Detour (1945) is an American film noir directed by Edgar G. Ulmer and starring Tom Neal and Ann Savage. It was released by Producers Releasing Corporation (PRC), a Poverty Row movie studio that operated during the 1930s and 1940s.
Al Roberts (Neal) is depressed that his career as a piano
player is going nowhere. To top it off, his girlfriend Sue Harvey (Claudia
Drake) quits her job as a singer in a New York City nightclub to pursue a
career in Hollywood. With little money in his pocket, Al decides to hitchhike across the country with the hopes of marrying Sue when he gets there.
Charles Haskell Jr. (Edmund MacDonald), an Arizona bookie
gives Al a ride in his Lincoln convertible. During the ride, Haskell takes several
pills and at one point asks Al to drive. Al pulls over to put the top up with Haskell asleep in the car during a rainstorm. Al tries to rouse Haskell from
his sleep but he appears dead. Al opens the passenger side door and
Haskell tumbles out and hits his head on a rock.
Fearing that the police will think he killed Haskell, Al
hides the body and assumes his identity along with his money and clothes. Al
picks up a woman named Vera (Savage) who knows that he isn’t Haskell and doesn’t
own the car he is driving.
What happens next is a battle of wills between Vera and Al
as they travel West.
Edgar G. Ulmer (1904 – 1972) was an Austrian film
director noted for the B movies he made at Producers Releasing Corporation
(PRC). He worked as a set designer for Max Reinhardt’s theater in Europe. He was
an apprentice to F. W. Murnau. He also
worked with the directors Robert Siodmak, Billy Wilder, and Fred Zinneman. His
most famous films include The Black Cat (1934) starring Bela Lugosi and
Boris Karloff made at Universal Pictures and Detour (1945) at PRC.
Tom Neal (1914 – 1972) was an American actor and
amateur boxer. Born in Evanston, Illinois, Neal was the son of a banker and
grew up in a ten-room home in Chicago. He enrolled at Northwestern University
where he majored in mathematics. Neal dropped out of Northwestern after a year
and began appearing in various stage productions including Summer Stock. He made
his Broadway debut in 1935 and his movie debut three years later in Out West
with the Hardys, the series starring Mickey Rooney. He appeared in many B movies, with Detour
(1945) being his most famous. His personal life was tempestuous and it derailed
his career resulting in his being blackballed in Hollywood.
Ann Savage (1921 – 2008) was an American film and
television actress. She starred in several B movies with actor Tom Neal with
their most famous pairing being Detour (1945). As a teenager, she failed
a screen test with M-G-M and decided not to show up at a screen test for Twentieth-Century
Fox because she felt they had plenty of pretty blondes. Savage worked at
Columbian Pictures co-starring with Rosalind Russell in What a Woman
(1943). Savage was a popular pin-up model during World War II. During the war,
she sold war bonds on two nationwide drives. After her film career faded,
Savage became a businesswoman and took flying lessons, becoming a licensed
pilot in 1979.
Detour trivia
- While setting up the hitchhiking scene, a driver tried to pick up Ann Savage.
- The 1941 Lincoln Continental V-12 convertible driven by Haskell was Ulmer’s personal car.
- Ann Savage and Tom Neal didn’t get along at all during filming and spent days not speaking to each other except when filming movie scenes.
- Director Wim Wenders called Ann Savage’s performance as Vera “30 years ahead of its time.”
- The film was made in 28 days.
- Ann Savage’s autobiography was titled Savage Detours, acknowledging her most famous film role.
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Ann Savage and Tom Neal |
Discussion questions
- Supposedly, this film had a budget of $100,000. Would it have been a better film with a higher budget?
- Director Ulmer was famous for making the best use of the money he was given to direct his features at PRC. Does Detour look like a low-budget film?
- What did you think of the onscreen relationship between Tom Neal and Ann Savage? Were their characters believable?
- Did this film remind you of any other films noir you’ve seen?
- Were you surprised by anything in the film?