Devon está preocupado com o relacionamento pouco saudável de sua irmã com seu novo chefe.Devon está preocupado com o relacionamento pouco saudável de sua irmã com seu novo chefe.Devon está preocupado com o relacionamento pouco saudável de sua irmã com seu novo chefe.
- Indicado para 4 Primetime Emmys
- 5 indicações no total
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Avaliações em destaque
An engaging show that modernizes the characters of the deadly alluring Sirens of Homer's Odyssey , beautiful bird-like creatures whose songs led sailors to their demise on the rocks. Not so veiled of course, but still fun to watch any show that takes from classic literature/mythology and brings these stories to today. All the female leads were at times both seductive and maybe a bit evil, while the men mostly were dupes who seemed helpless to avoiding the disaster the women all but promised to bring them. Kevin Bacon may have unfortunately been minimized as an actor by the "Six Degrees..", but I thought he played his part really well. Good show for watching on a rainy weekend...
After having see this show and reading the reviews it feels to me most people misunderstand the more than clever intention behind this story and direction: While most of these type of stories start with a seemingly perfectly normal situation that slowly reveals all the weird stuff that's actually going on, this show takes a refreshing opposite approach. Something I haven't seen to well executed before, and certainly not with such perfect acting from lead actors.
I have to admit the ending feels weak, and dropped my rating from an 8 to a 7, but overall I very much enjoyed every second of it, and it maintained to keep my attention and crave for more.
Watch it!
I have to admit the ending feels weak, and dropped my rating from an 8 to a 7, but overall I very much enjoyed every second of it, and it maintained to keep my attention and crave for more.
Watch it!
A sleek five-episode thriller where Lilly Pulitzer pastels hide knife-sharp class warfare-elevated by Julianne Moore but hobbled by tonal whiplash.
Molly Smith Metzler's Sirens (2025) transforms her play Elemeno Pea into a five-episode dissection of wealth as psychological warfare, where Martha's Vineyard aesthetics mask something far more sinister than simple class commentary. This isn't just another "eat the rich" thriller-it's a surgical examination of how economic desperation turns people into willing accomplices in their own psychological erasure.
Julianne Moore's Michaela "Kiki" Kell is a masterclass in weaponized vulnerability, shifting from maternal warmth to reptilian calculation with terrifying precision. Her relationship with Milly Alcock's Simone-part mentor, part predator, entirely unsettling-creates the series' most compelling dynamic. Alcock matches Moore's intensity with desperate, fevered energy, while Meghann Fahy's Devon grounds the surreal proceedings in working-class pragmatism that cuts through the estate's curated serenity like a rusty blade through silk.
Visually, the series achieves something genuinely unnerving: Lilly Pulitzer pastels as psychological architecture, where every perfectly appointed room becomes a gilded cage. The cliff-top mansion doesn't just house wealth-it embodies it, transforming luxury into environmental control. One signature image-Michaela, blood-smeared, clutching a dying bird while staring through a telescope-crystallizes the show's central thesis: beauty maintained through violence, preservation through destruction.
Where Sirens stumbles is in its tonal inconsistencies, oscillating between sharp social satire and genuine psychological thriller without fully committing to either register. The series has ambitious ideas about class, power, and the intimate mechanics of manipulation, but sometimes loses its nerve, defaulting to familiar wealth-adjacent Gothic tropes when it could push deeper into genuinely disturbing territory.
The five-episode structure works in the series' favor, preventing it from overstaying its welcome while allowing each performer to fully inhabit their psychological territory. This is television operating at solid B-plus levels-intelligent enough to avoid pure algorithmic pandering, ambitious enough to attempt genuine social commentary, but ultimately lacking the sustained intensity its subject matter demands.
Sirens succeeds as camp-luxury horror with intellectual aspirations, elevated by Moore's hypnotic performance and Metzler's sharp understanding of how proximity to wealth can transform identity itself. It's beautifully appointed but ultimately hollow-much like the privilege it critiques.
