Philippine Daily Inquirer

Netflix film tracks Blackpink’s rise

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LONDON— Blackpink fans will see a softer side to the K-pop girl power group in a Netflix documentar­y in which its members open up about their journey from teenage trainees to global superstars.

Blackpink has become a global phenomenon since their debut in South Korea four years ago. Some of their songs, including “Kill This Love,” have over 1 billion hits on Youtube, and they have collaborat­ed with stars such as Lady Gaga and Cardi B. In 2018, they worked with Dua Lipa in the single, “Kiss and Make up.”

Jisoo, Jennie, Rose and Lisa are known for their catchy tunes mixing Korean and English and slick dance routines, but in “Blackpink: Light Up The Sky,” which premiered on Oct. 14, they wanted to dig deeper, said filmmaker Caroline Suh.

Suh combined home videos, behind-the-scenes footage and candid interviews to tell the life stories of the four women, aged 23 to 25, of whom only Jisoo grew up in Korea.

Lisa is Thai, Rose grew up in Australia and New Zealand, and Jennie moved to New Zealand on her own as an 8-year-old, living with a home-stay family.

“I hope that the film humanizes the members so they’re seen as more three-dimensiona­l and not as one-dimensiona­l K-pop stars and idols,” said Suh. “I hope that people are empathetic toward them and cheer them on.”

As she gained the members’ trust, they started to share their experience­s, including the hardships they endured as trainees, Suh said.

Youngsters hoping to make it in the world of K-pop join training programs consisting of hours of daily dance lessons, voice training and school work, alongside weekly auditions. They aren’t always successful.

YG Entertainm­ent, which formed the group, did not set any conditions for the film crew, Suh said.

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