I didn't expect it. When Ann Savage gets in the car and broods for a while. Yeah, a quality twist when it came. I wasn't expecting such energy and bite in the dialogue she dishes. The film itself is okay. Suffers in the end from a budget demanding a rushed ending. But yes, Ann Savage's Vera is worth the watch. One of the most unique femme fatale portraits. They usually try to disguise the beast. This one can't control it..
In the future, when people talk about the quintessential film noir, it'll be this film. This is noir stripped away of everything but the essential elements, presented as starkly as possible. A true masterpiece.
The purest film noir in cinema history. This movie represents the beating heart of noir, which if you put in a pot and boiled it down to it's essence, you would be left with Detour. A masterpiece, pure and simple.
As a Musician and former long Distance Hitchhiker , I can really relate to this Movie . Traveling the Road , alone , makes You vulnerable to some crazy stuff .
I also hitchhiked extensively. Sometimes, just for entertainment, I would dream up a new personal history just to test the drivers reaction. Nothing insidious or threatening just an exercise in curiosity
I remember reading about the myth and legend about "Detour"; the miniscule budget, the minimal number of sets, etc. 30 plus years ago. After seeing it, and countless other noirs over the years, I still hunger for more. Thanks for the great post.
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The big sleep us my favorite movie. I don't mind if you don't like my manners I don't much like them myself I grieve over them on long winter evenings. I don't mind you ritzing me or you drinking your lunch out of a bottle .... Is indelibly etched into my mind I haven't heard that scene for a few years but could write it out without even pausing to think
I was fortunate to see Ann Savage introduce this film at a screening in the early 2000's. She said playing Vera had been easy because she LOATHED Tom Neal
@@jefferygoodman9928 She thought he was boorish and conceited. She also said that she left Columbia at the end of her contract in part so that she wouldn't have to work with Neal anymore. When PRC cast Neal for Detour, she was not happy. But it probably fueled her greatest screen performance.
@@seanconlon2408 great insight! Fascinating situation sort of a mixed blessing I guess for her... she probably had a thing for him and maybe he just rejected her and she never got over it. Otherwise why would she talk like that about him that sounds just like somebody who was basically rejected which is really sad if that is the case or was the case. I'm now more interested in the backstory than than the actual movie LOL thanks again, Bob M.
@@polara01 I doubt there was any attraction there at all. She was just sick and tired of the guy after working on 3 pictures with him (Detour was their fourth.) Given Neal's later history, it seems he was not the nicest guy.
So you do the right thing and leave his naked ass body 20ft from the road. Don't worry termata mommas going to school you good heres some perffume for when you reach the arizona state pen. What in the ever fucking fuck 1950's I believed granny when she said the 50's were idyllic and how things only went to shit recently. Apparently besides being crazy fucked up they had the best slang I've ever heard in my life its like listening to someone speak another language and learn wtf they're saying to each other including the subtleties and I prolly have a fair bit of it wrong. I an so happy to have found this im def going to have to watch it again.
The hands close ups at the piano were those of the films composer Leo Erdödy. He was playing a Brahms piece. I cant find out who played all the boogy woogy improvisations. Those bad ass rolling bass lines were hot.
Film was widely exclaimed as one of the best noir films ever made, and its hard to think of a better one. Great story; acting superb and fast paced direction True Classic that you may never have seen !
Tom Neal looks like Kurt Russell at times. Using skepticism & reason, you can be innocent even when, beyond a reasonable doubt you are judged guilty. Good movie thanks for posting it.
To fully appreciate the acting brilliance of Ann Savage, search interviews with her, where she reveals herself to be a remarkably sweet, sophisticated, charming person in real life. Her last scene is especially well-played. She is drunk, but the drunkeness brings out her vicious vindictive nature even more.
The plot takes off from an implausible premise. He could have just driven to the next truck stop, called the police, and related what happened. He wouldn't be suspected of robbery if he refrained from taking the guy's money. So there would be no motive, and the guy had a health condition. Then he offers a hitchhiker a ride while driving a dead man's car he had stolen? At the very least that would be asking for trouble.
Just finished seeing it for the first time, a true masterpiece that'll live on forever, I really didn't know if was more blown away by Ann Savage's classic beauty or her cutting and vicious performance.
It happened for "no good reason at all," except that he dragged the guy's body into a ditch, took his wallet and his car and pretended to be him. In the voice over, Al tries very hard to justify his actions. After all, what choice did he have in the matter? But the excuses fall flat. For me that is film noir: not that it happened for no good reason, but because an otherwise honest guy crossed a line that there was no turning back from.
