This movie follows the life of Chad, who unfortunately born in a family walks against the law and the government and always seeks to commit the crimes, but he changes his mind and decides to turn to his children and his family to save for them a better life.
The movie, lamely directed by first-timer Adam Smith, drifts from campground to fistfight, without much purpose or impact. The accents, thick as cold porridge, just drift.
If palling around with a group of wastrel criminal types whose idea of fun is burning their possessions while running around shirtless chasing rabbits, then Trespass Against Us is the film for you.
Caught between tradition, suspicion and the reality of modern life, Trespass Against Us makes its point about the shackles and constraints of freedom very well.