‘Trust Me’ was supposed to be a comedy: Clark Gregg

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Hollywood actor-director Clark Gregg, who has written, directed and acted in “Trust Me”, said the movie was originally supposed to be a goofy comedy about Hollywood. Gregg said he meant to pen a humorous tale, but when he finished first draft, he realised that the film had a much darker tone. The film is about a low-rent former child star who represents other young actors. “I thought I was writing a goofy comedy about the business,” femalefirst.co.uk quoted Gregg as saying. “I mean, I don’t feel like it changes at the end. I feel like there’s a gradually evolving darker component. But, yeah, it came blazing out of me, and I saw when I read it back, ‘Oh, this is different.’ “This is representative of my ambivalent feelings that I have about Hollywood and about kind of the distorted concept of stardom. Especially in this celebrity-obsessed moment,” added Gregg. Gregg celebrated the world premiere of the film at the 2013 Tribeca Film Festival in New York over the weekend, along with co-stars Felicity Huffman, Amanda Peet and Sarah Paulson.