Trust

1990 "A slightly twisted comedy."
7.4| 1h47m| R| en| More Info
Released: 09 September 1990 Released
Producted By: Zenith Entertainment
Country: United States of America
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Info

After being thrown away from home, pregnant high school dropout Maria meets Matthew, a highly educated and extremely moody electronics repairman. The two begin an unusual romance built on their sense of mutual admiration and trust.

Genre

Drama, Comedy, Romance

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Trust (1990) is currently not available on any services.

Director

Hal Hartley

Production Companies

Zenith Entertainment

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Trust Audience Reviews

Platicsco Good story, Not enough for a whole film
BallWubba Wow! What a bizarre film! Unfortunately the few funny moments there were were quite overshadowed by it's completely weird and random vibe throughout.
filippaberry84 I think this is a new genre that they're all sort of working their way through it and haven't got all the kinks worked out yet but it's a genre that works for me.
Gary The movie's not perfect, but it sticks the landing of its message. It was engaging - thrilling at times - and I personally thought it was a great time.
VisualSatori My favorite movie of all time... (under $700,000)Not sure why.... Low Production Value. Most of the acting is substandard. The Locations are mundane.But... The writing is profound and relatable. The characters are iconic, stereotypical yet Identifiable. Very Quotable one liners.Top Notch interpersonal relationships. (A True Cult Classic)
Steve Pulaski From the first sequence of Hal Hartley's Trust a viewer knows he's in for a dark, obscure ride. It opens with the shot of a young teen named Maria (Adrienne Shelly), smoking while being scolded by her parents on what a punk deviant she is after being kicked out of school. She informs them that she is pregnant and the consumption of shock and shame leads to her father's on-spot heart attack and death. This should give you an inkling on what kind of film you're in for.Maria winds up running away from home to inform her jock-boyfriend she is pregnant. He, of course, couldn't care less, as he wants to focus on sports with little distraction. Now, Maria is alone until she meets Matthew (Martin Donovan), a man whose life keeps intercepting the focus of the film up until this point. Matthew lives with his abusive father, who looks on to his son with a condescending eye. He regards him as an irrelevant failure with no ability to hold down a job. This puts Matthew in a suicidal position, barely holding on as a whole. When both of them meet, we truly see that misery loves company.The relationship Maria and Matthew have in the film is talky and quiet, with Matthew bringing detached realism into the life of Maria's, which is already dominated by teenage naivety. Hartley paints both characters as flawed people that do not magically become repaired by each other, but find a more stable sense of life and trust in their opposites. Shelley captures the reckless spirit of Maria well, and Donovan is superb at giving his sadsack character Matthew a face and a soul. Their chemistry is the driving force behind Trust's success.There's a constant use of bright, vibrant color in the film that really amplifies the overall look and tone of the picture. In the opening shot is where this can be viewed as being most prominent. As stated, Shelley remains in close-up and the colors of her makeup and lip gloss remain eye-popping and totally "in your face." The remainder of the movie can occasionally turn up as grim, with a gray palette, but often does Hartley gather up the brightest, most visually attractive colors to see on-screen.But where Trust really excels is in its dialog. Smooth, fluent, and often subversively philosophical in terms of direct contact, he establishes a relationship between two unlikely characters that we can see grow and build as time goes on. They expand from the one-dimensional caricatures we initially view them as to complete humans we can recognize and sympathize with.Trust is the second film from Hal Hartley, who has made a career out of making comedy-dramas with an emphasis on character and monologues. He establishes himself quaintly here, assuring his independent status, and carefully makes use of such neglected things as mood and tone to set a nice standard in this drama. It's the kind of feeling that I see many going for. We walk in unsure, but emerge with the mindset that we've seen a new filmmaking talent in the works. God, do I love that feeling.Starring: Adrienne Shelly and Martin Donovan. Directed by: Hal Hartley.
italys Most popular films delineate their stories in a rather comical and insipid way: the dialogue is often exchanged between characters as if it were bounced off a Spartan gladiator - and, in some cases very little to short-of-nothing is penetrable in the film."Trust" is a film that inverses that idea - and does so with wit, charm, and most importantly: astute cleverness. The story begins with careful sequencing that portrays each character a new journey of life. We see an antisocial protagonist, a pregnant girl who recently dropped out of high school, and a motherly type whose apathy is cunning and partially insane. "Trust" is a love story that defies any cliché of filmmaking. The lead character pours his organism into the film and invokes integrity of personality without apprehension or any constipation (who can forget that wit from Mr Slaughter??) The film is about what happens when we take chances, and don't take chances. In short: it's about being and what happens when we share our being with others.The film's sequencing is what I loved most of all. It's weaved into a fabric that reminded me of early avant-garde films (the envelope of the story is reminiscent of Kubricks's older film "The Killing") and perhaps more-or-less surprising is the protagonist(played by Martin Donovan) exchanges silence; those rare moments in the film that can't help to be compared to the work of Godard. Momentarily, it shines solicitude and violence (the symbolism is slightly ironic and very insincere.) My favorite moments are about jeering characters who feel unwanted.A definite must-watch. I recommend it to anyone, everyone.
LouE15 An all-time favourite. Hal Hartley's world may take some getting used to – and judging from some reviews here, not everyone does – but once you're in, it's a parallel universe where disaffected people exchange darkly funny deadpan lines in a rhythmic fashion, reflecting on weighty topics whilst existing in a bleak, northern working town world. Hartley regulars Martin Donovan and the late, wonderful Adrienne Shelly perfectly represent disaffection and spoilt self-inflicted misery respectively. Their growing intimacy echoes that of the viewer, being drawn into this world. Judging by how relatively few user reviews Hartley's films get on IMDb, I think they're maybe being lost slightly in the mists of time. But younger film fans shouldn't be put off by the look or sound, which fixes them in time: if you liked "Ghost World" I think you'll like this - It's as rebellious, and as dark and funny.Donovan's character, Matthew, is bored, angry, an electronics genius. His control freak, bully Dad keeps fixing him up with dead-end electronics jobs, and Matthew can't stand them. He's a picture of hopeless disaffection. Shelley's Maria is an over-dressed, over-made-up brat, convinced her life is all mapped out. She's pregnant, and her blunt, selfish breaking of the news to her parents proves the death stroke to her father. With her bright hair, her pink painted pout, her awful college football boyfriend and her breezy confidence that life will bend to her shallow desires, she's just made for a fall in the biblical tradition.They meet, as they must, and drag each other through a difficult transition from where they are, to where they might, just possibly, get to be, together. They both try to transform, with varying results. They discuss love and the nature of love; her vengeful mother tries to trick them both; Matthew, whose stark life becomes more complicated, tries to stick with the steady dead end job he's always despised; Maria's lurid life steadily simplifies to beautifully stark things. Sideline characters add colour; the weary nurse at the abortion clinic, the divorcée sister, Matthew's dad, the baby-thief.As a troubled teenager, I watched Hal Hartley's films on the - then - visionary Channel 4 in Britain in the late 80s and early 90s, and felt that they were speaking to me, directly, not necessarily with comforting messages of hope – just communicating, as little else around me then seemed to have the power to do.Hartley's films are in no way pieces of realism, or even magical realism. His style embraces artifice, but in so doing he creates a very consistent world, where themes and character types recur, and in being artificial, expose the artificial in life, too. It's somewhat bleak, but I find that a very comforting place to be. I can't recommend his films highly enough for anyone for whom the ultra-shallow glossiness of mainstream Hollywood output is just not good enough: "Trust", "The Unbelievable Truth" and "Amateur" are the ones to see.