
Syeyoung Park’s The Fin, a Haunting Vision of a Divided Society
Set in a ravaged post-war Korea, The Fin is a dystopian drama directed by Syeyoung Park, whose precise, atmospheric approach favours psychological tension over spectacle. Park brings a quietly unsettling sensibility to a world where control is exercised not through violence alone, but through routine, surveillance and belief.

In this new social order, ‘Omegas’ are mutated outcasts - tracked, captured and exploited as disposable labour. One of them lives under a fragile calm, working at an eerie indoor fishing store: a melancholy replica of the sea where city dwellers purchase the illusion of escape. When Sujin, a young government employee, notices inconsistencies in the Omega’s routine while searching for Mia, a fugitive Omega, curiosity turns into pursuit and the pillars of official doctrine begin to wobble.

The film’s tension lies less in the mechanics of the chase than in a mind slowly unlearning certainty. Shaped by texture rather than polish, the narrative unfolds into a study of fear, grief and helplessness when systems fail and rituals collapse. As the city’s pageantry recedes, what remains are rooms, faces and the unnerving calm of simulated nature - bright façades masking an emptiness too persistent to hide. Rejecting easy heroics, The Fin traces the thin line between order and complicity, survival and surrender, asking what is forgotten in the rush forward - and what mutates when buried.