Lol right. He blamed “fate” and pretended he was just a victim of bad luck but we see through his nonsense. His series of choices one after another led to his downfall.
He could have driven the dead man's car up to California, and pretend he didn't find out the dude was dead. In regards with the post-mortem hit in the head, he could have come out with some bulshit excuse, it was post-mortem after all
@@luisfelipesauvalle5807 The man was dead when he was hit in the head so there was no blood flowing around his body so there would not be a bruise or blood flowing from an open wound. In a post mortem they would detect that the blow had occurred after the mans death. So if he played it straight and went to the hospital or a doctor he probably would have been cleared of any blame, but then we wouldn't have had this movie.
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This proves you don't needa billion dollar budget & superstars tomakea good flick. Goodscript, direction & solid actors are more important. Classic filmnoir.
@A Tangerine Predictable but only in the sense whatever decisions the chacacters made could never turn out for their good...that's film noir--the one plus of having time on my hands--watching these great old films
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Saw this one night about 11:30 on TV. Later found and bought it on video. It's like the snowball effect. Gets steadily worse as it goes on. Another good one is, Scarlett Street , with Edward G. Robinson. Loved both of these movies. One of a kind not same ole figure it out befor it's half over.
The purchasing power of our dollar has dropped around 97% since around 1916-17...so it isn't that everything has just become more expensive. It's actually that our dollar now buys so much less.
@@TomLongusa Precisely. Nonetheless, he said a jukebox buy was a Nickel... Which, comparatively speaking, is still pretty steep for back then!! I'd say close to maybe a couple bucks at least today??
A Savage feme fatale performance by Ann . She was magnificent . Tom Neal was extremely believable. At the end when the police gave him a lift. What a touch . The fact he got away with it made the movie. Had me from beginning to end. Great movie 🍿🍿🍿🍿🍿!
A dark and pessimistic movie about a down-on-his-luck everyman caught up in a twisted tale of murder and dangerous romance. I love the sexually charged banter and moody lighting. A great film noir.
I just love it when a film that's not a musical makes good use of a song - a song that's both an object in the plot and also which fades humbly into the background to carry the mood. You've got that tune in The Lady Vanishes and in the remake of The Man Who Knew Too Much, and this one, where the disbelief in the lyrics cuts two ways, from veiled hope to unapologetic despair. Sensational! Anybody got some other favorite examples?
The chaotic life of Tom Neal, his insane affair with the tragic and beautiful film noir star Barbara Payton; his near-fatal fistfight with Franchot Tone are even more riveting than the film. Unbelievable how life imitates art.
This film has its moments, the tacked on ending was to satisfy the Hayes office. No murderer could go unpunished. Still, with the snappy dialogue and a femme-fatale from hell, who dies in an almost three stooges sorta way, I liked it. Ann Savage kills it as the fast talking Lil' hustler Vera.
Nevertheless, the Hays Office was a horrible and repressive group of uptight, self-righteous Jesus freaks who stained our film history and made movies much less interesting than they could have been.
Ended like a grade school story. Johnny woke up and it was all a bad dream. What a pantload of an ending. In real life L.A. of 1945, the guy runs the car over a cliff on Mulholland Drive, hitchhikes back into town, calls up his sweetie with a pocketful of cash and disappears into the city to join the Musicians Union and tinkle the ivories for some big band..
These old films are a hoot and showed just how simple everything was! Wish we could go back. Thanks for the opportunity to watch them here on You Tube!
Detour a Excellent Film Noir Movie. I really enjoyed it very much. It has a great Cast, Story, Director and music score by ErDody. Excellent Upload. Thanks. Out.
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I am such a product of that, Detroit by way of Rotterdam, two hard hitting towns with no use for posers. Last forty years in California, brother, what a bunch of soft sisters,
The main music after that is the song "I'm Always Chasing Rainbows," popularized by Harry Carroll, Broadway and pop music composer. (Words by someone else.) Tune is originally from Clssical great F. Chopin.
Proves one thing you don't need million dollar budgets when you have a fabulous writer who isn't afraid to tell it like it was. The greatest generation came back from the horrors of world war2. They wanted to watch a film that didn't sugar coat. The writer knew that and acted accordingly.
