Earlier this week, Sony Pictures Animationâs âKPop Demon Huntersâ made Netflix history.
It became the first Netflix original film to reach a new viewing peak in its sixth week â a massive 26.3 million views, topping the previous week (25.8 million) and the week before that (24.2 million). In its sixth week it also became âthe most popular Netflix animated film of all time,â according to the streaming giant.
Additionally, it was in the top 10 in all countries ranked and it should be entering the Netflix all-time top 10 in the next week or so. Plus, âGolden,â a song from its bop-filled soundtrack, returned to the #1 spot on the Billboard Global 200. All of this cemented the fact that âKpop Demon Huntersâ isnât just a movie but a rare worldwide phenomenon.
TheWrap has learned that âKPop Demon Hunterâ is about to expand into a number of related projects, including sequels and a live-action version.
The animated film, with English dialogue but set in Seoul, features a trio of K-pop singers whose infectious songs power their ability to battle hordes of demons. It has become a phenomenon boasting tens of millions of streams and whose songs have topped the charts. The show, which is aided by growing interest in Korean culture, has proven to be a draw for both adults and kids alike.
During the second quarter earnings call earlier this month, Netflix co-CEO Ted Sarandos singled out âKpop Demon Huntersâ as âa phenomenal success out of the gate ⊠And the fact that people are in love with this film and in love with the music from this film, that will keep it going for a long time. So weâre really thrilled. And now the next beat is, where does it go from here?â
If youâre also wondering whatâs next for Rumi, Mira and Zoey, the members of girl group Huntr/x who juggle slaying fans with their infectious beats while also slaying demonic beasts, weâre here to illuminate the possible next steps.
Netflix is referring to the project as its âFrozenâ or Disney Princesses franchise â a property that has tapped into the zeitgeist on an unprecedented level and one that the streamer plans to exploit across various channels and mediums, according to two people familiar with the companyâs plans. Among the projects being bandied about at Netflix are a stage musical, live-action remake, series and, of course, a pair of sequels to round out a full-on âKPop Demon Huntersâ film trilogy, a third person familiar with the situation told TheWrap. For their part, Netflix said that currently a live-action remake is not in discussion.
Additionally, much like âFrozen,â there is a short film being discussed to serve as âbridge contentâ between the mainline features, according to a fourth person familiar with the companyâs plans. (âFrozen Feverâ was released theatrically in 2015, in between âFrozenâ in 2013 and âFrozen IIâ in 2019.)
The ambitious plans underscore the kind of rare project that is âKPop Demon Hunters,â which benefited from Netflixâs willingness to bet on original animation and the fact that Korean culture has been in the spotlight, resulting in Netflix moving quickly to capitalize on that momentum. Like âFrozen,â it was an initial underdog that broke into a cultural phenomenon, reminding us that surprises can still come out of nowhere.
Similar to Disneyâs blockbuster film, Netflix is ramping up merchandising for âKPop Demon Hunters.â The products being sold on Netflixâs official store have been among the most popular this year, even if the company was caught flat-footed early with just a few items. Netflix plans to partner with a number of outside partners which will see âKPop Demon Huntersâ flood local malls and big box stores, the fourth person said. South Korean electronics giant Samsung, which recently partnered with the movie for an ad for their Galaxy Z Fold 7 phone featuring the weirdo bird, with a lens array that mirrors the bird characterâs multiple eyes, is keen to do more with âKPop Demon Hunters.â
And just like you couldnât escape âLet It Go,â the KPop bangers that populate the âKPop Demon Huntersâ soundtrack will be getting even more exposure, with breakout number âGoldenâ submitted for Best Original Song at the Academy Awards this year and possible live opportunities being explored, according to an individual with knowledge of the plans.
Thatâs another sneaky parallel to âFrozen,â which won the Best Animated Feature Oscar, with âKPop Demon Huntersâ quietly becoming an early favorite at the Academy Awards.
If there is one snag to the streamerâs plans for aggressive âKPop Demon Huntersâ expansion, itâs the fact that original directors Maggie Kang and Chris Appelhans have yet to sign onto additional projects. And for Netflix and Sony Pictures Animation, it will be important to get the (directing) band back together before they go out on tour.
Regardless, Netflix owns all of the underlying rights to the IP, meaning the streamer can do whatever it wants with the title and its future â with or without Sony Pictures Animation, according to several people with knowledge of the situation. Those sources have all said Netflix and Sony Pictures Animation intend to work on the franchise together.
Underdogs overperform
What makes the success of âKPop Demon Huntersâ even sweeter is that it was a project that was perpetually undervalued and discounted.
