― Michael, Friday, 8 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)
So I'm not sure if "I told you so" was at all what it seemed like at the time!
(Best-ever Halliwell capsule review, for The Vikings: "Low-grade hokum for the easily pleased...")
― mark s, Friday, 8 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)
― DG, Friday, 8 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)
― Otis Wheeler, Friday, 8 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)
What do I look like? A clown?
― Ally, Friday, 8 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)
It's sincerely the best film ever made, besides Les Enfants. I've seen it 8 TRILLION BILLION times, honest to god.
Les Enfants is clearly the best movie of all time, don't they have a Blockbuster near you? I know they have it in my Blockbuster but I'm on the Upper West Side, home of PONCEY YUPPIE TWAT HEADS (according to Momus), so we would have that. Obviously I fancy myself as Garance, otherwise it wouldn't be my email address.
How sad am I making myself, one email address is a film character I fancy myself as, the other a song that I feel describes me. I AM A STEREOTYPICAL GIRL.
― Michael, Saturday, 9 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)
How could you say that about Ray Liotta, Ally? Just, ewww, don't say that. Ray Liotta? Did you see him in Blow playing Johnny Depp's way old dad? Goodfellas left me totally perplexed. Actually, I think I turned it off with five minutes to go. I'm way Italian, but for one thing, my people come from northern Italy (part of the family's from Austria, even), so they're not exactly gangsters, and for another, I just couldn't watch Goodfellas after five years of the Sopranos. If there's some angle I'm missing, I'll watch it again, but as it was, I couldn't get anything out of it.
― Otis Wheeler, Saturday, 9 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)
For me, the best part of Goodfellas is when they move to the house with the wall that opens up with the entertainment center inside, but the wall looks like a rock. But that's just because whenever we see it, me and Fred and The Cult all go, "Jimmy's house!" because they have this ludicrious friend who buys all this random expensive shit for no reason, like ramote controls to control his remote controls and the internet for his car.
You definitely are not watching Goodfellas properly if you are getting nothing out of it. Just for the scene where they off Joe Pesci alone, for fuck's sake. It's easily the funniest movie ever after Bill & Ted's Excellent Adventure. And I always watch the end credits cos I totally feel that version of My Way, it's the best thing anyone even tangentially related to the Sex Pistols ever did.
― Ally, Saturday, 9 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)
― kevin enas, Sunday, 10 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)
― kevin enas, Wednesday, 13 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)
Not quite as great as 'Raging Bull' though... you fucked my wife?
― Johnathan, Sunday, 17 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)
― Ally, Sunday, 17 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)
I usually find De Niro hilarious, but in 'Raging Bull' he's as scary as hell. And that scene takes the fucking biscuit. Not many people get away with talking to Joe Pesci like that.
'Falling Down'? Better than 'Taxi Driver'? "Lions and tigers and bears, Oh My!" That is some truly scary stuff being pushed out into the intranetterhighway. Serously, wow. Just Scorsese alone prevents that assumption from happening (I won't even go into the whole Deniro/Douglas matter).
'Taxi Driver': earnest portrayal (basically, based on the writer Schrader himself - is why it is earnest) of a loser/loner type in America. Sure, it goes far overboard at the end with the "cool anarchist mohawk" bullshit and the shoot-em-ups and all that jazz, but...it's a Hollywood type of thing. It should've been left to a more earnest ending, fitting to the realistic loner/loser portrayal built-up. In reality, that character (a frayed coward at hear) would have just stayed in his crappy little apartment more as he spent the rest of his time driving the taxi. Nothing less/nothing more than that, basically. Until some other little "hottie" turned his eye, then it would all go round and round again.
'Falling Down': trite media driven drivel set-up to make the Hollywooditis folks (the audience) to stand-up and cheer (in their minds) as they related to the lead character (Douglas) and his (and most others) little everyday taxing trials and tribulations of dealing with foreign 7-11 vendors, etc.
― michael g. breece, Monday, 2 July 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)
― Ally, Monday, 2 July 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)
― Dan Perry, Monday, 2 July 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)
― Nicole, Monday, 2 July 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)
Cybill Shepard was always kinda J-Lo, wasn't she?
― Ally (mlescaut), Sunday, 22 December 2002 03:29 (twenty-two years ago)
― naked as sin (naked as sin), Sunday, 22 December 2002 03:41 (twenty-two years ago)
― Joe (Joe), Sunday, 22 December 2002 03:55 (twenty-two years ago)
― Joe (Joe), Sunday, 22 December 2002 04:10 (twenty-two years ago)
― Ally (mlescaut), Sunday, 22 December 2002 04:54 (twenty-two years ago)
They just showed that 'A Personal Journey with Martin Scorsese Through American Movies' thing on TCM again. Totally absorbing stuff, especially considering half the films are obscure b-pictures no one's ever heard of.
― Justyn Dillingham (Justyn Dillingham), Sunday, 22 December 2002 09:06 (twenty-two years ago)
― Justyn Dillingham (Justyn Dillingham), Sunday, 22 December 2002 09:14 (twenty-two years ago)
― Keith McD (Keith McD), Sunday, 22 December 2002 11:53 (twenty-two years ago)
Well, it means (or at least was supposed to convey) that Travis has not changed at all and that he is going to do something violent again.
― Joe (Joe), Sunday, 22 December 2002 13:57 (twenty-two years ago)
― Vic (Vic), Sunday, 22 December 2002 14:06 (twenty-two years ago)
OK, this is what I thought until I paid a lot of attention to it last night - if you notice, after he does the double take he's suddenly out of Betsy's uptown quiet neighborhood and back on the same street he was driving in at the point that I would think the "dream" segment would start if it was as such. Either there was a time lapse between the first look and the double take or he's "waking up". So now it's annoying me. I mean I'd certainly explain why Travis didn't freaking DIE from the gushing wound in his neck during the shootout.
Note: I don't necessarily agree with the people who think it was a dream.
And I'm curious as to how the ending of Goodfellas is dreamlike. I don't understand that claim - it's pretty straightforward, and kind of pathetic (his monologue), but not dreamlike...
