Today, Explained - KPop Demon Hunters keeps slaying
Episode Date: October 3, 2025The Netflix animated film KPop Demon Hunters is a mega cultural phenomenon. And the studio that used to own animation, Disney, is watching its dominance be tested...and maybe even fade. This episode ...was produced by Denise Guerra and Danielle Hewitt, edited by Jolie Myers, fact-checked by Laura Bullard, engineered by Patrick Boyd, and hosted by Noel King. A fan during a KPop Demon Hunters dance and singalong event in Seoul. Photo by Jintak Han/The Washington Post via Getty Images. Listen to Today, Explained ad-free by becoming a Vox Member: vox.com/members. New Vox members get $20 off their membership right now. Transcript at vox.com/today-explained-podcast. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
We're going up on What the Fathers!
All the kids are talking about K-pop Demon Hunters.
Sean, have you seen it?
I have not. No, I haven't. Is it good?
Ah, if you're a kid, it's great.
Oh, if you're a kid. Well, you know, Noel, I'm going to have a kid.
I do know it's why I invited you on the show today to share with listeners some news.
Thanks for having me. Yeah, I'll be gone for five months starting some time this month,
and all sorts of great people will be filling in, and Noel will be here, so the show will,
will still be the show you love
and I'll be back
and maybe when I'm back
you know I can introduce you
to my kid who I might name
K-pop demon hunter Ramosferm
I don't know we still haven't figured out a name
All right you heard it here first
founding daddy Sean Ramosferm
will be out for five months
coming up on today explained
K-pop demon hunters
take over the world
What do you think?
You did laugh at my joke
about naming my kid K-pop Deman
I thought I tried to be funny
but it wasn't that funny
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This is today's blink.
I'm Rebecca Sun, and I'm a journalist and cultural critic.
All right, so do you think, Rebecca, that it is fair to call K-pop Demon Hunters the movie and possibly even the soundtrack of 2025?
100%. And the numbers bear that out.
K-pop Demon Hunters just became Netflix's number one most viewed movie ever.
And now K-pop Demon Hunter's sing-along movie gross an estimated $18 to $20 million over.
a two-day run at the box office.
You know, quantifiably, it is the only soundtrack
that's ever had four songs in the top 10
of the Billboard Hot 100 at the same time.
You're my soda-up, my little soda-up.
Even waiting to exhale, which is the soundtrack, which had the most songs in the top ten, which was five.
And that was, if you remember, an all-star soundtrack.
Oh, yeah.
You know, Whitney, Mary, you know, everybody.
that had five in the top ten, but not at the same time. So certainly no soundtrack has been
as successful as K-pop demon hunters in decades. And what about streams? I imagine how many
millions of people have watched this? Yeah. Yeah. I mean, it is now, so the way that Netflix
quantifies this is they capture the views in the first 91 days of a title's release. And so
that's what they do for all of their titles.
and K-pop Demon Hunters is officially not just the most popular movie on Netflix of all time,
but the most popular title of all time.
It even overtook Squid Game, which had the record for, you know, like five years.
And so K-pop Demon Hunters, 325.1 million views in the first three months.
But surely that number has continued to go up because I know people who are still watching it.
For listeners who haven't seen it, what is this movie about?
So K-pop Demon Hunters is about a trio of women.
The world will know you as pop stars, but you will be much more than that.
You will be hunters.
Their cover story is they are a highly successful, three-piece K-pop girl band.
We love hunting!
But what their real mission is, is they use their songs, they use their music to fight demons.
And music is the power that seals, sort of,
creates this protective, they call it Honmoon in the movie, this protective bubble to keep the
demons out.
Happy fans, happy Horn Moon.
Now, one particularly clever demon, Genu, decides, well, let's fight fire with fire.
And so he enlists, he and four other demons create a five-piece boy band to basically enrapture the souls of the public instead.
So it's a very clever, very cute premise that works because then you end up getting
a girl group versus a boy group with their attendant songs, and it's brilliant. It's like brilliant
framing. And their attendant like romance is like the boy group is quite hot. Throughout you have
them kind of navigating each other as like enemies, but also as like, you know, cute.
which I don't know.
I really kind of loved that.
That's another thing that I found really brilliant about the movie
is because it incorporates so many clever Easter eggs
for these different references.
And so there's definitely very specific references
that are true to the practice of K-pop fandom,
the whole K-pop subculture.
