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Taxi Driver
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Taxi Driver
At night, a man stands in front of a bright yellow taxi while looking to the side. Underneath him, the words "Robert De Niro" and "Taxi Driver" appear in red font on a yellow background.
Theatrical release poster
Directed byMartin Scorsese
Written byPaul Schrader
Produced by
Starring
CinematographyMichael Chapman
Edited by
Music byBernard Herrmann
Production
companies
  • Bill/Phillips Productions[1]
  • Italo-Judeo Productions[1]
Distributed byColumbia Pictures
Release date
  • February 8, 1976 (1976-02-08)
Running time
114 minutes[2]
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$1.9 million[3][4]
Box office$28.6 million[5]

Taxi Driver is a 1976 American neo-noir psychological drama film[6][7] directed by Martin Scorsese and written by Paul Schrader. Set in a morally decaying New York City following the Vietnam War, it stars Robert De Niro as veteran Marine and taxi driver Travis Bickle, whose mental state deteriorates as he works nights in the city. The film also features Jodie Foster, Cybill Shepherd, Harvey Keitel, Peter Boyle, Leonard Harris and Albert Brooks (in his first feature film role).

Filming began in summer 1975, with actors taking pay cuts to ensure that the project could be completed on its low budget of $1.9 million. For the score, Bernard Herrmann composed what would be his final score. The music was finished mere hours before his death, and the film is dedicated to him.

Theatrically released by Columbia Pictures on February 8, 1976, the film was critically and commercially successful despite generating controversy for both its graphic violence in the film's climax, and for the casting of 12-year-old Foster as a child prostitute. The film received numerous accolades, including the Palme d'Or at the 1976 Cannes Film Festival and four nominations at the 49th Academy Awards, including Best Picture, Best Actor (for De Niro) and Best Supporting Actress (for Foster).

Although Taxi Driver generated further controversy for inspiring John Hinckley Jr.'s attempted assassination of President Ronald Reagan in 1981, the film has remained popular. According to STRAND Magazine, it is considered one of the greatest films ever made, and one of the most culturally significant and inspirational of its time.[8] In 2022, Sight & Sound named it the 29th-best film ever in its decennial critics' poll, and the 12th-greatest film of all time on its directors' poll, tied with Barry Lyndon. In 1994, the film was designated as "culturally, historically, or aesthetically" significant by the U.S. Library of Congress and was selected for preservation in the National Film Registry.

Plot

[edit]

In New York City, Vietnam War veteran Travis Bickle takes a job as a night-shift taxi driver to cope with his chronic insomnia and loneliness, frequently visiting adult movie theaters and keeping a diary in which he consciously attempts to include aphorisms such as "you're only as healthy as you feel". He becomes disgusted with the crime and urban decay that he witnesses in the city and dreams about getting "the scum off the streets".

Travis becomes infatuated with Betsy, a campaign worker for Senator and presidential candidate Charles Palantine. Travis enters the campaign office where she works and asks her to join him for coffee, to which she agrees. Betsy agrees to go on a second date with him, during which he takes her to an adult movie theater, which she leaves immediately. He attempts to reconcile with her, but fails. Enraged, he storms into the campaign office where she works and berates her before being kicked out of the office.

Experiencing an existential crisis and seeing various acts of prostitution throughout the city, Travis confides in a fellow taxi driver, nicknamed Wizard, about his violent thoughts. However, Wizard dismisses them and assures him that he will be fine. To find an outlet for his rage, Travis follows an intense physical training regimen. He gets in contact with black market gun dealer Easy Andy and buys four handguns. At home, Travis practices drawing his weapons, going as far as creating a quick-draw firearm hidden in his sleeve. He begins attending Palantine's rallies to scope out his security. One night, Travis shoots a man attempting to rob a convenience store run by his friend, leaving before the cops arrive as the convenience store owner proceeds to beat the non responsive robber.

In his trips around the city, Travis regularly encounters Iris, a 12-year-old child prostitute. Tricking her pimp and abusive lover Sport into thinking that he wants to solicit her, Travis meets with her in private and tries to persuade her to stop prostituting herself.

Soon, Travis shaves his hair into a mohawk and attends a public rally where he plans to assassinate Palantine. However, Secret Service agents see Travis putting his hand inside his jacket and approach him, which escalates to a chase. Travis escapes pursuit and makes it home undetected.

That evening, Travis drives to the brothel where Iris works to kill Sport. He enters the building and shoots Sport and one of Iris's clients, a mafioso. Travis is shot several times but manages to kill the two men. He fights with the bouncer, whom he manages to stab through the hand with his knife and kill with a gunshot to the head. Travis attempts to die by suicide, but has no bullets. Severely injured, he slumps on a couch next to a sobbing Iris. As police respond to the scene, Travis mimics shooting himself in the head with his bloody finger.

Travis goes into a coma due to his injuries, but he is heralded by the press as a heroic vigilante and not prosecuted for the murders. He receives a letter from Iris's parents in Pittsburgh, who thank him and reveal that she is safe and attending school.

After recovering, Travis returns to work, where he encounters Betsy as a fare. Betsy tells him that she followed his story in the newspapers. Travis drops her at her home but declines to take her money, driving off with a smile. He becomes agitated after noticing something in his rearview mirror, but continues driving into the night.

Cast

[edit]

Director Martin Scorsese plays a (possibly dual) cameo role: once in the background during Betsy's first appearance, and later as an unhinged passenger in Travis' car who intends to murder his unfaithful wife. Diahnne Abbott, who would go on to become De Niro's wife in real life, plays an adult movie theater concession girl who rebuffs Travis' flirtatious advances.[1][9][10]

Production

[edit]

Development

[edit]

Martin Scorsese has stated that it was Brian De Palma who introduced him to Paul Schrader,[11] and Taxi Driver arose from Scorsese's feeling that movies are like dreams or drug-induced reveries. He attempted to evoke within the viewer the feeling of being in a limbo state between sleeping and waking.

Scorsese cites Alfred Hitchcock's The Wrong Man (1956) and Jack Hazan's A Bigger Splash (1973) as inspirations for his camerawork in the movie.[12]

Scorsese also noted that Jef Costello (a solitary hitman), portrayed by Alain Delon in Le Samouraï, inspired the creation of Travis Bickle.[13][14][15][16][17][18] The role was, in fact, offered to Alain Delon, among many others.[19][20]

Before Scorsese was hired, John Milius and Irvin Kershner were considered to helm the project.[21] When writing the script, Schrader drew inspiration from the diaries of Arthur Bremer (who shot presidential candidate George Wallace in 1972[22]), as well as the Harry Chapin song "Taxi", which is about an old girlfriend getting into a taxi.[23] For the ending of the story, in which Bickle becomes a media hero, Schrader was inspired by Sara Jane Moore's attempted assassination of President Gerald Ford, which resulted in her being on the cover of Newsweek.[24]

Schrader also used himself as inspiration. In a 1981 interview with Tom Snyder on The Tomorrow Show, he related his experience of living in New York City while battling chronic insomnia, which led him to frequent pornographic bookstores and theaters because they remained open all night. Following a divorce and a breakup with a live-in girlfriend, he spent a few weeks living in his car.

