Right its blagging time on this blog, as I'm always keen to look at some of my reviews I posted in my overstuffed tennis blog, back when I incorporated everything into it, but now its time to make room for another review from it, and this time its the one on Taxi Driver. So let's have a look at it then....
The film starts with the film's central
character, Travis Bickle (De Niro) taking a job as a taxi driver so he
work long hours to help deal with his insomnia. Travis spends his
nights alone, and usually frequents Porno movie theatres to try and help
him sleep (as you do!). Whilst driving the streets he spots a
beautiful young woman, Betsy (Cybil Shepherd) who does voluntary work
for the Presidential candidate Senator Charles Pallantine (Leonard
Harris). Travis soon goes to the office where Betsy works and asks her
out, and Betsy is initially and accepts, and they go out for lunch.
However on their second date, Travis unwittingly decides to take Besty
to see a dirty movie at the Porno theatres, as those are the only films
that he knows of, which sickens Besty who walks out of the movie and
goes home alone. A few days after Travis repeatedly tries to contact
Besty to no avail, he confronts her at the office, where berates her and
says "you're in a hell! And you're gonna die in the hell like the rest
of them!", before being lead out by Betsy's co-worker, Tom (Albert
Brooks).
Now feeling more and more frustrated by his
lack of direction and by the corruption and decadence he sees daily on
the streets of New York with all the pimps, junkies, whores and
low-lifes, Travis decides to make changes in life, through strict daily
exercise. Travis also buys several guns from a travelling salesman,
Andy (Steve Prince) with intent on defending himself from the scum on
the streets. Travis also encounters a couple of indicents that have an
effect on him, the first being where he shoots a robber at a local
convenience store, who the store owner takes responsibility for. The
second is a young girl who Travis has a fare one night, who wants to get
out of the streets, but it turns she is a prostitute, and her pimp,
Sport (Harvey Keitel) comes along and pulls her out of the cab. Later
one night, Travis nearly runs her car into her and stops just in time,
he stares after her and drives off. The next day, Travis goes to the
girl (Jodie Foster) looking for "action", and he speaks to Sport, the
pimp, who mocks Travis for his unusual quiet manner, and winds him up
for looking like a cop, but tells him the girl is only 12 years old, but
she will do all sorts for you "but no rough stuff". Travis takes the
girl to a room, but Travis isn't interested in sex, he wants to try and
save her from Sport and from her sleazy life, the girl, who reveals her
name to be Iris, is initially resistant to Travis's offer but she
appreciates what he is trying to do for her, so they agree to meet again
the next day for breakfast. Next day when they meet for breakfast,
Travis becomes more insistent that he save Iris from her sleazy life,
calling Sport a killer and that he is a real low-life. Travis then
leaves her some money in an envelope for her to travel back home to her
parents, and a note that says by the time she reads it he will be
dead.
At this point Travis's paranoia and contempt
for the city's lowlife inhabitants reaches its limits, as he then shaves
his head into a mowhawk hairdo, and attends a rally for Charles
Pallantine, intent on assassinating him, but before he can get the
chance, secret agents spot him, and he quickly flees from the scene.
Travis then turns his attention to go after Sport, in his mission to try
and rescue Iris from her sleazy employer and the life that she has been
thrown into. And this is where the film culminates in a very bloody
climax.
Taxi Driver is without a doubt one of the best
modern films in American cinema, and even 36 years on, its impact is
still as relevant now as it was then. Travis Bickle is almost seen to
be like the lone gunman figure, almost like a Charles Wittman, who
suddenly snapped and went on a killing spree, except on a lower level.
But Travis at the same time also sees just how sick and depraved the
city has become, and he reasserts that to Pallantine in the scene where
he drives the Senator in his cab and says that the city is like "an open
sewer". And Travis in a strange way is almost like a moral avenger, as
he clearly is a moralistic guy, as he wants to uphold the American
dream, a better way of life, and has nothing but contempt for the
elements that surround him. But at the same time Travis is as Besty
also says "a walking contradiction", on one hand he wants to see Iris to
leave her sleazy street life and go back home, but one the other he
spends his nights watching Porno films in movie theatres. You also get
that Travis is clearly a racist character as well, as he even gives his
fellow cabbie, Charlie T, a look of contempt, as well as the pimps he
sees on the streets, but again it doesn't make any difference to him who
he takes as a fare in his taxi. Overall Travis is a rather complex
character and while his morals appear clear, there is a great deal of
conflicting emotions going on in his head as well.
