Okay, quick and direct: multiple songs share the title 'Sorry Sorry', so there isn’t a single definitive movie soundtrack I can name without more context. The biggest track people usually mean is 'Sorry, Sorry' by Super Junior (2009), but that one is known as a pop single and concert staple rather than a famous film song. For movie-specific use, smaller or regional films sometimes have a song called 'Sorry Sorry' by different artists.
If you’ve got a clip, the fastest route is Shazam or the soundtrack listing on IMDb/Tunefind. If you don’t have a clip, tell me the film’s country or an actor from it and I’ll try to match the exact soundtrack credit — I enjoy this sort of sleuthing, so give me a clue and I’ll follow up.
There’s a bit of a naming trap here — a bunch of songs called 'Sorry, Sorry' exist across styles, so the soundtrack you’re thinking of depends on which track and era you mean. For me, the most immediately recognizable is the K‑pop single 'Sorry, Sorry' by Super Junior (2009). It’s iconic in dance-pop circles and shows up in concert DVDs, tribute compilations, and fan playlists a lot, but it wasn’t originally released as a movie soundtrack cue the way a Hollywood scoring piece would be. I’d check the full credits on any movie you have in mind before assuming it’s that one.
If you don’t mean the Super Junior single, there are older and more obscure songs titled 'Sorry Sorry' in folk, soul, and indie catalogs — those sometimes crop up on indie film soundtracks or short films and can be harder to trace. My habit is to look up the film’s soundtrack listing on sites like IMDb (soundtrack section), Tunefind, or the soundtrack album notes on Spotify/Apple Music. Shazam helps if you have a clip, and checking the physical or digital liner notes will tell you the exact artist and whether it’s the song you’re expecting. If you tell me the film or drop a lyric, I’ll narrow it down faster; otherwise, start with the steps above and you’ll usually find the right match.
I've chased down song IDs for movies so many times that 'mystery track' is basically a weekly hobby. If your question is simply "Which movie soundtrack features the track 'Sorry Sorry'?", the short practical thing I’d do is: (1) try to recall a lyric or the scene (car chase, end credits, montage), (2) play the scene and Shazam/Google it, or (3) search the movie title + "soundtrack" + "Sorry Sorry". That usually cuts through the ambiguity of identical song titles.
From my own digging habits, the title 'Sorry, Sorry' most commonly brings up the Super Junior pop hit, which is huge in K‑pop circles but not typically a Hollywood soundtrack staple. Meanwhile, there are several lesser‑known tracks with the same name that land on indie or regional film albums. If you can tell me whether the movie was Bollywood, Korean, American indie, or mainstream Hollywood — or even drop a year or actor — I’ll dig in more specifically. I like solving these like little puzzles, and with a tiny clue I can usually point to the exact soundtrack credit within minutes.
2025-08-30 20:27:09
6
View All Answers
Scan code to download App
Related Books
Sorry, Too Late
J.J. Twelve
9.1
44.3K
For three years, I was nothing but a replacement. After my hundredth blood donation to my three wives' true love, I vanished from their lives.
They bombarded my phones with thousands of phone calls and ten times that number of text messages.
'I'm sorry, I'm really sorry, honey! I know I let our mom down. You can do anything to me, but please don't leave me!'
'Please, honey, I'm sorry. I'll do anything. I won't do it again, I swear! Just come back!'
'You can't leave me, honey! You're going to drive me mad! I can't live without you!'
'Please, just tell me where you are! Take my call, please!'
…
I changed my SIM card once I went back to Imperia and blocked all my wives' contacts. Peace and quiet came back to me.
Three months later, I was told that my wives' companies went bust, and the love of their lives swindled them out of every single cent they had.
And now they were scouring the land for me.
That was a joke. They did not panic when they still had everything. They should never have done what they did. Too late for regrets.
Michaela Ferguson had tears streaming on her face and she had blood in the corner of her lips. She shook her head and replied, “It wasn’t me. When I arrived at Shalom shopping mall, your mistress was already injured.”
Her husband, Thorne Ferguson didn’t believe her and said, “Pray that Paula will not die because should she die, I will bury you and your family alive.” Then he pushed her hard, and Michaela staggered and fell to the ground.
Michaela was in a sorry state. She cursed the day she first met Thorne Ferguson. She had been nothing but a good wife to him. However, her husband had been cold and cruel towards her. Her heart was overwhelmed with bitterness.
Thorne looked at his wife with icy-cold eyes and said sternly, “I will never forgive you for touching the love of my life. Paula is my bottom line.
I will make sure that you get a life sentence. Please pray hard for her not to die, because should she die I don’t know what I will do to you and your family.”