After visiting a hospital for a stomach ulcer, Schrader wrote the screenplay for Taxi Driver in "under a fortnight". He stated, "The first draft was maybe 60 pages, and I started the next draft immediately, and it took less than two weeks." Schrader recalled, "I realized I hadn't spoken to anyone in weeks [...] that was when the metaphor of the taxi occurred to me. That is what I was: this person in an iron box, a coffin, floating around the city, but seemingly alone."

Schrader decided to make Bickle a Vietnam vet because the national trauma of the war seemed to blend perfectly with Bickle's paranoid psychosis, making his experiences after the war more intense and threatening.[25] Two drafts were written in ten days.[26] Pickpocket, a film by the French director Robert Bresson, was also cited as an influence.[27]

In Scorsese on Scorsese, Scorsese mentions the religious symbolism in the story, comparing Bickle to a saint who wants to cleanse or purge both his mind and his body of weakness. Bickle attempts to kill himself near the end of the movie as a tribute to the samurai's "death with honor" principle.[12]

Dustin Hoffman was offered the role of Travis Bickle but turned it down because he thought that Scorsese was "crazy".[28] Al Pacino and Jeff Bridges were also considered for Travis Bickle.[21]

Pre-production

[edit]

While preparing for his role as Bickle, Robert De Niro was filming Bernardo Bertolucci's 1900 in Italy. According to Boyle, he would "finish shooting on a Friday in Rome ... get on a plane ... [and] fly to New York". De Niro obtained a taxi driver's license and, when on break, would pick up a taxi and drive around New York for a couple of weeks before returning to Rome to resume filming 1900.

Although De Niro had already starred in The Godfather Part II (1974), he was recognized only one time while driving a cab in New York City.[29] De Niro apparently lost 35 pounds (16 kilograms) and was repeatedly listening to a taped reading of the diaries of criminal Arthur Bremer. When he had free time while shooting 1900, De Niro visited an army base in Northern Italy and tape-recorded soldiers from the Midwestern United States, whose accents he thought might be appropriate for Travis's character.[30]

Scorsese brought in the film title designer Dan Perri to design the title sequence for Taxi Driver. Perri had been Scorsese's original choice to design the titles for Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore in 1974, but Warner Bros. would not allow him to hire an unknown designer. By the time when Taxi Driver was going into production, Perri had established his reputation with his work on The Exorcist, and Scorsese was now able to hire him.

Perri created the opening titles for Taxi Driver using second unit footage that he color-treated through a process of film copying and slit-scan, resulting in a highly stylized graphic sequence that evoked the "underbelly" of New York City through lurid colors, glowing neon signs, distorted nocturnal images, and deep black levels. Perri went on to design the opening titles for a number of major films, including Star Wars (1977) and Raging Bull (1980).[31][32]

Filming

[edit]

Columbia Pictures gave Scorsese a budget of $1.3 million in April 1974.[11] On a budget of only $1.9 million, various actors took pay cuts to bring the project to life. De Niro and Cybill Shepherd received $35,000 to make the film, while Scorsese was given $65,000. Overall, $200,000 of the budget was allocated to performers in the movie.[3][33]

Taxi Driver was shot during a New York City summer heat wave and sanitation strike in 1975. The film ran into conflict with the Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) due to its violence. Scorsese de-saturated the colors in the final shootout, which allowed the film to get an R rating. To capture the atmospheric scenes in Bickle's taxi, the sound technicians would get in the trunk while Scorsese and his cinematographer Michael Chapman would ensconce themselves on the back seat floor and use available light to shoot. Chapman admitted that the filming style was heavily influenced by New Wave filmmaker Jean-Luc Godard and his cinematographer Raoul Coutard, as the crew did not have the time nor money to do "traditional things".[34]

When Bickle decides to assassinate Senator Palantine, he cuts his hair to a mohawk style. This detail was suggested by actor Victor Magnotta, a friend of Scorsese's who had a small role as a Secret Service agent and had served in Vietnam. Scorsese noted that Magnotta told them that, "in Saigon, if you saw a guy with his head shaved—like a little Mohawk—that usually meant that those people were ready to go into a certain Special Forces situation. You didn't even go near them. They were ready to kill."[22]

Filming took place on New York City's West Side, at a time when the city was on the brink of bankruptcy. According to producer Michael Phillips, "The whole West Side was bombed out. There really were row after row of condemned buildings and that's what we used to build our sets [...] we didn't know we were documenting what looked like the dying gasp of New York."[35]

The tracking was shot over the shootout scene, filmed in an actual apartment, and took three months of preparation. The production team had to cut through the ceiling to shoot it.[36]

Music

[edit]
Taxi Driver: Original Soundtrack Recording
Soundtrack album by
ReleasedMay 19, 1998
RecordedDecember 22 and 23, 1975[37]
GenreSoundtrack
Length61:33
LabelArista
ProducerMichael Phillips, Neely Plumb
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusicStarStarStarStarHalf star[38]

Bernard Herrmann previously scored De Palma's Obsession, and De Palma introduced Herrmann to Scorsese.[39] The music by Herrmann was his final score before his death on December 24, 1975, several hours after Herrmann completed the recording for the soundtrack, and the film is dedicated to his memory. Scorsese, a longtime admirer of Herrmann, had particularly wanted him to compose the score; Herrmann was his "first and only choice". Scorsese considered Herrmann's score of great importance to the success of the film: "It supplied the psychological basis throughout."[40] The album The Silver Tongued Devil and I from Kris Kristofferson was used in the film, following Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore (1974), in which Kristofferson played a supporting role.[41] Jackson Browne's "Late for the Sky" is also featured.

Controversies

[edit]

Casting of Jodie Foster

[edit]

Some critics showed concern over 12-year-old Foster's presence during the climactic shoot-out.[42] Foster said that she was present during the setup and staging of the special effects used during the scene; the entire process was explained and demonstrated for her, step by step. Moreover, Foster said that she was fascinated and entertained by the behind-the-scenes preparation that went into the scene.

In addition, before being given the part, Foster was subjected to psychological testing, attending sessions with a UCLA psychiatrist, to ensure that she would not be emotionally scarred by her role, in accordance with California Labor Board requirements monitoring children's welfare on film sets.[43][44]

Additional concerns surrounding Foster's age focused on the role that she played as Iris, a prostitute. Years later, she confessed how uncomfortable the treatment of her character was on set. Scorsese did not know how to approach different scenes with the actress. The director relied on Robert De Niro to deliver his directions to the young actress. Foster often expressed how De Niro, in that moment, became a mentor to her, stating that her acting career was highly influenced by the actor's advice during the filming of Taxi Driver.[45]

John Hinckley Jr.

[edit]

Taxi Driver formed part of the delusional fantasy of John Hinckley Jr.[46] that triggered his attempted assassination of President Ronald Reagan in 1981, an act for which he was found not guilty by reason of insanity.[47] Hinckley stated that his actions were an attempt to impress Foster, on whom Hinckley was fixated, by mimicking Travis's mohawked appearance at the Palantine rally. His attorney concluded his defense by playing the movie for the jury.[48][49] When Scorsese heard about Hinckley's motivation behind his assassination attempt, he briefly considered quitting filmmaking as the association brought a negative perception of the film.[50]

MPAA rating

[edit]

The climactic shootout was considered intensely graphic by the MPAA, who considered giving the film an X rating.[51] The film was booed at the Cannes Film Festival for its graphic violence.[52] To obtain an R rating, Scorsese had the colors desaturated, making the brightly colored blood less prominent. In subsequent interviews, Scorsese commented that he was pleased by the color change, and considered it an improvement on the original scene.[53] However, in the special-edition DVD, Michael Chapman, the film's cinematographer, expresses regret about the decision and the fact that no print with the unmuted colors exists anymore, as the originals have since deteriorated.

