Universal’s Newest Ride—Skull Island: Reign of Kong

The old lady was yelling at nobody in particular. She stood alone in the dark, waving her arms around and ranting indecipherably, as a transfixed crowd looked on. Many pulled out cameras and started snapping away as her tirade continued, her face a mix of awe, fear and confusion. Eventually she started to repeat herself, but even if the sounds became familiar the words remained foreign. All except one, a word she repeated more than any other, and which was occasionally echoed by chanting voices from an unseen choir, joining together with the old lady in a solemn mantra. “KONG!” the lady would say, the voices responding “KONG! KONG! KONG!”
Skull Island: Reign of Kong’s queue is as important to the overall experience as the ride itself. The new attraction at Universal’s Islands of Adventure in Orlando is an impressive combination of theming, set design, 3D screens and animatronics, with a massive, intricately designed temple for a show building and a show-stopping face-to-face with Kong himself that’s surprisingly powerful. The high-capacity attraction might be too slow to be a genuine thrill ride, but it’s still a thrilling experience because of the attention to detail seen throughout the entire project. And it all starts with that robotic old lady in the waiting area.
Skull Island’s cavernous line area will keep you entertained during the wait and introduce you to the world of the ride, which takes place before the first King Kong film from 1933. (It also has no connection to next year’s Kong: Skull Island movie.) The centerpiece of the queue is that old lady, an animatronic native of Skull Island who holds court in the queue’s largest chamber. The lifelike quality of her weathered skin and matted hair are matched by the natural grace of her motions. She looks like a real person, and her threats and warnings combine with the ominous choir and the room’s skull-heavy detailing to prepare us for something more frightening than what actually awaits. That horror movie feeling is reinforced further in the line by mummified corpses and live actors in masks who randomly pop out of holes in the walls around you, like they’re part of a Halloween Horror Night street experience.
After making it through the line, you’ll approach the loading bay for the ride’s vehicles, which are massive trucks that hold 72 riders apiece. Behind the wheel, in a closed-off cab, sits one of five animatronic drivers. Their heads and shoulders move around as gracefully as that old woman in the queue chamber, as they look back at their passengers and briefly give their backstory as the ride begins. During one recent press event the truck was driven by Doc, an African-American working on a PhD who joined the expedition to Skull Island to study the dinosaurs that still live there. Doc explained the attraction’s story for his passengers at the start of the ride, and later interacted with the characters that appeared on screen. The other four drivers serve the same role, but with different stories and dialogue, offering a small variety of slightly different experiences for repeat riders.
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