Amy Post is a $20-a-trick hooker in Mobile, Alabama. One night she entertains Elmore Pratt, an ex-boxer who has just been fired from his job at a car wash. He cannot pay her for services rendered.
Pratt punches a plainclothes police officer. He and Amy drive away together, intending to head for California, bickering along the way.
Production
Field and Jones disliked one another intensely during filming.[3] Ritt said that he regretted not being able to make this film work, blaming its failure on both the script and the stars' inability to get along.
Reception
In his March 13, 1981 review, The New York Times critic Vincent Canby wrote that there "seems to be a real rapport" between the two actors. Canby described the film as "extremely appealing and occasionally gutsy and very funny."[4] Other reviewers were less kind. Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times considered the movie formulaic and "heavily laden with schtick", giving the film two stars on a scale of four, although he did comment that Field "gives a performance that cannot be faulted."[5] He considered Back Roads a "less-than-successful" effort by director Ritt.[6]