Themes and interpretations

[edit]

Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times has written of the film's ending:

There has been much discussion about the ending, in which we see newspaper clippings about Travis's "heroism" of saving Iris, and then Betsy gets into his cab and seems to give him admiration instead of her earlier disgust. Is this a fantasy scene? Did Travis survive the shoot-out? Are we experiencing his dying thoughts? Can the sequence be accepted as literally true? ... I am not sure there can be an answer to these questions. The end sequence plays like music, not drama: It completes the story on an emotional, not a literal, level. We end not on carnage but on redemption, which is the goal of so many of Scorsese's characters. They despise themselves, they live in sin, they occupy mean streets, but they want to be forgiven and admired.[54]

James Berardinelli, in his review of the film for ReelViews, argues against the dream or fantasy interpretation, stating:

Scorsese and writer Paul Schrader append the perfect conclusion to Taxi Driver. Steeped in irony, the five-minute epilogue underscores the vagaries of fate. The media builds Bickle into a hero, when, had he been a little quicker drawing his gun against Senator Palantine, he would have been reviled as an assassin. As the film closes, the misanthrope has been embraced as the model citizen—someone who takes on pimps, drug dealers, and mobsters to save one little girl.[55]

On the 1990 LaserDisc, DVD and Blu-ray, Scorsese acknowledges several critics' interpretation of the film's ending as Bickle's dying dream. He admits that the last scene of Bickle glancing at an unseen object implies that Bickle will fall into rage and recklessness in the future and that he is like "a ticking time bomb".[56]

Writer Paul Schrader confirms this in his commentary on the 30th-anniversary DVD, stating that Travis "is not cured by the movie's end", and that "he's not going to be a hero next time".[57] When asked on the website Reddit about the film's ending, Schrader said that it is not to be taken as a dream sequence but that he envisions it as returning to the beginning of the film, as if the last frame "could be spliced to the first frame, and the movie started all over again".[58]

The film has also been associated with the 1970s wave of vigilante films, but it has also been set apart from them as a more reputable New Hollywood film. While it shares similarities with those films,[59] it is not explicitly a vigilante film and does not belong to that particular wave of cinema.[60]

The film can be seen as a spiritual successor to The Searchers, according to Roger Ebert. Both films focus on a solitary war veteran who tries to save a young girl who is resistant to his efforts. The main characters in both movies are portrayed as being disconnected from society and incapable of forming normal relationships with others. Although it is unclear whether Paul Schrader sought inspiration from The Searchers specifically, the similarities between the two films are evident.[61]

The film has been labeled as "neo-noir" by some critics,[62][63] while others have referred to it as an antihero film.[64][65] When shown on television, the ending credits feature a black screen with a disclaimer mentioning that "the distinction between hero and villain is sometimes a matter of interpretation or misinterpretation of facts". This disclaimer was thought to have been added after the attempted assassination of Ronald Reagan in 1981, but, in fact, it had been mentioned in a review of the film as early as 1979. LA Weekly, Letterboxd and Yardbarker list this movie as belonging to the vetsploitation subgenre.[66][67][68]

Reception

[edit]

Box office

[edit]

The film opened at the Coronet Theater in New York City and grossed a house record of $68,000 in its first week.[69] It went on to gross $28.3 million in the United States,[70] making it the 17th-highest-grossing film of 1976.

Critical response

[edit]
The performances of Robert De Niro and Jodie Foster garnered universal critical acclaim, earning them Academy Award nominations for Best Actor and Best Supporting Actress, respectively.

Taxi Driver received universal critical acclaim. Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times instantly praised it as one of the greatest films he had ever seen, claiming:

Taxi Driver is a hell, from the opening shot of a cab emerging from stygian clouds of steam to the climactic killing scene in which the camera finally looks straight down. Scorsese wanted to look away from Travis's rejection; we almost want to look away from his life. But he's there, all right, and he's suffering.[71]

Writing for The New Yorker, Pauline Kael called it the "fevered story of an outsider in New York, a man who can't find any point of entry into human society" and describes it as "more feverish" than Mean Streets. Kael goes on to say that no other film "has ever dramatized urban indifference so powerfully."[72]

On the review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 89% based on 162 reviews and an average rating of 9.1/10. The website's critical consensus reads, "A must-see film for movie lovers, this Martin Scorsese masterpiece is as hard-hitting as it is compelling, with Robert De Niro at his best."[73] Metacritic gives the film a score of 94 out of 100, based on reviews from 23 critics, indicating "universal" acclaim".[74]

Taxi Driver was ranked by the American Film Institute as the 52nd-greatest American film on its AFI's 100 Years...100 Movies (10th Anniversary Edition) list, and Bickle was voted the 30th-greatest villain in a poll by the same organization. The Village Voice ranked Taxi Driver at number 33 in its Top 250 "Best Films of the Century" list in 1999, based on a poll of critics.[75] Empire also ranked him 18th in its "The 100 Greatest Movie Characters" poll,[76] and the film ranks at 17 on the magazine's 2008 list of the 500 greatest movies of all time.[77]

Time Out magazine conducted a poll of the 100 greatest movies set in New York City. Taxi Driver topped the list.[78] Schrader's screenplay was ranked the 43rd-greatest ever written by the Writers Guild of America.[79] Taxi Driver was also ranked as the 44th best-directed film of all time by the Directors Guild of America.[80] In contrast, Leonard Maltin gave a rating of 2 stars (out of 4) and called it a "gory, cold-blooded story of a sick man's lurid descent into violence" that was "ugly and unredeeming".[81]

In 2012, in a Sight & Sound poll, Iranian filmmaker Asghar Farhadi selected Taxi Driver as one of his 10 best films of all time.[82] Game designer Hideo Kojima named it as one of his four favorite films, though he noted his preferences shift over time.[83]

The February 2020 issue of New York magazine lists Taxi Driver as among "The Best Movies That Lost Best Picture at the Oscars".[84]

Accolades

[edit]

