“We are a detective club that has been around since August 2006,” says Noh Young-wook, who runs the RS Reasoning Club. “We have around 30,000 members who love investigating.”
Noh Young-wook runs a Seoul detective club. Since 2006, it has attracted 30,000 members who, in their spare time, like to solve true crime re-enactments. Source: SBS
Today’s whodunit involves following a series of clues from one location to the next, through the Gangnam backstreets, to hopefully lead the group to a crime scene. This isn’t a real murder investigation, of course, but a re-enactment of a historical case.
Part of the allure lies in the authenticity of the experience. Noh’s fellow organisers are all wearing black bulletproof vests worn by crime investigators, crime scenes are draped in police tape and the warehouse is peppered with life-like evidence of a crime.
“My passion is second to none,” says Park, afterwards. “I once wanted to become a police officer. There are so many cases that I watch with interest.”
Park Ji-hye says she follows many crime cases with interest. Source: SBS
Crime as entertainment
“It seems that many people have become more interested in mystery-solving activities like ours after watching these shows on TV.”
Crime thrillers like Memories of Murder and The Chaser were local hits in the early 2000s. More recently, Netflix shows such as Inspector Koo, The Good Detective and Voice have helped feed a global appetite for Korean thrillers and crime dramas.
What’s behind the true crime craze?
“Because the detection rate for crimes is high, the incidence of serious crimes is low and society is safe … a culture of enjoying crime-related content has been formed.”
Detective Kim Jin-ku from the Korean National Police Agency says many Koreans have become obsessed with true crime after years of repression, when harsh censorship laws kept stories of crime and corruption under wraps. Source: SBS
The thirst for true crime content has propelled police detectives like Kim to stardom. He has appeared as a forensics expert on a raft of TV shows, including the country’s most popular true crime show, Want to Know That.
But as liberalisation arrived in the ’90s, Korean filmmakers slowly began treading into formerly forbidden territory.
Kim says there’s another factor propping up true crime programming: a huge female audience.
RS Reasoning Club is known for its realistic recreations of crime scenes. There’s a make-shift drugs lab, fake blood, weapons, DNA evidence and, of course, a “victim”. Source: SBS / Dateline
One reason for that is that South Korea has a higher ratio of female victims of violent crime than many other nations, including Western countries.
In 2020, women accounted for 44.8 per cent of homicide victims in South Korea, compared with 20 per cent in the United States and around 30 per cent in Australia, according to statistics from the Korean National Police Agency.
True crime over-exposure
“In doing so, the victims are erased and reduced to objects … and the victims and their family members will be very traumatised by it.”
Academic and culture critic Han Yu-Hee believes seeing lots of graphic crime through an entertainment lens can be dangerous because victims become objectified. Source: SBS
These re-enactments can also give people ideas.
Jung Yoo-jung, 23, had been obsessed with crime shows and novels before becoming fixated with the idea of murder.
It is problematic that we see [crime] as some sort of entertainment.
Han Yu-Hee
“As more and more stimulating and strange and brutal crimes are committed, people think committing this much crime isn’t a big deal.”
Making ‘the world a better place’
But for passionate true crime hobbyists like Noh Young-wook and Park Ji-hye, the enigmatic allure of crime scene investigation will always represent a form of unique intellectual stimulation.
Passionate true crime hobbyists Noh Young-wook (left) and Park Ji-hye (right) say solving true crime re-enactments expands their mind. Source: SBS
For Park, it’s not just about entertainment; it’s about expanding the mind for the greater good.
“I’ll sum it up in just one sentence: You, too, can be Sherlock Holmes!”
Source Agencies