More demons, more K-pop: Netflix announces ‘KPop Demon Hunters’ sequel | Mix 106.9
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By Danielle Broadway

LOS ANGELES, March 12 (Reuters) – Netflix confirmed on Thursday that a sequel to “KPop Demon Hunters,” the streaming platform’s most watched film of all time, is officially in development.

The new ​installment will extend Netflix’s creative collaboration with co-directors Maggie Kang ‌and Chris Appelhans, and marks the first project under their new exclusive multi-year writing and directing deal for animation.

“I feel immense pride as a Korean filmmaker that the audience wants more from this Korean story and our Korean characters,” Kang said ‌in ​the announcement. “There’s so much more to this world ⁠we have built and ⁠I’m excited to show you. This is only the beginning.”

Animated by Sony Pictures Animation, the original musical film follows K-pop girl trio Huntrix — Rumi, Mira and Zoey — as they balance their superstardom with secret ​lives as demon hunters. Lead vocalists EJAE, Audrey Nuna and Rei Ami propelled the movie’s breakout anthem “Golden” to No. 1 on the ⁠Billboard Hot 100.

The film became a critical ⁠and awards-season powerhouse, earning best animated feature and best ​song at the 31st Critics Choice Awards, as well as best animated motion ​picture and best original song at the 83rd Golden Globes. ‌It has two Oscar nominations – for best animated feature and best original song.

“Golden” also secured a Grammy for best song written for visual media — the first Grammy ever awarded to a K-Pop song.

In January 2026, ⁠Netflix announced the movie had shattered platform records, drawing 482 million views over a six-month period, along with 32 million views for its lyric videos. Its ⁠soundtrack continues to ‌trend globally.

Appelhans, speaking to Reuters in January, stressed that ⁠a sequel would need a clear creative direction from ​the ‌beginning.

“You have to know where you’re headed because ​otherwise you will ⁠be lost immediately,” he said. “So, we’ll just have to do that again and make something that we love and that means something to us. And then I think if you do that well, it works and other people connect to it.”

(Reporting by Danielle Broadway, Rollo Ross, Hanna Rantala; Editing ​by Rosalba O’Brien)

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