There's also tropes that are taken straight out of K-Drama romances.
You guys are so grown.
When Rumi, who's the main female character and Jinnu, the main male character, when they first meet each other, there's a bump, there's a meat cute, and then everything slows down.
There's like a slow-mo, the camera pants.
There's actually a Korean song that starts playing that is an Easter egg because that's the song that famously plays when the actor who voices Jinnu, it's from one of his popular.
K-Drama's business proposal, also available on Netflix.
I mean, the layers go on forever.
But it's all done sort of out of a loving homage is how I think all the fans took it.
They're like, wow, this is made by people who are obsessed with all the same things I'm obsessed with.
Where did this movie come from?
How did Netflix get hold of it?
So this is another brilliant part of the narrative.
The movie is completely produced by Sony Pictures Animation, which is the studio.
that made the Oscar-winning Spider-Verse movies.
And the two directors, Maggie Kang and Chris Oppel-Hans, you know, had deals with Sony.
So it was completely developed in-house within Sony.
They pitched Sony's distribution arm, and they passed.
Sony said, yeah, I don't think we're going to put this movie out ourselves.
Simultaneously, Sony had a first-look deal with Netflix.
This was a deal that was struck around the time of the pandemic, where Netflix said,
Hey, we promise that we will finance like at least one or two of your movies a year.
We'll put them on our streaming service and we'll just buy them for you.
So you make them, we will pay, we'll reimburse you for the entire production budget and the rest is history.
And Sony was not the only entity to misunderestimate this movie.
You actually wrote on your substack I was reading that you ignored an invitation from Netflix to pre-screen this movie.
Why? What was going through your head?
So, first of all, I cannot compare myself anywhere to the level of, you know, import as a player in this universe.
To me, you are.
But, you know, this is what was going through my head was I, you know, as somebody who's been covering entertainment for a very long time, I had been tracking K-pop projects in Hollywood for a decade.
Like, Hollywood has been trying to make K-pop-themed projects since at least 2015, which is the earliest known project that I could find.
mind. And so it was more my cynicism about the industry's historic failure to make a successful
scripted K-pop feature. But look, it wasn't just me because merchandising, you know, they tried.
Like Netflix tried going to like merch retailers to say like, hey, do you want to partner with us
on this movie we have coming out, K-pop Demon Hunters? And all the merchandisers like passed.
And so, yeah, whatever toy companies passed on.
on making stuffed derpy tigers, like, they could have made so much money this summer.
But this raises a very interesting question, right?
Because I don't know a ton about K-pop, but I do know that Korean music and Korean movies
have had stunning global appeal for years now.
Why to this point was nobody able to pull off this type of movie?
And why did this movie hit, do you think?
So one commonality I found in all of the K-pop projects that never made it to the finish line was they were all written from the point of view of what I call the outsider's gaze.
So there were several projects where the protagonist was a Westerner and in most cases a white character who was imported to Korea to the K-pop scene for some reason, like, oh, washed up or.
you know, there's a scandal happening in the West,
so some Western white person
from the music industry out here could,
it has forced to go to Korea.
And so it's always been this
fish out of water trope.
And I think that that comes from
studio executives
who themselves are not K-pop fans
but have just like read,
right, in the papers
that K-pop is big. They were like, let's
do a K-pop thing, but like let's make sure
that it's, you know, this exotic thing
makes sense to people. And so
they're trying to sort of reverse engineer its popularity. Whereas K-pop Demon Hunters,
what's interesting about it is that it takes place in a universe where you're just assumed
that every single person in the world, every single character in the movie is obsessed with
K-pop, like every single person from kids to like old men at the sauna, like listen to K-pop,
participate in the subculture's rituals. And there's like no explanation. And so
I found that every single project that highlights some sort of historically excluded culture or some subculture, they always are more successful if they just throw you in there rather than attempt to handhold you in some cheesy way.
I was talking to some friends. They are four and six years old. And they were telling me how much they love K-pop demon hunters. And I was talking to their mom at one point over their heads.
And we were saying, like, okay, we get it.
But, like, if you're hearing the songs 17,000 times a day at a certain point,
you are going to feel like you're having a nervous breakdown.
I've never seen so many kids be obsessed with something so quick.
Because we're going up, up, that one moment.
Oh, those are over a lot.
This is what they're so long.
How long do you think this movie is going to dominate for?
