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LaRoy, Texas Review: When the American Dream Curdles

Shane Atkinson's Stylish Debut Conjures a Sleazy Neo-Noir Purgatory

Naser Nahandian by Naser Nahandian
2 years ago
in Entertainment, Movies, Reviews
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The inky night shadows a desolate Texan backroad, where a routine act of kindness – offering a ride to a stranded motorist – takes a chilling turn. With taut dialogue dripping in veiled menace, Writer-Director Shane Atkinson establishes the ominous tone right off the bat. This unsettling opener is our initiation into the dimly-lit, morally-ambiguous world of LaRoy, Texas.

In this sleepy outpost, desperation seethes beneath trailer-park ennui and dreary strip mall facades. At its heart is Ray, a sad-sack hardware store owner stuck in a miserable marriage to former prom queen Stacy-Lynn. When presented with a chance to escape his somnambulant existence by committing murder for hire, Ray’s ethical lines begin blurring in increasingly hazardous ways.

What follows is a tangled neo-noir web of extramarital affairs, cascading betrayals and bloody misunderstandings. Shady characters collide in frenzied pursuit of a hefty bag of illicit cash – the disillusioned gumshoe Skip, the devilishly nonchalant hitman Harry, and assorted strippers, sleazeballs and opportunistic low-lifes inhabiting LaRoy’s underbelly.

With ace cinematography bathing the humdrum Texan milieu in lurid shadows and neon insomnia, Atkinson has crafted a deliciously pulpy, Coenesque crime thriller. Brimming with darkly comic twists and turns, it’s a masterclass in tightly-coiled tension and eccentric character portraiture. Strap in for this gritty, tauter-than-a-gunshot ride through the dusty outskirts of despair.

A Twisted Tapestry of Deception and Grime

At the heart of LaRoy, Texas lies Ray Jepsen, a downtrodden hardware store clerk belittled by his boorish brother Junior and stuck in a loveless marriage to Stacy-Lynn, his glamorous but unfaithful ex-beauty queen wife. When private eye Skip brings Ray evidence of Stacy-Lynn’s infidelity, it triggers a domino effect of chaos and crime.

In a bizarre case of mistaken identity, Ray is mistaken for a hitman and handed a bagful of cash to kill a local lawyer. Desperate to please his wife and fund her dream salon, the meek Ray ponders taking the illegal job. His missteps quickly tangle him in a web spun by Harry, a ruthless real hitman who takes umbrage at being gazumped of his contracted kill.

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With Skip’s bumbling aid, Ray gets in over his head, crossing paths with slimy motel strippers, dodgy used car dealers and assorted underworld vultures – all circling the missing pile of bloody money like starved vultures. As the body count rises, Ray’s domestic turmoil escalates in parallel, with Stacy-Lynn’s callous disdain and Junior’s sadistic mind-games pushing him to the brink.

A shaggy-dog noir populated by quirky basket cases, LaRoy, Texas chronicles Ray’s harrowing descent from put-upon loser to embroiled anti-hero striving for respect and relevance, no matter the cost. With urns constantly shifting between comedic and tragic, it’s a precarious moral tightrope walk through one man’s despair-fueled unraveling.

Stylish Descent into a Neon-Soaked Purgatory

With a deft hand and keen eye for evocative imagery, Shane Atkinson establishes an unmistakably singular aesthetic for LaRoy, Texas right from its ominous opening scene. The skilled first-time director demonstrates a masterful control of tone, deftly oscillating between deadpan humor and palpable dread throughout.

LaRoy, Texas Review

Atkinson’s grasp of pacing is equally assured, maintaining a terrifically taut sense of tension that prevents the film from ever feeling bloated despite its sprawling plot machinations. Each narrative transition is surgical yet organic, segueing from one darkly comic vignette to the next with a seamless flow reminiscent of the Coen brothers’ finest work.

The visuals crafted by cinematographer Mingjue Hu are nothing short of sumptuous. With its burnished amber hues, brooding shadows, and sickly neon accents, LaRoy’s aesthetic evokes a deliriously sleazy purgatory. Every grime-caked locale from the seedy motels to the strip club titled “The Velvet Saddle” drips with smog-choked atmosphere and a pervasive sense of moral decay.

