logo
‘Americana' review: Sydney Sweeney's real controversy is her terrible new movie

‘Americana' review: Sydney Sweeney's real controversy is her terrible new movie

New York Post2 days ago
movie review AMERICANA
Running time: 110 minutes. Rated R (violence, language throughout and some sexual references). In theaters.
Who cares about a jeans ad?
Sydney Sweeney's real controversy is the bell-bottom-of-the-barrel quality of her new movie, 'Americana.'
Newish, that is. The wannabe Western crime drama premiered at South By Southwest back in March 2023 and is only now skulking into some theaters.
It's a violently annoying and annoyingly violent ensemble piece speckled with 'look how wacky we are!' characters that are impossible to put up with; a copycat Coen Brothers yarn with the depth of a tortilla.
The cast breakdown reads like a parody.
Sweeney plays Penny Jo, a shy South Dakota waitress who dreams of becoming a country singer but has a stammer.
We are supposed to accept that the constantly photographed Sweeney is a wallflower nobody pays any attention to. The actress' fake speech impediment, meanwhile, comes off both rehearsed and not nearly rehearsed enough.
4 Sydney Sweeney stars in 'Americana.'
Ursula Coyote
Penny Jo finally gets some human face time with a creepy loser. That's Lefty (Paul Walter Hauser), a breathy schlub who has proposed to four women this year alone. Despite his name, he's right-handed and tells everybody that.
There's a little boy named Cal (Gavin Maddox Bergman), who insists he's the reincarnation of Sitting Bull, and shoots his mom's abusive boyfriend, Dillon (Eric Dane), with an arrow.
He links up with Native American Ghost Eye (Zahn McClarnon), the leader of a gun-totin' group that protects their tribal legacy with rifles. He says he took his moniker from the Forest Whitaker indie 'Ghost Dog.'
4 Lefty (Paul Walter Hauser) falls for Penny Jo (Sydney Sweeney.)
Ursula Coyote
And spitfire Mandy (Halsey) has escaped from her father's Warren Jeffs-type sex cult.
And on and on. I was fed up with 'Americana' by minute 10, and the succeeding 100 did nothing to change my mind.
Everybody in this quirk brigade is trying to get their hands on a rare Native American ghost shirt that's worth hundreds of thousands of dollars.
Ghost Eye wants the garment for its historic significance. The rest are hungry for the cash. At one point, a group of pretentious rich snobs displays it in their living room. The points writer-director Tony Tost makes are painfully obvious.
4 Eric Dane's Dillon wants to get his hands on a rare Native American ghost shirt.
Ursula Coyote
Based on her prominence on the poster, you'd think so-so Sweeney is the lead. But the roles are equal in size — and irritation — and if there is any focal point, it's Halsey's Mandy, who has a meatier arc.
Though, spoiler alert, Penny Jo finds her voice at the end, as our eyes remain desert dry.
Tost bets that eccentricities will distract from his meandering, repetitive story that amounts to an object changing hands a few times.
Under more assured direction, the shoddy script could have amounted to something mediocre at least. When the Coens or Quentin Tarantino amp up the weird in their dark depictions of a dusty America, they do so with unsettling style and an enticingly skewed vision of reality to match.
4 An unlikely pair is Cal and Ghost Eye (Zahn McClarnon).
Ursula Coyote
Of course, they, unlike Tost, also write strong screenplays.
His 'Americana' is lifelessly visualized. Eye candy? Eye toothpaste.
Pair pat-on-the-back lofty themes with bland imagery and artificially kooky characters speaking hokey, unconvincing dialogue, and you get a great big bore.
'Americana' ends on a bloody standoff, an emotional death and a heartfelt reunion.
And it's all as engrossing and moving as a tumbleweed.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

No, Sydney Sweeney Didn't Cry on Video After Jeans Controversy
No, Sydney Sweeney Didn't Cry on Video After Jeans Controversy