― Ally (mlescaut), Sunday, 22 December 2002 18:49 (twenty-two years ago)
― Sean (Sean), Monday, 23 December 2002 01:53 (twenty-two years ago)
― Keith McD (Keith McD), Monday, 23 December 2002 03:01 (twenty-two years ago)
― Keith McD (Keith McD), Monday, 23 December 2002 03:06 (twenty-two years ago)
Is there a diff is I guess the important question.
― Ally (mlescaut), Monday, 23 December 2002 03:20 (twenty-two years ago)
― Joe (Joe), Monday, 23 December 2002 05:56 (twenty-two years ago)
Taxi Driver is his best film. At least my favorite. I still find new things in it and I've seen it at least twenty times.
― Ex-Tennis Star, Monday, 23 December 2002 06:17 (twenty-two years ago)
It's like people who say they don't care for the architect Rem Koolhaas. I mean, shit, Delirious New York and Taxi Driver are two of my favorite homages to the city.
Cybil Sheperd never looked better. They can never touch her. Notice that Marty is on the steps when she walks by in that one sequence. Later, Marty appears in the cab. Remember that part?
Why the fuck is the storekeeper who Travis saved from the armed robber wearing a Tulane ringer t-shirt?
Would a cabbie like the Wizard know anything about Bertrand Russell?
Look at the 70's fonts and graphics on the trucks on the street.
The seedy streets never looked better on film.
The part at the end, the "double-take" sound loop is beautiful.
So many things about that film. Ex-Tennis Star is absolutely correct in his comment above.
― Cub, Monday, 23 December 2002 06:33 (twenty-two years ago)
This just got a new DVD release (and it topped ILE top movie of the 70s poll). Let's talk some more about the film..
These are the good parts: the first scene with the dispatcher, most solo activity in the apartment or cab with narration, any scene with harvey keitel, the scene with the senator in the cab, botched hold-up, the bickle/secret service agent conversation, some scenes with jodie foster--others are too proto-Dakota Fanning for me to enjoy.
The rest of the film is mediocre. I think the Cybill Shepherd plot is boring, as are the conversations with the other cabbies. The two worst parts of the film are Scorsese's pussy-magnum speech in the cab--what is the point of the scene except to give Scorsese some freaky film time? there's no character or story development; bickle doesn't even speak-- and the awful, bombastic survey of the showdown aftermath at the end of the film (with overblown music), which almost ruins the movie for me.
i don't think the film is crap. it just bugs me to read (as I did in recent reviews for the DVD) that it's "arguably the greatest film of all time" etc. and i don't see how someone could want to watch it 20 times. the script shows its age the most, i think.
― poortheatre, Thursday, 23 August 2007 06:38 (seventeen years ago)
it's "arguably the greatest film of all time" etc. and i don't see how someone could want to watch it 20 times
not that I think it's the greatest film of anything, but what would re-watchability have to do with anything?
― kenan, Thursday, 23 August 2007 06:45 (seventeen years ago)
I don't want to watch Raging Bull over and over, either, because it's a painful movie to watch... but it's supposed to be. If you don't recall reflexively, you weren't paying attention.
― kenan, Thursday, 23 August 2007 06:47 (seventeen years ago)
recoil, not recall
this is way subjective, but some movies have more replay potential if there's elements of density (zodiac!) or humor or mastery or eroticism etc, and Taxi Driver doesn't seem like one of those films to me. of course, i can see how someone else wouldn't want to watch Ninja Scroll 15 times.
― poortheatre, Thursday, 23 August 2007 07:28 (seventeen years ago)
oh. wait. i didn't mean to suggest a connection between "greatest film of all time" and how many times you'd want to watch something. two separate thoughts.
― poortheatre, Thursday, 23 August 2007 07:33 (seventeen years ago)
Great music. I like Peter Boyle in it. A lot. So much so that I watched Raymond once. The other cabbie/Scorsese scenes are, y'know, a quotidien beats kinda thing.
Just saw Harsh Times, which is a Taxi Driver remake with a buddy film thrown in.
― Dr. Superman, Thursday, 23 August 2007 07:40 (seventeen years ago)
my favorite moment of the film comes right after de niro shoots keitel. he walks down the block then just sits on a stoop.
― poortheatre, Thursday, 23 August 2007 07:47 (seventeen years ago)
the point of the scorsese scene is that it gives bickle the idea to go buy a gun.
i like taxi driver more than any of the other "easy riders raging bulls" type uber-macho classics. de niro did a great job deepening the character of travis bickle (as written, he's a pretty two-dimensional character - ); what's really horrifying in the movie isn't the violence, it's how boyish and gleeful he gets about it. the charmer chatting up cybill, the awkward newbie asking advice from peter boyle, the yokel pelting the secret service guy with questions - all inseparable from the lunatic pointing a gun at his reflection.
i also think scorsese did a terrific job giving us a strong sense of everything that's going on outside bickle's self-contained little world. the scene with cybill and albert brooks talking in the campaign office seems superfluous at first, but it's there because it reminds you that THIS is everything travis can't have: an utterly casual and unremarkable conversation with a friend. bickle almost never has a real conversation with anyone; he's either playing the goofball rube or trying to save some woman he's idealized from afar. the talk he has with iris is heartbreaking because it's the only genuine connection he manages to establish in the whole movie - he even jokes around with her; "i AM a narc" - and of course he instantly destroys it by "saving" her.
the movie builds beautifully; there's so many individual scenes that stand out to me. the scene with bickle watching "american bandstand" has always particularly moved me for some reason.
there are ugly currents running through the movie, of course. bickle's racism (indicated in an ongoing series of long, silent shots which indicate he's staring at a black fellow cabbie) is obvious, but never explored. schrader's script contains huge dollops of misogyny, but scorsese was smart enough to make iris the movie's most sympathetic character.
the score, of course, is unforgettable; herrmann at his best.
― J.D., Thursday, 23 August 2007 08:32 (seventeen years ago)
bickle's racism (indicated in an ongoing series of long, silent shots which indicate he's staring at a black fellow cabbie) is obvious, but never explored
I think it's explored plenty, as in his silence and stillness when it's reflected back at him in the Passenger Scorsese scene. (ie, totally disagree w/ poortheatre)
― Dr Morbius, Thursday, 23 August 2007 14:00 (seventeen years ago)
JD absolutely OTM.
