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Jesser Horowitz and Grayson Lazarus return to the V/H/S franchise with its final entry (so far), 2016's Siren, the feature-length adaptation of Amateur Night from the first V/H/S movie. When it first released, Siren earned a mixed critical reception and found some very underground popularity with the niche horror crowd that earned its parent franchise three entries. Four years later though, it's the V/H/S film that no one remembers. Is Siren the hidden gem of this ill-fated franchise; or, like its predecessors, should it stay forgotten?
By Jesse Horowitz5
55 ratings
Jesser Horowitz and Grayson Lazarus return to the V/H/S franchise with its final entry (so far), 2016's Siren, the feature-length adaptation of Amateur Night from the first V/H/S movie. When it first released, Siren earned a mixed critical reception and found some very underground popularity with the niche horror crowd that earned its parent franchise three entries. Four years later though, it's the V/H/S film that no one remembers. Is Siren the hidden gem of this ill-fated franchise; or, like its predecessors, should it stay forgotten?