Award Category Nominee(s) Result Ref.
Academy Awards Best Picture Michael Phillips and Julia Phillips Nominated [85]
Best Actor Robert De Niro Nominated
Best Supporting Actress Jodie Foster Nominated
Best Original Score Bernard Herrmann[a] Nominated
Blue Ribbon Awards Best Foreign Film Martin Scorsese Won
British Academy Film Awards Best Film Nominated [86]
Best Direction Nominated
Best Actor in a Leading Role Robert De Niro Nominated
Best Actress in a Supporting Role Jodie Foster (also for Bugsy Malone) Won
Most Promising Newcomer to Leading Film Roles Won
Best Film Editing Marcia Lucas, Tom Rolf, and Melvin Shapiro Nominated
Anthony Asquith Award for Film Music Bernard Herrmann[b] Won
Cannes Film Festival Palme d'Or Martin Scorsese Won [87]
David di Donatello Awards Special David Jodie Foster Won
Martin Scorsese Won
Directors Guild of America Awards Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Motion Pictures Nominated [88]
Fotogramas de Plata Best Foreign Movie Performer Robert De Niro Won
Golden Globe Awards Best Actor in a Motion Picture – Drama Nominated [89]
Best Screenplay – Motion Picture Paul Schrader Nominated
Grammy Awards Album of Best Original Score Written for a Motion Picture or a Television Special Bernard Herrmann[c] Nominated [90]
Hochi Film Awards Best Foreign Film Martin Scorsese Won
Kansas City Film Critics Circle Awards Best Supporting Actress Jodie Foster Won [91]
Kinema Junpo Awards Best Foreign Language Film Director Martin Scorsese Won
Los Angeles Film Critics Association Awards Best Actor Robert De Niro Won [92]
Best Music Bernard Herrmann[b] Won
New Generation Award Jodie Foster and Martin Scorsese Won
National Film Preservation Board National Film Registry Inducted [93]
National Society of Film Critics Awards Best Film 2nd Place [94]
Best Director Martin Scorsese Won
Best Actor Robert De Niro Won
Best Supporting Actor Harvey Keitel 2nd Place
Best Supporting Actress Jodie Foster Won
Best Cinematography Michael Chapman 3rd Place
New York Film Critics Circle Awards Best Director Martin Scorsese Runner-up
Best Actor Robert De Niro Won
Best Supporting Actor Harvey Keitel Runner-up
Best Supporting Actress Jodie Foster Runner-up
Online Film & Television Association Awards Film Hall of Fame: Productions (1998) Inducted [95]
Film Hall of Fame: Characters (2021) Travis Bickle (played by Robert De Niro) Inducted [96]
Sant Jordi Awards Best Performance in a Foreign Film Robert De Niro Won
Turkish Film Critics Association Awards Best Foreign Film 4th Place
Writers Guild of America Awards Best Drama – Written Directly for the Screen Paul Schrader Nominated [97]

American Film Institute

[edit]

Other honors

[edit]

Legacy

[edit]

Taxi Driver, American Gigolo, Light Sleeper and The Walker make up a series referred to variously as the "Man in a Room" or "Night Worker" films. Screenwriter Paul Schrader (who directed the latter three films) has said that he considers the central characters of the four films to be one character who has changed as he has aged.[102][103] The film also influenced the Charles Winkler film You Talkin' to Me?[104] In addition, a tie-in book was published.[105]

Although Meryl Streep had not aspired to become a film actor, De Niro's performance in Taxi Driver had a profound impact on her. She said to herself, "That's the kind of actor I want to be when I grow up."[106]

The 1994 portrayal of psychopath Albie Kinsella by Robert Carlyle in British television series Cracker was in part inspired by Travis Bickle, and Carlyle's performance has frequently been compared to De Niro's as a result.[107][108]

In the 2012 film Seven Psychopaths, psychotic Los Angeles actor Billy Bickle (Sam Rockwell) believes himself to be the illegitimate son of Travis Bickle.[109]

The vigilante ending inspired Jacques Audiard for his 2015 Palme d'Or-winning film Dheepan. The French director based the eponymous Tamil Tiger character on the one played by Robert De Niro to make him a "real movie hero".[110] The script of Joker by Todd Phillips also draws inspiration from Taxi Driver.[111][112][113]

"You talkin' to me?"

[edit]

De Niro's "You talkin' to me?" segment has become a pop culture mainstay. In 2005, it was ranked number 10 on the American Film Institute's AFI's 100 Years...100 Movie Quotes.

In the relevant scene, the deranged Bickle is looking at himself in a mirror, imagining a confrontation that would give him a chance to draw his gun:

You talkin' to me? You talkin' to me? You talkin' to me? Then who the hell else are you talkin' to? You talkin' to me? Well I'm the only one here. Who the fuck do you think you're talking to?

While Scorsese said that he drew inspiration from John Huston's 1967 movie Reflections in a Golden Eye, from a scene in which Marlon Brando's character is facing the mirror,[114] screenwriter Paul Schrader said that De Niro improvised the dialogue, and that his performance was inspired by "an underground New York comedian" whom he had once seen, possibly including his signature line.[115]

Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times said of the latter part of the phrase, "I'm the only one here", that it was "the truest line in the film.... Travis Bickle's desperate need to make some kind of contact somehow—to share or mimic the effortless social interaction he sees all around him, but does not participate in."[116]

In his 2009 memoir, saxophonist Clarence Clemons said that De Niro explained the line's origins during the production of New York, New York (1977), with the actor seeing Bruce Springsteen say the line onstage at a concert.[117] In the 2000 film The Adventures of Rocky and Bullwinkle, De Niro would repeat the monologue with some alterations in the role of the character Fearless Leader.[118]

Home media

[edit]

The first "Collector's Edition" DVD, which was released in 1999, is packaged as a single-disc edition. It contains special features such as behind-the-scenes footage and several trailers, including one for Taxi Driver.

In 2006, a 30th-anniversary two-disc "Collector's Edition" DVD was released. The first disc contains the film, two audio commentaries (one by writer Schrader and one by Professor Robert Kolker) and trailers. This edition also includes some of the special features from the earlier release on the second disc, as well as some newly produced documentary material.[119][120]

To commemorate the film's 35th anniversary, a Blu-ray was released on April 5, 2011. It includes the special features from the previous two-disc collector's edition, plus an audio commentary by Scorsese that was released in 1991 for the Criterion Collection, which was previously released on LaserDisc.[121]

As part of the Blu-ray production, Sony gave the film a full 4K digital restoration, which includes scanning and cleaning the original negative (removing emulsion dirt and scratches). Colors were matched to director-approved prints under guidance from Scorsese and director of photography Michael Chapman.

An all-new lossless DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 soundtrack was also created from the original stereo recordings by Scorsese's personal sound team.[122][123] The restored print premiered in February 2011 at the Berlin Film Festival. To promote the Blu-ray release, Sony had the print screened at AMC Theatres across the United States on March 19 and 22.[124][125][126]

Possible sequel and remake

[edit]

In late January 2005, De Niro and Scorsese announced a sequel.[127] At a 25th-anniversary screening of Raging Bull, De Niro talked about the development of a story featuring an older Travis Bickle. In 2000, De Niro expressed interest in returning to the character in a conversation with Actors Studio host James Lipton.[128] In November 2013, he revealed that Schrader had written a first draft, but both he and Scorsese thought that it was not good enough to proceed.[129]

Schrader disputed this in a 2024 interview, saying, "Robert is the one who wanted to do that. He asked Marty and I. [...] So he pressed Marty on it and Marty asked me and I said, 'Marty, that's the worst fucking idea I've ever heard.' He said, 'Yeah, but you tell him. Let's have dinner.' So we had dinner at Bob's restaurant and Bob was talking about it. I said, 'Wow, that's the worst fucking idea I've ever heard. That character dies at the end of that movie or dies shortly thereafter. He's gone. Oh, but maybe there is a version of him that I could do. Maybe he became Ted Kaczynski and maybe he's in a cabin somewhere and just sitting there, making letter bombs. Now, that would be cool. That would be a nice Travis. He doesn't have a cab anymore. He just sits there [laughs] making letter bombs.' But Bob didn't cotton to that idea, either."[130]

In 2010, Variety reported rumors that Lars von Trier, Scorsese and De Niro planned to work on a remake of the film with the same restrictions used in The Five Obstructions.[131] However, in 2014, Paul Schrader said that the remake was not being made. He commented, "It was a terrible idea," and "in Marty's mind, it never was something that should be done".[132]

See also

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Notes

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References

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Works cited

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[edit]
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is a 1976 American drama film directed by from a screenplay by , starring as , a lonely insomniac and veteran who takes employment as a nighttime taxi driver in a seedy, post-Vietnam . The narrative follows Bickle's growing alienation amid observations of , moral , and personal isolation, culminating in his self-appointed mission of violent redemption against perceived societal filth. Featuring supporting performances by as a twelve-year-old prostitute, as a worker, and as a pimp, the film delves into themes of psychological unraveling, vigilantism, and the underbelly of American city life. Produced by Michael and Julia Phillips, it was released on February 7, 1976, and achieved critical acclaim for its raw portrayal of and Scorsese's kinetic direction, bolstered by De Niro's preparation including extensive time driving taxis. Taxi Driver won the at the 1976 despite audience booing over its graphic violence, and earned four Academy Award nominations, including Best Picture, for De Niro, Best Supporting Actress for Foster, and Best Original Score for . The film's iconic "You talkin' to me?" has permeated , underscoring its enduring influence on depictions of antiheroic descent and urban alienation in cinema.

