It's weird that Lon Chaney plays a mad scientist who has taken over the old asylum, but he's not really the star of the show. Instead, we follow the local town dufus whose been told that to succeed in life, he just needs to follow his ingenuity. I suppose I could write a longer review about this one, but it wasn't scary, and nothing about the simple story was all that interesting. At the beginning of the movie, I guess one way that they got the mad scientist bodies to work on was to cause car accidents. They would lower a mirror down from a tree onto the road, and then the driver would see his own car in the reflection and have an accident in the attempt to avoid a head-on crash. Local dufus finds the three guys in some sort of dungeon at the asylum. One is the asylum's director, and another is the guy who had the car crash at the beginning of the movie. Rating: 1.5/5 stars
Certain actors seem to pop up in movies together. Anyway, Tara Fitzgerald and Sam Neill have worked with Grant in other films, and I just wonder how the casting works, and how often actors ask for, request, or suggest other actors to appear with them in different films. In this one, Antony (Hugh Grant) is a clergyman who is going to visit Australian artist, Norman Lindsay (Sam Neill), with the purpose of maybe convincing him to tone down the obscenity in his paintings? Antony acknowledges that nudity can be completely fine, but there's a difference between nudity and obscenity. He brings Estella (Tara Fitzgerald), his wife, along. The Sirens are Norman's models. Norman's compound and studio is somewhere inconveniently located in the Australian outback, and as it turns out, Estella and Antony get stuck there for a few days. Sheela (Elle Macpherson) and Pru (Tziporah Malkah) are the main two Sirens, but maybe they're not the only ones to count as "sirens." Nev...