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

No, Sydney Sweeney Didn't Cry on Video After Jeans Controversy

A video showing Sydney Sweeney in tears has been circulating in the wake of the controversy surrounding American Eagle's jeans ad, which she starred in. Fans believe this video appear to suggest that the actress was reacting to the backlash against her jeans ad. In the past few months, the 27-year-old actress has headlined several ads and engaged in ventures that highlighted her physical appearance. These include her and Dr. Squatch's promotion and sale of her limited-edition bathwater soap made from her actual bathwater, as well as her participation in HEYDUDE's 'Country' campaign. Sydney Sweeney is not crying for jeans controversy amid resurfaced video Recently, a video of Sydney Sweeney crying surfaced on social media. In it, she could be seen getting emotional while addressing viewers about how it was important for people to realize the effect of their words on others. 'And I know everyone says 'you can't read things, you shouldn't read things,' but I'm a f—— person,' the Euphoria actress added (via The Independent). 'People need to be nicer on social media because it's really f—– up.' Many believed this video was Sweeney's reaction to the controversy surrounding her recent American Eagle ad. This is because the users who shared it on social media claimed it was the case. However, this video has nothing to do with the apparel company's ad. Sweeney has not yet released an official statement or addressed the backlash surrounding her American Eagle ad. The Anyone But You star had uploaded the video on social media a few years ago. In 2021, Sweeney went live on Instagram and addressed the nasty comments trolls made about her physical appearance. Sweeney received considerable support from fans. 'Not Sydney Sweeney on Instagram Live crying? She doesn't even do anything how did people manage to have a problem with her?' a fan wrote. Another added, 'I can't believe we live in a world where people actually think Sydney Sweeney isn't just absolutely breathtakingly beautiful.' One fan criticized trolls harassing the actress and urged them to 'leave' her 'alone.' They wrote, 'Y'all need to do better and leave this poor woman alone.' The post No, Sydney Sweeney Didn't Cry on Video After Jeans Controversy appeared first on Mandatory. Solve the daily Crossword

3 highlights from this week's issue of The Envelope
3 highlights from this week's issue of The Envelope

Los Angeles Times

time2 hours ago

  • Los Angeles Times

3 highlights from this week's issue of The Envelope

If you're feeling a little peckish as you open this week's letter from the editor, our latest cover subject, 'Hacks' star Hannah Einbinder, has a recommendation for you: a breakfast burrito from Historic Filipinotown's Doubting Thomas, home of her favorite in the city. And while you wait for those eggs to cook up, let's unwrap the foil on our Aug. 14 issue and chomp down on some highlights. No, 'Hacks' is not over. As of this writing, Season 5 is not even officially its last. But with a stand-up comedy special under her belt, Jane Schoenbrun's 'Teenage Sex and Death at Camp Miasma' in the can and another hush-hush project already underway, it's clear that the 'Hacks' star isn't planning to rest on the laurels of four Emmy nominations. As former competitive cheerleader Einbinder tells Margy Rochlin in this week's cover story, the prospect of leaving the 'Hacks' nest is 'emotional,' but the novelty of new challenges scratches its own itch: 'I'm an adrenaline seeker,' she says. 'I just have always liked the feeling of flying.' Accompanying the story online is the debut of our new short-form series 'In the First Place,' in which we ask cover subjects about life and career 'firsts' — including, in Einbinder's case, her first stop at the Americana, the first comedy album she listened to on repeat and more. As a result, perhaps, of my particular lens — former high-school teacher here — it wasn't the destabilizing premiere, the wrenching finale, or Owen Cooper and Erin Doherty's riveting two-hander that left me most awestruck when I watched Netflix's 'Adolescence' this spring. It was only after the second episode, which weaves a murder investigation into a chaotic school day, that I found myself muttering under my breath, 'I need a diagram of how they did that.' Thanks to Emmy-nominated director of photography Matthew Lewis for obliging my curiosity (see above), and for speaking to contributor Bill Desowitz for his story about the extraordinary choreography required to piece a fire drill, a police chase and a drone shot into a single continuous shot, all with 350 young extras to corral. For logistical stress, that puts even chaperoning prom to shame. And trust me, I'd know! 'Somebody Somewhere's' Jeff Hiller is having the time of his life — and not just in the photo above, snapped last month in the courtyard of his Manhattan apartment building. As Tyler Coates writes in his profile of the first-time Emmy nominee, the surprise and delight of the announcement allows Hiller to keep basking in gratitude for the role of lovable queer Kansan Joel even though the series ended its three-season run last fall: 'If I could play a role like that for six weeks once a year, for the rest of my life? I'd be more than fulfilled.' It also allows him entree to HBO's vaunted after-party, though my fingers are crossed that 'Somebody Somewhere' doesn't inspire any trays of 'St. Louis sushi.'