Synopsis

Plot Summary


, a 26-year-old veteran honorably discharged from the U.S. Marine Corps, suffers from chronic and takes a nighttime job in to occupy his sleepless hours. Driving through the city's seedy underbelly, he encounters , drug dealing, and , which intensifies his alienation and contempt for societal "filth," as documented in his personal journal entries voicing fantasies of cleansing the streets. Among his fellow cabbies— including the philosophical Wizard, the profane , and the volatile Tom—Travis remains detached, bonding minimally while rejecting their camaraderie.
Infatuated with Betsy, a campaign volunteer for presidential candidate Senator Charles Palantine, Travis secures a date by discussing mutual disdain for coffee and takes her to a pornographic theater, prompting her horrified rejection and severing their connection. Later, he picks up Iris Steensma, a 12-year-old runaway prostitute controlled by her pimp Sport, and attempts to persuade her to escape her life of exploitation, though she rebuffs his overtures. Spurned and increasingly unstable, Travis amasses an arsenal of firearms, rehearses confrontational monologues before his mirror—"You talkin' to me?"—and initially plans to assassinate Palantine but redirects his rage toward Iris's captors. Storming the brothel, he fatally shoots Sport, the hotel manager, and a mafioso associate, sustaining severe wounds in a shootout with Iris's john before collapsing as police arrive. Awakening in , Travis is lionized by the media as a heroic for "rescuing" Iris, who returns to her parents in amid public acclaim; he receives a letter of gratitude from them. Despite his infamy, Travis resumes driving and encounters Betsy as a passenger, releasing her without in a gesture of detached resolution, leaving his psychological state ambiguously unresolved.

Principal Cast

The principal cast of Taxi Driver (1976) centers on Robert De Niro as Travis Bickle, an insomniac Vietnam War veteran who becomes a New York City taxi driver amid growing alienation and vigilante impulses. Jodie Foster, aged 12 during filming, plays Iris Steensma, a child prostitute whom Bickle attempts to rescue. Cybill Shepherd portrays Betsy, a campaign worker whose brief romantic interest in Bickle highlights his social ineptitude. Harvey Keitel embodies Matthew "Sport" Higgins, the pimp controlling Iris, delivering a performance noted for its intensity in urban underworld dynamics. Peter Boyle appears as Tom "Wizard" Conlon, a fellow cabbie who serves as a mentor figure but fails to grasp Bickle's deepening instability. Supporting roles include Leonard Harris as Senator Charles Palantine, the presidential candidate Bickle fixates on, and as Tom, Betsy's colleague in the campaign office.
ActorCharacterDescription
Robert De NiroProtagonist, isolated veteran turned vigilante.
Jodie FosterIris SteensmaPreteen prostitute under 's influence.
Cybill ShepherdPolitical campaign aide and Bickle's fleeting love interest.
Harvey KeitelPimping antagonist exploiting Iris.
Peter BoyleWizardTaxi dispatcher offering superficial advice.
Leonard HarrisSenator PalantineAspiring politician targeted in Bickle's delusions.
Albert BrooksTomBetsy's pragmatic coworker.

Production

Script Development

Paul Schrader wrote the screenplay for Taxi Driver in 1975 amid acute personal distress, including a , chronic , heavy drinking, financial , and a stomach ulcer that required hospitalization. Homeless and isolated, he lived out of his car in , wandering at night and frequenting pornography theaters, experiences that directly informed the protagonist Travis Bickle's alienation and nocturnal urban prowlings. Schrader viewed the taxi as a for an "iron box" or coffin, encapsulating Bickle's self-imposed confinement amid societal decay. To overcome and channel his , Schrader placed a loaded on his desk as a stark motivator, completing the initial draft in ten days as a form of self-therapy rather than commercial pursuit. He projected aspects of his own rage and moral isolation onto Bickle, drawing from Protestant guilt and existential themes to portray an alienated driven to violence. Influences included Jean-Paul Sartre's , which Schrader reread to infuse European existential nausea into an American context of urban grit and . Additional sources encompassed Arthur Bremer's diaries, documenting the 1972 assassination attempt on Governor , and films such as Robert Bresson's Pickpocket (for motifs like the gun slide ritual) and Alfred Hitchcock's (for themes of wrongful persecution and descent into madness). Upon finishing, Schrader immediately handed the script to his agent and departed for travel, having recently sold his debut screenplay for $300,000, which elevated his marketability. Producers Michael Phillips and acquired the rights and paired it with director , whose vision aligned with Schrader's unyielding first-person perspective on Bickle's psyche. Scorsese implemented minimal revisions, preserving the script's sparse dialogue, narration, and refusal to venture beyond the protagonist's subjective viewpoint, though some proposed additions like expanded scenes were rejected to maintain narrative purity. Certain elements, such as Bickle's improvised "You talkin' to me?" monologue, emerged during rehearsals with rather than in the original text.

Pre-Production and Casting

The screenplay for Taxi Driver, acquired by producers Michael Phillips and for $1,000 after recommendation by , was set up at with a budget of $1.5 million following the successes of Martin Scorsese's (1973) and Robert De Niro's performance in (1974). Pre-production emphasized authenticity in depicting New York City's underbelly, with focused on gritty neighborhoods for nighttime shoots to capture . commenced in June 1975, under tight financial constraints that necessitated low salaries across the board, including $35,000 for De Niro and $65,000 for Scorsese. Casting prioritized actors capable of improvisational intensity, with De Niro secured as Travis Bickle on the condition of Scorsese directing, leveraging their prior collaboration in Mean Streets. De Niro immersed himself in the role by driving a real taxi cab in New York City and refining Bickle's accent during time in Italy. For the role of Iris, the 12-year-old child prostitute, Jodie Foster was selected after auditioning for Scorsese; her casting required approval from the Los Angeles welfare board due to the character's explicit involvement in prostitution and simulated sex scenes, with Foster's older sister serving as a stand-in for nude shots. De Niro assisted Foster in understanding improvisation through off-set outings, though the dynamic proved awkward given the age disparity and role demands. Harvey Keitel was cast as the pimp after the character was altered from to at Columbia's insistence, citing fears of inciting riots amid racial tensions. joined late as Betsy to provide star appeal, initially with minimal dialogue but relying on trust in De Niro and Scorsese from their work. Supporting roles, including as the Wizard and as Tom, filled out the ensemble with character actors suited to the film's raw psychological tone. Studio executives expressed reservations over the script's and the underage Foster's exposure to mature themes, prompting safeguards like on-set chaperones, though these did not halt production.