The movie was announced in 2021 as being in development at Sony Pictures Animation, the studio best known for âSpider-Man: Across the Spider-Verseâ (and its sequel) and the popular âHotel Transylvaniaâ franchise. At the time of its announcement, a release schedule was not immediately identified, but was later added to an ongoing partnership between Sony and Netflix. A year after the film was announced, Netflix registered the trademark for the movie and in 2023, in a Business Insider interview, Tom Rothman, chairman and CEO of Sony Pictures Motion Picture Group, noted that âweâre making a big animated K-Pop musicalâ for the streaming platform.
In one way, it made sense â Netflix has partnered with Sony Pictures Animation on a number of projects, including Appelhansâ âWish Dragon,â the Oscar-nominated âThe Mitchells vs. the Machines,â Lin-Manuel Mirandaâs animated musical âVivoâ and a number of upcoming projects, including Genndy Tartakovskyâs R-rated âFixedâ (out in August) and an animated âGhostbustersâ film.
When the project was brought to Netflix, the company snapped up the rights immediately.
Netflix scheduled the movie for June 20, directly up against Pixarâs âElio,â a presumed box office hit. (It was not.) There was little fanfare to the release; there was no glossy âart ofâ book accompanying it, nothing to buy in the official Netflix online store, and the creative team skipped the Annecy International Animation Film Festival, which happened the week before it debuted on Netflix â and where Netflix had a typically oversized presence.
While there wasnât a proper theatrical release, âKPop Demon Huntersâ did appear in enough cinemas in New York and Los Angeles to qualify for the Oscars. It didnât even have a traditional Hollywood premiere, with Netflix instead opting for a screening at its Tudum theater.
The filmâs first week numbers were relatively modest, with just 9.2 million views, according to Netflix. But its second week jumped to 22.7 million, as did demand for merchandise. Netflix was so caught off guard by the desire for merchandise that they started reprinting products that were intended as crew gifts; the plush tiger available on the site right now was originally handed out to those who worked on the movie â and they didnât have to pay $47.95. Netflix said on July 1 that several âKPop Demon Huntersâ items on the Netflix Shop were among âthe top five bestsellers of the year.â One of the top items? That tiger plush.
The power of surprise
When TheWrap spoke to Kang and Appelhans in early June, âKPop Demon Huntersâ had yet to blossom into an internationally recognized juggernaut. At the time, Kang said that âall of the ingredients of the concept were living separately,â before coming together to form âKPop Demon Hunters.â
âIâve always wanted to do a Korean project, something that showcased Korean culture and create it for the big feature animation space, because itâs something that we just havenât seen,â Kang explained. Obviously Japanese animation is a huge deal and Disney-made projects like âMulanâ were steeped in Chinese history. âBut I felt like I hadnât seen anything Korean yet,â Kang said.
She started to think about the way that demons are ârepresented in Korean media,â which led to the âdemon huntersâ part of the equation.
The K-pop element, she said, was âthe last thing to be added in.â She wanted the spectacle that K-pop brought with it, along with the songs (of course). âThere was a space in the superhero area, where I felt like women were not really depicted the way that I wanted to see them,â Kang said. âI wanted to see women who are allowed to be silly and crass and make stupid faces and not be so pretty all the time and have their imperfections. Those are all the ingredients that just came together.â
And in a way, that hyper-specificity of âKPop Demon Huntersâ is what made it so universal. Scroll through social media and youâll see people not only doing dances to songs from the movie, but drawing characters and shipping their favorite love story (people are very upset about the loss of a certain character â we wonât give it away here in case you are not one of the 100 million Netflix views). And while it could have been a hit if the movie had been released theatrically, thereâs something that the Netflix platform provides above all else â the chance to re-watch the movie again and again and again.
This harkens back to âFrozen,â which was a huge surprise for Walt Disney Animation Studios, who downplayed the movieâs musical elements and instead emphasized the lovable snowman Olaf. When the movie turned out to be a smash â and its Olaf plush was sold out everywhere â Disney began emphasizing the movieâs other elements and cashing in on its popularity. In the years since, weâve had short films and streaming content and Christmas specials and theme park attractions. And so too will we be buried in an avalanche of âKpop Demon Huntersâ stuff.
Itâs rare in an age where everything is pre-packaged and immensely diagrammed, especially in a place like Netflix which is built on numbers and powered by algorithms, for a genuine surprise to come along. âKPop Demon Huntersâ has reminded Hollywood that breakouts are still possible. And once a hit has been established, rewriting history is just the beginning.
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Fixed.