Like, at what point does the obsession fade?
I mean, that is, that's a question to ask some kids.
You know, like how long did their frozen phase last?
How long did the Encanto phase last?
This, I do feel, has a little bit of legs
because unlike the songs from those movies,
which were much more traditional animated musical songs,
the K-pop Demon Hunter's songs are pop songs.
I was a ghost, I was alone.
They're really different. You have like the inspirational ballad like Golden.
Given the throne, I didn't know how to believe I was the queen that I meant to be.
You have like a lovely, like what I call it like a Y2K coated R&B duet like free,
which I find I find to be like highly underrated.
What is it feel right every time I let you in?
What is it feel like I can tell you anything?
And then you have kind of like a really propulsive rap, like sort of a disc track, like takedown.
It's a takedown, I'm going to take you out. You'll break down like what?
It's a takedown. I'm going to take you out. And it ain't going to stop.
But I would also look out for early next year because that is when Oscar campaigning kicks into gear.
And I can tell you as a fact that Netflix is, you know, I would not be surprised if you see an increase in
marketing around that time. And so then there might be like a resurgence. Like you might see a little
swell again at the beginning of the year when they start campaigning for Oscars.
Rebecca Sun, she's a journalist and cultural critic and her substack is called The Quiet
Part. Coming up, bro, Disney is so mad right now.
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Hey, hey, everybody. It's today. It's plain.
It's me.
Noelle from earlier, Drew Taylor is a senior writer at The Rap. He hosts an animation podcast called Fine Tuning.
All right. So, Drew, this is the biggest animated movie of the year, if not the decade. And it is not a Disney movie. How unusual is it that an animated movie that's not a Disney movie breaks out like this?
Well, you know, it's becoming more common. You know, Netflix has been great at counter programming for the big theatrical animated movies. It's something that they've done.
done really well in the past couple of years, most successfully when they opened Leo.
We're all just people and lizards.
Which is a Adam Sandler lizard animated comedy against Wish.
You're a star!
Which was Disney's big Thanksgiving animated movie, and Leo just was a huge hit and Wish was not.
You're a star!
But we've never seen a Netflix animated movie perform like, I mean, we've never seen any Netflix movie perform.
like this, which is just insane.
So it's fair to say post-K-pop demon hunters, Disney is not ascendant.
But let's go back in time.
When did Disney start to assert dominance in animation, the kind of dominance that we think
of when we think Disney and cartoons?
So Disney really rose to, you know, kind of becoming the cream of the crop in animation
in the late 80s.
Disney had a set of animators.
called the Nine Old Men, who were really, who were still there in the 80s, but they were kind
of begrudgingly allowing this new crop of animators into the building. And, you know, they
would like go to the New York Times and like, you know, talk smack about the production
of the Black Cauldron, which was supposed to be sort of like, you know, that was supposed to be
the new era's kind of like Snow White or Sleeping Beauty and it absolutely was not.
Beautiful Princess. The mischievous Gergi, the magical pig Henwin, the fiendish creeper.
cost $44 million to make and made less than half that at the box office.
So when these new executives were installed and Jeffrey Katzenberg was put in charge of animation,
the nine old men basically left and this new crop of animators were finally given the chance
to kind of do what they had wanted to do.
A period that freaks like me refer to as the Disney Renaissance.
And that's where you get movies like, you know, Aladdin.
The Little Mermaid
and Beauty and the Beast
which was the first animated feature
to be nominated for the Best Picture Oscar
and is only one of three animated movies
to ever be nominated for the Best Picture Oscar.
So, yeah, it was a wonderful time back then.
And it lasted until roughly 1999
with the release of Tarzan.
Uh-oh, what happened then?
What happened in 99?
I mean, what happened?
I think was that, you know, they were looking to branch out into other avenues. This is when they sort of started targeting young boys instead of young girls, although obviously those movies were watched by everybody. So you had things like Treasure Planet and Atlantis, the Lost Empire. And then obviously you have the influx of computer animation. This is when Disney was still a traditional 2D house. And, you know, Pixar is coming out with.
Toy Story in 1995.
To Infinity.
And DreamWorks Animation is coming out with Shrek.
Don't care.
And ants a little bit later.
And the whole kind of dynamic was changing.
And Disney was kind of stuck.
You know, it's kind of analogous to what's happening now
because they were so committed to this one style
and this one kind of production process that they were being left behind.
