Trespass is a 2011 American crime thriller film directed by Joel Schumacher, from a screenplay by Karl Gajdusek.
It also stars Ben Mendelsohn, Cam Gigandet, Liana Liberato, Jordana Spiro, Dash Mihok, Emily Meade and Nico Tortorella.
They consist of leader Elias, his girlfriend Petal, his younger brother Jonah and a large man named Ty.
Enraged, Elias breaks the hand of Kyle, Avery's father, and takes a diamond necklace from Sarah, her mother.
Faced with threats of retribution, Elias was forced to commit a heist (under the supervision of henchman Ty) to pay off his debt.
In his dying breath, Ty reveals that the men who stole Elias' drug shipment were members of the syndicate.
Trying to sacrifice himself, Kyle tells his family to run while setting the money on fire after noticing a leaking gas canister that was turned over earlier in the tussle.
Production was disrupted on August 3, 2010, when it was reported that Cage had abandoned the project as he had allegedly insisted on switching roles from Kidman's husband to the kidnapper.
[citation needed] Trespass was panned by critics and has a rating of 11% on Rotten Tomatoes based on 76 reviews with an average score of 3.3 out of 10.
The consensus states: "Another claustrophobic thriller that Joel Schumacher can churn out in his sleep, Trespass is nasty and aggressive, more unpleasant than entertaining.
[16][17] However, the film also received some positive reviews from mainstream critics, praising the performances of Kidman, Gigandet,[18] and Mendelsohn.
[20] The film earned a Razzie Award nomination for Nicolas Cage as Worst Actor (also for Drive Angry and Season of the Witch), but lost to Adam Sandler for Jack and Jill and Just Go with It.
Trespass was given a limited release for one week in ten theaters in North America and earned $24,094 and an additional $9,988,226 internationally on a production budget of $35 million.