― Venga, Thursday, 23 August 2007 14:05 (seventeen years ago)
JD OTM, poortheatere NOTM, and most everything that needs saying's already been said. A damn near perfect film. Scorsese's best, DiNiro's best, Herrman's best. Not to slight the cinematography & editing. Opening w/ cab rolling out of the fog on rain-slick streets, muted trumpets boiling in behind = one of the finest and most mysteriously terrifying shots I've ever seen. I love this movie so much, I want to eat it. As though it were a cat or a small dog.
― Bob Standard, Thursday, 23 August 2007 15:49 (seventeen years ago)
or oatmeal with whiskey
― Gukbe, Thursday, 23 August 2007 16:51 (seventeen years ago)
I've seen Taxi Driver at least 20 times. And it keeps getting funnier every time I see it.
― marmotwolof, Thursday, 23 August 2007 21:04 (seventeen years ago)
I like the remake better (The King of Comedy)
― Dr Morbius, Thursday, 23 August 2007 21:08 (seventeen years ago)
King of Comedy is tops.
― marmotwolof, Thursday, 23 August 2007 21:12 (seventeen years ago)
the scene with cybill and albert brooks talking in the campaign office seems superfluous at first, but it's there because it reminds you that THIS is everything travis can't have: an utterly casual and unremarkable conversation with a friend.
nice!
― poortheatre, Thursday, 23 August 2007 21:14 (seventeen years ago)
Do you think it bothers Jodie Foster that she hasn't changed a bit - face, voice, mannerisms - in 30 years?
― milo z, Saturday, 1 September 2007 04:23 (seventeen years ago)
I think she sleeps okay.
― Alex in SF, Saturday, 1 September 2007 04:23 (seventeen years ago)
At least she's not a botox monster.
― marmotwolof, Saturday, 1 September 2007 05:30 (seventeen years ago)
the recent DVD documentary is amazing with this. paul schrader comes across as a very smart fellow. you almost need to watch the doc to counter-balance all the negativity slung around about the players/ makers in EASY RIDERS, RAGING BULLS.
― piscesx, Monday, 14 September 2009 16:58 (fifteen years ago)
"Falling down" is a lot wittier and heartfelt
!
― velko, Monday, 14 September 2009 17:10 (fifteen years ago)
So ridiculously better than Raging Bull and Goodfellas combined.
― boring movies are the most boring (Eric H.), Monday, 14 September 2009 17:22 (fifteen years ago)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4IumwPicacM
― kind of shrill and very self-righteous (Dr Morbius), Saturday, 8 May 2010 20:57 (fifteen years ago)
Saw this for the 29th or 37th time last night, introduced by Liam Lacey, a daily critic in Toronto. Something I never knew: the whole adrenelin-shot-to-the-heart bit from Pulp Fiction originated with Steven Prince, Easy Andy in Taxi Driver and subject of Scorsese's All-American Boy.
― clemenza, Friday, 15 October 2010 02:02 (fourteen years ago)
Scorsese & Schrader on restoration for BluRay -- Marty on RWF's influence:
It’s way over my head, in that sense. The Fassbinder stuff, I just don’t get.... But the thing about Merchant of Four Seasons was that it had a kind of brutal honesty about the way the camera looked at the characters — at the actors — and not necessarily the melodramatic scenes. And it just made me realize that you could do anything, really. Just anything, as long as you feel honest about it. It’s an honest image. It’s like a police photo — a crime scene photo.
http://www.movieline.com/2011/03/it-was-all-unsaid-martin-scorsese-and-paul-schrader-talk-35-years-of-taxi-driver.php
― Fuck bein' hard, Dr Morbz is complicated (Dr Morbius), Saturday, 12 March 2011 17:21 (fourteen years ago)
http://checkingonmysausages.blogspot.com/2011/01/writing-while-watching-taxi-driver.html
― ℳℴℯ ❤\(◕‿◕✿ (Princess TamTam), Saturday, 12 March 2011 18:32 (fourteen years ago)
I think it's getting a theatrical rerelease too. I see this in the theater any time I can. My favorite part is when DeNiro tells Foster "you're the one that's square, man, you're the square!"
― ℳℴℯ ❤\(◕‿◕✿ (Princess TamTam), Saturday, 12 March 2011 18:36 (fourteen years ago)
Travis Bickle: I should get one of those signs that says "One of these days I'm gonna get organezized". Betsy: You mean organized? Travis Bickle: Organezized. Organezized. It's a joke. O-R-G-A-N-E-Z-I-Z-E-D... Betsy: Oh, you mean organezized. Like those little signs they have in offices that says, "Thimk"?
And then there's the punchline where Travis actually gets the sign and has it up in his apartment.
― Your cousin, Marvin Cobain (C. Grisso/McCain), Saturday, 12 March 2011 18:39 (fourteen years ago)
The scene with Sport & Iris alone in their room--this is taking place in Travis's imagination, right? The obvious giveaway is the record player playing the theme song. The dialog is not what you'd expect a guy like Sport to say to his 12 year old girlfriend, either. It's really the only scene in the whole film that is not from Travis's perspective, and I don't see it in Schrader's script.
― Johnny Hotcox, Tuesday, 30 August 2011 03:39 (thirteen years ago)
hi
― buzza, Tuesday, 30 August 2011 03:43 (thirteen years ago)
definitely not a fantasy, imo -- it parallels the earlier scenes with betsy and albert brooks, which also aren't from travis's perspective.
the sport-iris scene is also one of the very best scenes in the movie, it's like a mini-movie in itself.
― (The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Tuesday, 30 August 2011 03:49 (thirteen years ago)
I don't have any proof beyond an opinion, but I've never even considered the possibility that the Sport/Iris scene isn't for real. Based on what we see of Sport elsewhere, his slimy sweet-talk to Iris seems perfectly in character. I'm guessing you're contrasting his behaviour with the way he roughs her up when she tries to get away earlier, but seeing as he's trying to make sure she doesn't attempt something similar again, I don't see that as being inconsistent. (When Cybill Shepherd and Albert Brooks talk for the first time--Brooks trying to light the match and all that--I wouldn't quite say that's from Travis's perspective. He's parked in his cab outside, true, but we're right inside the office, hearing and seeing them in a way that he can't.)
