Bangkok Post

GLOWING YOUNG SUPERSTARS

- NATALIA WINKELMAN © 2020 THE NEW

Blackpink: Light Up The Sky Starring Jennie Kim, Ji-soo Kim, Lalisa Manoban, Rosé Directed by Caroline Suh Now streaming on Netflix

Four young superstars shine brightly in Blackpink: Light Up The Sky, a brief but endearing introducti­on to the idolised K-pop girl group. The documentar­y (on Netflix) arrives just under two weeks after the release of Blackpink’s debut album, and while its salute to the artists flicks at the cynical side of their industry, it is less a probing profile than a backstage pass for fans of the band (aka Blinks) old and new.

Director Caroline Suh combines naturalist­ic, on-the-go footage of the group with separate interviews with its members: Jisoo, Jennie, Lisa and Rosé. They are an internatio­nal ensemble — Jisoo and Jennie were born and raised in South Korea, Lisa is Thai and Rosé is from New Zealand — and as Suh traces each of their young lives, she allows their singular personalit­ies and styles to come into focus.

This emphasis on individual­ity is especially valuable when set against a music business notorious for pruning its artists into a glossy commodity. Suh opens the documentar­y in 2016, on the day that YG Entertainm­ent, the South Korean music monolith, debuted Blackpink at a news conference. Reporters type furiously as they behold the nervous girls who had striven for this moment since YG recruited them to its intensive, live-in pop conservato­ry years earlier.

Alongside clips of their recitals, the girls allude to the rigour of their training: long hours, harsh criticisms, a competitiv­e atmosphere. Jennie laments leaving home so young; Rosé diplomatic­ally says the era “wasn’t a very happy vibe”. In its best moments, the documentar­y draws a line from the challengin­g lives Blackpink led as trainees to the pressure and loneliness they now face as global celebritie­s, forced to make besties with their make-up artist or private Pilates instructor.

It’s a shame that these complicati­ng moments are few, and Blackpink: Light Up The Sky declines to dig deeper into the ways YG engineers and commercial­ises talent at such a young age. Here is an economy in which companies make millions by working kids to the bone. Skimming the topic is a missed opportunit­y, but the film’s winsome stars are its saving grace.

 ??  ?? From left, Lisa, Jennie, Jisoo and Rosé in
Blackpink: Light Up The Sky.
From left, Lisa, Jennie, Jisoo and Rosé in Blackpink: Light Up The Sky.

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