KPOP DEMON HUNTERS: Songs From Netflix's Animated Movie Have Been Banned In An English Catholic School

KPOP DEMON HUNTERS: Songs From Netflix's Animated Movie Have Been Banned In An English Catholic School

Netflix's KPop Demon Hunters may seem like an inoffensive watch for the whole family, but one particular school in England has taken issue with the lyrics from the movie's original songs...

By MarkCassidy - Nov 19, 2025 09:11 PM EST
Filed Under: Netflix
Source: Via Toonado.com

It might be hard to imagine a family-friendly musical adventure like KPop Demon Hunters offending anyone, but it seems the lyrics in some of the songs from Netflix's animated phenomenon have become cause for concern for the faculty in one particular school in England.

According to The BBC, Lilliput Church of England Infant School in Poole, Dorset has "banned" its students from singing the original tunes from the movie due to concerns over certain song lyrics not being in line with its “Christian ethos.”

The school reportedly "sent a message to parents on Friday saying some members of the community are ‘deeply uncomfortable’ with references to demons. It said this was because they ‘associate them with spiritual forces opposed to God and goodness.’ In an update on Monday, acting head teacher Lloyd Allington said he had since received feedback from parents, highlighting positive messages from the songs, but said the school was seeking to support those who found the themes ‘challenging.'”

The school originally asked students to refrain from singing the songs out of respect for those "who find the themes at odds with their faith," but this was met with backlash from parents who pointed out that certain songs contained positive messages for their kids.

The school's headmaster wasn't having it, however.

“While we fully respect your right to make choices about the content your child engages with at home, we also want to be mindful of the diversity of beliefs within our school community,” head teacher Lloyd Allington responded. “For some Christians, references to demons can feel deeply uncomfortable because they associate them with spiritual forces opposed to God and goodness. We are not asking parents to tell their children that there is anything wrong with enjoying the film or its songs if it aligns with your own views and beliefs. Our role will simply be to help children understand that some of their peers may hold different views and to explore how we can respect and support those peers in upholding their faith.”

Back in August, Kpop pushed past Red Notice to claim first place on Netflix’s all-time rankings for English-language films, and earlier this month, we got official confirmation that a sequel was moving forward - but Huntr/x fans should prepare to wait quite a while for that reunion tour.

Netflix and Sony have finalized a deal for a second movie, which is not expected to release until 2029. An animated project of this scale obviously takes a long time to complete, but there is a chance it could arrive sooner, depending on how the production progresses.

KPop Demon Hunters introduced Rumi (Arden Cho), Mira (May Hong), and Zoey (Ji-young Yoo) as members of HUNTR/X, an internationally recognized K-pop girl group that secretly moonlight as demon hunters.

About The Author:
MarkCassidy
Member Since 11/9/2008
Mark Cassidy is a writer, photographer, amateur filmmaker, and Rotten Tomatoes-approved critic from Dublin, Ireland.
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TheVisionary25
TheVisionary25 - 11/19/2025, 9:22 PM
I get both sides tbh but it is a movie at the end of the day…

Maybe those parents who are offended need to sit down and watch the film with their kids to see the messages it is trying to state which are indeed positive (and could even enjoy the film since it’s a good one).

Also I wonder if anyone got in trouble for singing “Soda Pop”?.

?si=4DcOFh8_0HQ7BsGz
Apophis71
Apophis71 - 11/20/2025, 6:34 AM
@TheVisionary25 - They maybe need to also learn that the term Demon was first propagated by the Catholic/Christian faith (based on a change in spelling of the Ancient Greek word daimon) so MENTION of demons is NOT in direct opposition of Christian teachings IF demons are made out to be the evil villains. As such the main narrative of the movie is more in line with Catholic/Christian teachings than the teachers seem to realise and likely just using all this as an excuse to stop kids singing earworm songs rather than Christian Hymns :D
OriginalGusto1
OriginalGusto1 - 11/19/2025, 9:30 PM
I know a certain someone who has many K-Pop posters...
vectorsigma
vectorsigma - 11/19/2025, 10:02 PM
@OriginalGusto1 - we all know that about Josh Wilding
OriginalGusto1
OriginalGusto1 - 11/19/2025, 10:04 PM
@vectorsigma - Boom!!!!!!!!!!! K-Pop n sheep!
JackDeth
JackDeth - 11/19/2025, 9:42 PM
So dumb. Also, let's just ignore all the terrible things in the Bible. Fictional demons are bad, but condoning slavery is a-okay, I guess.
ObserverIO
ObserverIO - 11/20/2025, 4:35 AM
@JackDeth - The Bible condones slavery?
TheRevelation
TheRevelation - 11/20/2025, 8:20 AM
@ObserverIO - ...yes.
ObserverIO
ObserverIO - 11/20/2025, 8:35 AM
@TheRevelation - Enlighten me.
JackDeth
JackDeth - 11/20/2025, 8:42 AM
@ObserverIO - Okay, but brace yourself. These are the passages the Confederate army used during the Civil War to fight for the 'state's rights' to own other Humans.