6/10.
Molly Smith Metzler's Sirens (2025) transforms her play Elemeno Pea into a five-episode dissection of wealth as psychological warfare, where Martha's Vineyard aesthetics mask something far more sinister than simple class commentary. This isn't just another "eat the rich" thriller-it's a surgical examination of how economic desperation turns people into willing accomplices in their own psychological erasure.
Julianne Moore's Michaela "Kiki" Kell is a masterclass in weaponized vulnerability, shifting from maternal warmth to reptilian calculation with terrifying precision. Her relationship with Milly Alcock's Simone-part mentor, part predator, entirely unsettling-creates the series' most compelling dynamic. Alcock matches Moore's intensity with desperate, fevered energy, while Meghann Fahy's Devon grounds the surreal proceedings in working-class pragmatism that cuts through the estate's curated serenity like a rusty blade through silk.
Visually, the series achieves something genuinely unnerving: Lilly Pulitzer pastels as psychological architecture, where every perfectly appointed room becomes a gilded cage. The cliff-top mansion doesn't just house wealth-it embodies it, transforming luxury into environmental control. One signature image-Michaela, blood-smeared, clutching a dying bird while staring through a telescope-crystallizes the show's central thesis: beauty maintained through violence, preservation through destruction.
Where Sirens stumbles is in its tonal inconsistencies, oscillating between sharp social satire and genuine psychological thriller without fully committing to either register. The series has ambitious ideas about class, power, and the intimate mechanics of manipulation, but sometimes loses its nerve, defaulting to familiar wealth-adjacent Gothic tropes when it could push deeper into genuinely disturbing territory.
The five-episode structure works in the series' favor, preventing it from overstaying its welcome while allowing each performer to fully inhabit their psychological territory. This is television operating at solid B-plus levels-intelligent enough to avoid pure algorithmic pandering, ambitious enough to attempt genuine social commentary, but ultimately lacking the sustained intensity its subject matter demands.
Sirens succeeds as camp-luxury horror with intellectual aspirations, elevated by Moore's hypnotic performance and Metzler's sharp understanding of how proximity to wealth can transform identity itself. It's beautifully appointed but ultimately hollow-much like the privilege it critiques.
6/10.
The Good:
The Not So Good:
Ps: If you liked Meghann Fahy in this definitely watch her in the movies Drop and Your Monster, she's great in both, and quickly becoming one of my favorite actresses :)
- Julianne Moore is so so great in everything she has ever done
- Michaela's three groupie ladies were so funny
- how is Kevin Bacon 66 years old?? 😳
- good acting
- Meghann Fahy's fancy dress shopping
- cozy one day/ rainy day binge you don't have to think too much about or pay too much attention to
The Not So Good:
- why was it so.. fuzzy looking??
- honestly could've been 3-4 eps not 5
- could've been.. twistier?
Ps: If you liked Meghann Fahy in this definitely watch her in the movies Drop and Your Monster, she's great in both, and quickly becoming one of my favorite actresses :)
A series with a lot of potential that started off great but starts to downfall after the third episode. Plot moves too quickly without barely any story building or character development. Im convinced that they tried to capture the white lotus vibes but couldn't quite get to it. It even ends with open plots just like the it. Was funny in the first episode and I wish that they would of kept that comedy aspect going. The actresses did do great however which made it good. The luxury, cinematography and the fashion was fun and enjoyable. I do recommend that you watch it if you dont have anything else to watch.
The 77th Emmys Acting Nominees in Character
The 77th Emmys Acting Nominees in Character
Check out our gallery of the nominees in the leading and supporting acting categories.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesThe actual "Cliff House" hotel is located in Caumsett State Historic Park on Long Island.
- ConexõesFeatured in The 77th Primetime Emmy Awards (2025)
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- Data de lançamento
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- Idioma
- Também conhecido como
- Sirens
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- Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro
- Tempo de duração1 hora
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