LaRoy, Texas Review: John Magaro in a Small-Town Noir of Mistaken Identity
★★★½☆ 3.5/5
Modest but sharply entertaining indie noir.
Is LaRoy, Texas good?
It’s solidly reviewed rather than a must-see — a 98% Critic Score sits well ahead of a modest 67% Audience Score and 69 Metascore, landing around a “generally favorable” overall picture. Shane Atkinson’s debut drops a broke, depressed Ray (John Magaro) into a case of mistaken identity when he’s confused for a hitman and handed an envelope of cash.
What is LaRoy, Texas about?
Ray teams up with private-investigator friend Skip (Steve Zahn) and stumbles through a Texas border-town noir where everyone seems to know more than he does. At 115 minutes, the film knows it’s a B-movie and treats that identity as freedom rather than a limitation.
Should you watch LaRoy, Texas?
If you enjoy modest, well-acted crime comedy, yes — but temper expectations against the audience score’s more lukewarm read. Magaro’s jittery, defeated performance and Zahn’s comic timing carry the film further than its familiar plot mechanics would suggest on their own.
How does LaRoy, Texas compare to Fargo?
The Coen Brothers’ fingerprints are all over this — mistaken identity, rural noir, dark comedy of incompetence — though Atkinson doesn’t fully escape the shadow of that influence. It’s an homage that succeeds on craft and performance rather than originality.