Kyle and Sarah Miller have it all: a huge gated house on the water, fancy cars, and the potential for romance in their relationship. He's just back from a business trip and their teen daughter Avery is sneaking out to a party, when four thugs in security uniforms and ski masks stage a home invasion. They want what's in the safe: cash and diamonds. As Kyle stalls them, trying to negotiate for Sarah's freedom, the fault lines in Kyle and Sarah's marriage and the pasts of the four robbers come into play. Is there room here for heroism?
Schumacher makes it all look good - he can't help himself - but somehow that just makes it nastier.
– Stephen Whitty,
Newark Star-Ledger,
14 Oct 2011
rotten:
Is "Trespass" the moment when we give up, and accept the path Nic Cage has chosen for himself? Or should we just keep averting our eyes, until he's done cashing easy checks?
– Elizabeth Weitzman,
New York Daily News,
14 Oct 2011
rotten:
I wished a bottle would roll by so I could stick an S.O.S. in it.
– Kyle Smith,
New York Post,
14 Oct 2011
rotten:
It's sloppy and obvious, with curves so un-serpentine they might as well be straightaways
– James Berardinelli,
ReelViews,
14 Oct 2011
rotten:
As terrible movies go, it's not unentertaining - once you surrender to its trashmeister idiocy.