![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgAu9mSAYZiHeoI1rqP7BeWFim6fYfkZn07HAsM_jjygFrlcm-8x-m9VEgIwwrWBWC8LDqlmH1wY9BfKYqjgvswxVFZ7jMactVcLSCtOlLONvUYuTyI-XEPABFqMMzURJnauXxqrivbTkk/s320/Detour_05b_Still_FaceOff2_CROP_17x14smx.jpg)
"As Roberts’s doleful narration drones on, the camera moves backward behind his eerily white coffee cup that now appears overlarge and surreally animate . . . then forward, past, and behind him to another circular object, the spinning record on the jukebox, whose love song triggers his tortured memory of happier times . . . which, in turn, are visualized through a form-match dissolve to the circular white surface of a base drum in the nightclub where Roberts, in flashback, accompanies sweet Sue. Roberts’s voice-over underscores his limbo state, as well as the innocent fugitive’s lament":
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhQB1bC4NWv1Ox_WVF5cUKxRXgsfiOIAOhPxoltioCi5EKvSFBZg8PxnL-ewwRim4PYIukT6ZcC5DD71ZxRMVjNj30T7DsyWg2B2mUQi-Jem1vEr9SSib2v559i6161ewwLtKtd7TTzSjI/s320/MV5BMTQxMzA0ODk4OV5BMl5BanBnXkFtZTcwOTkwMzQyMQ%2540%2540._V1._SX330_SY475_.jpg)
-"Driven to Darkness: Jewish Emigre Directors and the Rise of Film Noir" by Vincent Brook (2009)
Also please read again Performances imitating real feelings.
New York nightclub pianist Al Roberts decides to hitchhike to Hollywood to see his girl, Sue. When the sleazy gambler he's riding with dies en route, he impulsively takes the man's identity to hide from the police. A mysterious woman blackmails him and we watch his accidental descent into a life of crime. Despite a miniscule budget, this powerful and seedy drama was one of the most profitable films ever made.