Some Bible passages describe or regulate slavery, such as those in Leviticus and Exodus, while others like Numbers 31 include instructions for taking female captives, a practice later described by some as enslavement. Other passages that discuss masters and servants in the context of parables and instructions for Christian conduct.

Leviticus and Exodus: Some Old Testament passages contain laws that regulated the practice of slavery, including rules for owning Hebrew and foreign slaves.

Numbers 31: This passage instructs the Israelite army to kill male captives but take female virgins for themselves, a practice that resulted in the enslavement of the women.

1 Peter: This epistle instructs Christian servants to be submissive to their masters and to endure suffering, which some argue condones the practice.

Parables of Jesus: Jesus used the imagery of masters and servants in his parables, such as the parable of the faithful servant, to teach spiritual lessons.
JackDeth
JackDeth - 11/20/2025, 8:43 AM
@ObserverIO - Exodus 20:17 -- God provides a list of belongings which are not to be coveted, including servants (implying that they are property).

Exodus 21:2-6 -- Israeli slaves must be set free after 7 years unless you trick them into wanting to stay by giving them a wife.

Exodus 21:7-11 -- How your daughter must be treated after you sell her into slavery.

Exodus 21:20-21 -- You may beat your slaves as long as they do not die within a couple days of the beating.

Exodus 21:26-27 -- You have to let your slave go free if you destroy their eye or knock out one of their teeth.

Exodus 22:2-3 -- A theif must pay restituion. If unable, he himself is to be sold.

Leviticus 19:20-21 -- God tells Moses and Aaron what to do with a man who sleeps with another man's female slave.

Leviticus 22:10-11 -- A priest's hired servant may not eat the sacred offering, but his slaves can.

Leviticus 25:44-46 -- You may buy slaves from the nations around you and bequeath them to your children as inherited property (except if they're Israelites).
TheRevelation
TheRevelation - 11/20/2025, 8:45 AM
@ObserverIO - Nah, just read the book.
ObserverIO
ObserverIO - 11/20/2025, 2:33 PM
@TheRevelation - Respectfully sir, that's a long-ass book.


(a line I might find myself repeating at the pearly gates)
ObserverIO
ObserverIO - 11/20/2025, 3:00 PM
@JackDeth - So I think it's important to note that a lot of people do make a distinction between the old and new testaments. That the old laws have been done away with as soon as Jesus arrives. And a lot of those are old Hebrew laws.

Now yes these specific laws were supposedly passed along to Moses from God on high, but at the end of the day they aren't moral laws but laws of order. And slavery was a large part of the culture and needed to be regulated. Had Moses put on a silly stovepipe hat and made a speech about human freedom, the ancient Hebrews might have had a very disorderly war. Would God have wanted that? Prolly not.


So I don't think that's necessarily condoning slavery. Just regulating what's already there.

As far as parables and such, again slavery was actually a thing, just talking about it isn't condoning. It's just history. There were all kinds of bad shit going on in those parables. To say that parables about slavery is condoning slavery is like saying Django Unchained condones slavery.
Also servants is different from slavery. Servants get paid, that's a job.

Okay so in those aforementioned Hebrew laws slaves are seen as property and belongings but when you really think about it, no one really owns anything. But when you make a law you recognise these things, politically in order to preserve order. But you can't actually own another human being in the same way you can't own a TV. But if the people think they do then there will be disorder when someone takes a TV (or indeed slave) from another person who paid money for them. They will feel slighted.

