Cinematic Releases: Sydney (2025) - Reviewed

Images courtesy of Mangoland

Parody or tributes are the purest form of flattery and they’re becoming more common in a post-Tarantino universe of movie homages as an art form unto itself.  Whether its showing off your letterboxd account lineup or your poster collection on your wall in between your shelves of countless DVDs and blu-rays, everyone who gets into film has an eagerness to share and impress with what they know.  The problem is finding your own voice and craft amid a sea of boundless inspirations coming at you from all directions and often in earnest filmmakers misinterpret empty cribbing and name dropping as a sign of having mastered the art of original creative storytelling.  At a certain point, too many obvious outside influences threaten to discolor or cloak whatever you were trying to say as we just find ourselves hung up on homage for its own sake.

 
If you’re wondering what I’m rambling about, I had a look at short-film indie filmmaker Jeremy Berkowitz’ microbudget podcasting pressure cooker Sydney.  Basically about a podcast consisting of three characters who are hired and increasingly poked and prodded by Jeremy with mounting hostility and endless angry rants, the film is building up to…something or other.  While featuring an up-and-coming character actress Callie Bussell in the titular role of Sydney alongside Kevin Marus and Jeremy Berkowitz more or less playing an iteration of themselves, this multi-media multiple-aspect-ratio driven ‘slow burn’ doesn’t know whether it wants to be Richard Linklater’s Tape featuring three actors in an intense closed space or if it wants to recreate the black lodge from Twin Peaks or the closing curtains credits shot from Blue Velvet.  

 
When the film co-written by Berkowitz and Alexander Kang is trained inside the podcasting room with Sean Mouton’s camera gazing back and forth between the trio, it rambles but seems to have a unique premise.  The idea of making a film around a podcast that steadily goes awry and uncomfortable if not borderline sociopathic is a novel one.  But then Berkowitz gets bored with his own story and amid a series of intertitles intended to function like Lars Von Trier chapters, he starts channeling and even quoting Lost Highway with the time-honored David Lynch motif of a black highway at night scrolling past the camera.  For what it’s worth the film is decently acted with Callie Bussell from the recent low budget unofficial Crow film holding her own against a litany of tawdry dialogue largely coming from Berkowitz himself.  The cinematography is crisp though it can’t decide if it wants more aspect ratios than Christopher Nolan or more recently Andrew Dominik.

 
Released on the director’s YouTube channel while touring festival circuits, Sydney feels like an attempt to steal back the title from Paul Thomas Anderson’s Hard Eight when it isn’t showing off posters for Inherent Vice.  Very clearly Berkowitz loves PTA and Lynch and at one point name drops Stanley Kubrick and even slyly references a certain Tom Green vomitorium.  But love and admiration for your heroes does not mean imitating them is the way to go.  Somewhere in Sydney is a decent exercise in experimental minimalist theater akin to the aforementioned Richard Linklater film but it gets lost in pointless Lynch shoutouts for no real reason in scenes that flat out boot you out of the film.  I wish Berkowitz the very best in his future filmmaking endeavors but he needs to find his own niche away from his heroes.

--Andrew Kotwicki