Great film. Achieves a lot with just a good story, good acting and a modest budget. Ann Savage was especially captivating. Even though it has aged pretty well, i would find it interesting to see a remake
Some great lines in this gem. "What is a 10 spot? A piece of paper crawling with germs." "Life is a ball game. You gotta take a swing at a few things before you wake up and find out it's a ninth inning."
I'm not really an old movie buff, but I caught this on TCM last night. OMG does Ann Savage live up to her stage name! She makes the film for me. Vera is such a great character. I have to watch more old movies! Wow!!!
WOW! What a convertible! Is that a Lincoln? Seems like all trademark traces have been removed for the film's on-the-cheap producers, but that's one fine classic old auto indeed! And what a handsome guy, that Tom Neal! Man alive, after a google search, it seems that his previous-to-acting stint as a boxer plagued him Mike Tyson style, with him eventually being arrested for assault and battery and then later being convicted of manslaughter! Geez, some people just don't know how good their future will be and do all they can to self-destruct. Really sad that he died of an apparent heart attack at only age 58, and as an ex-con gardener in Palm Springs. Hollywood has a million sad stories of lives all too short lived.
bill ding Thanks so much for the details about that Lincoln. What a way to celebrate the USA helping to end World War Two! Well, not all war everywhere at the time, as world history well knows, but geez what a car nonetheless!
Actually that is a 1941 Lincoln Continental, you can distinguish by the grill..........this movie came out in 1945, no new civilian cars were built since early '42 because of the war effort, and the 1946 models were still to be released, pretty much just warmed over pre-war models....the '46 looks about the same as a '41 with just grill and tail light changes.........
I've thoroughly enjoy watching detour every year. I love the song that makes him crazy when the trucker asks of change for a dime to play the jukebox. Awww the good old days. With my social security I would have been rich then. Lmao.
I would have loved to live during this era. I would have had a farm, married to a farmer in the Midwest, preferred Norwegian, and raised 10 children and lots of animals.
James Ellroy once said that film noir means, almost by definition, "...that you're eff'd." . He must have said that after viewing this film. A great little gem. Many thanks.
and Barbara Payton's was even worse than Neal's... I think Babs and Scotty Beckett were the two most tragic male and female figures that ever came out of H-wood
yeah he hooked up with that trainwreck Barbara Payton,.. and so did Franchot Tone.. Tom Neal practically beat him to death in a drunken brawl over Barbara.. yikes
Tom Neal's life took more than one tragic "detour." To learn more, read "Kiss Tomorrow Goodbye: The Barbara Payton Story" by John O'Dowd. Barbara was part of the reason Neal's film career crashed.
I KNEW THE MOMENT I SAW THAT WOMAN STANDIND A FEW FEET FROM THE GAS STATION, THAT WAS THE WOMAN HASKELL PUT OUT OF HIS CAR. I WAS YELLING DON'T PICK HER UP. I WAS WAITING FOR HER TO SPRING ON HIM WITH A BOAT LOAD OF QUESTIONS. BOY DID SHE. AND HE WAS SHOCKED TO THE QUICK. NEVER PICK UP HITCH HIKERS. BUT HE INVITED HER.
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saphiffer talbert can't ever go wrong with either bette or joan . To be fair so many great actresses but, they are the head of the class in my view.
I didn't expect it. When Ann Savage gets in the car and broods for a while. Yeah, a quality twist when it came. I wasn't expecting such energy and bite in the dialogue she dishes.
The film itself is okay. Suffers in the end from a budget demanding a rushed ending. But yes, Ann Savage's Vera is worth the watch. One of the most unique femme fatale portraits. They usually try to disguise the beast. This one can't control it..
The ending was demanded by the Breen Committee regulating morality in films at the time (although surely rushed as well.)
This film gets better with every viewing. It is a hidden treasure.
In the future, when people talk about the quintessential film noir, it'll be this film. This is noir stripped away of everything but the essential elements, presented as starkly as possible. A true masterpiece.
Steve.....true
to the point
Love this film!
I love this superb film also. My pinnacle of film noir is THE BIG SLEEP, but I respect yours.
@@davidpirkola1547 mine is the Postman always ring twice.
This is probably one of the best female performances I’ve ever seen. What an amazing actress
She was one of Marlon Brando's favorite actresses. Her sassy, tragic performance here is perfection.
The purest film noir in cinema history. This movie represents the beating heart of noir, which if you put in a pot and boiled it down to it's essence, you would be left with Detour. A masterpiece, pure and simple.
So true!
Have you seen a second movie in your life?
I love how you phrased that.