― clemenza, Tuesday, 30 August 2011 03:53 (thirteen years ago)
Don't most of the Betsy scenes happen just as Travis is walking in or about to walk in and, hence, would be watching from the window? (Interesting theory anyway.)
― Gus Van Sant's Gerry Blank (Eric H.), Tuesday, 30 August 2011 03:53 (thirteen years ago)
I think the second and third time that's true, when he asks her out and again when he and Brooks scuffle, but the first time, I see that scene as being outside of his perspective.
― clemenza, Tuesday, 30 August 2011 03:57 (thirteen years ago)
But yes, it's an interesting theory. I've always partially subscribed to the theory that the final scene, where he picks up Betsy, might be a fantasy of Travis's.
― clemenza, Tuesday, 30 August 2011 03:58 (thirteen years ago)
For the record, I was wrong about the script--it is in there. And yes my point about Travis's perspective was that in the Sport/Iris scene he's completely removed from the action, but the Betsy/Albert Brooks scenes he's nearby. There's definitely some interesting parallels there between those scenes.
Another thing that struck me after not seeing the film for many years is that for all its technical brilliance, some of the sound editing is not very good. The scene outside of the porno theater when Betsy leaves the date has at least two lines of dialogue from Cybill Shepard that are essentially inaudible. And when Albert Brooks is telling the story about the canary and smashes his fist into his hand, it sounds like the Three Stooges. A couple of other minor things. But I think it's all made up for in the shootout scene, which has amazing sound--how often in a film do you hear bullets echo throughout a hallway the way they do here? It really sounds like a true shootout, not some video game.
JD is otm upthread about the "American Bandstand" part. That may be the best scene in the whole thing. It's unbelievably heartbreaking.
― Johnny Hotcox, Tuesday, 30 August 2011 23:46 (thirteen years ago)
Speaking of sound editing, I just pulled out my copy of "Late for the Sky". I never realized that the guitar solo is actually edited in the film! They cut out about 20 seconds of it, and for the better. I take it all back...
― Johnny Hotcox, Wednesday, 31 August 2011 00:04 (thirteen years ago)
"Late for the Sky" in Taxi Driver is one of the most unappreciated great uses of music in any Scorsese film. I don't think it's nearly as well known as the girl group and doo-wop stuff that's all over Mean Streets and Goodfellas--when you think about Taxi Driver, you think about Bernard Herrmann's score. It works so well, though. I've always been intrigued by the empty pair of shoes. Surely Scorsese and Schrader put that in there themselves.
― clemenza, Wednesday, 31 August 2011 00:24 (thirteen years ago)
So you think that Scorsese actually had a special "American Bandstand" clip filmed for the movie? Hmm, I don't know. My hunch is that that song was never even on AB, and that the video clip we see is probably of another song. Didn't they just play charting singles on AB? I'm almost certain that song was not a top 40 hit. Although it would be interesting to hear if anyone has a 45 of that song (if one exists) and see if the guitar edit I noticed above is the same.
― Johnny Hotcox, Wednesday, 31 August 2011 01:04 (thirteen years ago)
The clip is obviously real, and yes, I think they shoe-horned Jackson Browne on top of it--"Late for the Sky" would not have been played on American Bandstand. The thing that I think Scorsese and Schrader snuck into the clip (using whatever non-digital means were available at the time) is the empty pair of shoes, the symbolism of which is too good to be true.
― clemenza, Wednesday, 31 August 2011 04:56 (thirteen years ago)
http://3-ps.googleusercontent.com/h/www.retronaut.co/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/520x426xDe-Niro-520x426.jpg.pagespeed.ic.za5Bb7uVEM.jpg
― ☆★☆彡彡 (ENBB), Thursday, 12 January 2012 20:01 (thirteen years ago)
http://farm4.staticflickr.com/3442/3355915808_59bb9ce5ab.jpg
(I was hoping to find a fake Judd Hirsch license, but no luck.)
― clemenza, Thursday, 12 January 2012 20:12 (thirteen years ago)
Apparently that's a real De Niro license that he got while prepping for the role!
― ☆★☆彡彡 (ENBB), Thursday, 12 January 2012 20:15 (thirteen years ago)
i don't really see how anyone can take the coda of the film (after the bloodbath) as anything _but_ some kind of fantasy. not only is the way its shot thoroughly (and clearly intentionally) dreamlike and disorienting (the most obvious example being the way cybill shepard appears in the rear-view mirror, like a disembodied portrait), but it simply doesn't make any literal sense. (one thing i noted was that the voice-over of iris's "dad" has the same awkward, staccato cadence of deniro reading the fabulist letter to _his_ parents.)
it's interesting that neither schrader nor scorsese really seem to have intended for audiences to identify with the lead character, strictly speaking. but by making much of the film in an expressionist mode, in which we are aligned with deniro (and arguably inside his head-space), there's really an encouragement to do so.
i think part of the point of the scene with scorsese as the taxi fare is actually to break some of that possible identification w/ bickle. what the character played by scorsese says is utterly harrowing/horrifying. bickle's initial reaction seems to be discomfort, but by the end he seems to be identifying with the rant and envisioning something similar. in other words i imagine this was designed by the filmmakers to be a moment where our reactions and those of bickle diverge in a very strong sense. i'm not sure if it has that affect on everyone in the audience though.
― flesh, the devil, and a wolf (wolf) (amateurist), Monday, 11 June 2012 03:22 (twelve years ago)
i kind of see this film as a stunning, virtuoso piece of work that kind of elevates, if not transcends, a really problematic screenplay.
schrader has a way of writing dialogue that is almost revelatory in its awkward detail. but despite that sense of surface authenticity i feel like he often just doesn't _get_ the milieu he's writing about. i feel that way with taxi driver and i feel that way about blue collar.
still think schrader's greatet moment is the first act of rolling thunder.
― flesh, the devil, and a wolf (wolf) (amateurist), Monday, 11 June 2012 03:25 (twelve years ago)
I'd play devil's advocate on that point with the Peter Boyle-De Niro dialogue scene, which sounds pitch-perfect to me. (Unless it was improvised?)
― World Congress of Itch (Dr Morbius), Monday, 11 June 2012 03:41 (twelve years ago)
yeah i like that scene--they are talking past one another completely
― flesh, the devil, and a wolf (wolf) (amateurist), Monday, 11 June 2012 04:38 (twelve years ago)
But isn't that the exact scene that follows the "44 magnum" scene? Whatever "break" may have happened between the audience and Travis in the silhouette scene is probably made up for by his total vulnerability in the Wiz dialogue. Also, Scorcese also gives us other opportunities later on to re-bond with him, especially in that American Bandstand bit.
Part of this movie's power is that the audience's identification with the hero is always ambiguous. We always partly "root" for him, even when he's about to kill a presidential candidate in cold blood.
― Johnny Hotcox, Monday, 11 June 2012 14:11 (twelve years ago)
I really can't post my response to that last bit, surveillance being what it is these days.
― World Congress of Itch (Dr Morbius), Monday, 11 June 2012 14:22 (twelve years ago)
heh
i think i remember reading around the time peter boyle died that his giving advice scene to travis was mostly improvised
― dell (del), Monday, 11 June 2012 14:26 (twelve years ago)
Look, if you're really interested, if you give us your name and address, Morbius, we'll send you all the information on how to apply--how's that?
― clemenza, Monday, 11 June 2012 14:28 (twelve years ago)
K-R-I-N-K-L-E
― World Congress of Itch (Dr Morbius), Monday, 11 June 2012 14:30 (twelve years ago)
That bit was my intro to this movie. My Dad called me into the rec room to watch that scene since Fair Lawn wasn't far from where we lived. I think the next scene he blows away the robber? Anyway, I was hooked. Perhaps I'll relate this fond memory on my Father's Day card.
― Johnny Hotcox, Monday, 11 June 2012 14:47 (twelve years ago)
schrader has a way of writing dialogue that is almost revelatory in its awkward detail. but despite that sense of surface authenticity i feel like he often just doesn't _get_ the milieu he's writing about.
what milieu does he not get in taxi driver? the cabstand? the campaign office? 70s new york in toto? i guess i dont know enough to challenge the authenticity of it, but schrader at his best (=taxi driver) is so *psychologically* authentic that the rest doesnt matter to me
― Hamburger Hitler (Hungry4Ass), Thursday, 14 June 2012 14:08 (twelve years ago)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UcENNk-JLNU
― Pangborn to be Wilde (Dr Morbius), Friday, 15 June 2012 12:02 (twelve years ago)
amazing
― brony ver (s1ocki), Friday, 15 June 2012 16:36 (twelve years ago)
somehow i am picturing burt lancaster as travis bickle
― flesh, the devil, and a wolf (wolf) (amateurist), Saturday, 16 June 2012 08:41 (twelve years ago)
alas YT doesn't have Joe Flaherty's as Gregory Peck
― Pangborn to be Wilde (Dr Morbius), Saturday, 16 June 2012 08:47 (twelve years ago)
You know, I had absolutely no idea that Arthur Bremer had been released from prison a couple of years ago; I was checking to see if he was even still alive, which is how I found out. I have to believe there's been no end to people trying to contact him about a documentary.
― clemenza, Sunday, 5 August 2012 00:21 (twelve years ago)
Every time I want out, they pull me back in.
http://phildellio.tripod.com/schrader.jpg
(Screening + Q&A.)
― clemenza, Monday, 15 April 2013 12:19 (twelve years ago)
sweet
― turds (Hungry4Ass), Monday, 15 April 2013 12:21 (twelve years ago)
Taxi Driv
― zero dark (s1ocki), Monday, 15 April 2013 13:27 (twelve years ago)
It's been quite a while since I last saw this, but as I look back at it what strikes me today is that its brilliance was in taking an excellent basic stucture, with a strong plot and characters, and then adding a dash of cartoonish overstatement to every single aspect of it, so that one could feel like it was both middlebrow and dramatic as, let's say Ghandi, while at the same time getting plenty of lowbrow thrills and yucks, like for example Dumb and Dumber.
― Aimless, Monday, 15 April 2013 18:11 (twelve years ago)
ghandi meets dumb & dumber... yeah that sounds apt
― turds (Hungry4Ass), Monday, 15 April 2013 18:22 (twelve years ago)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MeTAux3_VwI
― christmas candy bar (al leong), Monday, 15 April 2013 18:24 (twelve years ago)
gentlemen, I present you with... turds
― Aimless, Monday, 15 April 2013 18:26 (twelve years ago)
u present your posts? bazinga!!!!
― turds (Hungry4Ass), Monday, 15 April 2013 18:29 (twelve years ago)
― turds (Hungry4Ass), Monday, April 15, 2013 2:22 PM (25 minutes ago) Bookmark
dying
― zero dark (s1ocki), Monday, 15 April 2013 18:47 (twelve years ago)
cartoonish, overstated, middlebrow, 'yucks and thrills' -- this is a good list of words that do not apply to taxi driver
― (The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Monday, 15 April 2013 18:58 (twelve years ago)
http://nice-cool-pics.com/data/media/22/new_york_taxi__2004__queen_latifah__jimmy_fallon.jpg
― christmas candy bar (al leong), Monday, 15 April 2013 22:48 (twelve years ago)
i agree with aimless here: all those words apply to taxi driver, it is complete, shameless pulp, that doesn't miss an opportunity to luxuriate in its gritty subject matter, sometimes for "yucks and thrills". it's interesting though, because the film manages to both be suprarealistic -- almost frank miller territory -- and at the same time effectively thematize post-vietnam urban alienation. it's not a restrained movie by any means but it still manages to feel honest, not exploitative. that's why it's so great.
i don't like any other films by scorcese though.
― Pat Finn, Tuesday, 16 April 2013 02:29 (twelve years ago)
http://scrapetv.com/News/News%20Pages/Business/images-6/dc-cab.jpg
― buzza, Tuesday, 16 April 2013 02:39 (twelve years ago)
Schrader was excellent last night. Very generous with his time--spoke and answered questions for around an hour after the film. I thought he might get a little impatient with Taxi Driver questions ("Where would Travis be today?")--that was the film that was showing, but he was really there to promote his new one--but no, he answered them all at length. Went into a long digression on how upside down everything is today: "We don't know what a movie is anymore." (Meaning that the nature of the industry has changed drastically, not that the audience is stupid. His upcoming film cost him, the screenwriter, and another backer $90,000 + some Kickstarter money. Yes, $90,000.) Got my DVD of Affliction and reprint Taxi Driver poster signed. I wanted to post a photo, but my friend didn't have her camera.
