Found this great website and account on the filming
Quote:
The 20th Century Fox "Air Operations" production was located at Barbers Point Naval Air Station, in cooperation with the U.S. Navy. Operating from a plywood hut, the nearly fifty pilots of the "Tora" flying group were on "war routine." Test flown first in California, the aircraft operated almost continuously from mid-December, 1968, to late April, 1969, burning about 3000 gallons of fuel daily, and were put through combat conditions identical to those of World War II.
Being in a military family at the time, I had a access to all local island military bases because I had a military sticker on my car (a 1965 Volkswagen Beetle- the really COOL Car of it's day) with the rank of Colonel.
The gold "Full Bird" sticker always got me into all the Oahu bases and also very snappy salutes from the Marine sentries who guarded U.S. Navy and U.S. Marine bases. Barbers Point was no exception. It was a SPRAWLING and HUGE base that was a spring-board for many South Pacific Navy and Marine operations in WW-II, as well as for the Korean War- and at this time the rapidly expanding Vietnam War. It also served for lots of "Spook"
Operations involving Spy Satellites as well as for the U.S. Navy Anti-Submarine P-3 Orions. So, in fact the base was "stuffed" with hundreds of Navy and Marine prop and jet aircraft of all types when I was out there taking pictures. The once beautiful and busy base is just a "Ghost Town" today!
I was not invited by Fox to go out and take these pictures of the planes- I had to find out where they were located and make the request for permission to come out and see the planes. But the guy running the "Tora" Flight Ops was very friendly and could probably tell I was some kind of WW-II airplane history nut and said "Sure, come on out and take some pictures". Something like this "these days" would be nearly impossible (as was the case with "Pearl Harbor") as everything is now always tightly controlled by lawyers, publicity regulators and intense security.
In fact, while I had read in the papers that a movie company was coming out to the Islands to do a film about the attack on Pearl Harbor, the very FIRST time I knew something really interesting was happening was the day I was out at Bellows AFB Beach. Once a P-40 fighter base, by the late 1960's it had become mostly a "Rest and
Recreation" Center for military personnel and their families. Bellows was a beautiful beach and while there I had already gotten used to things like seeing Marine amphibious landings on the beach only a few hundred yards away
(The Marines were training EVERYWHERE at that time, and they still use Bellows today) and even seeing Marine Commandos (maybe SEALS?) paddling by off-shore with Boonie Hats, M-16's and blacked faces, etc.
But, on that particular afternoon, slowly climbing over the sound of my little SONY Transistor beach radio playing something like the Rolling Stone's "Hey, You, Get Off Of My Cloud" or the Door's "Come On Baby Light My Fire" was the increasing rumble of RADIAL ENGINES… What? I hadn't heard that kind of deep, multi-engine sound since I was a little kid living on Travis AFB in the 50's, when the Air Force was still then flying B-29 bombers! ...But coming across the beautiful Hawaii skies over the Lanikai "bird islands" was a squadron of… WHAT?...Japanese planes?!...They came closer and then roared past, maybe about 300 feet over Lanikai bay…
This was followed by ANOTHER squadron of Japanese planes roaring past! And then further out at sea I could see even another squadron of Japanese Zeros! To say, like "WOW MAN!, What The F*** is happening?" was a major understatement!
It GOT my attention!. And it didn't stop there. These guys started making nearly DAILY flights over Kaneohe Bay and Kailua… Each day, sometimes in the morning, sometimes in the afternoon, there would be fly-overs of plane after plane! And then we began seeing the P-40's and B-17's- that beautiful, rumbling of mult-radial engines, 4 per B-17 bomber, as they made passes overhead. It was like...well...WORLD WAR II!"
The "Tora" pilots were from both military and civilian backgrounds. More than half were off-duty or on-leave pilots from the Navy, Air Force and Marine Corps. Some were pilots on commercial airlines and others were in the charter business. Ages ranged from late twenties to mid-fifties. Many were combat veterans, and one pilot had been shot down in three wars -- World War II, Korea and Vietnam. For the pilots, it was more fun than work. They could legally "flat-hat" over deserted Ford Island; they were flying formation again, sweeping over the length of Oahu. It was seat of the pants flying where they could taste it and feel it.
http://www.december7.com/1941/Classic_M ... index.html
http://www.december7.com/1941/Classic_M ... page2.html
http://www.december7.com/1941/Classic_M ... page3.html