Principal Photography

Principal photography for Taxi Driver took place from mid-June to mid-August 1975, spanning approximately 45 days in , with a of $1.8 million. The shoot was delayed from an initial June 1974 start due to scheduling conflicts involving director and lead actor . Filming emphasized on-location authenticity, capturing the mid-1970s without reliance on studio sets or constructed environments, primarily in Manhattan's district, the Garment District, and other street-level sites, as well as select locations like Columbia Heights for interior scenes. The production's commitment to realism involved extensive nighttime exteriors in the city's then-seedy neighborhoods, utilizing handheld cameras and practical lighting to immerse the viewer in Travis Bickle's nocturnal world. De Niro, drawing from his experience obtaining a real New York taxi and logging shifts as a cabbie, incorporated method elements into scenes, including improvising the film's iconic "You talkin' to me?" monologue during a that Scorsese retained in the final cut. Challenges included the oppressive summer heat, which strained the cast and crew during extended outdoor sequences, and logistical hurdles from filming in uncontrolled urban environments, leading to a schedule overrun of at least five days beyond the planned 40. Additional precautions were taken for child actress Jodie Foster's involvement in mature-themed scenes, such as psychological evaluations and use of a for any suggestive content. Scorsese's use of hand-drawn storyboards guided complex shots, ensuring precise execution amid the improvisational energy on set.

Technical Aspects

Music and Soundtrack

The score for Taxi Driver was composed by Bernard Herrmann in 1975, marking his final film project before his death on December 24, 1975, mere hours after completing the recording sessions. Herrmann, suggested for the role by Brian De Palma, crafted a jazz-inflected orchestral soundtrack emphasizing isolation and urban grit, conducted in part by Herrmann himself alongside Jack Hayes. The composition features prominent alto saxophone solos by Tom Scott of the LA Express, particularly in the wistful main theme, evoking New York's nocturnal sleaze through brooding brass, sweeping percussion, and mechanical 4/4 rhythms that mirror protagonist Travis Bickle's repetitive, trapped existence. Key cues include the titular "Theme from Taxi Driver" (4:06), a melancholic underscoring Travis's loneliness; "I Work the Whole City" (2:24), depicting his nocturnal prowls; "Betsy in a White Dress" (2:13), highlighting his ; and "God's Lonely Man," a powerful orchestral piece amplifying psychological descent. The score's hazy modulations and rigid structure draw comparisons to influences like , enhancing the film's portrayal of mental unraveling without overt romanticism, despite its saxophone-led intimacy. Source music appears sparingly, primarily via diegetic radio broadcasts, such as Jackson Browne's "Late for the Sky" during a pivotal drive with Betsy, written and performed by Browne under Asylum Records, which contrasts the score's tension with folk-rock introspection. The original soundtrack recording, released by Arista in 1976 (AL 4079), compiles Herrmann's cues alongside select tracks, totaling around 62 minutes and later reissued in expanded editions highlighting brass and percussion for climactic violence. Herrmann's work, blending jazz evocation with dark orchestration, has been lauded for its radical prescience, intensifying the film's critique of 1970s urban decay over mere mood-setting.

Cinematography and Editing

The cinematography of Taxi Driver was executed by Michael Chapman, who applied high-contrast visuals and vivid colors to portray the moral decay and nocturnal grit of 1970s , aligning the imagery with Travis Bickle's psychological turmoil. Harsh contrasted against dark urban backdrops amplified themes of isolation, while Chapman's restless, floating camera movements and slow-motion sequences captured Bickle's paranoid detachment from . Innovative techniques included a panning opposite to Bickle's exit from the dispatcher's garage to emphasize his alienation, and an overhead view of the climactic brothel shootout achieved by physically cutting through a real building's ceiling for authenticity. Chapman collaborated with director using detailed storyboards to synchronize camera work with emotional beats, prioritizing appropriateness to the observed reality over conventional beauty. The film was lensed on 35mm stock, with a 2016 digital restoration from original negatives preserving its raw, high-contrast aesthetic for Blu-ray, including subtle adjustments to the finale's coloration to avert an . Editing duties fell to Marcia Lucas, Tom Rolf, and Melvin Shapiro, with Scorsese's input, employing subjective point-of-view shots and slow dissolves to externalize Bickle's skewed perception of the city as a menacing dreamscape. Jarring cuts and repetitive scene structures underscored his obsessions, such as montages of his routines that blend into hallucinatory loops, while techniques like repetition and replacement in transitional sequences signaled his mental decline. In the mirror confrontation, rapid jump cuts and quick dissolves fragmented the action, mirroring Bickle's splintering psyche through accelerated pacing.

Release

Distribution and Initial Marketing

Columbia Pictures handled the theatrical distribution of Taxi Driver in the United States, launching a wide release on February 8, 1976, following a premiere in New York City the previous day. The studio's strategy emphasized the film's raw depiction of New York City's underbelly, leveraging the directorial reputation of Martin Scorsese and the star power of Robert De Niro to attract audiences interested in psychological dramas. Initial promotional materials, including the iconic one-sheet poster featuring De Niro standing beside a yellow taxi cab under nocturnal lighting, underscored the protagonist's isolation and the film's gritty aesthetic. Newspaper advertisements in major markets like highlighted the movie's intensity, positioning it as a provocative exploration of amid the era's cinematic trend toward realism in crime and character studies. The film's early performance reflected effective initial outreach, grossing approximately $27.3 million domestically against a $1.3 million , with strong opening attendance driven by critical buzz and word-of-mouth in urban centers. Although specific opening weekend figures from are not comprehensively documented in available records, the rapid accumulation of earnings indicated robust initial reception, aided by Columbia's targeted marketing in key theatrical markets.

MPAA Rating Dispute

The initial cut of Taxi Driver (1976) was awarded an by the (MPAA) primarily due to the graphic in the film's climactic sequence, which featured vivid blood effects that the ratings board deemed excessive for a restricted audience. An at the time would have severely limited commercial distribution, as theaters and mainstream exhibitors often avoided such films to prevent alienating family audiences and advertisers. To secure an R rating without removing any footage, director instructed the lab to desaturate the colors in the during printing, rendering the red hues less intense and stark while preserving the scene's structure and impact. Scorsese later described this adjustment as an artistic enhancement rather than a compromise, noting that the muted palette heightened the scene's nightmarish quality. The MPAA accepted this modification, allowing the film to premiere with an R rating on February 8, 1976, which enabled broader theatrical release and contributed to its commercial success, grossing over $28 million domestically against a $1.9 million budget.