― clemenza, Monday, 22 April 2013 18:20 (twelve years ago)
http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/512CW9H4H9L.jpg
"Jodie Foster is Delightful"
― johnny crunch, Saturday, 30 May 2015 20:56 (nine years ago)
opened 40 years ago
http://www.bfi.org.uk/news-opinion/news-bfi/features/taxi-driver-40th-anniversary-five-films-influenced-scorseses
― we can be heroes just for about 3.6 seconds (Dr Morbius), Monday, 8 February 2016 22:28 (nine years ago)
This is number 2 on my list of "great films" that I feel a little meh about, after Citizen Kane.
― on entre O.K. on sort K.O. (man alive), Monday, 8 February 2016 22:29 (nine years ago)
lol sorry I'm fronting I don't have a list
― on entre O.K. on sort K.O. (man alive), Monday, 8 February 2016 22:30 (nine years ago)
but probably the Big Sleep would be #3 and Chinatown #4, if I did.
really, fascinating
― (The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Monday, 8 February 2016 23:37 (nine years ago)
apple pie and *cheese* WTF. vom.
― piscesx, Tuesday, 9 February 2016 04:33 (nine years ago)
secretly down with #3 & #4, hysterically furious at #1 & #2
― bloat laureate (schlump), Tuesday, 9 February 2016 06:38 (nine years ago)
i'm going to stop reviving these for my own good
― we can be heroes just for about 3.6 seconds (Dr Morbius), Tuesday, 9 February 2016 07:01 (nine years ago)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ihHw3de86xs
― karla jay vespers, Tuesday, 9 February 2016 07:06 (nine years ago)
The maxim never look at comments on YouTube goes 100-fold for this movie's clips.
― Anne of the Thousand Gays (Eric H.), Monday, 31 July 2017 20:28 (seven years ago)
Haven't watched the film in a few years, but thought I'd give Geoffrey Macnab's The Making of Taxi Driver a try. Not great by any means--primarily looking for interesting anecdotes, anyway, not analysis. Three I didn't know:
Foster's character is based on Garth Avery, who was hired as a consultant. She has a cameo, too--when Travis almost runs over Iris, Avery is the friend who pulls Iris away.
Keitel based his big monologue with Iris on...Barry White!
The make-up artist, Dick Smith (who did makeup for Hoffman in Little Big Man, Brando in The Godfather, and Blair/Von Sydow in The Exorcist), was distantly related to Ralph Waldo Emerson.
― clemenza, Sunday, 25 March 2018 20:30 (seven years ago)
Another one: Scorsese's role (44 Magnum and all that) was supposed to have been played by George Memmoli, Joey Clams in Mean Streets. Memmoli didn't show up the day his scene was supposed to have been shot.
"You know who lives there? A nook lives there."
― clemenza, Tuesday, 27 March 2018 13:18 (seven years ago)
"mook"
(I should only post from a desktop...)
― clemenza, Tuesday, 27 March 2018 13:19 (seven years ago)
Love the story that De Niro got the inspiration for the "You talkin' to me?" line from Bruce Springsteen, who used to say it as part of his between-song schtick.
― the word dog doesn't bark (anagram), Tuesday, 27 March 2018 13:56 (seven years ago)
I saw an episode of The Twilight Zone from 1960 the other day that features a shifty guy saying, "you talkin' to me?" twice, into a mirror no less, so I'd say that's a possible unconscious inspiration. The ep is called "Nervous Man in a Four Dollar Room"... A+ title
― Josefa, Tuesday, 27 March 2018 14:48 (seven years ago)
I figured Sometime Sweet Susan--Travis's inspired movie-date idea--would be famous enough because of Taxi Driver that getting hold of it via Amazon or YouTube would be easy. Not so.
― clemenza, Tuesday, 27 March 2018 20:14 (seven years ago)
Fun fact: This, the Lyric Theatre, is where Travis Bickle took Betsy to see the porno. Not much has changed pic.twitter.com/XqAYBC9UZn— Matt Prigge (@mattprigge) November 7, 2019
― a Mets fan who gave up on everything in the mid '80s (Dr Morbius), Thursday, 7 November 2019 21:39 (five years ago)
rewatched it last night in the most recent (i think??) blu-ray release (40th anniversary restoration). looks great, the colors are just beautiful, and that coupled the graininess of the film and the absolute griminess of the atmosphere and Travis' disgusted/dreamy narration just really make this one of the most tactile viewing experiences of any movie. i feel like saying more about it but i tend to think of it as such a complete and immersive experience that it's difficult to pin down certain things thematically and separate them out from the whole.
ok i will say that Travis seems inconsistent but in ways that make complete sense to me, it being the journey of someone who is losing his mind. And everything that happens to him sets him down on his path. Also the film spends a lot of time making sure that while he's a character to have some sympathy for, we see that Travis is never wronged or misunderstood. The other characters react to him in ways that are entirely appropriate, bc he's a creepy fuckin guy. obv of course Scorsese/Schrader/De Niro really nailed him, he's such a great character.
― omar little, Tuesday, 28 January 2020 19:27 (five years ago)
Watched last night for the first time in many years, showed it to my 18-year-old son. Movie still packs a wallop. It actually felt more timely now than any of the previous times I've seen it, Travis feels like such an 8chan incel precursor/prototype. And all of the things that are supposed to be shocking and uncomfortable (the vicious racism, child prostitution, gun fetishism) only feel more unsettling now. (Also it sure is beautiful for an ugly movie.)
― a man often referred to in the news media as the Duke of Saxony (tipsy mothra), Sunday, 11 September 2022 17:17 (two years ago)
At the end, my somewhat blown-away son asked, "What was the moral of that?" I was hard-pressed to come up with a good answer.
Don't drive a taxi!
― Halfway there but for you, Sunday, 11 September 2022 17:20 (two years ago)
Yeah. Don't drive a taxi at night. Make some friends. Porn films aren't good for 1st dates. Also I guess, if you're going to go on a shooting spree, pimps are better targets than presidential candidates.