I definitely remember in the 2000.
when Disney was not cool, but Pixar was incredibly cool.
Yes.
But then, at some point, Disney bought Pixar.
And beyond!
How does that fit into the story of Disney's success or lack of success?
Well, what's interesting about the purchase of Pixar, which was completed by Bob
Iger in his, like, first year or so as CEO, Iger was installed.
he bought Pixar, and he put John Lassiter, the kind of creative head of Pixar, in charge of the entire creative side of Disney.
I felt that I had to address Disney animation, that it needed huge improvement.
And I thought the fastest way to accomplish that, albeit the riskiest and the most expensive, was to buy Pixar.
Pixar at that point exemplified original storytelling and quality and creativity in its highest form.
Lassiter is a huge animation buff, and he really doubled down on this commitment to quality.
You know, he kind of applied the Pixar formula to Disney, and I feel like what was nice about that period was that both companies were sort of being led by the same ethos, but we're making very different films.
But, yeah, they have kind of waxed and waned in terms of cultural relevance, I would say, in the past decade or so.
And you look at Frozen and you look at Moana and you look at Zootopia and all the IP that created generated.
Everything that we've done at Disney animation since then was tied to the Pixar acquisition.
You know, obviously in 2019 they had Frozen 2, which was the biggest animated feature of all time.
I believe it has been eclipsed, obviously, by Nazar 2, the Chinese movie, which is made like $2.5 billion or something.
But since then, there have been some struggles.
You know, Strange World was famously a huge disaster.
It was, again, kind of courting that young male audience, and it just did not work.
And Wish was not financially successful, which was meant to be their kind of celebration of the 100th anniversary of Disney.
And it just didn't connect.
I was expecting a lot more for, like, the 100th anniversary Disney animation film.
Changes that I think would have made Disney's movie wish a lot better.
Is the company straining too hard to remind audiences of its legacy with this movie?
And I think that there was a lot of sort of hand-wringing about what could be done.
And what could be done ended up being turning a show that was meant for Disney Plus into a theatrical movie
and making a billion dollars last year with Moana too.
You're welcome.
And, you know, I think that for better or worse, Disney has been part of conditioning audiences to,
go to streaming for animation,
for original animation.
You know,
Pixar put three of its very best animated movies
directly to Disney Plus,
Soul, Luca, and Turning Red.
And, you know, Enkanto really found its audience on Disney Plus.
They didn't show up to the theaters,
but they showed up on Disney Plus.
So I think that
when you have a sequel, like, Inside Out 2,
of course, it's going to do huge theatrically.
Everybody has seen it.
Everybody has to see it on the big screen.
But some of these wilder, smaller, more original projects are perhaps going to be defined by their streaming life.
You clearly follow the world of animation very closely.
You have named movies that I have not thought about in years, movies I have not seen.
Let me ask you to be prophetic now for a moment.
What upcoming releases do you think in late 2025 and throughout 2026 are going to tell you.
Tell us where animation is headed.
Well, here's what's fascinating about 2026.
2026 is almost all original animation from the big studios.
And to me, that is really, really exciting.
Sony has a movie called Goat, which is about a goat that plays basketball,
and is going to be the greatest of all time.
Obviously, that's his goal.
But you have things like Hoppers, which is the Pixar movie,
about a young scientist who puts her brain in the inside the body of a robotic beaver.
You know, that old story.
How could you be called it that?
The Forgotten Island from DreamWorks, which is going to be so great.
And, you know, there are still sequels.
There's Toy Story 5 is coming on next summer and, you know, I'm sure we'll make more money than they can count.
And beyond!
But Disney has an original animated movie called Hext, which I am really, really excited.
about that is kind of
a modern fairy tale
kind of set in the world of witches
and has the potential
to be really exciting and bold
and I just hope that they
commit to it and that
they don't shy away from the kind of
idiosyncrasies that have made
some of these movies from DreamWorks or Sony
or these other companies so special
and obviously
they're connecting with audiences so I hope
that that kind of gives them the backbone
to kind of go
all in.
Drew Taylor is a senior writer at The Rap.
He hosts an animation podcast called Fine Tuning.
Denise Gera and Danielle Hewitt produced today's show.
Jolie Myers edited.
Patrick Boyd is our only engineer and Laura Bullard checks the facts.
I'm Noelle King.
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