That is also what Jesus talks about when he tells his servants to obey the law of their lands. Those laws could be anything. They could be 'If you see a peasant on a Tuesday you must rape then and beat them but if it is a Wednesday simply kill them'. Jesus can't write a blank check for what another person's law might be, so he's not condoning these laws, just telling you to respect them. He says "Render unto Caeser what is Caeser's". That's the human system. Money. Economy, politics, law and order. A slave is bought and paid for with the coin of the land.
That sort of goes for Peter 1 also.

Exodus 21 feels more like a Superman '25 Jor-El debate. He's not saying raoe women, just [frick] virgins. Semantics I guess.
JackDeth
JackDeth - 11/20/2025, 8:21 PM
@ObserverIO - With no due to respect to slavery apologists, he made a whole list of rules and never thought to tell the people it was wrong to own other people. Instead he said, 'Well, I guess since you already own people, better not mistreat them, Kay?'

As far as the argument that you can't actually own a person, I'm sure the slave owners consider those people their property as slave owners always have. Any time someone tries the 'Slavery wasn't so bad' argument I have to ask them, 'Would YOU want to be a slave?" Then they're like, 'Oh, I wouldn't be a slave because I haven't done anything wrong.'

To which immediately begs the question, 'What could a Human do that would justify them becoming a slave and what did those people do to justify their treatment, other than being unfortunate enough to have been born in an era with evil people?" If God is all-knowing, he should know slavery is evil. If he is all powerful, he could stop this evil and chooses not to. This is not a God who deserves to be worshipped.
ObserverIO
ObserverIO - 11/20/2025, 8:50 PM
@JackDeth - "I'm sure the slave owners consider those people their property as slave owners always have."

Yeah that's my actual point. You can't really own a person (or a TV) but if they've paid money for the slave (which is a fictional concept that belongs to 'Caesar') then you can't tell them that slave isn't theirs without creating disorder.

Also, if God is real and created everything, don't you think that's worthy of worship?
JackDeth
JackDeth - 11/20/2025, 9:18 PM
@ObserverIO - I think if you're GOD, you can tell people not to buy people like property. As far as 'creating disorder' there are a LOT of moments in the Bible where the 'word of God' created disorder. If God thinks slavery is wrong (which he should know), his word on the topic shouldn't be controversial. Also, [frick] these sheep-[frick]ers who don't know where the Sun goes at night. If they didn't know having slaves was wrong, they have no moral stance I want to be a part of. Slavery has ALWAYS BEEN WRONG. End of that.

As for God deserving worship? No, I don't think he deserves to be worshipped whether he made the planet or not. What kind of petty, insecure almighty being needs to be worshipped. Sick shit. [frick] that guy.
ObserverIO
ObserverIO - 11/21/2025, 5:00 AM
@JackDeth - I mean there's a difference between deserving to be worshipped and needing to be worshipped.

Of course you're right, Slavery has always been wrong and [frick] the dangerous backwards civilizations that disagree. But Every civilization is a little backwards. In fact every nation has slaves. We are all slaves, legally. We belong to our nations. There's no such thing as a free citizen.
Your birth certificate is a slave document. You are the property of your country, which is of course a fictional entity. So they don't really own you. It's an agreed upon fiction just like the slaves of the past and all ideas of money and ownership.

"Render unto Caeser what is Caeser's" is the perfect biblical answer to all of this. It at once acknowledges and dismisses all of our fictions of civilization. All our laws, economies and ideas of nations and order. The money has your slave-owner's face on it. It belongs to them.
Play along with these fictions is Jesus' advice.

You're not really a slave, you're a free man. But you still have to play along with ideas of nationality and finance and maneuver your moral life within those ideas. That's all God was probably doing with those old Hebrew laws.

I'm just playing devil's advocate here. Or God's advocate.
ObserverIO
ObserverIO - 11/21/2025, 5:12 AM
side note: They did just cancel The Last Ronin movie which does support the idea that there is no god.

