At the end of the century, conspiracy theorist reporter LEE Jung-hwan is imprisoned in the cyber prison “New Flash”, which confines consciousness within the brain. Disgraced police officer KIM Jeon-pil, fired due to Jung-hwan's fake news, retaliates against his fabricated exposé.
Korea is facing a population decline crisis, compounded by the emergence of a new virus called PT3 that destroys red blood cells. The only treatment is transfusion of young blood, but with only 11 million elderly patients eligible for donation and a mere 900,000 young donors, the price of blood has skyrocketed.
In a near future, Pascadia, an outsider in a rebellious but ultimately ineffective group of humans, is struck by lightning and transformed into a digital superwoman.
Dasha is conducting a seemingly complex scientific experiment. Just as Kostya visits, the experiment suddenly accelerates. An explosion occurs, opening a portal, and at that moment, something unknown takes over Kostya's hand.
The film is structured into three episodes: "Goblin Frequency," "Electric Brain," and "Life Water." The protagonists of each episode face harrowing experiences: a fisherman loses his life to the pond's ominous aura, a Bitcoin miner loses his mother by following computer instructions, and a person experiences bizarre physical changes after drinking the pond water.
Despite her mother Jiyeon's objections, daughter Siwoo brings home a trial version of a robot clone of her deceased father, Dojun. Seeing the Dojun robot replicate even the smallest of Dojun's habits stirs complex emotions within her.
Around ten teenagers live in a world where anyone can be whoever they want and create any story they wish. Amidst the pitch-black night of Lisan City, Alstroemeria Forest, and Ashua Island, their imagined stories flow through myriad choices, seeking out faint glimmers of light.
Zia Lainey, shattered by the loss of her son, awakens inside the afterlife of the Oculus, transforming her into Zylah, Leader of the Suits. As she navigates this enigmatic realm, Zylah grapples with her new-found identity and revenge to hold those who are responsible. All while seeking solace and understanding for her own grief.
In a post-apocalyptic world, the isle provides a safe haven from a pandemic that has decimated earth. Anna wake up pregnant and unable to remember who her husband is. Nor does Anna recognize Helen and Peter who are supposedly helping her get her health back. Disbelief in what she is being told leads to a horrible revelation and Anna having to contend with existential issues brought on by man’s destruction of the planet.
A solar system in which the end of history has already been surpassed: people allow themselves to be ruled by computer reason – ActualSanity – which keeps the community of planets in an harmonious ideal state. Political processes no longer seem to be necessary in this AI-driven, totalitarian and cosy government; instead, identity-forming collectives distinguish themselves from each other solely by subtle behavioural differences. Until a threat looms on the horizon: the Broken Hearts Collective disquiets the solar system with terrorist attacks – a development at the centre of which Marten Eliot and Emma Glendale, young head fellows of the Dolphin Collective, unexpectedly find themselves.
Two estranged siblings go to their late scientist father's farmhouse to make sense of his incomplete work. They soon discover an evil entity, buried in time and space for millions of years, has been released and begun wreaking havoc.
Elsa and Franck used to be close siblings, but everything changed when Franck’s space mission went awry. 3 years have passed since his mysterious disappearance, and 23-year-old Elsa is having trouble moving on with her life. One day, an unidentified life form contacts her, offering to bring her big brother back to Earth. But there is a price to pay…
The hotel room as a place where everyone is a stranger. A place that is yours for just a moment. A temporarily intimate space entered by a maid in order to clean it while, if possible, not leaving a trace of her visit. Each episode of Stranger is set in such a place, and each is captured in one long take. Weaving together a series of episodic stories – some humorous and absurd, some poignant and mysterious – that all unfold within a seemingly confined space, Stranger explores the idea of home while being away from it, and sheds light on the distinctive yet universal experiences of isolation and loneliness.
Faye's life is thrown into chaos after a scandalous new sexual health contact-tracing system is introduced by the newly-elected, radical Prime Minister.