Posts Tagged Julianne Moore

Sirens (2025): A Netflix Psychological Drama Unraveled


494 words, 3 minutes read time.

Sirens is a Netflix original drama series that follows Simone (Milly Alcock), a troubled young woman who becomes entangled with Michaela Kell (Julianne Moore), the glamorous but manipulative head of a falcon rescue charity. After a chance encounter, Simone is drawn into Michaela’s rarefied world, where appearances deceive and power is quietly exerted under the guise of care. As Simone begins working at the charity, her sister Devon (Meghann Fahy) grows suspicious, while their estranged father (Bill Camp) forces long-buried family tensions to the surface. Meanwhile, Michaela’s husband Peter (Kevin Bacon) wrestles with his own sense of disillusionment, especially in his fractured relationships with his children from a previous marriage—strained further by Michaela’s cold attitude towards them.

The series unfolds as a slow-burning psychological thriller and character study, exploring themes of control, vulnerability, and emotional inheritance.

Julianne Moore plays Michaela with unsettling charm. On the surface, she is composed, elegant, and philanthropic. But beneath that lies a web of emotional manipulation and covert cruelty. Her falcon rescue charity becomes a metaphor for her life—containing wildness, taming others, and displaying them on her terms.


She is the cold centre of the series. She exudes calm authority and grace, but beneath this surface lies manipulation of the most insidious kind. Moore plays her with unnerving precision, never overplaying but always suggesting something toxic under the polish. Kevin Bacon’s Peter is equally well-drawn—a man too weary to rebel, but too aware to remain comfortable. His guilt over past mistakes, including the breakdown with his children, lingers in every scene he shares with Michaela.

Milly Alcock brings raw vulnerability to Simone, a young woman whose search for direction and stability makes her susceptible to Michaela’s grooming. Her arc is tragic and tense—Simone wants to belong, but at what cost? Her sister Devon, played with sharpness by Meghann Fahy, is more grounded, but no less damaged. Devon’s attitude toward sex is telling: confident yet defensive, shaped by unresolved traumas and emotional neglect. Their father, played with grit and fatigue by Bill Camp, hovers like a storm cloud, reminding us of the toxic legacy both sisters are trying to escape or remake.

Though much of the narrative centres on this dysfunctional triangle of Michaela, Simone, and Peter, minor characters are given careful shading. One in particular, Louis, seems at first peripheral but becomes crucial as alliances shift. His arc speaks to the series’ broader concern with complicity and the moral grey areas people navigate in pursuit of survival or self-preservation.

Sirens succeeds as both class satire and psychological drama. The charity setting provides a fitting backdrop for a show obsessed with image versus intent. The moody soundtrack and precise cinematography echo the show’s themes: cold surfaces, hidden violence. With standout performances from its core cast and sharp, layered writing, Sirens is a compelling examination of emotional power, trauma, and the deceptive appeal of safety.

Review by Mia Fulga


Picture credit

By https://www.netflix.com/, Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=80037318


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Film & DVD Review: The Shipping News

Running Time: 111 minutes

Directed by: Lasse Hallstrom

Screenplay by: Robert Nelson Jacobs

Starring: Dame Judi Dench, Kevin Spacey, Julianne Moore, Cate Blanchett, Pete Postlethwaite, Rhys Ifans, Scott Glenn

The Shipping News

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The Shipping News is based on Annie Prouix’s Pullitzer prize-winning novel. It tells the story of a broken man, a lonely man who has been undermined since childhood. Quoyle (played by Kevin Spacey) is in a dead-end job as a typesetter for the Poughkeepsie News in New York when he meets and marries Petal. Marriage and even his role of Father fail to change or lift Quoyle. It is only after both his wife and Father die and he is persuaded by his long lost aunt (played by Dame Judi Dench) to move back to his ancestral home in Newfoundland in Canada that a process of change within Quoyle begins.

It’s by no means all plain sailing! Quoyle finds out many secrets about his past and the small community he now lives amongst as he settles into the community.

The scenery was imposing and its severity and wild beauty reflected the inner conflicts of the central characters. The cinematography alone made the movie very watchable. The locale was probably the most powerful “character” in the film.

Though the backdrop of Newfoundland is bleak (though beautiful) the story itself becomes less so after the move. We see Quoyle begin to gain strength and confidence when supported by friends, family and neighbours. Where before he was frightened to tell his daughter simply that her mother was dead he now feels able to do so. He begins to come to terms with the “unfinished business” of his childhood. The message of the film is positive — a broken man can be healed.

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