Contemporary Controversies

Jodie Foster Casting and Child Actor Protections

, aged 12 during in 1975, was cast in the role of Iris Steensma, a child , after auditioning alongside other young actresses including , who declined due to scheduling conflicts, and considerations of and . 's prior experience as a child performer in productions and television contributed to her selection, with director praising her maturity and ability to embody the character's streetwise demeanor without affectation. The casting decision drew scrutiny given the film's explicit themes of urban and violence, prompting interventions to safeguard the minor actress. To address child welfare concerns, the Los Angeles County Department of Children's Services imposed strict oversight, requiring daily on-set supervision and a psychiatric evaluation of Foster to assess her emotional readiness for the role's psychological demands. Production utilized Foster's older sister, Connie Foster, then 20, as a for any simulated intimate or nude scenes, ensuring the underage actress did not participate in such content; Connie wore identical costumes and performed the physical actions while remaining unseen on camera. Scorsese and producer Michael Phillips coordinated with welfare representatives, limiting Foster's exposure to graphic rehearsals and maintaining a professional set environment, though Foster later described interactions with adult co-stars like as "awkward" due to the age disparity and role's maturity. These measures reflected 1970s industry standards, which, while more permissive than contemporary regulations like the Coogan Law expansions or intimacy coordinators, prioritized verifiable safeguards amid public and legal pressures against exploiting minors in adult-oriented films. Foster has reflected that the experience, though challenging, was managed effectively by her family—her mother Evelyn and sister Connie provided constant presence—preventing lasting harm and allowing her performance to earn an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actress at age 14 upon the film's 1976 release. No violations were reported, underscoring the production's adherence to era-specific protections despite the role's provocative nature.

John Hinckley Jr. and Real-World Violence Associations

John Hinckley Jr., who attempted to assassinate U.S. President on March 30, 1981, outside the Hotel, cited the film Taxi Driver as a key influence on his actions. Hinckley, suffering from mental illness including delusions, had become fixated on Jodie Foster's portrayal of the child prostitute Iris Steensma and identified strongly with the protagonist , viewing himself as a similarly alienated figure capable of heroic violence to gain her attention. He watched the film at least 15 times in the months leading up to the attempt, drawing parallels between Bickle's failed assassination of the fictional senator Charles Palantine and his own plan to target Reagan, whom he saw as a symbolic stand-in. In letters to Foster, Hinckley expressed intentions mirroring Bickle's obsessive pursuit, stating in one undated note recovered by authorities that he hoped the act would prove his devotion, though he later claimed in a draft letter that he might abandon the shooting if she agreed to meet him. During Hinckley's 1982 trial, defense psychiatrists argued that his repeated viewings of Taxi Driver exacerbated his psychotic delusions, blurring the line between fiction and reality and reinforcing a fantasy of redemption through violent spectacle akin to Bickle's vigilante rampage. Prosecutors countered that while the film played a role in shaping his script-like behavior—such as carrying a of music from the movie and composing poetry echoing Bickle's alienation—Hinckley's underlying personality disorders and family history of mental instability were the primary causal factors, not the movie itself. The jury ultimately found him not guilty by reason of on charges including , leading to his commitment to until his conditional release in 2016. Film scholars and director have since emphasized that Taxi Driver critiques societal decay and individual isolation rather than endorsing violence, noting that Hinckley's interpretation represented a pathological misreading disconnected from the film's intent. Beyond , no other documented cases of real-world violence directly attributable to Taxi Driver have been credibly established, despite periodic concerns raised in media and academic discussions about media influence on unstable individuals. Arthur Bremer's 1972 attempt on Governor , which partially inspired elements of Travis Bickle's character, predated the film's release and thus cannot be seen as an effect of it. Empirical analyses of copycat violence linked to films generally highlight over causation, attributing such rare incidents to pre-existing vulnerabilities rather than media as a sole trigger, a view supported by Hinckley's extensive predating his exposure to the movie. The association with Hinckley nonetheless fueled 1980s debates on cinematic depictions of , prompting some theaters to briefly pull screenings amid fears of imitation, though no subsequent attacks materialized.

Themes and Interpretations

Travis Bickle's Isolation and Psychological Decline

Travis Bickle, a 26-year-old honorably discharged U.S. Marine who served in the Vietnam War, arrives in New York City lacking clear purpose and secures a job as a nighttime taxi driver to manage his severe insomnia, which confines him to the city's underbelly during off-hours. His voiceover narration underscores an initial detachment, describing the streets as filled with "filth" and "scum," reflecting a worldview shaped by alienation from post-war civilian life. This nocturnal routine exposes him to prostitution, drug use, and crime, amplifying his sense of disconnection from societal norms. Bickle's journal entries document his growing internal isolation, positing that "loneliness does not come from having no people around, but from being unable to communicate the things that seem important to oneself." Attempts to forge connections fail disastrously; for instance, his date with worker Betsy ends in rejection after he takes her to a pornographic theater, mistaking her interest for tolerance of his grim reality. Superficial interactions with fellow drivers and figures like the gun dealer or pimp reinforce his outsider status, as he perceives others as complicit in rather than potential allies. As isolation deepens, Bickle's psychological state deteriorates into and self-mythologizing, evidenced by his acquisition of illegal firearms and obsessive training routines. He rehearses confrontations alone in his apartment, muttering lines like "You talkin' to me?" to an imaginary adversary, signaling a shift from passive observation to active of grandeur as a redeemer. This decline manifests in fixations, such as his plan to "rescue" underage prostitute Iris from exploitation, blending messianic impulses with unchecked rage born of unaddressed trauma and solitude. Symptoms align with post-traumatic stress, including and emotional numbing, though the film attributes his unraveling primarily to environmental immersion without therapeutic intervention.

Urban Decay and Governmental Inefficacy in 1970s New York

In Taxi Driver (1976), the portrayal of reflects the tangible plaguing the metropolis during the mid-1970s, characterized by rampant crime, physical dilapidation, and social disorder that navigates nightly as a taxi driver. The film's visuals—litter-strewn streets, overflowing garbage from a real strike that lingered in public memory, and pervasive and activity—mirror empirical conditions where , , and violent incidents had become normalized amid . By 1975, the year the story is set, 's murder rate had more than doubled from a decade prior, reaching approximately 1,600 homicides annually, while overall reports had surged dramatically since the . This decay was exacerbated by a severe fiscal that peaked in , when the teetered on due to chronic budget deficits, borrowing, and an overreliance on short-term notes that markets refused to finance further. Municipal spending had ballooned, particularly on welfare programs that quadrupled in caseload from 1965 to , straining resources without corresponding as jobs fled and white-collar flight accelerated. Infrastructure crumbled: were vandalized and unreliable, with ridership plummeting; blackouts like the July 1977 event fueled and , amplifying perceptions of irreversible decline. In the film, these elements underscore Bickle's disgust at the "filth" and "mobs," symbolizing a abandoned to chaos. Governmental inefficacy compounded the crisis, as Mayor Abraham Beame's administration (1974–1977) failed to curb expenditures or implement reforms, relying instead on deceptive accounting to mask deficits estimated at over $1 billion by October 1975. State intervention via the Municipal Assistance Corporation imposed austerity, slashing services like police and fire staffing, which critics argued worsened street-level disorder by reducing visible deterrence. Federally, President Gerald Ford initially withheld aid, citing moral hazard in bailing out mismanaged local governance, only relenting after congressional pressure with loans totaling $2.3 billion under strict oversight—highlighting a broader reluctance to underwrite urban profligacy amid national inflation and recession. Such responses, while stabilizing finances, prioritized creditor interests over immediate public safety, leaving residents like Bickle to perceive officialdom as complicit in the moral and physical rot, fueling themes of individual vigilantism against systemic neglect.

