Trust Me
In an attempt to sign a Hollywood starlet, Howard Holloway, down-on-his luck agent and former child star Howard Holloway must contend with her volatile father, a scheming long-time rival, and a producer and casting director who despise him.
16 October 1971, Lawton, Oklahoma, USA
19 May 1970
22 December 1973, McHenry, Illinois, USA
16 September 1964, Shaker Heights, Ohio, USA
21 August 1975, Casablanca, Morocco
1964
1 September 1959
13 March 1950, Miami, Florida, USA
24 August 2000, Los Angeles, California, USA
5 November 1968, Daly City, California, USA
23 February 1970, Palmdale, California, USA
9 December 1962, Bedford, New York, USA
4 April 1976, San Diego, California, USA
23 November 1964, Virginia, USA
June 11, 2014
A grim portrait of an agent for young actors who takes his best shot at success in the nasty and venal Hollywood film community.
June 09, 2014
Really can't compete on any level, being insipid and mean-spirited.
June 20, 2014
Seems forced into much darker territory in its final act. Gregg provides a prologue to foreshadow it, but it still doesn't quite fit.
June 06, 2014
Its perky poster notwithstanding, "Trust Me" is a putatively hard-edged comedy that promises to turn into something harder.
August 04, 2014
It is a smart, funny, endearing, and entertaining glimpse into a part of Hollywood rarely depicted in film.
June 05, 2014
As the movie picks up speed and undergoes sudden, confusing plot reversals, it loses its satirical edge.
June 08, 2014
There's certainly humor running through writer-director-star Clark Gregg's "Trust Me," the tale of an inept agent for child actors; it's just that not all of it feels intentional.
June 12, 2014
Trust Me is a great offering from Clark Gregg that really puts the man's skill - in writing, directing, and performing - on proud display.
June 06, 2014
As long as Gregg, as both actor and director, is anatomizing the Hollywood viper pit, Trust Me rings true.
June 05, 2014
"Trust Me" contains so much terrific writing, acting and observation that it becomes a bit easier to forgive writer-director-star Clark Gregg when his ambitions best him during the movie's convoluted last third.
June 12, 2014
There's a fine tradition of acerbic movies that skewer Hollywood: Think "Sunset Boulevard," "The Player" and "What Just Happened," to name a few. The dark-humored "Trust Me" is a worthy addition to the list.