American Eagle Needs To End Its Sydney Sweeney Campaign
American Eagle Needs To End Its Sydney Sweeney Campaign

Forbes

time2 hours ago

  • Forbes

American Eagle Needs To End Its Sydney Sweeney Campaign

Among consumers aged 15 to 25, American Eagle Outfitters makes the most popular jeans. For years the brand's marketing has tapped into just the right tone of what those consumers want and delivered a product with a well-earned reputation for great fit at an opening price point today of $36. Jeans have been the backbone of the brand's relevance and performed consistently. In 2023, the core denim business generated almost $1.6 billion of revenue for the company. Recently, American Eagle created a marketing campaign with the rising starlet Sydney Sweeney (known for her roles on the TV shows Euphoria and The White Lotus). The tag line of the campaign has been 'Sydney Sweeney has great jeans.' The campaign is a play on the word 'genes' and highlights Sweeney's blue eyes and blonde hair. In one ad, Sweeney is quoted saying, "Genes are passed down from parents to offspring, often determining traits like hair color, personality and even eye color," and adding, "My jeans are blue." The campaign has generated backlash from consumers who believe it highlights white privilege and discriminates against minorities and people with different bodies and skin than idealized, white, young people. So Here's The Problem You'd think that all the attention the campaign is getting, even the criticism, would be good for the brand. And for a while, it seemed like it will work as intended. But recent data from indicates that consumers are literally voting with their feet and not in a good way. Store visits to American Eagle stores are now down compared with the prior year. The Road To Hell For its part, American Eagle says the campaign "is and always was about the jeans. Her jeans. Her story. We'll continue to celebrate how everyone wears their AE jeans with confidence, their way. Great jeans look good on everyone.' I believe American Eagle and that the messaging that people are hearing was unintended. I've met senior executives there and they are all uniformly impressive and focused on their business. But good intentions doesn't matter. Consumers decide what they hear and their decision is the only one that counts. It's clearly left-leaning consumers that are objecting to the campaign. And given the ascendancy of the right in our politics right now, avoiding American Eagle is one way consumers can exercise power when they are feeling powerless. Because American Eagle depends on the sale of jeans to young consumers and because younger people are more likely to be left-leaning, American Eagle is especially vulnerable to this kind of consumer reaction. It's possible that other things are causing negative store traffic but given how dramatically it has turned, it seems likely that the campaign is the culprit. The Only Choice Whatever the intentions were originally, the campaign is now counter-messaging to a huge segment of American Eagle's audience and getting involved with issues that are hurting it. And now the numbers are showing it. So the campaign has to end. It will undoubtedly cost money to exit the campaign but it seems unlikely that keeping the campaign is worth having reduced store traffic on the order of 10% year-over-year. American Eagle will undoubtedly create a more anodyne campaign to follow this one. The last thing it needs now is more attention on this campaign. Hopefully it happens as soon as possible. Market positions like American Eagle Outfitters has with young consumers are almost impossible to create at this scale. Preserving that position is key and quick action needs to be taken.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store