Jason Momoa details the wink of the island of Hawaii from approval to the “warlord”

Jason Momoa revealed the reaction of the Hawaiian island at its next mini-series War chief.
THE Aaquman The actor’s new project follows the story of an indigenous Hawaiian concern Ka’iana (Mamoa), the son of the great chief of the War of Maui, while he united the Hawaiian islands before the era of colonialism.
The series was shot in lava fields of the city of Kalapana, Hawaii, and honored the culture with a sacred cleaning ritual before starting filming.
Momoa revealed that two volcanoes, the Mauna Loa and the Kīlauea, broke out when the mini-series approached the end of its shooting, and he took it in response from the island.
“I just knew that the volcano was going to leave, and everyone made fun of me and didn’t believe me,” said Momoa.
“Of course, the day before our departure, I told Brian [Mendoza, fellow producer]”Dude, the volcano will leave.” He called the bulls —. About four hours later, we received a call at 3 am, Mauna Loa left, “he said.
When the production restarted after the conditions are back to OK, the Kilauea broke out.
“So it was two active volcanoes,” he said.
“You cannot write this S —“, he said, noting how the eruptions of the volcano coincided with the end of the shooting. “You obviously do a lot of spirits and Mana. It was incredible, but there was really positive energy.”
Once the shooting is finished, he explained his point of view on the unique experience: “The island itself is alive, and it responded to what we were doing. This is what separates traditional production from a production led by culture. ”
Momoa continued: “We had a mandate to direct this production with culture. We did it with traditional blessings [and] Ceremonies, and we took this like a hōʻailona, which is a sign or an omen that you do the right thing. “”
Warlord First with two episodes on August 1. New episodes will be published every Friday on Appletv +.




