White: The Melody Of The Curse | |||||||||||||
Director: | Kim Gok Kim Sun | ||||||||||||
Starring: | Hahm Eun-jung Hwang Woo-seul-hye May Doni Kim Choi Ah-ra Jin Se-yeon | ||||||||||||
Studio: | DOO Entertainment | ||||||||||||
Distributor: | CJ Entertainment | ||||||||||||
Runtime: | 106 minutes | ||||||||||||
Country: | South Korea | ||||||||||||
Language: | Korean | ||||||||||||
Gross: | [1] | ||||||||||||
Native Name: |
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White: Melody of Death (lit. White: The Melody of the Curse) is a 2011 South Korean horror film directed by Kim Gok and Kim Sun.
The film was pre-sold in Malaysia and Singapore with the teaser trailer and poster released at the Hong Kong Film Mart.[2] The movie was a commercial success grossing US$ 5,3 Million and ending up being the highest-grossing horror movie and among Top 30 highest-grossing movies in South Korea in 2011.[3]
The girl group Pink Dolls, consisting of Je-ni, A-rang, Shin-ji, and Eun-ju, debuted on stage but failed to achieve popularity. They and the record company relocated to a renovated studio that had been burned in a fire 15 years prior. Eun-ju's sponsor, Mr. Choi, who funds an idol or group on the condition they receive sexual favors, was credited for making the move, and renovations happen. The other three members bully Eun-ju for her involvement with Mr. Choi and consider quitting. Her vocal trainer and best friend, Soon-ye, encourages her to remain in the group as she believes they will find success and gain attention with their new song. While cleaning up in the dance rehearsal room, Eun-ju finds a VHS tape titled "WHITE", containing unfinished music video footage. When Eun-ju plays the video in her dorm room, the group's manager finds her watching the tape, she demands that the group be permitted to remake the song as their next single.
When Pink Dolls received overnight popularity with their debut single "White," which became a viral hit across the country, the manager sought to re-record the song but with the main vocalist as the focal point doing most of the singing. The tension rises as Je-ni, A-rang, and Shin-ji become jealous and hostile against each other as they fight over the spot of the lead vocalist. During this time, a ghost attacks the three members on different occasions; Je-ni strangles her with microphone cords during a vocal session, A-rang causes her to fall off a music-video set, and Shin-ji crushes her with camera equipment during a shooting on a televised game show. Fearing the song is cursed and that she will be the next victim, Eun-ju accompanies Soon-ye and a record producer, Tae-Yong, to examine hidden images within the video, and from there comes to believe that a trainee named Jang Ye-bin, who died before the studio caught fire, wrote the song. Eun-ju meets up with Mr. Choi and asks about the circumstances surrounding Ye-bin, and he replies that she died by suicide. After returning to the rehearsal room in a fit of depression, Eun-Ju is haunted by a ghost until she collapses in the morning, where she finds a suicide note beside power sockets that may have started the fire.
After feeling confident that the curse has been broken, Eun-ju takes credit for the song as her solo performance and plans to reinvent her image by dying her hair, dressing in white, and using the stage name "White". However, Eun-ju's mainstream popularity causes conflict with those around her and distances herself from her friends Je-ni, A-rang, and Shin-ji who are still recovering from their injuries. While Soon-ye was destroying the evidence, she re-watched the video and noticed new details they had never seen. While doing so, Soon-ye and Tae-yong receive a phone call from the television producer that the other three members of Pink Dolls, who had been hosts for a music television show, died from drinking bleach live on air. Unaware that her friend is in danger, Soon-ye calls Eun-ju, who is on her way to a venue to perform "White," and warns her that the curse is not over, but ignores her. As they review and edit fan videos that match the original one, Soon-ye and Tae-yong finally discover that the true writer of the song is not Ye-bin, but a backup dancer who had been bullied by Ye-bin and tormented her by disfiguring her face with acid, driving dancer to commit suicide by drinking bleach. This causes her ghost to kill Ye-bin, which leads the studio to be set on fire as she attempts to burn the suicide note.
Soon-ye rushes to the venue to rescue Eun-ju but cannot enter the stage with all the doors locked. During Eun-ju's performance, all of the stage lights go out, and the electricity in the venue begins to malfunction. Eun-ju's manager and Mr. Choi try to get her off the stage, but they are both killed by stage equipment, and the ghost attempts to attack her. Afterward, the doors all open, and the panicking crowd starts to rush out of the building, Soon-ye enters and she and Eun-ju attempt to reunite, but Eun-ju trips in the crowd and gets trampled to death. The electricity eventually sets the venue on fire. After the incident, Soon-ye destroys all of the remaining evidence of the song in the studio's karaoke room. However, the karaoke machine announces that the next song is "White," implying the possibility that the curse has not been broken.
The soundtrack contains 3 versions of the song "White," the original (the one featured on the VHS tape), another sung by Pink Dolls (Ham Eun-jeong, May Doni Kim, Choi Ah-ra, and Jin Se-yeon), and a solo version with just Eun-jeong.
The film grossed its opening weekend landing at the fifth position of the box office chart.[4] In total the film grossed by the end of its theatrical run.[1] The film received a total of 791,133 admissions nationwide.[5]
2011 | The 30th Vancouver International Film Festival | White: The Melody of the Curse | [6] | ||
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2012 | 16th Fantasia International Film Festival | Feature film | [7] | ||
2013 | The 6th FILM LIVE: KT&G Music Film Festival | [8] | |||
2016 | 14th Florence Korean Film Festival | [9] |
Publisher | Year | List | Recipient | Rank | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
SlashFilm | 2018 | The Best South Korean Horror Movies You've Never Seen | White: The Melody of the Curse | Placed | [10] |
India Times | 2020 | Best Korean Horror Films | Plcaed | [11] | |
OTAKUKART | 2021 | Top Ten Horror Korean Movies of All Time | 5th | [12] | |
Rolling Stone India | 2022 | 15 Creepy Korean Horror Films You Must See | Placed | [13] | |
Scoop Whoop | 8 Best Korean Horror Films To Watch | 4th | [14] | ||
WION | 2023 | 15 spine-chilling Korean movies | 15th | [15] | |
Creepy Catalog | The 30 Best Korean Horror Movies | Placed | [16] | ||
OTAKUKART | 50 Best South Korean Horror Movies of All Time | Placed | [17] |
White was released in Japan as a DVD on March 02, 2012 by NBC Universal. A re-issue was released in the same country on July 21, 2017.[18]