Trust

2011 • 105 minutes
4.0
413 reviews
79%
Tomatometer
R
Rating
Eligible
Watch in a web browser or on supported devices Learn More

About this movie

A suburban family is torn apart when fourteen-year-old Annie (Liana Liberato) meets her first boyfriend online. After months of communicating via online chat and phone, Annie discovers her friend is not who he originally claimed to be. Shocked into disbelief, her parents (Clive Owen and Catherine Keener) are shattered by their daughter's actions and struggle to support her as she comes to terms with what has happened to her once innocent life.

MPAA Rating: R Rated R for disturbing material involving the rape of a teen, language, sexual content and some violence.

Cast: Clive Owen, Catherine Keener and Liana Liberato
Rating
R

Ratings and reviews

4.0
413 reviews
A Google user
September 10, 2012
Its not meant to be viewed as "just a movie" it shows the real life woes of what goes on w/ both sides of a case like this. The victim and the family. Altogether while educating teens on the dangers of cyber communication and the crafty games sexual predators can play and the amount of devastation it can cause to a family and love ones.
2 people found this review helpful
A Google user
March 7, 2012
This is the kind of movie you hate watching but cant stop, and when the credits hit you are glad that you sat through the whole thing. The movie is not a feel good kids movie, but it is a movie every Kid should watch (with their parents). If you watch this thinking everything will be wrapped in with a nice bow by the end you will be disappointed. Its rough, its real, and it shows the permanent damage problems like this have on kids and families. In terms of acting, 5/5 for all the main performances. Its not perfect, but neither is life. This movie shows that well. I would give this a 4.5/5 if i could because some pacing issues. But it deserves a 5 more than a 4 so it gets a 5.
15 people found this review helpful
Susan Florence
March 12, 2015
Bothered by "looksism.". The lead was awesome. All the acting, directing, the cinematography. But although it does happen in real life, body dysmorphobia, that is, I find it bothersome in this movie! The girl lead is stunningly beautiful, but filmmakers are so disrespectful, that they don't dare make a movie about a girl who better fits the part of a victim of her plain or homely looks. It offends me. This actress is stunning. She's far less likely to be this victim.