Released on OCN and streaming via Netflix, Strangers from Hell diverges from conventional K-drama tropes by rejecting romantic subplots and procedural resolutions. Director Lee Chang-hee intensifies the source material’s existential dread through sound design (persistent drilling, wet chewing) and mise-en-scène. The narrative follows Jong-woo (Im Si-wan), an aspiring writer who moves from the countryside to Seoul for an internship. Forced into a cheap room in the decrepit Eden Gosiwon, he encounters a cast of grotesque residents—most notably the charismatic dentist Seo Moon-jo (Lee Dong-wook)—who systematically erode his sanity.
Dentistry in the series serves as a terrifying metaphor. Moon-jo’s profession—normally associated with healing—becomes a tool of torture (drilling live victims, extracting teeth as trophies). The dental chair mirrors the gosiwon bed: both are sites where one is supine, exposed, and at the mercy of a stranger’s hands. Furthermore, Moon-jo’s obsession with “fixing” Jong-woo’s jaw (a psychosomatic tic from stress) literalizes the desire to reshape another’s identity. The show asks: is Moon-jo a monster, or a mirror? strangers from hell -2019-
The Inferno of Proximity: Urban Anomie, Masculine Anxiety, and the Gaze of the Other in Strangers from Hell (2019) Released on OCN and streaming via Netflix, Strangers