
Title – Bob Trevino Likes It (2024)
Director – Tracie Laymon (feature debut)
Cast – Barbie Ferreira, John Leguizamo
Plot – Based on a true story, lonely Lily Trevino (Ferreira) strikes up an unlikely and important friendship with Bob Trevino (Leguizamo) via an internet connection when her real life father bearing the same name abandons her when she needs him most.
“Do you know where you’d be without me?”
Review by Eddie on 30/07/2025
The little 2024 film that could, earning a raft of audience and critical praise as well as a large collection of festival awards at some of the industries premiere events, one suspects that the life of Tracie Laymon’s debut feature Bob Trevino Likes It is only just beginning as more audiences discover this based on a true story tale for themselves.
Based on Laymon’s own personal experiences after meeting with an online contact while searching for a connection with her real life father, Trevino clearly comes from heartfelt place and while it walks the same path of many similar low-budget character driven films of the past, it’s hard not to be moved and inspired by this small but effective offering that is worked brilliantly by its two leads.
Finally getting a chance to test herself in the feature film landscape after making her mark in hit HBO series Euphoria, a lot of Trevino’s success rests on the shoulders of Barbie Ferreira and she is more than up for the task.
A tricky role for any performer to deliver on, with Lily being a complex and flawed iteration of Laymon’s own-self, Ferreira does a fantastic job of keeping Lily on the right side of the ledger while at the same time creating a memorable chemistry with her off-sider John Leguizamo who is as good as his been in years as the softly spoken and kind-hearted Bob, reminding us all that when he is given the right material and he himself invests, he’s one of Hollywood’s most reliable character actors.
With her two leads on fine form there’s any easy-going nature and feel to Trevino yet while viewers may feel as though they have everything pegged as the early stages march on, Laymon has some tricks up her sleeve with where Trevino goes and how it goes there, creating an emotionally resonate and powerful watching experience that is sure to surprise many unsuspecting viewers unaware of what Trevino has too say about life, love, friendship and finding ones way in this big scary world.
In a day and age where small independent films like Trevino feel like a dying breed as they are forced into fighting for space in cinemas or standing out in crowded streaming marketplaces, Laymon’s relatable and humanly focussed dramedy isn’t a revelatory experience but its a timely reminder of the power of films of this shape and size.
Final Say –
Sure to discover a wide-reaching and passionate fanbase as a larger audience accesses the film on home media, Bob Trevino Likes It is a heartfelt and heart-warming little tale that features two fine central performances anchoring proceedings.
3 1/2 possessed toilets out of 5