On
the performance side of things, Robert De Niro, undoubtedly gives one
of his best performances here as the lonely insomniacal Travis Bickle,
and he has so many memorable scenes and moments, as well as his infamous
dialogue that he gives to himself in the mirror "you talking to me????
you talking to me??". The scene itself was naturally an improvisation
that De Niro developed as part of his character, and it remains a scene
that sticks in your mind.
The other performances are
also similarly great, Cybil Shepherd is really good as the cool headed
Betsy, who you get is a girl who wants to be wooed, and while she is
amused by her work colleague Tom, she is more intruiged by Travis, until
he blows his chances by taking her to the naughty film. Peter Boyle is
also great as the veteran cabbie, Wizard, who tries to impart advice to
Travis in their scene where Travis is clearly frustrated by his lack of
direction in life, and Travis shakes off his advice by saying "That's
about the dumbest thing I've ever heard!", and Wizard says "Well its not
Bertrand Russell, but what do you want? I'm a cabbie!". Albert Brooks
is also very good in his role as Tom, Betsy's co-worker, whom he has a
good rapport with Besty, although Tom is basically in his own way trying
to get into Betsy's knickers, by trying to impress her with his witt.
Harvey Keitel is very good as Sport, the sleazy pimp and his scene with
Travis is really good, as he banters with him and says "catch ya later,
copper!". And while its a small part, Steve Prince as the travelling
salesman, Andy, is also really good, and he has one of my favourite
lines from the film, when Travis puts one of his guns in his jeans and
checks it out in the mirror, and Andy says "ain't that a little
honey???". And finally Jodie Foster, who at the time was already an
experienced child actress, puts in an excellent performance as Iris, the
precocious young girl who ends up leading a sordid lifestyle.
Direction
wise, Martin Scorsese does pretty much a flawless job, and his use of
the smoke filled streets, and the neon lights on the streets are used
really well. He also does a great job with the bloody climax scene,
where at the end when the cops break into the room we see an impressive
360 degree camera pan around the room, which was achieved by cutting a a
circular shape out of the roof of the set, so the cameras could move.
He too also puts in a very memorable and creepy performance as one of
the Travis's fares, who tells him of his plan to kill his wife, and
apparently Scorsese did the part to fill in for an actor that was
unavailable, which was just as well, as its great scene in the film.
The effects work on the film in the bloody climax are also worthy of
note and really well created by the at the time Hollywood special
effects make-up artist guru, Dick Smith. Apparently the violence of the
scene with Travis going on his bloody crusade was considered by the
MPAA at the time (the Motion Picture Association of America) to be so
violent that they insisted that the colour in the scene be diluted,
which is why the colour in the print looks so pale.
The
film is generally very impressive and for me there are very few flaws
in the film, although if there is one then for me its the reasoning
behind Travis's motives to try and assassinate Pallantine. Its like he
seems to want to kill off Pallantine on a whim, and you don't really get
why all of sudden he would want to do it, as there appears to be no
real reason or motive behind it. Perhaps maybe Travis had become so
disillusioned by that point that he felt that not even Pallantine could
do anything to clean up the scum off the streets, or that he was just
another politician with empty promises (maybe the latter!).
Anyway
I can't finish the post without mentioning the film's music score,
which was by the late great Bernard Herrman, who at the time was in ill
health, but agreed to write the score of the film based on the script
that he read. Herrmann himself actually passed away the day after he
had completed the score, on 24 December 1975. The score itself stands
as one of the most memorable, moody, atmospheric and terrific scores
that the great master composer ever committed to cinema, and its
instantly recognisible as soon as you hear it.
Soooo
that's it for my Taxi Driver analysis, its a great classic and remains
one of the best films of the 1970s and one of the best films of the last
40 years.
And that's ittttttttttt!
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