BTS Concert Film Set to Stream on Prime Video

The K-pop group announced they were going on hiatus in June 2022

<p>Jeff Kravitz/FilmMagic</p> BTS

Jeff Kravitz/FilmMagic

BTS

The highly anticipated BTS concert documentary is coming soon — and it's set to play exclusively on Prime Video.

According to Variety, BTS: Yet to Come will launch on Nov. 19 in 240 countries and includes 19 performances of the boy band's hit tracks including "Dynamite, "Butter," "RUN," "Mic Drop" and "Yet to Come (The Most Beautiful Moment)."

The film will also include speeches, extensive stage design and a firework display from the concert, which was originally filmed in South Korean city Busan in October of last year in support of its bid to host the 2030 World Expo.

With approximately 50,000 people in attendance at the Asiad Main Stadium, the concert was also live streamed on Weverse, the fan platform operated by Hybe.

Related: BTS' Jungkook Would Travel Across Dimensions for a Girl on '3D,' His Sexy Team-Up with Jack Harlow

The film, which is produced by HYBE, CJ 4DPlex, and Trafalgar Releasing, follows the release of BTS's Disney+ concert film BTS: Permission to Dance On Stage – LA, which was filmed at Sofi stadium in November 2021.

The band also previously released BTS Monuments: Beyond the Star, which documented the band's rise to fame.

BTS members RM, JungkookJinJ-HopeVJimin and Suga announced in June 2022 that they would take a temporary hiatus. Their agency HYBE clarified that the group would take some time to “express their individuality through the release of solo albums and collaborations with other artists."

BIGHIT MUSIC, HYBE's parent company, also added, "Members will take this time to achieve personal growth through various new activities, and we expect it to further strengthen the foundation for the group's long-run as a team.”

Related: BTS' Suga Announces Military Service Start Date

Their label then revealed in October that all seven members of the K-Pop supergroup would carry out their mandatory military duties — an announcement that came shortly after the band's free concertin Busan — but would reunite in the future.

Since the announcement, Jin and J-Hope have enlisted in the South Korean military for mandatory service — with Suga being the latest member to enlist. In September, Big Hit Music wrote announced in a statement on Weverse that Suga, who recently concluded his his Agust D trek in support of his debut album D-Day, would begin his required service on Sept. 22.

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