I disagree there was no motive - to me, Kong sees the sailors, Driscoll and Denham as invaders in his territory. There seems to be an understanding between the tribe and Kong: people on one side, Kong on the other; and perhaps Kong permits the people their space as long as they provide him with their periodic sacrifice. He understands the process of the ritual - watch him acknowledge the tribe members' cheers as he takes Ann and then departs. And clearly, he deals with humans on a different level than the various dinosaurs and such, with whom there seems to be no communication or deals.
In any event, I interpret this as the understanding that humans live on *this* side. The rest of the island is Kong's territory. Territory is important - animals of all sorts of varieties - humans included - will kill over territory.
So Driscoll, Denham and company streaming through the gate after Kong have already broken one branch of the "alliance" between the tribe and Kong. Kong, I think, would also be aware that these invaders are specifically trailing him, and therefore constitute a wrong that needs to be dealt with - after all, if these interlopers get away with this, then other humans will too, and this, for whatever reason, must not be. I find myself thinking of a lion killing a cheetah for invading the lion's territory. In no way is the cheetah a threat to the lion, but the cheetah is hunting in the lion's territory. This, to the lion, cannot be allowed.
So here are, to my way of thinking, at least two motives for Kong to act as he did on the island.
Then. It turns out that the survivor of the log adventure is after Kong's Blonde, who is the gift of the tribe to Kong, and, if my reasoning is correct, the bond that allows the tribe to exist in their portion of the island. By taking Ann, Driscoll has broken the pact between Kong and the tribe, and not only that, but Ann appeals to Kong in a way the other gifts have not, and so the retribution of the broken pact is exacerbated by the fury of losing a special gift. (So yes, according to Kong's perception, humans on his side of the wall are bad).
So to me, trying to see things from Kong's point of view, there is motive.
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