Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Trinity (2016 film)

2016 American film From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Remove ads

Trinity is a 2016 American psychological thriller[1] film written and directed by Skip Shea in his feature directorial debut.[3] Partly inspired by Shea's own experiences with clergy abuse,[1] the film stars Sean Carmichael as Michael, an artist who becomes tortured by his past after a chance encounter with a priest who abused him as a child.[1][4]

Quick facts Directed by, Written by ...
Remove ads

Cast

  • Sean Carmichael as Michael[3]
  • David Graziano as Father Tom[3]

Production

Trinity was inspired in part by writer-director Skip Shea's own experiences with clergy abuse.[1][4] The film marks Shea's feature directorial debut, following his short films Microcinema (2011) and Ave Maria (2013), which dealt with similar themes.[1] Filming for Trinity took place in Worcester, Massachusetts, including at a restaurant called Nick's Bar and Restaurant.[1]

Release

Trinity screened at a number of film festivals,[1] including the Boston Underground Film Festival in March 2017.[3][5]

The film was made available for streaming on Amazon Prime Video on September 28, 2021.[1][6]

Reception

Victor D. Infante of Worcester Magazine noted the film's "power and intensity, which Shea orchestrates masterfully", and wrote that, "while its themes can be dark and deeply uncomfortable, it's very much worth watching."[1] John Townsend of Diabolique Magazine gave the film a score of three-and-a-half out of five stars, praising its cinematography and calling it "an impressive, honest work of visual poetry. Judged solely as a piece of cinema, there are issues that a casual viewer may find too difficult to overcome. Not one for the masses."[3]

Tony Wash, in his review of Trinity for Bloody Disgusting, commended the film's "solid performances" and look, and wrote that it "contains elements that are terrifyingly real, sometimes much more disturbing than what I prefer in a horror movie".[5] However, Wash added that he found himself "losing interest midway through."[5]

Remove ads

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads