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  1. Jun 6, 2014 · We’ll get to that. After the confounding opening featuring narration from a mortally wounded character, "Trust Me," the second feature directed by busy actor Clark Gregg, who also stars here, shifts into inside-showbiz-satire mode, or so it seems. Gregg, who also wrote the script, plays Howard, a puppy-dog-eager but down-on-his-luck agent ...

  2. Jun 6, 2014 · As the movie picks up speed and undergoes sudden, confusing plot reversals, it loses its satirical edge. You can’t help wondering if the production ran out of money while racing to meet a...

    • Stephen Holden
    • Clark Gregg
  3. Jun 8, 2014 · Jun 8, 2014 3:53pm PT. Film Review: ‘Trust Me’. Clark Gregg's Hollywood satire plays for uncomfortable laughs, and doesn't always get them. By Bill Edelstein. There’s certainly humor running...

    • Bill Edelstein
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  5. Written and directed by Clark Gregg, Trust Me bodes many laugh out loud funny moments that spring from genuine Hollywood-insider satire while drawing its warmth and subtext from the subtle...

  6. www.cinemablend.com › reviews › Trust-Me-6857Trust Me | Cinemablend

    Jun 9, 2014 · It does offer some amusing satirical humor, like a joke where Ang Lee is selected to direct effectively the next Hunger Games-like franchise, complete with flying vampire teens. And Gregg has ...

  7. May 23, 2014 · Trust Me,” which Mr. Gregg made independently, is his satirical look at the shallowness of show business and the people who strive to succeed at it.

  8. Jun 2, 2014 · Less satirical poison-pen letter than inept psychological drama, Trust Me is a nearly comprehensive misstep from writer-director-star Clark Gregg, whose intentions are muddled from an opening voiceover that doubles as a frame narrative, with Howard (Gregg), a fledgling agent for child actors, bleeding on a staircase and pontificating about being...

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