트렌드경제신문
Trend Entertainment

TVING's occult documentary 'Shaman', guided by Shin Ha-kyun and Han Ye-ri:

The TVING Original 'Shaman: The Temple of Superstition' was released on the 6th. It is an 8-episode occult documentary featuring Shin Ha-kyun and Han Ye-ri as presenters.

·
TVING's occult documentary 'Shaman', guided by Shin Ha-kyun and Han Ye-ri:

Unknown Entities Guided by Shin Ha-kyun and Han Ye-ri

Actors Shin Ha-kyun and Han Ye-ri have stepped up as guides connecting supernatural phenomena with human psychology. The TVING original 'Shaman: Temple of Superstition' began its full-scale journey with its premiere on the 6th at 6 PM.

This series tells the stories of people whose daily lives have been shattered by entities that are difficult to define. Asking the question, "Is it a ghost or a god?", it unfolds the process of those fiercely confronting their suffering through a real-life investigative format based on actual cases.

Participating as presenters, Shin Ha-kyun and Han Ye-ri take on the role of delivering various cases within the work to the viewers. The two guide the audience by connecting supernatural phenomena with human psychology.

The Worldview of K-Shamanism Comprising 8 Episodes

The TVING original 'Shaman: Temple of Superstition' is the follow-up season to 'Shaman: Temple of Ghosts', Korea's first occult documentary series. It is produced in 8 episodes, with a running time of approximately 40 minutes per episode. It will be released sequentially twice a week over the next four weeks.

The production team noted the recent increase in social interest in shamanistic culture, such as spiritual readings and fortune-telling. Rather than simply delivering provocative horror, they deeply illuminated the worldview of Korean shamanism through the original setting of "entities that have not yet become gods." They realistically captured phenomena that are difficult to explain scientifically and the lives of people whose lives have been changed because of them.

Life, Wounds, and the Process of Healing

The production team aimed to sincerely capture the lives, wounds, and healing processes of the people experiencing these phenomena, rather than the supernatural phenomena themselves. The production team explained that viewers should watch how the participants experience changes as they face unknown entities.

In the Episode 1 clip 'It would have been mine if it were just a little more,' the identity of a ghost that transformed for 11 hours is dealt with, showing the reality of an actual case through the situation, "A rotten smell is coming from me."

Background and Context

It reflects the recent trend of increasing social interest in shamanistic culture, such as spiritual readings and fortune-telling. The production team focused on deeply illuminating the worldview of Korean shamanism beyond simple horror or provocation.

The Episode 1 clip 'It would have been mine if it were just a little more' deals with the identity of a ghost that transformed for 11 hours, showing the reality of an actual case through the situation, "A rotten smell is coming from me."

By 차도윤 · Translated from the original Korean article. · Original Korean article ↗
Share this story
in R X f @ BS TG WA M