Lacy..... totally agree
@@jenisbetzke6228 I've seen hundreds of films on two continents and this little gem still stands out
As a Musician and former long Distance Hitchhiker , I can really relate to this Movie .
Traveling the Road , alone , makes You vulnerable to some crazy stuff .
Remind me never to pick you up
@@peterzang Consider Yourself Reminded because Its the Ones that gave Me a ride that were the 🤪 Crazy ones .
who cares... shut up!
I also hitchhiked extensively. Sometimes, just for entertainment, I would dream up a new personal history just to test the drivers reaction. Nothing insidious or threatening just an exercise in curiosity
@@jamesbueker11 That sounds interesting .
But I believe , that the World has changed and Those Hitchhiking Days are Gone
forever .
I remember reading about the myth and legend about "Detour"; the miniscule budget, the minimal number of sets, etc. 30 plus years ago. After seeing it, and countless other noirs over the years, I still hunger for more. Thanks for the great post.
DITTO!
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The big sleep us my favorite movie. I don't mind if you don't like my manners I don't much like them myself I grieve over them on long winter evenings. I don't mind you ritzing me or you drinking your lunch out of a bottle .... Is indelibly etched into my mind I haven't heard that scene for a few years but could write it out without even pausing to think
@@zabglobalcinema4010 ok give me a link and I'll look into it's legitimacy and will go from there.
old days when movies based on great writer's stories.
And a great song
Jimmy rock blah blah
Phenomenal story. That's what it's all about...
I was fortunate to see Ann Savage introduce this film at a screening in the early 2000's. She said playing Vera had been easy because she LOATHED Tom Neal
Lol, she is great in this film. How cool you got to see her.
@Sean Conlon: Did she go into any more detail on why?
@@jefferygoodman9928 She thought he was boorish and conceited. She also said that she left Columbia at the end of her contract in part so that she wouldn't have to work with Neal anymore. When PRC cast Neal for Detour, she was not happy. But it probably fueled her greatest screen performance.
@@seanconlon2408 great insight! Fascinating situation sort of a mixed blessing I guess for her... she probably had a thing for him and maybe he just rejected her and she never got over it. Otherwise why would she talk like that about him that sounds just like somebody who was basically rejected which is really sad if that is the case or was the case. I'm now more interested in the backstory than than the actual movie LOL thanks again, Bob M.
@@polara01 I doubt there was any attraction there at all. She was just sick and tired of the guy after working on 3 pictures with him (Detour was their fourth.) Given Neal's later history, it seems he was not the nicest guy.
Ann Savage might be the best thing in this movie. I can almost taste her rage as it oozes out.
DON'T WANT TO TASTE THAT.
VERA WAS VERY HARD CORE.
autumn t. allgood
Why were you SHOUTING, autumn? 🙉
@@EYE_GOTCHA 🤣🤣
"That's life; whichever way you turn, fate sticks out a foot to trip you".
Is this yours?
So you do the right thing and leave his naked ass body 20ft from the road. Don't worry termata mommas going to school you good heres some perffume for when you reach the arizona state pen. What in the ever fucking fuck 1950's I believed granny when she said the 50's were idyllic and how things only went to shit recently. Apparently besides being crazy fucked up they had the best slang I've ever heard in my life its like listening to someone speak another language and learn wtf they're saying to each other including the subtleties and I prolly have a fair bit of it wrong. I an so happy to have found this im def going to have to watch it again.
@@tonytafoya6217 It's in the movie .36.5. Martin Goldsmith
Noir in a nutshell
4:06 The texture on the coffee cup, the chiaroscuro; fantastic!
A conscious, living, nightmare. This was some kind of writer. Compare this to the garbage plots that are concocted these days. Bravo!
The hands close ups at the piano were those of the films composer Leo Erdödy. He was playing a Brahms piece. I cant find out who played all the boogy woogy improvisations. Those bad ass rolling bass lines were hot.
Thank you - I was wondering about that.
One of the Best Movies of All Time
Film was widely exclaimed as one of the best noir films ever made, and its hard to think of a better one.
Great story; acting superb and fast paced direction
True Classic that you may never have seen !
Wow, Ann Savage is a savage in this role. That Vera is one scary character.
He walks by a sign that says "Danger" right before the conclusion. This film is pure gold.
Tom Neal looks like Kurt Russell at times. Using skepticism & reason, you can be innocent even when, beyond a reasonable doubt you are judged guilty. Good movie thanks for posting it.
"Hey glamorous. Give me change for a dime, will ya?"