― a man often referred to in the news media as the Duke of Saxony (tipsy mothra), Sunday, 11 September 2022 17:24 (two years ago)
I need to watch this again. I just read that the first 15 minutes are based on Astral Weeks and can't think what they are
― Stevolende, Sunday, 11 September 2022 19:16 (two years ago)
First 15 minutes are mostly him driving the cab and ruminating darkly on the sickness of the city. Not sure how that connects to Astral Weeks, but maybe somehow in Scorsese's head.
― a man often referred to in the news media as the Duke of Saxony (tipsy mothra), Sunday, 11 September 2022 19:22 (two years ago)
Ah apparently it was "Madame George" in particular:
Down on Cyprus Avenue,With a childlike vision leaping into view,Clicking, clacking of the high heeled shoe,Ford & Fitzroy, Madame GeorgeMarching with the soldier boy behind;He’s much older with hat on drinking wine,And that smell of sweet perfume comes drifting throughThe cool night air like Shalimar;And outside they’re making all the stops;The kids out in the street collecting bottle-tops,Gone for cigarettes and matches in the shops.
― a man often referred to in the news media as the Duke of Saxony (tipsy mothra), Sunday, 11 September 2022 19:23 (two years ago)
i read this in shawn levy's bio of de niro:
The famous words were, apparently, stolen from Bruce Springsteen, who was about to burst into superstardomwith his forthcoming album Born to Run, the release of which was preceded by a series of shows at the Bottom Line nightclub in Greenwich Village that De Niro had attended. Ever the master showman, Springsteen would do a bit in which he pretended not to realize that the audience's hoots of "Bruuuuuuce" were for him. "You talkin' to me?" he would ask in mock humility. De Niro held on to that phrase and turned it into one of the most famous lines in all of American movies.
found it interesting cuz just a few weeks ago watching the howard stern springsteen hbo interview i noticed how much springsteen now reminds me of de niro esp when he laughs/smiles
― johnny crunch, Monday, 26 December 2022 19:35 (two years ago)
It's been probably 30 years since I've seen this film. Is it ever explicitly stated that Bickle is a Vietnam vet? I remember it as being unstated but somehow understood.
― immodesty blaise (jimbeaux), Monday, 26 December 2022 19:41 (two years ago)
In the scene w/him applying for the taxi gig he refers to being in the marines and getting an honorable discharge in 1973, which kinda softens the hard edge of the dude interviewing him.
“I was in the Marines, too.”
― omar little, Monday, 26 December 2022 19:53 (two years ago)
Agree on all the incel comparisons though also what makes everything hit harder is it doesn’t feel like the laundry list of grievances a tedious angry white guy (see: Falling Down) but it feels like a troubled man who’s just saturated in all of this shit and has been for a long, long time. What makes it hit is the character is actually vv disturbed and not even angry at all, he’s quiet and he’s not even able to express what he’s feeling. He just acts on the feelings.
― omar little, Monday, 26 December 2022 19:57 (two years ago)
He’s expressive in ways that are just generally referencing his emotions, his targets shift because he’s not even focused on anyone in particular as much as just hazily feeling these large things. I think it’s a really rich and telling portrait of a guy who is hard to pin down.
― omar little, Monday, 26 December 2022 19:59 (two years ago)
To me, the film is less a character study than an attempt to capture the despair and decay of the era. Bickle, who is mentally unstable, returns from the fiasco of the Vietnam war to a city in mid collapse. In his confused state, he somehow hits on the idea of assassinating a presidential candidate as a way to solve the problem, before his self-immolation in an attempt to rescue Foster's character.
― immodesty blaise (jimbeaux), Monday, 26 December 2022 21:01 (two years ago)
xp His bafflement at his date's reaction to the porn film is kind of heartbreaking.
― immodesty blaise (jimbeaux), Monday, 26 December 2022 21:05 (two years ago)
For what it's worth, Tarantino, in his book, disputes that Travis was ever actually a vet--thinks it's another of his fantasies, and that he bought his jacket at a surplus store.
After his chapter on Taxi Driver, the next chapter is "What if De Palma had directed Taxi Driver?" (It's well known that he was the first person the script was offered to.) Not nearly as interesting as the title promises.
― clemenza, Monday, 26 December 2022 22:07 (two years ago)
I revere De Palma well above Scorsese and Friedkin, but I'm glad he didn't get either Taxi Driver or Cruising.
― عباس کیارستمی (Eric H.), Monday, 26 December 2022 22:14 (two years ago)
There was one studio request that Scorsese acceded to (willingly--sounds like he was uncomfortable with the script as written too) that Tarantino believes De Palma wouldn't have: in Schrader's original script, every single person Travis kills is African American, including Sport.
― clemenza, Monday, 26 December 2022 22:18 (two years ago)
https://snakkle.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/07/taxi-GC.jpg
― The field divisions are fastened with felicitations. (Deflatormouse), Tuesday, 27 December 2022 01:05 (two years ago)
I think, as related by Tarantino, De Palma's reasoning was that Scorsese let Travis off the hook somewhat by softening his racism.
― clemenza, Tuesday, 27 December 2022 02:16 (two years ago)
i’ve always been a fan of this movie, lately i’ve decided my favorite part is his self help monologue
June twenty-ninth. I gotta get in shape. Too much sitting has ruined my body. Too much abuse has gone on for too long. From now on there will be 50 pushups each morning, 50 pullups. There will be no more pills, no more bad food, no more destroyers of my body. From now on will be total organization. Every muscle must be tight
“every muscle must be tight” always cracks me up
― the late great, Tuesday, 27 December 2022 02:34 (two years ago)
My take is that Travis isn’t really let off the hook, as his racism is there and clearly simmering, but it’s just part of his larger nebulous anger, aimed at whoever crosses his path in the wrong way at the wrong time.
His exercise routine sounds like regurgitated Jordan Peterson advice.
― omar little, Tuesday, 27 December 2022 02:39 (two years ago)
Scorsese made the right call; the racism is there and plain as day for those who have working eyes, but it's not the text, and ergo won't be easily either affirmed or rejected, depending on the audience member's own personal biases
― عباس کیارستمی (Eric H.), Tuesday, 27 December 2022 02:52 (two years ago)
The other factor, of course, is that making Sport white allowed him to cast Keitel. The racism is definitely there and can't be missed, but it seems to have been much harsher in Schrader's original script.
