Minhwa, norigae, gat: the film's Korean roots
The Korean past is sewn into the pop present — no shop-window folklore.
The tiger and magpie following Jinu don't come from nowhere: they're a minhwa motif, the folk painting of the Joseon era. In the hojak-do genre, the magpie mocks the tiger — satire of the powerful. The film honors the tradition: its magpie steals the tiger's hat.
On every HUNTR/X stage outfit, look for the norigae — the traditional braided pendant hung from the hanbok. The costume team wove it into couture silhouettes inspired by Givenchy and McQueen: the past worn by the present.
The Saja Boys push the reference further. Their name plays on saja (사자) — “lion”, but also jeoseung saja (저승사자), the death messengers of Korean folklore. Their “Your Idol” performance in gat (black horsehair hat) and dark hanbok is the film's most literal image: the idol as messenger from beyond.
Even Seoul is specific: Namsan Tower, the city walls, the street food. The animators even shaped mouths on Korean phonemes despite the English dialogue.
That precision is a design lesson: identity isn't decorated on, it's sewn into the structure. It's what separates homage from costume.