Detour Comments

  • Amparo 2023-07-02 11:52:30

    3.5. Very streamlined. Starting from the monologue of the male protagonist, this absurd road trip is expounded, and it is associated with "Double Indemnity". The heroine's temperament is still very suitable for film noir, but it is a pity that there are too few...

  • Christina 2023-06-27 20:55:46

    It's so miserable that the male protagonist annoys this chattering female...

  • Lydia 2023-06-22 06:04:28

    7.3 Powerless to be played with by fate, innocently involved in crime, but due to the lack of portrayal of the ugliness of human nature - none of the characters in it can reflect this, making this film seem more like it wants to emphasize the fate brought by fate. It's dark humor rather than being a noir, so it's more appropriate to call it an anti-noir...

  • Emery 2023-06-19 16:23:35

    This ending is...

  • Murray 2023-06-18 22:52:59

    1. 67 minutes, you can't guess the direction of the story at all, it feels like we are the little puppets in the hands of God, at the mercy of...

  • Clovis 2023-06-06 20:10:18

    Recommended by "The Great Movie", this temperament is really unforgettable, this may be the rotten...

  • Alec 2023-05-31 13:41:18

    A road-themed film with black connotations, full of teasing about fate. The storyline is bizarrely reversed, the narrative rhythm is undulating, and the male and female counterparts perform...

  • Ned 2023-05-24 20:15:52

    Bad guys in crime movies know they're bad, and hope so, while main characters in film noir think they're good people who just get sucked in by life. The protagonist, Al, complains to us that no matter which side you turn, fate cares about sticking out a foot and tripping you...

  • Karelle 2023-05-21 08:52:29

    Very low-budget shot. The protagonist's monologue runs through almost the entire...

  • Kyleigh 2023-05-12 19:49:14

    Since black fate has caught you, it doesn't matter which way you...

Extended Reading

Detour quotes

  • Al Roberts: That's life. Whichever way you turn, Fate sticks out a foot to trip you.

  • Al Roberts: Yes. Fate, or some mysterious force, can put the finger on you or me for no good reason at all.