― clemenza, Tuesday, 27 December 2022 04:16 (two years ago)
Does anyone else feel that the narration doesn't feel credible coming from the character we see on the screen? I think Robert Kolker saw that as part of an intentional fragmentation of Bickle's self; to me, it always felt like the narration came from a conception (Schrader's) that was a lot closer to Bresson's country priest than what Scorsese and DeNiro were creating.
― Halfway there but for you, Wednesday, 28 December 2022 17:59 (two years ago)
I had the impression that Bickle had maybe read a bunch of pulp adventure novels while he was in Vietnam, and was regurgitating them. The kind of adventure novels where the author details all of the weapons, as per this series from the early 1980s: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Survivalist_(novel_series)
The kind of novels where the US government is evil and the hero is a massive racist who fetishises the idea of Native Americans as proud warrior savages.
Taxi Driver is one of those really good films I have seen once and have no desire to see again. I went into it dimly aware that it was some kind of classic cop/gangster film from the 1970s, and I remember having much the same reaction as the chap above who is often referred to as the Duke of Saxony. e.g. it wasn't what I expected from a Martin Scorsese film starring Robert De Niro.
I was expecting something like the lines Harry Enfield's Badfellas but with a taxi. But it's genuinely grim and uncomfortable. Bickle is a really unusual character. He has the same kind of victim complex as the people who idolised Rambo in the 1980s. I'm thinking specifically of Michael Ryan. I was confused by the ending as well. Like a lot of people. It might work if his lawyer had been able to persuade the jury that Bickle had acted in self-defence, but that would have been a heck of a stretch.
On the other hand I can imagine why Bickle turned out the way he did. At the same time the film could easily have been a vigilante fantasy in which our hero snaps and dispenses justice after being wronged for ninety minutes, but it doesn't do that. I remember reading somewhere that taxi drivers were still killed in large numbers in New York right up until the 1990s. e.g. this story here:https://www.nytimes.com/1992/09/24/nyregion/gypsy-cabs-a-hard-chancy-life-on-the-side-streets-of-new-york.html
"Thirteen years after his hopeful arrival, Mr. Amara's life ended at the wheel of his cab, about five blocks from his home. He died last month face-down, a single .22-caliber bullet in his chest, on the hard streets from which he had tried to wrest a living.
He became another grim statistic as assaults and slayings of gypsy- and livery-cab drivers have become common in New York City. There have been 26 livery- and gypsy-cab drivers slain so far this year, compared with 30 in 1991, 32 in 1990 and 28 in 1989, according to the city's Taxi and Limousine Commission."
And presumably dozens more were shot in the arms and not killed. The thought of Friends coexisting with taxi drivers being killed by the dozen feels wrong somehow.
― Ashley Pomeroy, Wednesday, 28 December 2022 22:23 (two years ago)
I think the narration is a Travis fantasy of how he’s disciplined and is a truth teller and is brave and also shows his somewhat dangerous idealization of women, pedastaling them up to a height they can’t possibly fulfill when he interacts with them. It’s childlike fantasy.
The victim complex is interesting since he is charming and good looking enough to a point where he can get a date with Betsy by simply working up some bravado and intriguing her, but the details and nuances of how to get beyond that elude him, and he’s totally lost. And when Betsy correctly flees, it’s due to his own lack of understanding, his own sabotaging the situation. What makes it sad is that he’s been set adrift in life at some point, unprepared to handle adult relationships and anything other than menial gigs. It’s maybe no mistake that the person he connects with most easily is Iris; he’s stuck in adolescence.
The irony of the ending is that Travis just happened to target some truly despicable characters who could easily be written off by society, and this ending was only possible bc he failed at killing a political candidate. It had a bit to do with who they were and what they did, but if he’d walked into that campaign office at the same point in his downfall he might’ve shot up that place instead of a pimp hostel.
What continues to be amazing to me about this film is that it’s genuinely beautiful, the music and gauzy colors at night and methodical pace really cast a spell.
― omar little, Wednesday, 28 December 2022 23:26 (two years ago)
I’d say the first time I saw the film I appreciated it but when I saw a 20th anniversary screening in NYC (good audience to see it with) it really hit home. And its continued to do that moreso over time, as I mentioned upthread the most recent blu-ray looks amazing and I understand that character a lot more.
― omar little, Wednesday, 28 December 2022 23:28 (two years ago)
― omar little, Wednesday, December 28, 2022
yes!
― Dan S, Wednesday, 28 December 2022 23:36 (two years ago)
Great posts.
― Malevolent Arugula (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 28 December 2022 23:44 (two years ago)
The genius of the film is how it’s pitched for maximum dissonance, gorgeous visuals and score, charismatic actors and dialogue, telling a story which is fucked up and psychotic as if it were a beautiful tragedy.
― assert (matttkkkk), Wednesday, 28 December 2022 23:49 (two years ago)
The beauty of the movie is something that is almost astonishing to behold after years of it having been misunderstood and represented in media incorrectly. I think the emptiness of something like Joker which aspires to that supposed scuzzy Taxi Driver-via-King of Comedy Scorsese vibe is that Joker is an ugly film making empty gestures by depicting this washed out dirty setting and Scorsese makes a beautiful poetic kind of film out of it. Joker had a “dorm room poster of Travis holding a .357 magnum in Taxi Driver/I saw the movie once” understanding of its inspirational material.
― omar little, Thursday, 29 December 2022 21:47 (two years ago)
I was most struck by its visual beauty when I saw what was obviously a restored print some time in the '90s or maybe early '00s. I'd been seeing deteriorating rep-theatre prints for a couple of decades before that.
― clemenza, Thursday, 29 December 2022 23:50 (two years ago)
(I did like the way Joker played off against Taxi Driver and King of Comedy, though.)
― clemenza, Thursday, 29 December 2022 23:52 (two years ago)
I mean there are worse ways that film could have turned out, it wasn’t anything I found really worthwhile but better that than Jared Leto’s joker interpretation being made into a solo vehicle.
― omar little, Friday, 30 December 2022 01:37 (two years ago)
Released Feb. 9, 1976.
https://i.postimg.cc/xTwWR7wj/betsy.jpg
― clemenza, Sunday, 9 February 2025 16:40 (three months ago)