jump to navigation

Taxi Driver (1976) August 3, 2006

Posted by derek in : Reviews, Thriller , trackback

 

I generally like Scorsese’s work but I’m not a big fan of Taxi Driver (1976). It is a very well made movie with an excellent score and great mounting tension. The acting is also excellent particularly De Niro but my main problem with it is that there is little positive to hold onto here, it is unremittingly grim and depressing. The character of Travis Bickle is certainly very interesting but he also to me has no redeeming features. A lot of Scorsese movies feature environments/ characters we’d rather sweep under the carpet but I find myself drawn into their world, I can feel for the gangsters in Goodfellas (1990), I don’t feel any kinship with Travis Bickle. The cinematography too in the main pales next to Raging Bull (1980) though the shot of the blood soaked room near the end is great. I’m not squeamish about the violence, to the film’s credit it really makes it pretty obvious Travis is a psychopath, he’s an anti-hero, a guy on the edge he could be pushed over at any time. The other characters are also not heroes in any shape or form but I baulked a little at the end which seemed to glorify Travis’ killing spree that it had freed Jodie Foster from a life of vice, on the documentary on the DVD they say its a comment on the media, fair enough but I felt Travis deserved something to happen to him. It could be that this is real life, that this is the point, it is movie which defies convention with no real heroes or villains, the morals of it are very ambiguous, it certainly makes it interesting and exploration of people like this who do exist shouldn’t be censored but it is on the edge of glorifying violence though of course many worse films went far further. If you can take quite graphic violence one film you definitely have to see, it can be found very cheaply on DVD in the UK too, the documentary on the making of the film is worth it alone. So a very good film but not to me at least a great one.

Still worth (3 1/2 stars out of 5)

Comments»

no comments yet - be the first?


Login     Film Journal Home     Support Forums           Journal Rating: 4/5 (2)