"Yeah, fate or some mysterious force can put the the finger on you or me for no good reason at all." What a closing line!
+M H Lee Yeah, and what an eerie foretelling of Neal's own fate...
To fully appreciate the acting brilliance of Ann Savage, search interviews with her, where she reveals herself to be a remarkably sweet, sophisticated, charming person in real life. Her last scene is especially well-played. She is drunk, but the drunkeness brings out her vicious vindictive nature even more.
Found an interview...thanks for the prompt Sheila Macdougal! ruclips.net/user/results?search_query=interview+with+actress+anne+savage
The most searing, no-holds-barred film fatale of all time!
@@Jimmy1982PlaylistsShe reminds me of a couple of blind dates that I've been on.
Ho ho ho 😂@@michaelstearnes1526
The plot takes off from an implausible premise. He could have just driven to the next truck stop, called the police, and related what happened. He wouldn't be suspected of robbery if he refrained from taking the guy's money. So there would be no motive, and the guy had a health condition. Then he offers a hitchhiker a ride while driving a dead man's car he had stolen? At the very least that would be asking for trouble.
I'm 67 years old and I do not remember ever watching this movie. GREAT MOVIE!!!!!
I'm 67 too. Haven't seen it before either. I'm waiting to see what the fuss was all about.
I’m 48 and I hope both you guys are doing well.😊
i have one word for you:
CERN.
Had never heard of it, and fancy myself a cinema buff!
Assisti pela primeira vez, há 10 anos.
Assisti várias vezes desde então...
Delicioso filme!
Just finished seeing it for the first time, a true masterpiece that'll live on forever, I really didn't know if was more blown away by Ann Savage's classic beauty or her cutting and vicious performance.
You know a movie is good when it brings serenity...
Love that guy's voice and the general sound of these films.
There are some great old movies on youtube.
Diana Blue yes there is
And this isn't one of them.
unlike this one.
Diana Blue yes there are. Been watching Sherlock Holmes movies. There’s just something nostalgicly cool about b&w movies
Diana Blue. Yes, but there are also a LOT of stinkers.
Back when life was about killing time between newspaper editions by playing cards.
It’s nice to be nostalgic but we often take for granted what our elders had to endure.
They should have bought a radio.
Very well said.
@@lemonmazter7831THIS.
It happened for "no good reason at all," except that he dragged the guy's body into a ditch, took his wallet and his car and pretended to be him. In the voice over, Al tries very hard to justify his actions. After all, what choice did he have in the matter? But the excuses fall flat. For me that is film noir: not that it happened for no good reason, but because an otherwise honest guy crossed a line that there was no turning back from.
Peremalfait Too bad he didn't find a Gideon's Bible in that motel room, then he might have discovered the best way out of that mess.
Lol right. He blamed “fate” and pretended he was just a victim of bad luck but we see through his nonsense. His series of choices one after another led to his downfall.
He could have driven the dead man's car up to California, and pretend he didn't find out the dude was dead. In regards with the post-mortem hit in the head, he could have come out with some bulshit excuse, it was post-mortem after all
@@luisfelipesauvalle5807 The man was dead when he was hit in the head so there was no blood flowing around his body so there would not be a bruise or blood flowing from an open wound. In a post mortem they would detect that the blow had occurred after the mans death. So if he played it straight and went to the hospital or a doctor he probably would have been cleared of any blame, but then we wouldn't have had this movie.
Or call Car-shield- they fix broken stuff in s jiffy!
Poor guy has worst luck than me! Thank you for uploading these movies, I love Noir flicks.
That and a couple of wrong decisions.
@@larryrobertson2150 ya think?
😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆
Thanks, this was a brilliant movie, true to Film Noir.
I love this flick, Vera was one of the most hard-boiled dames you'd ever have the misfortune of running into 🍿
TELL ME ABOUT IT.
She looked hot after a warm bath and some nice clothes but I agree he should have never offered her a ride, poor guy had the worst luck
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She's Savage sin city would shit its pants if she showed up.
@@zxtenn she needed a good ride but not the kind he gave her.😂
This proves you don't needa billion dollar budget & superstars tomakea good flick. Goodscript, direction & solid actors are more important. Classic filmnoir.
Right!!!👍
Back then those actors were getting about $4000 a week! That even good money today. I wish I was making that much now!
@A Tangerine Predictable but only in the sense whatever decisions the chacacters made could never turn out for their good...that's film noir--the one plus of having time on my hands--watching these great old films
Tomakea? Sounds like a dried up lake.