Hu’s camerawork is utterly transporting, composed with an eye for stylishly off-kilter angles that render even the most mundane Texan vistas feverishly cinematic. In Atkinson’s hands, LaRoy itself becomes a vividly realized character – a rustic frontier ghost town of shattered dreams warped by greed, lust and desperation.

The visuals work in perfect synergy with the taut direction, together bottling the intoxicating allure of classic neo-noir while imbuing it with a modernized eccentricity all its own. A stunningly self-assured debut, dripping in style.

Eccentric Portraits from a Stellar Ensemble

At the core of LaRoy, Texas’ deliriously skewed tapestry lie a quartet of indelible performances that breathe vivid life into Atkinson’s colorful menagerie of tragic strivers and mordant oddballs.

LaRoy, Texas Review

As the ill-fated everyman Ray, John Magaro delivers a masterclass in finely-etched tragicomedy. He imbues the downtrodden hardware clerk with immense pathos – his sad-sack demeanor and soulful eyes radiating a bone-deep weariness even before the madcap cavalcade of betrayals kicks into high gear. Yet Magaro’s Ray retains an innate likability and glimmers of quiet resilience that render his gradual unraveling into crime utterly compelling.

Steve Zahn is undeniably hilarious as the cluelessly earnest Skip, evoking peals of laughter with his goofball antics while also charting an unexpectedly poignant arc of heartwarming friendship with Ray. Zahn’s consummate comedic chops shine, but he never lapses into caricature – grounding Skip’s flailing bravado with flashes of melancholy that enhance the doomed PI’s hapless appeal.

As the enigmatic hitman Harry, Dylan Baker is magnetic – his squirrely menace and tart line deliveries conjuring a disquietingly ambiguous figure of utter ruthlessness intermittently laced with shades of misplaced chivalry. Baker’s slippery charisma and facility for oscillating between genteel and menacing on a dime elevates what could have been a stock villain into a compellingly unpredictable wild card.

And then there’s Megan Stevenson, luxuriating in the rich role of faithless femme fatale Stacy-Lynn. Alternating between callous narcissism and unexpected glimpses of desperate vulnerability, Stevenson paints a captivating portrait of faded glamour curdled into bottomless resentment. Her blistering contempt for Ray leaves an indelible mark.

It’s a true ensemble tour-de-force, with even the most fleeting supporting caricatures rendered vivid and distinct courtesy of the phenomenal cast. Eccentric, haunting, and hilarious in equal measure – an exemplary marriage of performer and material.

Ripples of Ambition in a Stagnant Moral Vacuum

Beneath its pulpy genre thrills and macabre humor, LaRoy, Texas meditates on profound questions of morality, loyalty and the desperation that drives seemingly ordinary individuals to extraordinary transgressions when seeking an escape from life’s inertia.

LaRoy, Texas Review

In this parched Texan wasteland, blind ambition and selfish compulsions hold sway over basic human decency. From Stacy-Lynn’s ruthless narcissism to Skip’s pathological delusions of grandeur, the motivations propelling LaRoy’s cavalcade of malcontents are nakedly materialistic – the petty yearnings for status, success and money eclipsing ethics at every turn.

Even the ostensible “good guy” Ray exhibits a capacity for moral elasticity once tempted by a chance to transcend his meek existence, no matter how steeped in bloody illegality that metamorphosis may be. It’s a searing portrayal of the soul-corroding consequences when dreams are perverted into idolatry.

While not quite as cosmic and nihilistic as the Coens’ most scathing neo-noir dissections of human folly, LaRoy, Texas ultimately illustrates how rampant societal rot is a self-perpetuating disease. Each increasingly unhinged transgression committed by the characters is a desperate grasp at validation and meaning in a morally rudderless vacuum – which only breeds more despair, betrayal and emptiness in its wake.

For all its deranged hilarity, there’s a vein of profound melancholy in Atkinson’s search for purpose amidst the existential wasteland. A bleak, deeply cynical wake-up call cloaked in feverish pulp trappings.

Stylish Highs Muddled by Tonal Turbulence

LaRoy, Texas is an intoxicating slice of neo-noir brimming with deliriously off-kilter thrills and scathingly funny character portraits. Writer-director Shane Atkinson demonstrates a precocious command of mood and visuals in his impressive debut.