On the morning of my eighteenth birthday, I collapsed in the pack clinic after my ninety-ninth blood donation to my twin sister, Maeve.
She'd been cursed since birth—a curse that could only be sustained by my blood. Our shared bond from the womb was the only thing keeping the dark magic at bay.
When I woke up, the healer told me I had developed Aplastic anemia—a rare condition where my bone marrow was failing. Years of constant donations had finally broken my body down, and my wolf, Aurora, was too weak to fight it.
I rushed to tell my family, hoping that this time would be different, only to find them at the bakery ordering a custom birthday cake with only Maeve's name on it.
They'd forgotten my birthday entirely, even though we were twins born five minutes apart.
At first, my sacrifice was met with love and praise. Now, it was nothing more than an obligation everyone expected.
My family had chosen Maeve over me countless times before.
This time, I decided to choose myself.
I had two weeks before I would slip away from this pack house and their lives. Two weeks to prepare everything in silence while they remained oblivious.
They would think I'd finally learned my place as Maeve's blood supply.
But they would never realize I was counting down the days until I disappeared from their lives forever.
By then, it would be too late.
“If you ever call that bastard my child again, I will yank it out of your belly!”
My heart shatters like a knife plunged deep. I stay still, my body shaking.
“Now sign these papers and get out of my life!” he barks, throwing the papers at me. “If I ever see you close to me or my territory, I will have you beheaded in the most painful way imaginable!”
****
Isla Monroe had given up everything: her dreams, her wishes, even her best friend; just to please her cold, distant husband. She endured the silence, the neglect, the loneliness, hoping that one day he would change… that he would finally look at her as something more than just the trophy wife.
The day she learned she was pregnant, Isla was accused of an affair with the gardener. The staff turned on her, her family cast her out, and Marcus believed them without question.
Saving her unborn babies was more important than proving her innocence, so Isla left quietly.
“From now onwards, I will be your mother and your father. I will never let those who discarded us come close to you.”
She fled the city. Five years later, Marcus runs into two identical little children who look just like him. They have his red lips and deep blue eyes. He is instantly drawn to them.
“Little one, who is your mother?”
The children point to Isla, the wife he discarded, now powerful and determined to keep him from her children.
“Get away from my children!” she hisses, urging the nannies to take them away. “Didn’t I tell you not to speak to strangers, my babies?”
Marcus is shocked. But what will he do when he finds out she is married to his blood, his rival?
Drama with a twist.
"I'm sorry, Sophia. But her daughter's hurt even worse."
Among the rubble, Sophia watched in disbelief as Jared pushed her aside, choosing to go to his first love.
But who would save her daughter, who lay unconscious, a steel rod piercing her small body?
At Molly's funeral, Sophia silently vowed she was done with Jared. She wanted a divorce.
But just as she made up her mind, Jared stumbled back to her, grabbing her hand and telling her she was the one he loved.
Sophia looked at a handsome man beside her, her arm linked with his. She smiled slightly and said, "Alright. If Molly agrees, I'll consider it."
When my husband is away on a business trip, I'm left at home with my brother-in-law. One night, he hands me a glass of milk that's been laced. Then, he violates me…
You know that awkward little line that sneaks into so many buddy scenes—'sorry bro'—and for me it pops up most when the soundtrack switches from punching drums to a soft, reflective guitar or string pad. I think the place that leans on it hardest is the reconciliation moment in big ensemble or buddy films: think team members sheepishly apologizing after a dumb stunt while the score does a gentle swell. I’ve noticed it in movies like 'The Avengers' or 'Guardians of the Galaxy' where one-liners and casual apologies are underscored with triumphant or nostalgic music to sell emotional warmth.
On the flip side, those same three-word apologies show up in smaller indie scenes too, but they hit differently—quieter, almost embarrassingly human—backed by minimal piano in films such as 'The Perks of Being a Wallflower' or the low-key score pieces of 'Eternal Sunshine.' From a fan’s perspective, the reason it stands out is the contrast: the casual phrasing of 'sorry bro' against a cinematic swell makes the moment feel real and oddly sweet. I always end up smiling when it happens, even if it’s predictable.
I was obsessed with movie soundtracks for a while, and 'Too Late to Apologize' by OneRepublic always stood out to me. It wasn't until I stumbled upon an indie film called 'August Rush' that I recognized it in a scene. The song plays during this emotional moment where the protagonist, a musical prodigy, finally connects with his estranged father. The blend of raw violin and the song's soaring chorus gave me chills.
I later found out it’s not the original version but a cover by Timbaland, which fits the movie’s vibe perfectly. 'August Rush' is one of those hidden gems where music drives the narrative—kinda like 'Once' but with more orchestral flair. If you love films where songs feel like characters, this one’s a must-watch.