Sirens (1994)
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73% of critics liked it
(30 reviews) -
34% of users liked it
(6,928 ratings)
Sex, religion, and morality are the key ingredients in this Australian comedy set in the 1930s. Rev. Anthony Campion (Hugh Grant) is a liberal, forward-thinking Anglican priest who is sent on an unusual assignment. Norman Lindsay (Sam Neill) is a popular and highly controversial artist whose… More Sex, religion, and morality are the key ingredients in this Australian comedy set in the 1930s. Rev. Anthony Campion (Hugh Grant) is a liberal, forward-thinking Anglican priest who is sent on an unusual assignment. Norman Lindsay (Sam Neill) is a popular and highly controversial artist whose paintings often feature voluptuous nude women; his latest major exhibition is to feature a work called The Crucified Venus, which depicts a naked female impaled on a cross. Outraged, the Anglican Bishop of Sydney wants Campion to visit Lindsay and persuade him to remove the work from his show. Rev. Campion and his wife, Estella (Tara Fitzgerald), travel to Lindsay's Blue Mountain estate, where the artist is hard at work with a bevy of lovely nude models in tow, including Sheela (Elle MacPherson), Giddy (Portia de Rossi), and Pru (Kate Fischer). The Reverend is quietly appalled by the open sensuality of Lindsay's household, and Estella is mortified; they're even more upset when Lindsay calmly but firmly refuses to remove The Crucified Venus from his show. However, the longer the Campions stay with Lindsay in hopes of changing his mind, the more they find themselves drawn into the sensuous pleasures of his world. Sirens was based on an actual incident and Norman Lindsay was a real artist of the period (his life was depicted in the film Age of Consent, in which he was played by James Mason). But audiences were probably less interested in art and cultural history than in the opportunity to see supermodel Elle MacPherson appear undraped; she also gives a fine and charming comic performance, as do Hugh Grant and Tara Fitzgerald. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi
- Directed By
- John Duigan
- Written By
- John Duigan
- Genres
- Drama, Art House & International, Comedy
- In Theaters
- Aug 5, 1994 Wide
- Studio
- Miramax
Critic Reviews
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Clint Morris, Moviehole
A class act. Great performances.
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Rob Gonsalves, eFilmCritic.com
Its eroticism -- good-natured, harmlessly naughty -- arises from character and material.
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Emanuel Levy, EmanuelLevy.Com
Aussie helmer Duigan seems committed to sensualist cinema: as a follow-up to Wide Sargasso Sea and Flirting, this comedy of morals and manners centers on a repressed preacher (Hugh Grant)and sexually wild spirits set against spectacular vistas.
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Frederic and Mary Ann Brussat, Spirituality and Practice
A congenial film about art and sex.
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Brian Mckay, eFilmCritic.com
Dreary and pointless, even with all the supermodel nudity.
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Cast
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Hugh Grant
as Rev. Anthony Campion
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Tara Fitzgerald
as Estella Campion
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Sam Neill
as Norman Lindsay
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Elle Macpherson
as Sheela
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Portia de Rossi
as Giddy
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Kate Fischer
as Pru
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Pamela Rabe
as Rose Lindsay
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Ben Mendelsohn
as Lewis
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John Polson
as Tom
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Mark Gerber
as Devlin
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Julia Stone
as Jane
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Ellie MacCarthy
as Honey
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Vincent Ball
as Bishop of Sydney
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John Duigan
as Earnest Minister
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Peter Campbell
as Articulate Drunk
