- Sirens (film)
Infobox_Film
name = Sirens
caption = Theatrical release poster
director =John Duigan
writer = John Duigan
starring =Hugh Grant Tara Fitzgerald Sam Neill Elle Macpherson Portia de Rossi Kate Fischer Pamela Rabe Mark Gerber
producer =Sue Milliken
music =Rachel Portman
cinematography =Geoff Burton
editing =Humphrey Dixon
distributor =Miramax Films
released =April 28 ,1994
runtime = 95 min. [http://www.afc.gov.au/filmsandawards/filmdbsearch.aspx?view=title&title=SIRENS Entry for the film] on theAustralian Film Commission (AFC) website]
country = AUS
UK
language = English
budget = N/A
gross = flagicon|AUS $2.8 million [ [http://www.afc.gov.au/GTP/mrboxausttop5.html Gross Australian box office] from the AFC website]
flagicon|USA $7.7 million [ [http://www.boxofficemojo.com/movies/?id=sirens.htm "Sirens"] fromBox Office Mojo ]
amg_id = 1:131185
imdb_id = 0111201
"Sirens" is a 1994 film, written and directed byJohn Duigan , and set inAustralia between the two World Wars."Sirens", along with "
Four Weddings and a Funeral " and "Bitter Moon " — all released in the U.S. within weeks of each other — were the films that broughtHugh Grant to the attention of American audiences. [http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9406E3DA103BF934A15751C0A962958260 Hugh Grant Makes Them Think of Cary Grant] , a February 27, 1994 article byStephen Farber in "The New York Times "] .Plot
The film stars Grant as Tony, an Anglican priest newly arrived from England, asked to visit a notorious artist, loosely based on the Australian artist
Norman Lindsay and played here bySam Neill , out of the church's concern about a blasphemous painting the artist plans to exhibit.Estella, the priest's wife (played by
Tara Fitzgerald ), accompanies him on the visit to the artist's bucolic compound in the Blue Mountains. The artist's saucy models are played byElle Macpherson andKate Fischer ; Lindsay's wife, Rose (Pamela Rabe ) also poses for him.Portia de Rossi (in her film debut) plays the maid who has just begun demurely modeling for him as well.Mark Gerber plays the partially blind Devlin, the "odd-job" man who also poses for Lindsay. While both Grant and Neill play characters critical to the film's story, the film is really about Estella, who responds to the sensuality of her surroundings over the course of her visit to Lindsay's estate. Her relationship with Tony includes the intimacy and commitment needed in a well-rounded marriage, but is missing the passion, in all of that term's senses. All of Estella'ssense s are engaged by thebackdrop for the film, a lush and dangerous landscape filled with the distinctive flora and fauna of Australia. To the prim and proper English wife of a priest it's all quite exotic. Lindsay's voluptuous models (played by Macpherson and Fischer) live thelibertine lives that Lindsay champions through his paintings and Lindsay has animatedpostprandial conversations with her husband. Those scenes and conversations, and various glimpses of naked models and a naked Devlin, contribute to the stimulating environment. The surroundings and the lives of the models aresiren calls that lead Estella to fantasize with increasing intensity, and (with encouragement from the models) act on a few of her impulses. She suffers morning-after remorse about a late-night encounter with Devlin, and perhaps influenced by supportive words from her husband (who had witnessed her acting on one of her impulses, though not the sexual one with Devlin), the film ends with a playful scene between the two of them. The scene hints at the possibility that she may find passion with her husband after all. A separatestory arc follows de Rossi's character as she matures emotionally under the influence of the other two models and Estella's advice. It intersects with the primary arc in the person of Devlin, to whom de Rossi's character is attracted.Cast
*
Hugh Grant - Reverend Anthony Campion
*Tara Fitzgerald - Estella Campion
*Sam Neill -Norman Lindsay
*Elle Macpherson - Sheela
*Portia de Rossi - Giddy
*Kate Fischer - Pru
*Pamela Rabe - Rose Lindsay
*Ben Mendelsohn - Lewis
*John Polson - Tom
*Mark Gerber - DevlinProduction
Duigan told film critic
Stephen Farber what drew him to cast Grant: "Hugh has the capacity to be a terrific player of light comedy, in the tradition ofCary Grant andDavid Niven . He has the same ease and urbanity in the way he moves and talks." Grant told Farber what he brought to the character of the Anglican priest::I kept looking at the part and wondered how I could crack it, because he was such a straitlaced character. And then I realized that if he thought he was trendy and "avant-garde", that added a whole new swing to it. I see him as quite the star of his theological college, probably quite daring with his Turkish cigarettes. And I imagine that he even makes the occasional sexual reference in his conversation after a couple of glasses of sherry. But confronted with the real McCoy, in the form of Elle Macpherson without her clothes, he's hopeless.Most of the film is set at what is now the
Norman Lindsay Gallery and Museum , which was the original home of the real-life Lindsay.Opening credits
The
opening credits of the film include a scene in which Grant's character walks past paintings in theArt Gallery of New South Wales in Sydney, including:
* "Spring Frost" byElioth Gruner (which won theWynne Prize in 1919),
* "The Golden Fleece" (1894) byTom Roberts ,
* "Still Glides the Stream and Shall Forever Glide" (1890) byArthur Streeton ,
* "Bailed Up" by Tom Roberts, and
* "Chaucer at the Court of Edward III" (1847-51) byFord Madox Brown .Reception
Janet Maslin of "The New York Times " wrote: "Sirens" is best watched as a soft-core, high-minded daydream about the liberating sensuality of art..... [it] has an archly intelligent performance from Mr. Grant, who turns the priest's embarrassment into a real comic virtue. Ms. Fitzgerald, who made a strong first impression in "Hear My Song ", is again a forceful presence, even when acting out the story's giddy erotic fantasies." [http://movies.nytimes.com/movie/review?res=9402EFDB103AF937A35750C0A962958260 Naughtiness in Pooh Land] , a March 4, 1994 review of "Sirens" in "The New York Times " byJanet Maslin ] Masling said the film "often verges on silliness and desperately overworks the symbolic importance of snakes. Still, it's hard not to enjoy a film whose most intellectually daring character — Mr. Neill's stern Lindsay — claims to have spent a previous life inAtlantis ."Hal Hinson of "The Washington Post " was less forgiving: he called the ideas presented by the film "warmed-overD. H. Lawrence " and the film, a "peculiar, not entirely undesirable sort of art-house hybrid, like a marriage between "Masterpiece Theatre " and "Baywatch ", citing "scenes, like the one in which Estella's passion is released by the tender, knowing hands of a blind laborer, [that] are almost laughable." [ [http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/style/longterm/movies/videos/sirensrhinson_b009e1.htm Review of "Sirens"] from the March 11, 1994 issue of "The Washington Post "]Roger Ebert , guessing incorrectly that the inspiration for Neill's character wasAugustus John , noted that "Sirens" has "no particular plot"; he also called it a "good-hearted, whimsical movie which makes no apologies for the beauty of the human body and yet never feels sexually obsessed." [ [http://rogerebert.suntimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/19940311/REVIEWS/403110305/1023 Review of "Sirens"] byRoger Ebert ]References
External links
*
* [http://www.normanlindsay.com.au/ Norman Lindsay Gallery Home Page]
*
* [http://colsearch.nfsa.afc.gov.au/nfsa/search/display/display.w3p;adv=yes;group=;groupequals=;holdingType=;page=0;parentid=;query=Number%3A247409;querytype=;rec=0;resCount=10 Sirens] at theNational Film and Sound Archive
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