• Main
  • Film
  • Television
  • Theater
  • Best Of the Rest
  • Subscribe
  • About
Sunday, June 15, 2025
  • Login
  • Register
The Contending
No Result
View All Result
  • Main
  • Film
  • Television
  • Theater
  • Best Of the Rest
  • Subscribe
  • About
No Result
View All Result
The Contending
No Result
View All Result
Home Reviews

‘Sirens’: Birds of a Feather Cult Together

Joey Moser by Joey Moser
May 28, 2025
in Featured Story, Television
0
‘Sirens’: Birds of a Feather Cult Together

(Photo courtesy of Netflix © 2025)

Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

In the prologue of Netflix’s Sirens, Julianne Moore’s Michaela Kell walks out at dawn carrying a covered birdcage. As the morning welcomes her, she traipses through tall grass, her emerald green dress trailing behind her, before she reaches a cliffside and removes the cage’s mask. Michaela is about to perform an act of release, of merciful, confident goodbye, as the bird, with its yellow eyes and questionable glance lifts off into the sky. “I love you,” she says before her feathery ward takes flight. There is something dramatic and campy at play from the very beginning, but Molly Smith Metzler’s limited series also weighs the complicated, thorny mechanics of destabilized family with dark, bristling comedy. It’s like if Wicker Man hosted the event of the summer.

The complete opposite of Michaela’s release-at-dawn bubble comes crashing in when we meet Meghann Fahy’s Devon. Newly released from an overnight stay at a Buffalo police station, she is greeted on her doorstep by an obscenely large Edible Arrangement from his sister, Simone, played by Milly Alcock. No amount of honeydew and melon will distract Devon from the fact that Simone won’t answer any of her SOS texts (they exchange the phrase SIRENS as a calling card for the other to respond), so she boards a Greyhound and heads to the coastal estate where Simone responds to Michealea’s every beck and call.

Stepping onto the Kell property is like walking into a fuzzy, pastel daydream, and Devon’s presence, sweaty and clad in black, feels like a heated up dagger slicing into an ostentatious dessert that no one will actually eat. Michaela and her husband, Peter, are hosting their annual weekend gala to help raise money for Michaela’s bird sanctuary, and Simone is given the chance to prove herself as Michaela’s assistant. Is it a way of continuing large amounts of wealth or are Michaela’s followers in deeper than they know or care about? Simone bosses around the staff, guides the guests in the right direction, and even helps Michaela hoist up her breasts so she can sext with her husband and keep their marriage fresh. Simone tells her sister that she has even been dubbed the honor of calling Michaela by her given nickname, Kiki.

(Photo: Macall Polay/Netflix © 2025)

Simone is knocked off kilter by her sister’s presence, and her demeanor cracks. You remember that feeling of being in your early twenties and trying to impress new friends or colleagues? Sirens makes show of pointing out the differences of “who you always were” with the ambitions of “who you could be” as Simone struggles to keep smiling and guide her life in a direction away from her tragic past. Fahy is remarkable, tapping into Devon’s frustrations, rage, and hurt. She needs help taking care of her and Simone’s ailing father, played by Bill Camp, but Simone refuses to entertain the idea of going home. “I don’t do Dad,” she says plainly before Michaela interrupts and Simone giggles at her artificial, airy tone. Simone isn’t just running from her family, but she had her matching sister tattoo removed and had a nose job much to Devon’s horror. Some birds do, in fact, try to fly as far, far away from the nest as possible.

Moore literally glows in the first few scenes we see her, as he house is turned upside down by the Labor Day festivities. Her Michaela keeps a cool head, but listen to how Moore modulates her voice. She can be needy and infantile but also cool and steady. Kevin Bacon plays Peter with a detached distance, smoking pot with Devon in scenes and joining in on making fun of how ridiculous this weekend becomes. Bacon and Liev Schrieber, from Netflix’s popular The Perfect Couple, should be smoke buddies in a spin-off if Netflix feels like expanding. Alcock’s Simone flew the coop to stay away from pain and plastered on a wide grin, but her sister’s presence disrupts her perfect plan. Alcock plays the push and pull with a expert ease. Costume designer Caroline Duncan has a blast coating these characters in pinks, greens, blues and whites, and John Paino’s production design is expansive and luxurious.

