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Trust (2010)
A suburban family is torn apart when fourteen-year-old Annie 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 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.
A suburban family is torn apart when fourteen-year-old Annie 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 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.
The film explores the devastating psychological and emotional impact of online child exploitation on a family, focusing on their struggle for justice and healing rather than promoting a specific political ideology or solution.
The movie features a cast with visible diversity in supporting roles, though the primary family and antagonist are white, without explicit race or gender swaps of lead characters. The narrative centers on the emotional impact of sexual abuse and family trauma, rather than offering a critical portrayal of traditional identities or explicitly focusing on broader DEI themes.
The film 'Trust' does not feature any identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes. Its narrative focuses exclusively on a heterosexual relationship and its devastating consequences for a family, resulting in no depiction of queer identity.
The film "Trust" does not feature any identifiable transsexual characters or themes. The narrative centers on online deception regarding age and identity, but not gender identity. Therefore, it has no impact on the portrayal of transsexual individuals.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
Trust (2010) is an original film, not an adaptation or biopic. All characters were created for this specific production, meaning there are no pre-existing canonical or historical figures whose gender could have been altered.
The film "Trust" (2010) is an original screenplay, not an adaptation of pre-existing material or a historical depiction. All characters were created for this specific film, meaning there were no prior canonical or historical racial baselines to deviate from. Therefore, no race swaps occurred.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources