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It was dull until Vera came on -- then it caught fire! Ann Savage is awesome! What a character!
razor blade eyes,
I love golden age of hollywood flicks..especially fim noir! Thanks for this upload and I have subscribed!
Clarification: In those days, driver's licenses did not have photos.
Saw this one night about 11:30 on TV. Later found and bought it on video. It's like the snowball effect.
Gets steadily worse as it goes on.
Another good one is, Scarlett Street , with Edward G. Robinson. Loved both of these movies. One of a kind not same ole figure it out
befor it's half over.
Totally agree..was checking Scarlett Street today
Saw this on Cheap DVD years ago. I was so intrigued by this style of movie after this. 10/10
Dialogue like this is what's missing in today's films. If only they'd focus on their scripts instead of special effects.
One of the best noir films ever.
I liked Vera. She was the perfect 1950's female character. Very good movie. Thanks for posting it.
yeah, she was quite ahead of her times...
Great classic, a good lesson too... just be honest and face the music. Also illustrates how every choice and event can change everything
Good analysis
Correct, we can choose an upward spiral or a downward spiral.
that guy needed change for a dime to play the jukebox...how things have changed...
The purchasing power of our dollar has dropped around 97% since around 1916-17...so it isn't that everything has just become more expensive. It's actually that our dollar now buys so much less.
Now hed just stream the song from Spotify.
No jutebox
YES INDEED.
@@TomLongusa Precisely. Nonetheless, he said a jukebox buy was a Nickel... Which, comparatively speaking, is still pretty steep for back then!! I'd say close to maybe a couple bucks at least today??
Wow! What an actress that Vera was!
My first film noir. I don't think there are many left that I haven't seen.
A Savage feme fatale performance by Ann . She was magnificent . Tom Neal was extremely believable. At the end when the police gave him a lift. What a touch . The fact he got away with it made the movie. Had me from beginning to end. Great movie 🍿🍿🍿🍿🍿!
I thought he was getting arrested!!
37:00 this banter is as sweet as any in any movie anywhere or anytime. "what did u do kiss him with a wrench"
A dark and pessimistic movie about a down-on-his-luck everyman caught up in a twisted tale of murder and dangerous romance. I love the sexually charged banter and moody lighting. A great film noir.
Hey there, watch "the scar" and "the lady in the window", you'll love them then.
@49jubilee Yeah give them hell buddy!
NOIR!
man I love these atmospheric old films
I just love it when a film that's not a musical makes good use of a song - a song that's both an object in the plot and also which fades humbly into the background to carry the mood. You've got that tune in The Lady Vanishes and in the remake of The Man Who Knew Too Much, and this one, where the disbelief in the lyrics cuts two ways, from veiled hope to unapologetic despair. Sensational! Anybody got some other favorite examples?
Just rememebered that Bringing Up Baby is another, with I Can't Give You Anything But Love.
Uncanny how Neal resembles Brando at times.
Ann Savage really Sores in this one !
He looks like Dom DeLouise.
@@tonirose6776 And Dom de Louise resembles Rod Steiger somewhat.
@@bobdownes162 And Rod looks like Johnny Carson, somewhat
😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆
One of the best film noir crime movie ever
"and run interference for your girl on the dance floor" WHAT A MAGNIFICENT LINE!
This is the best print I've seen of this public domain film.
The chaotic life of Tom Neal, his insane affair with the tragic and beautiful film noir star Barbara Payton; his near-fatal fistfight with Franchot Tone are even more riveting than the film. Unbelievable how life imitates art.
Not to mention that he did kill his wife Gale
Yes, life tripped him and he fell -- hard.
I wrote an essay on "Detour" that was published.
Thanks for uploading classic movies I really appreciate it
I love how he pronounces Miami
Miama lol
I believe that pronouncing it like that will get you an easy 10 stretch up state.
This guy sounds like my mother. They both speak English up to a certain point... 🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔
This film has its moments, the tacked on ending was to satisfy the Hayes office. No murderer could go unpunished. Still, with the snappy dialogue and a femme-fatale from hell, who dies in an almost three stooges sorta way, I liked it. Ann Savage kills it as the fast talking Lil' hustler Vera.
THAT SHE WAS.
NO: the Hays (actual spelling) Ofce. ending didn't reduce DETOUR's Noir greatness at all, because, remember, he was NOT a murderer.
Nevertheless, the Hays Office was a horrible and repressive group of uptight, self-righteous Jesus freaks who stained our film history and made movies much less interesting than they could have been.
Ended like a grade school story. Johnny woke up and it was all a bad dream. What a pantload of an ending. In real life L.A. of 1945, the guy runs the car over a cliff on Mulholland Drive, hitchhikes back into town, calls up his sweetie with a pocketful of cash and disappears into the city to join the Musicians Union and tinkle the ivories for some big band..
Maybe gets jobs playing music for film soundtracks.
@@emjayay To quote John Wayne in "The Alamo": "It do look likely."
I thought there was too much narration in the first section, but boy, what a gripping tale by the end.
Fantastic!! How could you not love this!!! Poor bloke was doomed from The Start
Vera was SCARY ... Enjoyed it!
Talk about a victim of circumstance ! A good movie.
These old films are a hoot and showed just how simple everything was! Wish we could go back. Thanks for the opportunity to watch them here on You Tube!
This just may be the craziest film noir I have watched on youtube--thanks for the upload:)...
Have you seen Kiss Me Deadly?
Based on Detour the 1939 novel by Martin M. Goldsmith....I love movies based on books.....purr
This movie is just like I want my coffee: dark and bitter...
Chocolate is good when it's like that too.
Thank you for putting great movies in here.😁
Love it when someone gets change for a dime:)
Detour a Excellent Film Noir Movie. I really enjoyed it very much. It has a great Cast, Story, Director and music score by ErDody. Excellent Upload. Thanks. Out.
The moral of the story is this: Don't be yellah. Don't be a sap. Don't get sore. Don't squeal.
And you're no gentleman see? And you're not gonna beat it till tell you you can
i like how ppl talked shit to each other then and everyone took it and didn't get upset or overreact.
Well, in film noir movies.
Don't swear
!'^+%&/()=?_?=)(/&%+^'You are invited to our film company. We broadcast subtitles for our movies in most languages. It doesn't matter what language you know.
You are invited to our film company. We broadcast subtitles for our movies in most languages. It doesn't matter what language you know.
You are invited to our film company. We broadcast subtitles for our movies in most languages. It doesn't matter what language you know.
!'^+%&/()=?=)(/&%+^%()=??=)(/&%+^^+%&/()=)(/&%+^'+%/()=?)(/&%+^^
Lol fucking rube doesn't know whats coming do ya rube?
I am such a product of that, Detroit by way of Rotterdam, two hard hitting towns with no use for posers. Last forty years in California, brother, what a bunch of soft sisters,
That's Artie Shaw's version of I CAN'T BELIEVE THAT YOU'RE LOVE WITH ME that the guy plays in the cafe jukebox in the opening scene.
Wasn't he Ava Gardner's first husband?
Mister Bojangles Maybe not the first, but they were married.
@@misterbojangles6205 no Mickey Rooney was her first. Artie was her second.
The main music after that is the song "I'm Always Chasing Rainbows," popularized by Harry Carroll, Broadway and pop music composer. (Words by someone else.) Tune is originally from Clssical great F. Chopin.
I’ll save this for my early Sunday morning movie watching. Thanks for sharing
Proves one thing you don't need million dollar budgets when you have a fabulous writer who isn't afraid to tell it like it was. The greatest generation came back from the horrors of world war2. They wanted to watch a film that didn't sugar coat. The writer knew that and acted accordingly.
Great film. Achieves a lot with just a good story, good acting and a modest budget. Ann Savage was especially captivating. Even though it has aged pretty well, i would find it interesting to see a remake
A remake post-2000 would be mostly special effects, with the plot completely screwed up. A cartoon superhero or two.
Great movie, I loved it, Vera was excellent :-)
Another good old movie here on RUclips.
The Underground Man goes to Las Vegas! What a story! Anne Savage (as Vera) pays the role to a tee--with a certain savageness! Really a great flick!
Las Vegas? Where do you come from?
Las Vegas didn’t even exist at the time
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I thoroughly enjoyed this movie, well done.
Good old film. Thank you for posting!!
Some great lines in this gem. "What is a 10 spot? A piece of paper crawling with germs." "Life is a ball game. You gotta take a swing at a few things before you wake up and find out it's a ninth inning."
Arguably the greatest fatalist noir.
OUT OF THE PAST great too. Don't know why I'd never heard of this one till today....
I'm not really an old movie buff, but I caught this on TCM last night. OMG does Ann Savage live up to her stage name! She makes the film for me. Vera is such a great character. I have to watch more old movies! Wow!!!