In Sirens brisk five episides (holy crap, could other shows take notes about brevity), we slowly shift from a glossy, summer obsession to an even deeper, meaningful drama about family, the dangers of chosen family, and a cheeky wink of how even a cult leader could have marital problems. While some might assume that Sirens is an extension of Couple, The White Lotus, or Nine Perfect Strangers, this series is more concerned with the deep relationships at its center, and how they are rocked when forced with the truth. You can try to fly the coop, but your flock will always know where to find you.

Sirens is streaming now on Netflix. 

Spread the Word!

  • More
Tags: Julianne MooreMeghann FahyMilly AlcockMolly Smith MetzlerNetflixSirens
Joey Moser

Joey Moser

Joey is a co-founder of The Contending currently living in Columbus, OH. He is a proud member of GALECA and Critics Choice. Since he is short himself, Joey has a natural draw towards short film filmmaking. He is a Rotten Tomatoes approved critic, and he has also appeared in Xtra Magazine. If you would like to talk to Joey about cheese, corgis, or Julianne Moore, follow him on Twitter or Instagram.

Next Post
Crunchyroll Announces 2025 Crunchyroll Anime Awards Winners

Crunchyroll Announces 2025 Crunchyroll Anime Awards Winners

Subscribe to Podcast

Apple PodcastsSpotifyAndroidby EmailRSS

Subscribe Now!

Subscribe here to The Contending's newsletter! We will never spam you. We promise!

Looking To Advertise?

Looking to advertise with The Contending? Email Clarence Moye for inquiries!

The Latest Stuff

shadows

‘Shadows’ Director Yana Gorskaya On Those Multiple Series Endings

June 15, 2025
ashley sutton as hannah holds a jar with a frog in it

‘Yellowjackets’ Supervising Sound Editor Brett Hinton is the Man Behind the Frogs

June 14, 2025
Tribeca 2025: Stellar Turns By Finn Wittrock, Asa Butterfield, Travis Jeffery, Cosmo Jarvis, Agathe Rouselle, Jacob Tremblay, Vicky Krieps, Vincent Miller Mark The Fest

Tribeca 2025: ‘Westhampton’ Filmmaker Christian Nilsson Discusses His Deeply Affecting Meditation On Forgiveness And Redemption [VIDEO]

June 14, 2025
Live Alone and Like It

“Live Alone and Like It:” But We All Know He Truly Loves Chocolate

June 14, 2025
Dearbhla Walsh On Reuniting the Garvey Sisters with Even Deeper Suspicions for ‘Bad Sisters’

Dearbhla Walsh On Reuniting the Garvey Sisters with Even Deeper Suspicions for ‘Bad Sisters’

June 13, 2025

Wise Words From Our Readers

  • Glen Runciter on Telluride 2025: Telluride Film Festival Unveils For 2025 Edition
  • FJA on Tonys 2025: The Long, Perilous Road to Nicole Scherzinger’s Triumphant Tony Victory for ‘Sunset Blvd’
  • Tom85 on Top Ten Tuesday: The Ten Best Movie Dads
  • Michael Weyer on Tonys 2025: The Long, Perilous Road to Nicole Scherzinger’s Triumphant Tony Victory for ‘Sunset Blvd’
  • Kevin on Top Ten Tuesday: The Ten Best Stage-to-Screen Adaptations
The Contending

© 2025 The Contending

Find All the Things

  • Main
  • Film
  • Television
  • Theater
  • Best Of the Rest
  • Subscribe
  • About

Dreaded Social Media

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Sign Up

Create New Account!

Fill the forms below to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Main
  • Film
  • Television
  • Theater
  • Best Of the Rest
  • Subscribe
  • About

© 2025 The Contending

  • More Networks
Share via
Facebook
X (Twitter)
LinkedIn
Mix
Email
Print
Copy Link
Copy link
CopyCopied