Perhaps Sydney Sweeney's most popular movie to date, "Anyone But You" is a romantic comedy in the most traditional sense. After a misunderstanding cuts their budding romance short, a woman (Sweeney) and a man (Glen Powell) are forced to reunite at a wedding in Australia. Predictably, their differences evolve into a romance with the customary "happily ever after" ending.
If there's one movie that truly showcases Sydney Sweeney's acting prowess, it's "Reality." Based on the true story of war veteran Reality Winner, the film portrays the day she was arrested by FBI agents, and accused of leaking details to the media about Russian involvement in the U.S. elections. While the outcome may seem predictable, Sweeney's performance effectively captures the urgency of her character, which is caught in a desperate situation.
Sydney Sweeney not only stars but also produces this movie, which falls into the subgenre of nunsploitation but with a unique twist. In "Immaculate," she portrays a young American novice who is admitted to an Italian convent, where she soon suspects a conspiracy is unfolding... and that she is at the center of it all.
Definitely, far from being one of Sydney Sweeney's best movies (it barely qualifies as a movie, to be honest). Madame Web also isn't your typical superhero movie with thrilling action sequences. However, Sydney Sweeney and her co-stars, Isabela Merced and Celeste O'Connor, manage to convey the vulnerability of three teenagers who must battle against something far more powerful than themselves.
Sydney Sweeney is so popular these days that it's easy to forget she was relatively unknown not long ago, playing smaller roles in movies. In Quentin Tarantino's "Once Upon a Time in Hollywood," she portrays one of the Manson Family members, sharing the screen with other rising stars like Margaret Qualley ("Kinds of Kindness"), Mikey Madison ("Anora"), and Victoria Pedretti ("You").