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      • Trust Me is a great offering from Clark Gregg that really puts the man’s skill – in writing, directing, and performing – on proud display. Speckled with great bit players and a fantastic performance from newcomer Sharbino, Trust Me is a movie you should be checking out for a good laugh and/or cry.
      www.ign.com › articles › 2014/06/07
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  2. Jun 6, 2014 · Reviews. Trust Me. Glenn Kenny June 06, 2014. Tweet. Trust Me. Now streaming on: Powered by JustWatch. You may think it’s weird that a movie about a Hollywood agent who specializes in child actors would start off with a situation lifted from "Carlito’s Way," but on the other hand, consider that a warning.

  3. www.ign.com › articles › 2014/06/07Trust Me Review - IGN

    • Never trust Hollywood.
    • Verdict

    By Cliff Wheatley

    Updated: Aug 16, 2021 11:58 pm

    Posted: Jun 7, 2014 2:37 am

    In his first writer/director role since 2008’s Choke – and since becoming known to the world at large as Marvel’s breakout SHIELD Agent Phil Coulson, Clark Gregg writes, directs, and stars in Trust Me. The trailers and posters for the movie would suggest that it’s a feel-good, zippy comedy, which isn’t entirely misleading. However, there’s much more to this story than the dumbed-down ads present, and that’s ultimately what makes Trust Me such a winner.

    Howard (Gregg) is a former child actor turned agent for child actors struggling to catch a break with his clients, who all seem to leave him for sleazy competitor Aldo (Sam Rockwell). When he accidentally stumbles onto a talented young actress named Lydia (Saxon Sharbino) and her manager father Ray (Paul Sparks), he sees in her an opportunity to finally make a big deal happen. The problem is that Howard is a genuinely nice guy; a trait that doesn’t typically get you far in Hollywood. So when things get complicated for Howard as he starts to figure out Lydia and Ray’s past, the deal begins to go south.While the movie explores the seedier sides of Hollywood – the corruption of youth, the nepotism, the backstabbing dirty deals, and the overbearing parents of child actors – it does so through a generally humorous lens. It delves into more serious elements, but Trust Me establishes a tone that puts Gregg’s deadpan delivery to great use.

    His affection for Lydia feels genuine, and Gregg manages – both in performance and direction – to avoid creepy romantic vibes that could have been easy to allude to, particularly in context of one particular scene. Instead, Gregg adeptly plays a mentor to Lydia, while Lydia is a clear reminder of Howard’s own past as a child star.

    Trust Me is a great offering from Clark Gregg that really puts the man’s skill – in writing, directing, and performing – on proud display. Speckled with great bit players and a fantastic performance from newcomer Sharbino, Trust Me is a movie you should be checking out for a good laugh and/or cry.

    • Cliff Wheatley
    • 3 min
  4. Parents need to know that Trust Me is an indie dramedy about teen actors in Hollywood that was written and directed by Marvel's Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.'s Clark Gregg. It has some very dark moments, including a gunshot to the stomach (with pooling blood) and a suggestion of the sexual abuse of a teen girl by her father.

    • Clark Gregg
    • Jeffrey M. Anderson
    • Clark Gregg, Amanda Peet, Saxon Sharbino
  5. Jun 5, 2014 · By Gary Goldstein. June 5, 2014 3 PM PT. The inside-Hollywood dramedy “Trust Me” contains so much terrific writing, acting and observation that it becomes a bit easier to forgive...

  6. Our review: Parents say: ( 1 ): Kids say: Not yet rated Rate movie. Documentarian Belic presents a powerful picture about the escalating use of digital misinformation and need for media literacy. The movie mentions that misinformation spreads surprisingly at a quicker speed than true information.

    • Roko Belic
    • Sabrina Mcfarland
    • New Day Films
  7. Jun 6, 2014 · Hollywood agent Howard Holloway cannot find any real success until he signs Lydia, a talented and troubled 14-year-old with an alcoholic father. Every day he navigates challenging obstacles to ...

    • (33)
    • Comedy
    • R
  8. Trust ME, this is a good movie rooprect 16 May 2015 Along with the obscure gem "The TV set", this movie "Trust Me" is one of my favorites for blowing the lid off the sleazy cut-throat industry that cranks out what we're all here for: movies.

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