With that, I grew the desire to be able to produce my own music that I could perform on stage. Naturally and gradually with that passion, I had a desire to be on the stage, which meant I wanted to be able to sing.
“Initially, it wasn't really the singing that attracted me.
“I started to grow my dream as a singer when I was very young, watching the music shows on TV in Korea,” Adora tells Teen Vogue over Zoom. But the seed had been planted even before that. Way before she made a name for herself as a producer, songwriter, and vocalist - and way before she even auditioned to join HYBE in 2016 - fans would know Adora used to be an idol trainee set to debut with a girl group called The Ark under Music K Entertainment. She’s also helped BTS members on many solo projects - from RM’s mono to Agust D’s D-2, J-Hope's “Blue Side,” and V’s “Winter Bear.” The list of acknowledgments she has amassed is nothing short of impressive, but now you won’t have to flip through as many pages to find her name - because it will be on the cover.īehind the moniker is 24-year-old Park Soo-hyun, a Seoul native with over half a decade of experience in the industry. She contributed to projects like G Friend’s 回 series, TXT’s The Dream Chapter and Minisode 1: Blue Hour, as well as BTS’s Love Yourself trilogy and Map of the Soul albums. During her time at HYBE, Adora’s credits spanned across production, writing and arrangement, as well as backing vocals. Up until recently, Adora was mainly known as an in-house producer at HYBE Labels (then still Big Hit Entertainment) where she worked alongside the likes of Slow Rabbit and Pdogg on songs for acts such as BTS, TXT, and the now-disbanded GFriend from her Adorable Trap studio. I give it 2/10 and I think that may be slightly generous.If you’re the type of K-pop fan that flips through the lyric booklets of your albums, you’ve probably come across the name Adora more than a handful of times. In the end I found it a little insulting to the 'Wrong Turn' franchise.
Overall this movie is very poor and most importantly not scary in the slightest.
But undoubtedly the worst element of this movie is the script which could have been written by a couple of teenagers, the guards and cops have clichéd dialogue and the other actors have such a poor script to work with you almost begin to feel sorry for them. The special effects are beyond cheap and they look like something from the 70s or 80s. The casting of British actors in American parts didn't help the film either with most of the casts accents slipping constantly, Tamer Hassan is particularly bad in his role and often reveals his strong London accent. I understand that this was a low budget horror movie but it could have been done so much better. However, it doesn't work and these are the reasons why the terrible casting, the laughable special effects and the dire script. Initially, I thought the plot was fairly well thought out and had the potential to work quite well. Predictably the bus is attacked by Three Finger, causing the bus to crash in the woods and the struggle for power and survival begins. Meanwhile, a group of dangerous criminals are transported from the West Virginia Grafton Penitentiary in a custody bus escorted by three security guards through the backwoods. Only the teenager Alex (Janet Montgomery) succeeds in escaping running through the woods. The plot consists of this four college kids are out rafting in the Bluefish River area, however their fun is abruptly ended when they are attacked by the mutant cannibal hillbilly Three Finger (Borislav Iliev). As a fan of the first two 'Wrong Turn' films, I was expecting this to be a good but not great film with enough gore/horror/comedy to keep me entertained for 90 minutes.