Takedown! KPop Demon Hunters Sing-Along hits movie theaters this Halloween weekend
OCTOBER 16, 2025–Another round of K Pop Demon Hunters Sing-Along screenings is scheduled for Oct. 30th-Nov 2nd. Rumi, Mira, and Zoe slammed through our entertainment siloes last summer, resonating across gender and age borders faster than most parents could say “Saja Boys.”
Netflix was smart and wasted no time capitalizing on Huntrixx and The Saja Boys’ appeal, announcing multiple sequels and potential spin-offs, not to mention a rumored live action remake that pop culture commentators squashed faster than you can say YouTube Short.
And now, with Halloween conveniently falling over a weekend this year, they announced that Sing-Along versions of the movie will screen internationally.
KPop Demon Hunters, produced in partnership with Sony Pictures Animation (Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse, The Mitchells vs. The Machines), is directed by Maggie Kang and Chris Appelhans, with a script by Danya Jimenez, Hannah McMechan, Kang, and Appelhans. The voice ensemble includes Arden Cho, May Hong, Ji-young Yoo, Ahn Hyo-seop, Yunjin Kim, Joel Kim Booster, Liza Koshy, Daniel Dae Kim, Ken Jeong, and Byung Hun Lee.
Original songs are performed by EJAE, AUDREY NUNA, REI AMI, Andrew Choi, Danny Chung, Kevin Woo, samUIL Lee, Neckwav, and Lea Salonga; with TEDDY, 24, IDO, DOMINSUK, Jenna Andrews, Stephen Kirk, Lindgren, and Ian Eisendrath produced the soundtrack. Songwriters include TEDDY, 24, Danny Chung, IDO, Vince, KUSH, EJAE, Jenna Andrews, Stephen Kirk, Lindgren, Mark Sonnenblick, and Daniel Rojas. Composer Marcelo Zarvos wrote the original score.
Which KPop Demon Hunters’ character is your cosplay?
One day I hope to recreate the generation just before this one, as the 1990s were much closer to my decade:
Sunlight Sisters /Netflix
Think of them as the queens of demon hunting. The Sunlight Sisters are a legendary bloodline of female protectors—Rumi’s mother, Ryu Mi-yeong, among them. And their name isn’t poetic coincidence.
Sunlight Sisters (햇빛 자매단)
Sunlight is seen in Korean folklore as cleansing and truth-revealing. These women aren’t just hunters—they’re generational warriors whose power lies in their unity and sacrifice. The name Sunlight Sisters is a beautiful nod to matrilineal power and Korea’s tradition of mudang (female shamans) who fought darkness with light.