So you win by default. Actually we both win, because if there is no god then it's actually Moses that condones slavery. And he once murdered a man in Egypt in cold blood. He was also a ruler over slaves as a member of the Egyptian royal family too. And he once made his crazy political ideas on gun control known when he said that that they could pry his gun "From my cold dead hand".

Or maybe that was the dude that played Moses. Either way he was a dick.
JackDeth
JackDeth - 11/21/2025, 8:56 AM
@ObserverIO - That's a lot of mental gymnastics. Look, I'm not trying to convince you God isn't real. I don't believe, but that's just me. If you believe, I'm not judging you. I'll judge you if you defend slavery, but other than that we're good.
ObserverIO
ObserverIO - 11/21/2025, 5:21 PM
@JackDeth - Slavery sucks. Balls. Big balls. Slavery sucks the biggest, wrinkliest, hairiest balls imaginable.

That's why I'm an anarchist.
JackDeth
JackDeth - 11/21/2025, 9:39 PM
@ObserverIO - I can relate.
Malatrova15
Malatrova15 - 11/19/2025, 9:45 PM
Good, this satánic slop doesnt fly here now that Trump fixed our country
MarkCassidy
MarkCassidy - 11/19/2025, 9:54 PM
The silliest thing about this is that they're not even actual demons... like not Biblical, fire and brimstone devils. They're just interdimentional beings or something.
OriginalGusto1
OriginalGusto1 - 11/19/2025, 10:05 PM
@MarkCassidy - So, democrats?
MarkCassidy
MarkCassidy - 11/19/2025, 10:22 PM
@OriginalGusto1 - Demoncrats.
OriginalGusto1
OriginalGusto1 - 11/19/2025, 10:26 PM
@MarkCassidy - [frick]in' Welsh bastards.
DocSpock
DocSpock - 11/19/2025, 10:32 PM
@OriginalGusto1 -

ROFLMGDAO!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Wild thing, you made my heart sing.
OriginalGusto1
OriginalGusto1 - 11/19/2025, 10:45 PM
@DocSpock - You make my junk shrink!
OriginalGusto1
OriginalGusto1 - 11/19/2025, 10:46 PM
Which, doesn't seem possible...I need a microscope to piss..
DocSpock
DocSpock - 11/19/2025, 10:50 PM
@OriginalGusto1 -

NO! Your stripper career run at the old nuns home will be ruined.
OriginalGusto1
OriginalGusto1 - 11/19/2025, 10:55 PM
@DocSpock - The Diarrhea ended that run. No pun intended.
DocSpock
DocSpock - 11/20/2025, 2:09 AM
@MarkCassidy -

I knew the truth was out there.
TheRevelation
TheRevelation - 11/20/2025, 8:21 AM
@MarkCassidy - True. It's less about protecting children and more about controlling them. This sh!t doesn't perpetuate itself.
JackDeth
JackDeth - 11/20/2025, 8:46 AM
@MarkCassidy - I think it's from Korean folklore. The 'demons' are all different monsters from their fairytales like ghosts and goblins.
Apophis71
Apophis71 - 11/20/2025, 10:41 AM
@JackDeth - It is considered by many to be based on a mix of both the Christian faith AND Korean Folklore (although the folklore and culture of the region is more obvious) as Christianity is the dominant religion (31%) of the region although 51% in SK are stated as irreligious (followed by about half as many, 16% of the population, who identify with Buddhism). There is actualy a higher percentage of Catholics in South Korea, 11%, than in the UK, at most 8% even though we have a higher percent who identify as Christian, 46% compared to SK's 31%

All silly semantics however for something that shouldn't be controversial when the demons are the antagonists just as they are in Christian mythology.
CyberNigerian
CyberNigerian - 11/19/2025, 9:56 PM
A lot of Christians just seem very performative as of late.

OriginalGusto1
OriginalGusto1 - 11/19/2025, 10:27 PM
@CyberNigerian - I'm a Jesuit. Do I get a pass?
DocSpock
DocSpock - 11/19/2025, 10:35 PM

K-Pop is a North Korean virus that unravels your brain they have been testing on the South Koreans for years. Now the virus is spreading.


Orangeblack
Orangeblack - 11/19/2025, 11:25 PM
This is some comic book movie news if I've ever read it. What is this site anymore? Snyderverse rage baiting and click bait. Is the site dying?
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