Detour

1945 "He went searching for love… but fate forced a DETOUR to revelry… violence… mystery!"
7.3| 1h8m| NR| en| More Info
Released: 30 November 1945 Released
Producted By: PRC
Country: United States of America
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
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The life of Al Roberts, a pianist in a New York nightclub, turns into a nightmare when he decides to hitchhike to Los Angeles to visit his girlfriend.

Genre

Drama, Thriller

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Detour (1945) is now streaming with subscription on Prime Video

Director

Edgar G. Ulmer

Production Companies

PRC

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Detour Audience Reviews

TrueJoshNight Truly Dreadful Film
Dotbankey A lot of fun.
Neive Bellamy Excellent and certainly provocative... If nothing else, the film is a real conversation starter.
Philippa All of these films share one commonality, that being a kind of emotional center that humanizes a cast of monsters.
Sameir Ali It's quite surprising to see such amazing films in those years.Al Roberts is traveling to Hollywood to meet his girl friend. The poor man has no enough money to travel. So, he tries different ways to get there. A strange man gives him a lift. He offer him food also. On the long drive,the stranger takes a nap and Roberts drives the car. Later he finds out that the stranger is dead. Afraid of the Police, he hides the dead body in the woods, and take the man's identity. On his way, he offers lift to a woman, that puts him into more troubles.A really interesting plot, and very well made movie. A must watch film for all movie maniacs. Do not miss it. #KiduMovie
edwagreen Classic film noir with Tom Neal and a magnificent performance of Ann Savage, truly in Bette Davis style. Her gritty, mean, fast-talking persona leads to her eventual downfall.Talk about fate, circumstances and being in the wrong place at the wrong time. You've got Tom Neal in that kind of situation, for while hitch-hiking across America, he is picked up by a gambler who dies suddenly in the car. The Neal character, fearing that he will be named as the killer, dumps the body and travels on, only to meet Vera, played memorably by Miss Savage. From the beginning of their meeting, she dominates, calls the shots and Neal learns that she knew the guy that died.One problem I did have with the film was that to me it ended abruptly.
SnoopyStyle Down and out Al Roberts (Tom Neal) recalls his life as a New York nightclub piano player. His singer girlfriend Sue Harvey (Claudia Drake) rejects his proposal and seeks fame in Hollywood. He follows her west but with no money, he is forced to hitchhike. He catches a ride in the desert from degenerate gambler Charles Haskell Jr. (Edmund MacDonald) on his way to L.A. Haskell dies and Roberts fears being blamed for a killing. He hides the body and takes his identity. Along the way, he picks up hitchhiker Vera (Ann Savage) who happens to have ridden with Haskell before. Soon, she has him wrapped around her finger.Ann Savage has a fitting name. She savages the wannabe player. She's a real man eater. This is a small budget film. It can be strip down and thread bare. Its core is a B-movie noir. It's pulpy melodrama. It's not always the most technically sound but Savage rocks and it's usually a compelling watch.
zardoz-13 Edgar G. Ulmer's classic 1945 film noir "Detour" gives new meaning to the derisive phrase "Don't do me any favors." Anybody who does somebody a favor ends up paying for it. Fate proves worse than blind justice in this minimalist masterpiece. No matter what our unfortunate protagonist does in this trim 71-minute, black & white melodrama, he gets kicked in the teeth. Typically, film noir movies focus on men who find themselves on the wrong side of the 8-ball. Usually, a dastardly dame is on the other side and she lures them to their demise. The hero here is a destitute piano player who doesn't pack a firearm. Basically, he is an honest guy whose streak of bad luck earns him an inevitable seat in the gas chamber. Although we never witness his ultimate fate, the implication is rather obvious by the end of this taut tale. Like the standard film noir, "Detour" occurs primarily in flashback as our protagonist reflects on his disreputable past. The poverty row studio Producers Releasing Corporation made this melodrama, but the low budget doesn't constitute a liability. Instead, the austerity of everything enhances this cynical, unsavory, doom-laden subject matter. The performances all qualify as solid stuff, though none of the thespians left a cinematic legacy. Tom Neal is convincing but sympathetic as the conscientious protagonist who finds himself trapped in a web of circumstances. In real life, Neal was a scrapper. Later, he did time in prison for shooting his wife. Nevertheless, he is thoroughly credible as the ill-fated hero plagued by bad luck. Neal made some notable films, including "The Flying Tigers" with John Wayne and "The Bowery at Midnight" with Bela Lugosi. Neal's leading lady Ann Savage didn't murder anybody in real life, but she languished for most of her career in low-budget movies, most prominently "Renegade Girl" (1946). Aside from these two, the remaining nine actors and actresses made little impression. Meantime, acclaimed cult director Edgar G. Ulmer skillfully fashioned a memorable yarn on a threadbare budget, but he shared credit with Anthony Quinn's brother-in-law Martin Goldsmith. Nominated later for an Oscar for his contribution to "The Narrow Margin," Goldsmith penned this gripping narrative. Moreover, he contributed some sharp, snappy dialogue that Neal and Savage uttered with glorious irony more often than not. Their scenes in a Los Angeles apartment are unforgettable for their vitriolic repartee.Al Roberts (Tom Neal) plays piano in a seedy nightclub, while his attractive girlfriend, Sue Harvey (Claudia Drake of "Reunion in France"), warbles songs. Sue sings the song "I Can't Believe You Fell in Love with Me," and this song later haunts the forlorn protagonist. Sue wants to wed Al, but she prefers to make her fortune first before she ties the matrimonial knot. Sue surprises Al when she reveals her plans to head to Hollywood to seek fame and fortune. Ironically, when she arrives in Tinsel Town, Sue winds up slinging hash. Al perseveres around New York City, until he can no longer live without his songbird. He takes the ankle express to Hollywood, thumbing rides when he isn't wearing out shoe leather. Along the way, a motorist in a convertible, Charles Haskell Jr (Edmund MacDonald of "Destry Rides Again"), picks up Al in Arizona and agrees to drive him to their mutual destination Los Angeles. During the journey, Charles talks about his dueling scar. Al notices three scratches on Haskell's hand, and Haskell talks about an obstinate woman that he picked up and then turned loose. Al slips behind the steering wheel, while Haskell takes a nap. They are caught in a downpour with the roof down. When he tries to get Haskell out of the car, the man falls out and dies. Al suspects that nobody will believe that Haskell died in such a convenient manner. Instead of surrendering himself to the authorities, Al drags Haskell's corpse out into the desert, and he appropriates dead man's identity. The cash-strapped musician is pleased when he discovers a wad of dough. This good fortune doesn't last long because he picks up a hitchhiker, and she turns out to be Vera (Ann Savage) the same girl who scratched up Haskell. Vera threatens to turn Al over to the authorities, but she never makes good on her threat. Once they arrive in Los Angeles, they set out to sell their car. Neither Tom nor Vera utter kind words for the other. Eventually, she seizes the telephone and locks herself away in her room and threatens to call her cops. Al grabs the telephone cord and pulls on it. Little does he realize what he has done until he breaks into the bedroom and finds the cord wrapped tightly around Vera's neck. Talk about rotten luck. Al flees from the apartment complex, but the Highway Patrol nabs him. Things do not appear to be auspicious for Al."Detour" ranks as top-notch film noir. You cannot help but feel sorry for the woebegone protagonist. At the same time, Al Roberts emerges as a petulant loser, and it's easy to see why Sue would leave him behind. If you consider yourself a film noir completist, you have to have seen this gem.