WOW! What a convertible! Is that a Lincoln? Seems like all trademark traces have been removed for the film's on-the-cheap producers, but that's one fine classic old auto indeed! And what a handsome guy, that Tom Neal! Man alive, after a google search, it seems that his previous-to-acting stint as a boxer plagued him Mike Tyson style, with him eventually being arrested for assault and battery and then later being convicted of manslaughter! Geez, some people just don't know how good their future will be and do all they can to self-destruct. Really sad that he died of an apparent heart attack at only age 58, and as an ex-con gardener in Palm Springs. Hollywood has a million sad stories of lives all too short lived.
"46 Lincoln Continental. Probably Pace Car Yellow code 14146. One of the most popular colors for that model.
bill ding
Thanks so much for the details about that Lincoln. What a way to celebrate the USA helping to end World War Two! Well, not all war everywhere at the time, as world history well knows, but geez what a car nonetheless!
Actually that is a 1941 Lincoln Continental, you can distinguish by the grill..........this movie came out in 1945, no new civilian cars were built since early '42 because of the war effort, and the 1946 models were still to be released, pretty much just warmed over pre-war models....the '46 looks about the same as a '41 with just grill and tail light changes.........
Great film. The main character caused two accidents by mistake but his story is unbelievable to anyone if he told it.
I've thoroughly enjoy watching detour every year. I love the song that makes him crazy when the trucker asks of change for a dime to play the jukebox. Awww the good old days. With my social security I would have been rich then. Lmao.
Thank you for the upload of this classic...
superbly entertaining, well acted low budge noir.
I would have loved to live during this era. I would have had a farm, married to a farmer in the Midwest, preferred Norwegian, and raised 10 children and lots of animals.
What? No malls?😢😢😢
"Ok, ok... Don't get sore" -cool colloquium from that day 😂
Colloquial
What are you a Mary?
@@Laura-hb2rt If you really want to get technical, its a colloquialism.
I agree, should still be used today. Another one I like from that era is "what of it?" and "nothing doing".
Love film noir,but the comments were very interesting. People interested in your are special. They get it! It = life.
James Ellroy once said that film noir means, almost by definition, "...that you're eff'd." . He must have said that after viewing this film.
A great little gem. Many thanks.
MrShobar Don't underst
MrShobar Don't understand.
THANKS UPLOADER!!!!!!!!!
@@marywilliams9858 "...that you're f**ked."
Romance, back then, always took place in the midst of cigarette smoke or fog ! 😂
Tom Neals real life story is more bizarre than any film noir scriptwriter could've ever conceived.
and Barbara Payton's was even worse than Neal's... I think Babs and Scotty Beckett were the two most tragic male and female figures that ever came out of H-wood
Have you read John O'Dowd's "Kiss Tomorrow Goodbye: The Barbara Payton Story"?
yeah he hooked up with that trainwreck Barbara Payton,.. and so did Franchot Tone.. Tom Neal practically beat him to death in a drunken brawl over Barbara.. yikes
@@katiezee2 yup
Who the hell gives a total stranger a ride in a car he just STOLE !! "Poor guy" deserved his bad luck ...
Tom Neal's life took more than one tragic "detour." To learn more, read "Kiss Tomorrow Goodbye: The Barbara Payton Story" by John O'Dowd. Barbara was part of the reason Neal's film career crashed.
Life imitating art or vice versa maybe.
@@denisenoe7927 Barbara Payton was only 39 when she died . Alcoholism is a bitch . Addiction to Nicotine is just as bad 😨
The time when they had to string sentences together, facial and body expressions, eyes , actually it’s called acting . 😊
So there's Robert, driving a stolen car wearing a dead man's clothes, oh look, a crazy lady...hop in, where ya going? Good Lord.
And same lady just happened to have been picked up and dropped off by the dead man on the same journey and arrives where she is ahead of Al.
😂😂😂 true
I KNEW THE MOMENT I SAW THAT WOMAN STANDIND A FEW FEET FROM THE GAS STATION, THAT WAS THE WOMAN HASKELL PUT OUT OF HIS CAR.
I WAS YELLING DON'T PICK HER UP.
I WAS WAITING FOR HER TO SPRING ON HIM WITH A BOAT LOAD OF QUESTIONS.
BOY DID SHE.
AND HE WAS SHOCKED TO THE QUICK.
NEVER PICK UP HITCH HIKERS.
BUT HE INVITED HER.
@@Romans8-9 Hey, shit happens.