Netflix's 'K-POPS!' Reviews Have A Big Rotten Tomatoes, Metacritic Gap
Anderson .Paak at Los Angeles Premiere of Anderson .Paak’s “K-POPS!” held at AMC The Grove on February 24, 2026 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Chad Salvador/Variety via Getty Images)
Variety via Getty Images
Anderson .Paak’s directorial debut K-POPS! lands on Netflix on May 30, but if you head to the two biggest review aggregators to decide whether it’s worth your Saturday night, you may leave torn. On one site, it’s a certified crowd-pleaser. On the other, it’s a shrug. Same movie, same critics, but wildly different verdicts? Here’s what’s actually going on with the numbers and what’s causing the large gap.
After KPop Demon Hunters not only won over audiences but also critics across Hollywood, let’s look at how Netflix’s latest K-pop feature is shaping up.
What Netflix’s ‘K-POPS!’ Movie Is About
K-POPS! is the full-length feature directing and writing debut of nine-time Grammy winner and Silk Sonic member Anderson .Paak, who also stars in the film. He plays BJ, a jaded-but-genuine Los Angeles musician trying to revive his stalled career and nursing the wounds of a complicated past relationship. BJ takes a gig with a house band on a K-pop competition show in Seoul, and while he’s there, he discovers that his long-lost son, Tae Young, is also chasing stardom in the same industry. Tae Young is played by .Paak’s real-life son, Soul Rasheed.
The supporting cast includes Perry Mason actress Jee Young Han, actor-rapper Jonnie “Dumbfoundead” Park, and Yvette Nicole Brown of Community fame. The flick also includes a slew of superstar musician cameos from around the world including Saweetie, Jay ParkDiplo, Jessi, Jaden Smith, TOKiMONSTA, Vernon of SEVENTEEN, The Rose, and even soul legends Earth, Wind & Fire, who perform in the film. Anderson .Paak conceived the project during the pandemic as a way to bond with his son over their shared love of YouTube and K-pop.
Rated PG-13 and clocking in at 114 minutes, the drama-comedy took the long road to come into your living room via Netflix. It premiered as a “Special Presentation” at the 2024 Toronto International Film Festival, made its U.S. debut at the Tribeca Film Festival in 2025, then got a limited theatrical release through Aura Entertainment in AMC locations on February 27, 2026, before Netflix scooped up the streaming rights.
On the professional review aggregate site Metacritic, K-POPS! currently has a 60indicating a “mixed or average” score from professional critics. That number is built from just five reviews so far — three positive and two mixed. The Boston Globe was the warmest at 88, with Odie Henderson calling the film “adorable.” RogerEbert.com gave it a 63, with Clint Worthington wishing the sincere family story had more “oomph.” The New York Times sat at 50, and the Los Angeles Times brought up the rear at 40, where the latter’s film critic Amy Nicholson plainly states, “Anderson .Paak has nine Grammy awards and a smile that could power the city of Oxnard, where he grew up playing drums in church, confident that he was born to entertain. His optimism and heart are inspiring…so he’ll be fine hearing that his directing debut K-POPS! isn’t very good.”
Created in 1999, Metacritic aggregates professional reviews into a single weighted average it calls a “Metascore,” converting each critic’s verdict into a 0–100 score, weighting them by the critic’s stature, and pooling them into a single figure. Green means good, yellow means mixed, red means bad. A Metascore of 60 places K-POPS! squarely in yellow territory.
Launched in 1998, Rotten Tomatoes works differently from Metacritic where, instead of averaging grades, the “Tomatometer” is binary and every review is sorted into “fresh” or “rotten,” and the score is simply the percentage of critics who came down on the positive side. A film where almost everyone is mildly favorable can score very high, even if nobody loved it.
That could be what happened here. At press time, K-POPS! is “Certified Fresh” at 88% based on 41 reviews — a full 28 points above its Metascore. The site’s critics’ consensus praises it as “an effervescent tribute to K-pop and writer-director Anderson .Paak’s own life story, this agreeable dramedy goes down smooth with its dogged focus on good vibes.” Variety’s Tomris Laffly is cited as saying the film “lovingly spreads some uncynical fun and happiness to the world, and proudly wears its specific perspective on its sleeve.” Outlets are also included in the RT mix including Common Sense Media (which gave the film 4 out of 5) and Mediaversity Reviews gave it an A-, singling out how “at its most impactful, K-POPS! uses a lighthearted tone to address the painful history of anti-Blackness in K-pop.”
Audiences seem on board too. Currently, the publicly available Rotten Tomatoes “Popcornmeter” sits at 87% from 50-plus verified ratings with viewers noting it as a heartwarming, must-watch family movie. Notably, Rotten Tomatoes has come under scrutiny for potential conflicts of interest, as the site’s owners have been major film studios like NBCUniversal and Warner Bros., but K-POPS! was created and produced by several independent partners, including EST Studios, Stampede Ventures, Big Dummie, Apeshit Films, and Aura Entertainment. Currently, Warner Bros. Discovery holds a 25% ownership stake in Rotten Tomatoes, with NBCUniversal’s spun-off media company Versant owning the remaining 75%.
Notably, Rotten Tomatoes’ scores may change as more critics and audiences check out K-POPS! once it’s widely available to stream.
Which Number Should You Trust for ‘K-POPS!’ Reviews?
Neither is “wrong” and the 28-point gap is mostly about methodology: Rotten Tomatoes rewards broad approval, even if mild, while Metacritic’s average punishes films that critics may have liked but didn’t rave about (and vice versa). It’s also worth noting the difference in sample sizes that 41 reviews from outlets representing all kinds of audiences and caliber are counted for Rotten Tomatoes versus just five more traditional but credible reviews feeding into Metacritic.
From this critic’s perspective, K-POPS! has the most potential when it leans into global music history, drawing on some of the most impactful moments in biting, honest critiques of show business in both the Western and Eastern hemispheres — even if they are just moments. While most of its funny moments fall into overused gags, Jonnie Park and Yvette Nicole Brown are genuine comedic gold as an adorably odd couple that shine on screen together every time. Diehard K-pop fans may gawk at some of the steps away from reality the movie needs to take to pull off its story, but the twists to see if BJ will ultimately put love before fame — or give in to his greedy American side — can keep an audience of all ages entertained until the credits.
Read the different review sites to find what you’re looking for in movie night.
Either way, K-POPS! is streaming on Netflix on Saturday, May 30, 2026.
