awa Valley of Kualoa Ranch, Oahu

All of these striking locations have only left us excited for Godzilla vs. Kong in 2021. And if the “King of Monsters” is to bring part of the fight to Skull Island, it would be wise to expect far more giant footprints and skeleton graveyards.

With Kong: Skull Island, Hawaii has once again proven its versatility. When it isn’t posing as a tropical resort where prehistoric animals have been created, it’s a lost world where such animals have long since survived. And while Skull Island is a place that time would rather forget, we will never forget some of Hawaii’s truly timeless locations.

More Movies, Filmed in Hawaii

Filmed in Hawaii – Jurassic Park (1993)
Filmed in Hawaii: TV Series Lost (2004 – 2010)

Kualoa Ranch – a Must-See Oahu Destination

12 thoughts on “Filmed in Hawaii – Kong: Skull Island (2017)

  1. I was in Hawai’i on Oahu in 1986 for 3 weeks and even 3 weeks was NOT enough. If I would have had my way I would never have come back home to ATL. At the time my son was 6 years old and my ex had visitation rights that meant I could not move away unless my job REQUIRED that I must move away. I was so down the last few days of our 3 week vacay. My sister lived there and I didn’t have to pay for taxi service(no ride shares@the time) or hotel, etc. That is the only way I could afford my son and I to go there for 3 weeks. On top of that, we had someone who knew everything about the island. Oahu has many wonderful places to explore, but MANY more that usually only folks who live there know of and can direct you to. Luckily my sis and her hubby were our free tour guides. Needless to say the trip was wonderful.

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