
Fresh off her recent stint hosting “Saturday Night Live,” Sydney Sweeney made her way to Austin and SXSW for the world premiere of her new religious horror film “Immaculate” — and on Tuesday night, she had the crowd screaming (and laughing at their own reactions) at the Paramount Theatre.
The jump scares, in particular, had the entire theater jumping — and then giggling at their own fear. “Immaculate” leans into horror but also has plenty of moments of dark humor.
“I think that you really truly care about the characters and story,” Sweeney said during the on-stage conversation after the screening. “Yes, we wanted you guys all to jump in your seats and be hopefully horrified shitless. But you still care about the story.”
Related Stories
VIP+Hollywood Must Define AI Technical Standards to Prep for Its Future

'The Masked Singer' Plans Miley Cyrus, Barbie and 'Footloose' Tributes for Season 12
Neon is behind “Immaculate,” while Sweeney also produced the movie with Black Bear and Middle Child Pictures. The film is set to be released on March 22.
Popular on Variety
Directed by Michael Mohan and written by Andrew Lobel, “Immaculate” centers Cecilia (Sweeney), a religious young nun who is offered a chance to move into an illustrious Italian convent. But her warm welcome to the European countryside is soon interrupted as Cecilia discovers her new home may be picturesque on the outside, but it harbors some dark and horrifying secrets.
Sweeney first auditioned for “Immaculate” a decade ago, but back then it was a very different movie. When she first auditioned, she and the main character were younger, still a a teenager, and it was set at a boarding school. “It wasn’t until years later that I think we really finally figured out what the movie needed to be and Mike and Sydney were integral on that,” Lobel said. “We drew from an entirely different section of movies, we start looking at classic nunsploitation movies, and suddenly the movie knew what it wanted to be at its core.”
The panel discussed the lush Italian setting, the cinematography and the costumes. For much of the film — spoiler alert (it’s in the title!) — Sweeney must wear a pregnancy belly. “It was a lot of fun,” she quipped. “I had a little pouch inside that had candy!”
Sweeney most recently starred in the rom-com “Anyone But You” opposite Glen Powell, and also appeared in the recent Marvel film “Madame Web.” “Immaculate” reps a reunion between Sweeney and director Mohan, as they previously worked together on the Netflix coming-of-age series “Everything Sucks!.”
“Immaculate” also stars Simona Tabasco (“The White Lotus”), Àlvaro Morte (“Money Heist”), Benedetta Porcaroli (“Baby”) and Dora Romano (“The Hand of God”), Giorgio Colangeli and Giampiero Judica.
Sweeney produced “Immaculate” with Jonathan Davino for Fifty-Fifty Films, alongside Middle Child Pictures’ David Bernad, who developed the project with Sweeney following their work together on “The White Lotus.”
Teddy Schwarzman and Michael Heimler produced for Black Bear, which fully financed and represented the international sales rights. Black Bear’s John Friedberg and Christopher Casanova served as executive producers on the film, alongside Will Greenfield. “Immaculate” marks the second recent collaboration with Neon and Black Bear after Michael Mann’s “Ferrari.”
Before the screening, a choir — along with the scary, red-face-covered nuns from the film — opened the evening with some religious hymns.
Read More About:
Jump to CommentsMore from Variety

Paris Olympics Draws Big Crowd: Swimming, Soccer, Volleyball Deliver 32.4 Million Viewers for NBCUniversal on First Day of Competition

Reality Check: Summer Hot Streak Won’t Dig U.S. Box Office Out of Deep Hole in 2024

Paris Olympics Opening Ceremony Delivers 28.6 Million Viewers for NBCUniversal, Most Watched for Summer Games Since 2012

‘House of the Dragon’ Finale Hits Season 2 Viewership High With Nearly 9 Million Viewers, But Down From Season 1 Ender

AI Content Licensing Deals With Publishers: Complete Updated Index

Blackpink’s Lisa, Halsey, Benson Boone, Lenny Kravitz to Perform at MTV’s VMAs
Most Popular
‘Inside Out 2’ Becomes First Animated Film to Hit $1 Billion at International Box Office

Box Office: ‘Deadpool & Wolverine’ Returns to No. 1 in Fifth Weekend as ‘The Crow’ Bombs and ‘Blink Twice…

Channing Tatum Says Gambit Accent Was Supposed to Be ‘Unintelligible’ at Times and He Was ‘Too Scared to Ask’ Marvel for the Costume to Bring…

Ryan Reynolds Was ‘Mortified’ to Cut Rob McElhenney’s ‘Deadpool & Wolverine’ Cameo but the ‘Sequence Wasn’t Working’: ‘I Had to Kill a Darling…

‘Ted Lasso’ Eyes Season 4 Greenlight With Main Cast Members Returning

Oasis’ Liam and Noel Gallagher Drop Biggest Hint Yet That Group Is Reuniting

China Box Office: 'Alien: Romulus' Becomes Hollywood's Second Biggest Film of 2024

Taylor Swift Praises Charli XCX After ‘Sympathy Is a Knife’ Reignited Feud Rumors: ‘Her Writing Is Surreal and Inventive’

Chris Hemsworth Plays Drums in Surprise Appearance at Ed Sheeran’s Romania Concert

‘Super/Man’ Trailer: Christopher Reeve Doc Captures the Late Actor’s Superhero Stardom and Life After His Near-Fatal Accident

Must Read
- Film
‘Megalopolis’ Trailer’s Fake Critic Quotes Were AI-Generated, Lionsgate Drops Marketing Consultant Responsible For Snafu

- Music
Sabrina Carpenter Teases and Torments on the Masterful — and Devilishly NSFW — 'Short n' Sweet': Album Review

- Film
Tim Burton on Why the 'Batman' Films Have Changed and How 'Beetlejuice Beetlejuice' Saved Him From Retirement

- Film
Jennifer Lopez and Ben Affleck Are the Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton of the 2020s

Sign Up for Variety Newsletters
By providing your information, you agree to our Terms of Use and our Privacy Policy.We use vendors that may also process your information to help provide our services. // This site is protected by reCAPTCHA Enterprise and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.Variety Confidential
ncG1vNJzZmiukae2psDYZ5qopV9nfXOAjp%2BgpaVfo7K4v46ssJ2mla56tMPEnqWesV2euq6twq6jmqyVYr%2BmrcKtoKimo2LAub%2FWZp%2BoqqKkv26yyKWkZmliaIJ6gI9qbG9n
