Overlooked Movie Marathon 2: Taxi Driver (1976)
Do you know how many times I’ve heard the phrase “Martin
Scorsese should have won best director at the Oscars for Taxi Driver and not
The Departed?” Do you? I’ve heard that so many times that my head
nears the brink of explosion whenever I think about it. Right now, I’m about ready to blast my brain
tissue all over the walls. Not in a
violent way. Just in an irritation kind
of way. It bugs me when people say
that. It’s not that I think Taxi Driver
is a bad movie or anything. Oh no. It’s a good movie. But the competition that year was stiff and
only one director can win. Well, who
knows? There could be a tie at some
point in the future. But as far as I
know, only one movie can have the director win the award. And the fact that he wasn’t even nominated,
which could be argued as a bad choice on the Academy’s part, only goes to show
that the competition was stiff. This
paragraph really has nothing to do with my opinion on Taxi Driver, but I felt
the need to rant a little bit about people who say things like this. The competition in 1976 and 2006 was vastly
different. Scorsese won in 2006 because
he was voted the best director in all of the movies for that year. He didn’t get nominated in 1976 because he
wasn’t voted as one of the best directors of that year. It’s not because he was a bad director in
1976, but because the movies were different and people’s tastes were
different. I think it’s time for me to
move on to actually writing about Taxi Driver.
Taxi Driver is the eighth movie, I think, in the second
annual Overlooked Movie Marathon. That’s
right. Until now, I had not seen Taxi
Driver. It was directed by Martin
Scorsese. Taxi Driver stars Robert
DeNiro as Travis Bickle, a nighttime taxi driver (hence the name), who wants to
rid the city of New York of the scum that resides there. Along the way, Travis meets presidential
candidate Palantine (Leonard Harris), his campaign people (Albert Brooks and
Cybill Shepherd), a taxi driver named Wizard (Peter Boyle), a teenage
prostitute (Jodie Foster), and her pimp (Harvey Keitel). It’s basically a movie about the mental state
of Travis Bickle, and you’re along for the downward spiral of a ride that it
is.
Taxi Driver is a movie that starts in a fairly dark place
and only gets darker as it goes along. I
mean this in a purely thematic way, not in the sense that Travis Bickle drives
taxis at night. The movie begins by
laying out a thesis of how New York is not a good city. The people within the city are terrible people
who do terrible things. This is all told
through Travis’s voiceover near the beginning of the movie. As the viewers are brought along for Travis’s
journey, the movie begins to reveal some of the people who help to make New
York City the mess that it is. We spend
time with a man whose wife is cheating on him.
We experience the bigotry of society at the time. Then we delve into the world of underage
prostitution. Taxi Driver sheds a light
on a world that makes you want to spend hours in the shower. You feel dirty after watching Taxi Driver.
What really drives the movie, however, is Travis Bickle’s
journey through this part of New York City that isn’t really thought about too
much today. Yes, we’re almost forty
years removed. Yes, New York City has
changed during that time. But the world
set up in Taxi Driver existed, and some of it still exists. Watching Travis traverse this world is
exciting, interesting, and entertaining.
It might not be the same sort of action packed fun as the summer
blockbusters of recent years, but the character study that is being done
throughout Taxi Driver is just as engrossing.
As a viewer, you’re invested in what is going on, even if you do not relate
to the character of Travis. Part of it
is the exceptional writing of the character, part of it is the top notch directing,
and a lot of it comes down to the great performance by Robert DeNiro. When DeNiro turns on that thing that gets him
to act, it is hard to find a better actor.
It’s hard to think of his top performances without Travis Bickle being
in the mix. This is one of DeNiro’s best
performances. Watching the character lose
his sense of reality and fall into the pit of despair that is New York City is
captivating. The character might not be
relatable, but the events unfolding are still a wonder to the eyes and the
mind. DeNiro sells the character more
than I think any other actor could.
Taxi Driver is a dark movie.
It’s not all puppies and rainbows and unicorns. This is a story about the dirtier world of
New York City as told through a mentally unstable character. It is captivating to watch and meaningful to
explore. This is a movie I should have
seen sooner, but might not have had such an experience at a younger age. If you haven’t seen it, you should. It’s well worth the two hours.
The next movie in the second annual Overlooked Movie
Marathon is going to be Robocop. I don’t
know what it is about the movie that stopped me from ever watching it
before. That’s how I feel about most of
the movies in this marathon. I simply
overlooked them. And now I’m catching
up. I’ll be back soon with the post for
Robocop.
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