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    Untamed Hawaii: ‘Jurassic World’ Tourism Takes the Islands By Storm

    Emily Zemler October 14, 2015
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    The lush vegetation and cliffs of Oahu feel prehistoric. (Photo: Thinkstock)

    By Emily Zemler

    The lush, green mountains of Isla Nublar rise up over the jungle. If you squint slightly, edging out any buildings or other people, it’s easy to convince yourself that somewhere in those trees are actual dinosaurs. The overgrown tropical plants, damp with intermittent rain, could hide any number of prehistoric creatures. Thought they look it, these mountains and these plants don’t actually belong to the fictional Central American island overrun with dinosaurs first in 1993’s Jurassic Park and in this year’s sequel Jurassic World. The view, a seemingly perfect setting, is the Hawaiian island of Oahu, which lent itself as a stand-in for Isla Nublar during the shooting of both films.

    During the production of Jurassic World, the fourth film in Steven Spielberg’s franchise and currently the highest grossing film of 2015 — which is out now on Digital HD and comes out on Blu-ray and DVD Oct. 20 — director Colin Trevorrow reimagined Isla Nublar across three Hawaiian islands: Oahu, Maui, and Kauai. The primary shooting, particularly that with stars Chris Pratt and Bryce Dallas-Howard, took place on Oahu, where vestiges of Jurassic World remain. Although it is impossible seek out the T-Rex, there are numerous opportunities for fans of the film to see actual locations and sets from the movie when visiting Hawaii, and it’s becoming big tourism business.

    One of the best spots is Kualoa Ranch, a 4000-acre ranch and tourist attraction where Dr. Alan Grant and the kids ran with dinosaurs in the first Jurassic Park. Its ridged peaks, surrounded three separate valleys, have also been used a filming location for everything from Lost to 50 First Dates to Pearl Harbor. (They’re the backdrop for Hurley’s golf course in the first season of Lost, the sight of massive footprints in Godzilla.)

    Related: Life Lessons From Maui: What I Learned Driving the Crazy Road to Hana

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    Taking an ATV tour of Kualoa Ranch. (Photo: Mario Perez/Universal Pictures Home Entertainment)

    The ranch first launched its tourism component in 1985 for the purpose of sustainability. Now attracts half a million visitors a year, most of whom are interested in the Hollywood aspect of the tours. Kualoa offers zip-lining, horseback riding, and ATV-ing (the latter of which recently drew Nicki Minaj and Meek Mill to the ranch), and in early 2016 they will launch a Hollywood-specific bus tour that will integrate the set pieces from Jurassic World that remain onsite.

    “The movie business has been a great symbiotic relationship,” says Kualoa Ranch President John Morgan. “The more things that are filmed here the more people go ‘Oh, that’s great. I want to go there.’ It’s a wonderful thing for us.”

    The two main Jurassic World attractions at Kualoa are impressive, actual sets that transport you, momentarily, into the world of the film. The first is a massive paddock that, in the movie, was used to hold hybrid dinosaur Indominus Rex (which eventually wrecked havoc across the park). Its walls are 40 feet high and scratched with terrifyingly realistic claw marks. It feels possible, standing inside, that the I-Rex is hiding behind the vegetation, seconds from pouncing. The second set, across the ranch and nestled high on one of the valley’s ridges, is the Gyrosphere launching pad, a platform where spherical vehicles departed in the film’s amusement park.

    “We have already seen a lot of interest,” Noelani Schilling-Wheeler, Senior Director of Sales & Marketing at Oahu Visitors Bureau, says of Jurassic World and its ability to encourage fans to visit Hawaii. “Kualoa could have easily torn down everything, but they didn’t because they have a huge impact. People are just interested. Consumers are watching this and many of them are saying they want to go. The connection is right there.”

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    Jurassic World spheres (Photo: Universal Pictures)

    Kualoa Ranch is the most obvious destination for those chasing a Jurassic World experience, but visitors can also see numerous other locations across Oahu. Atlantis Navatek, the actual boat used to ferry park-goers at the beginning of the film, is based in Honolulu and offers sunset cruises and whale watching tours (during which you can pretend you are headed across the water to visit the fictional park). The Hawaii Convention Center, located near Waikiki, provided the location for several interior scenes (and also stood in for the Sydney airport on Lost). The Pacific Aviation Museum at Pearl Harbor housed the bedraggled survivors at the end of Jurassic World and the Honolulu Zoo’s elephant paddock was reimagined as a dinosaur petting zoo.

    As with Lost before it, Jurassic World gave Hawaii an opportunity to reveal its mutability. It’s not simply a collection of tropical islands; it can become another place, even as its signature self remains apparent. Jessica Cole, Jurassic World Production Coordinator, has worked on several films and TV shows around Hawaii. She helped shoot Hunger Games: Catching Fire outside the resort of Turtle Bay and in the jungle of He’eia Kea, and worked on Lost, which is one of the state’s most famous shows.

    “What I like about films like Jurassic World and Hunger Games is there’s a draw to be in a place that’s not just Hawaii,” Cole says. “I think it does a lot for Hawaii to have lots of different facets shown, not just the beach. Not just a palm tree here and there. It’s nice for people to know how much is really here.”

    For Cole, Lost was the first real instance of tourists coming to Hawaii for the sole purpose of finding certain shooting locations.

    “I think it changed a lot of people’s approach to seeing Hawaii,” she says. “They would specifically make trips to go find places we had shot on Lost. Where was the Dharma Village? Where’s the banyan tree? What was shot in Kualoa? I’ve met a lot of people who will come out here and look for that stuff.”

    Now visitors do the same with Jurassic World. It doesn’t seem to matter to visitors that it depicts a fictional place, supposedly located in Central America rather than in the Pacific. The movie’s visuals are enough to lure people to Hawaii.