LaRoy, Texas Review

The film’s foremost strength lies in its sheer stylistic bravura. From the ominous opening gambit to the satisfyingly bleak denouement, Atkinson’s assured direction conjures an immersively seedy atmosphere dripping with hard-boiled grit and neon-glazed sleaze. Mingjue Hu’s sumptuous cinematography renders even the most innocuous Texan locale feverishly cinematic through its flair for evocative framing and burnished, atmospheric lighting.

The uniformly excellent ensemble is equally essential in selling LaRoy’s sordid charms. John Magaro, Steve Zahn, Dylan Baker and Megan Stevenson are all firing on all cylinders, imbuing their eccentric character turns with nuances alternately hilarious and haunting. It’s a masterclass in tragicomic debasement.

Atkinson’s whip-smart writing keeps the darkly comic thrills coming at a blistering clip, laced with delicious hardboiled vernacular and pungent observational humor about human folly. The spiraling noir narrative is fiendishly intricate yet consistently engaging.

However, the film’s tonal juggling act doesn’t always hit the sweet spot. The farcical comic hijinks occasionally veer into outright parody in a way that clashes with the bleak cynicism undergirding the more dramatically compelling moments. Meanwhile, some of the side characters feel half-baked and unnecessary given the capacious 2-hour runtime.

A shade more restraint could have elevated LaRoy into the realm of a genre-defining cult classic ala the Coens’ Blood Simple. As is, it’s still a mightily impressive debut marked by tremendous style and riveting character work – a wonderfully idiosyncratic neo-noir cocktail that arguably bites off more than it can chew, but delivers enough delirious highs to impress nonetheless. An uneven but extremely promising start.

Smoldering Embers of a Darkly Comedic Cult Classic

While it may not quite ascend to the delirious heights of the Coen brothers’ neo-noir masterworks that clearly inspired it, Shane Atkinson’s audacious debut LaRoy, Texas still marks the arrival of an unmistakably vital new voice in American independent cinema.

LaRoy, Texas Review

For all its tonal wobbles and occasional indulgences, the film remains a ferociously entertaining blend of hardboiled grit, scathing black comedy, and sun-baked Texan eeriness conjured through immaculate style and performances. Atkinson’s preternatural control of mood and visuals is staggering for a first-time feature director.

More than just an exercise in morally-askew genre thrills, LaRoy, Texas charts a blistering character study of desperation, self-delusion, and the slimy depths people are willing to plumb in pursuit of validation. It’s a searing portrait of societal decay that pulls precious few punches, even when wrapped in feverishly pulpy machinations.

Flaws and all, there’s an intoxicating allure to this bleak neo-noir fable that renders it truly unforgettable. Like the inescapable black hole of LaRoy itself, the film possesses a delirious gravitational pull that will likely only deepen through repeat viewings as cult appreciation takes hold.

For students of richly-drawn eccentric character portraiture and finely-crafted crime storytelling alike, LaRoy, Texas demands to be studied and savored. A tantalizing opening salvo from an electrifying new talent unafraid to embrace the beautifully sordid shadows.

The Review

LaRoy, Texas

8 Score

Shane Atkinson's delightfully sordid neo-noir LaRoy, Texas is a stylish and morbidly funny plunge into moral decay strongly evocative of the Coen brothers, even if it can't quite match the masterful tonal control of its clear inspirations. With phenomenal performances bringing vivid life to a richly-drawn tapestry of tragic strivers and mordant oddballs, the film's distinctive visual flair and ingenious twists render it a must-see for genre aficionados. While its reach occasionally exceeds its grasp as it juggles tones, the sheer bravura craft and intoxicating atmosphere on display more than compensate. A remarkably assured and wildly entertaining debut from an unmistakable new talent unafraid to bask in life's seedy underbelly.

PROS

  • Stylish neo-noir visuals and atmosphere
  • Strong performances from the ensemble cast
  • Clever, darkly comedic writing
  • Engaging, twisty crime plot
  • Thematic depth exploring morality and desperation

CONS

  • Slightly uneven tonal balance at times
  • A few superfluous side characters
  • Runs a bit long at around 2 hours
  • Doesn't quite reach the masterful heights of its Coen brothers influences

Review Breakdown

  • Overall 0

Tags: ComedyCrimeDylan BakerEmily PendergastFeaturedGaladriel StinemanJohn MagaroLaRoy TexasShane AtkinsonSteve ZahnThriller
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