Posted by David Kalat on March 10,
2012
Once upon a time there was
a motion picture called Detour (1945). It was a small, wiry thing,
gristle and bone. It would have been the runt of any litter, except for the sad
fact that it came from a litter of runts, movies made for pocket change and
thrust out into the world without support, left to fend for themselves in a
harsh and competitive environment.
What Detour lacked
in polish and graces it made up for with a steely constitution. It was made of
stern stuff, this angry little poem written in the language of failure and
defeat. Its flickering frames contain a story of an aspiring artist whose
talent would seem to merit one kind of fate, glorious and celebratory, but
whose life is shuttled down a cruel detour to a very different destination. He
begins his adventure dreaming of a new life in a sunnier world, and finishes up
lost and lonely, an exile.
The grubby little picture
flailed its way across movie screens in 1945 with no greater or lesser
prominence than any of its impoverished brethren. It was a B-movie, and such
things have no shelf life. Detour, however, did. More than a
half-century later, film critics and fans were still falling over themselves to
shower it with accolades. In movie parlance, Detour had “legs.”
It was fashioned by a man
named Edgar G. Ulmer, who like some Jewish mystic of myth had a habit of pulling
clay from the ground and giving it his special imprint such that it could come
to eternal life, a Golem. Detour was not Ulmer’s only bid to cinema
immortality, but it was his most distinctive and memorable. His own life had
been touched by such detours: an artist of no small ability whose destiny was
redirected, stunted, misfired. For the pointy-heads who took up Detour
as their cause-celebre, the film and its maker were a recursive Moebius strip,
art and artist endlessly reflected in one another.
Ulmer has been called many
things—King of the B’s is a common title. But the nickname says more about his
circumstances than his role within them. Look past the fact that he made
low-budget programmers, look only at the films themselves, and we can see he
was heir to the grand traditions of German Expressionism, and a direct
precursor and inspiration to the avatars of the French New Wave. That he worked
in American genre pictures, mercenary as mercenary gets, makes his legacy that
much more important: here was living proof that the world of European high-art
cinema and American commercial moviemaking were not mutually exclusive.
Or so film historical
conventional wisdom would have you believe. Real life is never so tidy.
for the rest go here:
http://moviemorlocks.com/2012/03/10/detours-detour/
for the rest go here:
http://moviemorlocks.com/2012/03/10/detours-detour/
1 comment:
Thanks Ed. Great post and great article. I never forgot this movie after seeing it on TV many years ago.
Watched it again recently and thought it was even stranger.
TWB
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