    Related: Fast and Furious: Abu Dhabi, the Hollywood of the Middle East

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    Views from Kualoa (Photo: Emily Zemler)

    “For us, it’s a huge part is showcasing the island,” Schilling-Wheeler notes. “It’s a commercial, basically, for the world to see your beautiful destination, whether there’s a lot of CGI in it or not. And there’s a whole generation of people who just love celebrities and what they’re doing. If a celebrity comes here and shoots here, they’re not rushing off usually so that helps. They hang out. There’s a very close connection between the tourism industry and the film industry.”

    “Some people like it because the actors came here and if it’s good enough for Jennifer Lawrence or Chris Pratt, then they want to go,” agrees Cole.

    Jurassic World star Dallas-Howard spent almost three months in Hawaii shooting the film. She was there so long that her two kids went to school on Oahu during the production. The star has signed on for a sequel and hopes that next film will also shoot on the islands.

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    Chris Pratt and Bryce Dallas-Howard in Jurassic World (Photo: Universal Pictures)

    “Getting to be here for a length of time longer than a vacation was incredible,” Dallas-Howard says. “I really had the time to take things in. Anything that can encourage someone to take some time and go see one of the most beautiful places on Earth is great. If the movie does bring in visitors, then wonderful.”

    “I think Hawaii surpasses what it looks like onscreen,” Cole adds. “It’s so different from people’s normal daily perception of what they see. Whatever we can show them blows people away.”

    Standing on the ridges of Kualoa, the green valley below, the ocean in the distance, the sky hazy, you feel like you are in a foreign world. It transports you elsewhere, a sensation you hope for when visiting a new place. Hawaii’s power, as seen onscreen, is that it can take you away, to places fictional or real. But for those who love Jurassic World and the films that came before it, it takes you somewhere truly exotic, to where just behind those trees a dinosaur may be lurking.

    Related: Dinosaur Digs, Museums, and More: 10 Places to Get Your Paleo on

    WATCH: Inside the Cage of Death: Face to Face with Australia’s Monster Crocs

    Let Yahoo Travel inspire you every day. Hang out with us on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and Pinterest.  Watch Yahoo Travel’s original series “A Broad Abroad.”

    For more on Yahoo Travel’s travel policy, click here.

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    Michael: A lot of people are saying the US is the laughingstock of the entire world right now because of our president, but the fact is that even the wookies on Endor are mocking the American electorate; and not without good reason. So we’ve got that going for us. ”Mike Pence's aid is a Never Trumper" according to President Donald Trump because she testified against him on the Ukraine phone call. That’s good enough for his supporters. Recently a friend of mine who works in a coal mine told me he was a trump supporter because he was a coal miner. All I could do was shake my head. The largest coal mine in the western US was closed in AZ recently, which was owned by the very company he works for in WY. It's not President Trump’s fault that the coal mines are closing, but it is his fault that those affected and his supporters believe in economic and political fantasies, and don't think they even need to consider reality since he doesn't; and no one calls him on it. "They wash the coal; and make it clean." Trump says with conviction. His supporters also believing that. A family member recently told me he can't support Democrats because "they'll take away our 2nd amendment rights". This family member who I love and respect has been a felon for 20 years and has absolutely no 2nd amendment rights whatsoever. "Democrats only want to take your guns and have open borders!" "Vindman and Yavonovitch are traitors" Trump says(in spite of the fact that they are highly vetted and distinguished patriots and painting the democrats with such a broad brush is entirely inappropriate) and the walking-dead zombies of the Trump cult believe it all without question. Such departures from reality cannot go unchecked without resulting in the inevitable and complete destruction of our nation and all it stands for. Democracy requires an ability to appeal to reason and a belief in the pursuit of Liberty and Justice for ALL. A belief in equality and Justice which entail the right to be governed in a non-corrupt manor. A belief in the objective existence of Truth. The hypnotic effect of trumpspeak seems to have rendered his cult members beyond the reach of reason. This is incredibly sad as well as incredibly dangerous and it sends us sliding down the slippery slope into fascism. As I have watched the Impeachment hearings I have come to realize that the Republican Representatives and Senators no longer believe that the citizens of the U.S. have a right to expect their government to operate with integrity. Neither intellectual nor constitutional integrity; and that they no longer uphold the values espoused in the American political philosophy. That is why after forty years I am walking away from the Republican Party. I love my country, God, and most importantly: The Truth. So did the founding fathers, which is why they engineered a form of government in which as Lieutenant-Colonel Vindman so aptly put it during his testimony when asked by republicans why he risked coming forward: He said he still believed America was “A country where Right Matters”. Read the Declaration of Independence for substantiation of the fact that it is supposed to be just that. Most telling however is the fact that they(the sitting republicans) can’t seem to wrap their heads around the idea that an individual would take personal risk for the Nation’s benefit. The patriotic notion of sacrifice for county is foreign to them. As is an inherent reverence for the Truth. As a man of integrity I am going to stand with Colonel Vindman. I’m going to support the notion that America is a nation where “Right matters”. The only question that remains is: What are you going to do? The Republican party no longer reflects my values nor the values of the founding fathers. That’s why it’s as good as dead as is evidenced by the most recent election results and the ridiculous positions its supporters take and try to defend, as exemplified by their dear leader. Lindsey Graham said during the primaries of the last election that if we nominated Donald Trump it would mean the “end of the Republican Party and that we would deserve it." He was right. His current stance shows the degree to which the malignancy of trumpspeak has infected his personal integrity in particular, and the party’s as a whole; and how it's too late to successfully treat that malignancy and save the party. Sadly, It's over. Idiocracy in real life. RIP GOP.

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