Trope filter
Movies with You Can't Trust Anyone
Every movie in our catalog that leans on the You Can't Trust Anyone trope. Trusted allies, institutions, or authority figures are secretly working against the protagonist. Paranoia is justified because betrayal is real and pervasive.
11 movies feature this trope

Over Your Dead Body
Each spouse is simultaneously protagonist and hidden enemy to the other: Dan's 'reconnection retreat' conceals a murder plan; Lisa's acceptance conceals an identical one. When each discovers the other's scheme, paranoia is fully validated — the most trusted person in each life was plotting lethal betrayal. The true enemy was hiding in plain sight as an intimate partner. Allegra, the corrupt correctional officer who enabled the escape, layers in a second institutional betrayal.

Mārama
Cole presents himself as a benefactor—offering employment, speaking Māori, appearing fascinated rather than predatory—while actively gaslighting and manipulating Mārama. She must 'gradually piece together the truth,' validating suspicion. The true enemy was hiding in plain sight as her employer, and the conspiracy (prior targeting of Māori women, connection to her family) was concealed within an ostensibly trustworthy relationship.

Everyone Is Lying to You for Money
The film's title is a direct statement of this trope. Trusted authority figures — SBF (FTX), Mashinsky (Celsius), celebrity endorsers, politicians — are revealed as actively deceiving ordinary participants. Paranoia is fully validated; the true enemies were hiding in plain sight as promoters and exchange operators. Retail investors discover they were systematically manipulated.

Don't Trust the Couple Upstairs
Brooke, a longtime trusted friend, secretly orchestrates the entire scheme using planted impostors (Emma/Vicki and Connor/Clay) with fake identities. Maria's growing suspicion is validated when she uncovers the conspiracy. The true enemy was hiding in plain sight as a close friend, and every new ally (the tenant couple) turns out to be part of the deception.

The Sheriff
A web of secrets pervades Riverwood with multiple figures playing hidden roles in an escalating conspiracy. The 'significant and unexpected plot twist' connecting the old and new murders reveals that the true enemy was hiding in plain sight among the town's residents. Paranoia is validated as the investigation uncovers layer after layer of deception, and characters are recklessly killed off as danger mounts from within the community Nick thought he knew.

Long Time Listener
The murder of Ruby turns the entire podcast team into suspects, forcing Genesis to question her trusted colleagues. The whodunit structure validates paranoia as dark secrets surface among allies. The killer—a 'long-time listener' hiding in plain sight—exploits the team's proximity and trust. The twist-filled climax reveals the true enemy was embedded within the group all along.

Fuze
The film's central twist is that Tranter, the trusted military officer leading the bomb-disposal operation, was a criminal collaborator all along—the entire official response was staged as cover for the heist. This satisfies: (1) a major trusted figure revealed as a traitor (Tranter); (2) an institution appearing legitimate but secretly compromised (the bomb-disposal operation itself was the deception); (3) paranoia validated—the 'official' emergency response was fraudulent from the start; (4) the true enemy hiding in plain sight among authorities (Tranter coordinated the evacuation while engineering the robbery). The Afghanistan backstory deepens the betrayal: a decade-old bond was weaponized against the state.

Wasteman
Taylor's most trusted relationship — his genuine friendship with Dee — turns into blackmail and a coerced murder attempt. Gaz and Paul exploit Taylor's dependency to weaponize him against Dee. The prison institution is pervasively compromised: drug networks, violent coercion videos, and threats against Taylor's son are all facilitated within an ostensibly controlled system. Taylor must constantly re-evaluate who is using him, validating paranoia as rational survival strategy.

A Blind Bargain
The Gruder Institute poses as a legitimate addiction-recovery facility and spa — an ostensibly trustworthy institution concealing sinister experiments (institution secretly compromised). Nurse Ellie functions as a seemingly helpful contact who lures Dominic in under false pretenses (trusted ally as deceiver). Dominic discovers he has been manipulated when he uncovers the institute's true nature through the fine print and Gruder's unhinged behavior (protagonist discovers manipulation). Dr. Gruder's predatory agenda was hidden in plain sight behind a medical façade (enemy hiding among apparent helpers). The paranoia is fully validated by the plot's dark escalation.

Eagles of the Republic
The regime's inner circle — presented to Fahmy as the 'Eagles of the Republic' — conceals a coup conspiracy orchestrated by the Defense Minister, a man Fahmy dines with and whose wife he is drawn into an affair with. All three core conditions are met: a major betrayal occurs within an ostensibly trustworthy group, a conspiracy is hidden inside official power structures, and Fahmy progressively discovers he has been manipulated at every turn. All five signals are present: the Defense Minister is revealed as a traitor, the institution (inner military circle) is secretly compromised, Fahmy must navigate an environment where everyone is potentially an informant or threat, his paranoia is validated by real danger, and the enemy (coup plotter) was hiding in plain sight at the regime's own dinner table.

Gunpowder Milkshake
Nathan — Sam's handler, mentor, and the operative who raised her — betrays her location to McAlister's enforcers the moment she becomes inconvenient. The institution Sam loyally served turns its own assets against her. The true threat was hidden inside her own organization, validating paranoia and forcing Sam to operate entirely outside The Firm.