Detour - posters, covers, wallpapers

Lots of posters, covers and wallpapers for the movie "Detour"
Detour (1945)
Timing: 1:8 (68 min)
Detour - TMDB rating
7.235/10
342
Detour - Kinopoisk rating
7.064/10
2743
Detour - IMDB rating
7.3/10
22000

Backdrops, wallpaper

Backdrop to the movie "Detour" #229248HD Ready 720p
Backdrop to the movie "Detour" #229242HD Ready 720p
Backdrop to the movie "Detour" #229243HD Ready 720p
Backdrop to the movie "Detour" #229244HD Ready 720p
Backdrop to the movie "Detour" #229245HD Ready 720p
Backdrop to the movie "Detour" #229246HD Ready 720p
Backdrop to the movie "Detour" #229247HD Ready 720p

Posters, covers

Poster to the movie "Detour" #2292495K UHD 3000p
Poster to the movie "Detour" #229250Full HD 1152p
Poster to the movie "Detour" #2292515K UHD 3000p
Poster to the movie "Detour" #2292524K UHD 2325p
Poster to the movie "Detour" #2292535K UHD 3000p
Poster to the movie "Detour" #2292542K 1500p
Poster to the movie "Detour" #2292555K UHD 3000p
Poster to the movie "Detour" #2292562K 1500p
Poster to the movie "Detour" #2292575K UHD 3000p
Poster to the movie "Detour" #2292582K 1500p
Poster to the movie "Detour" #229260Full HD 1200p
Poster to the movie "Detour" #229261HD Ready 932p
Poster to the movie "Detour" #2292625K UHD 3000p
Poster to the movie "Detour" #229259Full HD 1269p
Poster to the movie "Detour" #2292635K UHD 3000p
Poster to the movie "Detour" #2292645K UHD 3000p
Poster to the movie "Detour" #2292655K UHD 3000p

What's left behind the scenes

  • According to later testimonies from Ulmer and Savage, the film was shot in six days. In a 2004 documentary, Ulmer's daughter Arianna shows the title page of the director's script, which contains a note: «June 14, 1945 – June 29. 14 shooting days».
  • Given the low budget, reshoots were out of the question. Ulmer, prioritizing the plot over coherence, printed some hitchhiking scenes from the reversed negative. Thus, while depicting a journey west from New York to Los Angeles, the cars move from right to left, but not in the 'correct' lane; the hitchhiker gets into the car on the driver's side.
  • According to Anne Savage (1921-2008), who played Vera, she and Tom Neal (1914-1972), the actor portraying Al, did not get along on set. Once, he embarrassed her by licking her ear in front of everyone. She responded by slapping him in the face. After that, they only spoke to each other through their characters' lines.
  • The script did not originally include the arrest of Tom Neal's character. He was arrested only at the insistence of censor Joseph Breen (1888-1965), as rules of the period stipulated that films could not depict a criminal escaping deserved punishment, and a scene of the arrest was inserted.
  • In this film, Tom Neal plays a man who accidentally kills two people. Neal himself was later arrested and sentenced to six years in prison for the involuntary manslaughter of his wife, Gail Bennett.
  • According to later testimonies from Ulmer and Savage, the film was shot in six days. In a 2004 documentary, Ulmer’s daughter, Arianna, shows the title page of the director’s script, which has a note: “June 14, 1945 – June 29. 14 shooting days.”
  • Since reshoots were out of the question with such a low budget, Ulmer, who prioritized the overall plot over coherence, printed some hitchhiking scenes from a flipped negative. Thus, while showing a journey west from New York to Los Angeles, the cars move from right to left, but not in their “correct” lane; the hitchhiker also gets into the car on the driver’s side.
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