Vigilantism, Moral Decay, and Individual Action

In Taxi Driver, moral decay manifests through vivid depictions of 1970s New York City's underbelly, including widespread prostitution and violent crime, which Travis Bickle encounters during his night shifts. An estimated 40,000 prostitutes operated in the city during this era, with 2,383 arrests for prostitution recorded in 1976 alone, reflecting the unchecked vice and urban squalor that fueled Bickle's revulsion. His voiceover diary entries capture this disdain, stating, "Someday a real rain will come and wash all this scum off the streets," portraying the metropolis as an irredeemable cesspool of "filth and scum" beyond institutional reform. Bickle's response embodies individual action against perceived societal failure, as he arms himself with illegal firearms and trains rigorously, declaring in his journal intentions to "change things" through personal intervention. Perceiving politicians like Senator Charles Palantine as emblematic of elitist unresponsive to street-level decay, Bickle initially plots Palantine's during a campaign ride, telling him directly, "This city is like an open sewer." After this plan falters upon encountering , Bickle redirects his toward "rescuing" 12-year-old prostitute Iris Steensma, massacring her pimp, enforcer, and a mafioso in a bloody raid on December 6, 1975, in the film's timeline. The film's portrayal of critiques the of extralegal individual justice, emphasizing Bickle's untreated mental instability—evident in his , hallucinations, and messianic delusions—as the causal driver rather than coherent moral outrage. Scorsese depicts Bickle as "God's ," whose isolation amplifies alienation into destructive fantasy, culminating in an ambiguous ending where media hails him a , yet his final mirror smile suggests persistent , undermining any redemptive . Scholarly analyses interpret this as a cautionary examination of how moral decay in anarchic urban environments can provoke unstable lone actors to impose order, often with catastrophic irony, rather than endorsing such as effective or justifiable. The privileges causal realism by linking Bickle's actions to personal amid real societal failings, without romanticizing extrajudicial violence as a viable solution.

Political Dimensions: Corruption, Elitism, and Societal Hypocrisy

The film portrays the political establishment as emblematic of elitism through the character of Senator Charles Palantine, a presidential candidate whose campaign operates in a sanitized bubble detached from New York City's underbelly. , seeking purpose, volunteers for Palantine's team and drives the candidate, but observes only superficial interactions that ignore the pervasive filth and he encounters nightly as a cab driver. Palantine's vague slogan—"One day, this will be the year of the people"—serves as empty rhetoric, underscoring a disconnect between promises and the lived realities of working-class individuals exposed to urban squalor. This elitism manifests in scenes highlighting the chasm between political insiders and street-level existence, such as when Travis takes campaign worker to a pornographic theater, revealing her shock at the she ostensibly campaigns against. The incident exposes how political operatives, aligned with Palantine's liberal-leaning facade, remain insulated from the decay they claim to reform, critiquing the post-Watergate cynicism toward figures blind to systemic failures. Screenwriter drew partial inspiration from Arthur Bremer's 1972 assassination attempt on segregationist , adapting it to target a mainstream figure like Palantine to emphasize Travis's rage against perceived institutional impotence rather than ideological opposition. Societal hypocrisy is amplified by the film's depiction of as tolerated by a system that feigns moral outrage, with Travis's diary entries decrying the "scum" of pimps, drug dealers, and prostitutes thriving unchecked while politicians like Palantine evade accountability. New York City's real 1970s fiscal , with over 1,000 murders annually and widespread graft in municipal contracts, forms the backdrop, yet Palantine's campaign sidesteps such grit for photo-ops. The narrative critiques this through Travis's failed plot, which shifts to vigilante action against a child procurer, only for media and society to later lionize him—evident in the tabloid headlines and Betsy's adulatory letter—exposing a selective valorization of that ignores root causes like elite inaction on rings operating openly near campaign events. Although Schrader described the as a personal existential tale rather than overt political allegory, its release amid the 1976 election amplified readings of it as indicting hypocritical unable to address causal drivers of decay, such as unchecked immigration-fueled crime waves and welfare dependency straining city resources.

Reception

Box Office Performance

Taxi Driver was released theatrically in the United States on February 7, 1976, beginning with a premiere. Produced on a of $1.9 million, the film grossed $28,262,574 in the United States and . Its worldwide earnings reached $28,979,798, yielding a return of approximately 15 times the production costs. Despite a modest initial rollout, the film's commercial performance strengthened over time, driven by critical acclaim and word-of-mouth following its premiere at the in May 1976, where it won the . This success positioned Taxi Driver as one of the higher-grossing independent-leaning productions of the year, recouping its investment multiple times over amid a competitive 1976 box office dominated by blockbusters like and A Star Is Born.

Critical Response

Taxi Driver garnered widespread critical acclaim upon its February 8, 1976, release, praised for Martin Scorsese's direction, Robert De Niro's performance, and Paul Schrader's screenplay's unflinching portrayal of isolation and urban decay. Critics highlighted the film's technical mastery, including Michael Chapman's cinematography and Bernard Herrmann's score, which amplified its atmospheric tension. On Rotten Tomatoes, it holds an 89% approval rating from 163 reviews, with the consensus deeming it a "must-see" Scorsese masterpiece that is "hard-hitting as it is compelling." Roger Ebert awarded the film four out of four stars, calling it a "masterpiece of suggestive characterization" where Scorsese's style evokes profound emotions through selective details, and he later included it in his canon for its exploration of utter aloneness. , in her New Yorker review titled "Underground Man," described it as "ferociously powerful" with a "sense of vertigo," emphasizing its unparalleled dramatization of urban indifference—initially horrifyingly funny, then simply horrifying. She noted its relentless movement and Travis Bickle's outsider status in New York society, positioning it as more intense than Scorsese's . While some reviewers acknowledged its visceral intensity as potentially overwhelming—"beautiful to look at, exciting to listen to, but much too much to stomach," per one assessment—the prevailing view celebrated its psychological depth and social critique without endorsing its protagonist's actions. Critics like later affirmed its enduring relevance, with characters as "shockingly believable" as in the , underscoring its timeless commentary on alienation. The film's reception solidified its status as a landmark of cinema, influencing perceptions of moral ambiguity in narrative storytelling.

Awards and Industry Recognition

At the 1976 , Taxi Driver premiered on May 19 and initially drew boos from the audience due to its violent content, yet the jury awarded it the , the festival's highest honor, recognizing Martin Scorsese's direction and the film's overall impact. The film received four nominations at the on March 28, 1977: Best Picture, for Robert De Niro's portrayal of , Best Supporting Actress for as Iris Steensma, and Best Original Score for Bernard Herrmann's posthumous work, though it won none, with dominating several categories. At the 30th British Academy Film Awards in 1977, Taxi Driver earned nominations for Best Film, Best Direction (Scorsese), Best Actor (De Niro), and Best Editing (Marcia Lucas), securing one win: Best Actress in a Supporting Role for Foster, shared with her performance in Bugsy Malone. Additional recognition included De Niro winning Best Actor from the New York Film Critics Circle in 1976 and the National Society of Film Critics in 1977 for his role, underscoring the performance's critical acclaim amid the film's themes of urban alienation.

Legacy

Iconic Elements and Cultural Quotations

The mirror scene featuring rehearsing a confrontation, culminating in the improvised line "You talkin' to me?", represents one of Taxi Driver's most enduring visual and verbal motifs. delivered the without a full script for that take, drawing from prior inspirations to convey Bickle's escalating and isolation. This sequence has permeated through parodies in animations like and , as well as homages in films such as (1995) and (1990). Bickle's transformation includes shaving his head into a mohawk before attempting political , a stylistic choice achieved via prosthetics on De Niro due to concurrent filming commitments for The Last Tycoon (1976). The hairstyle evokes military subcultures, including Vietnam-era units observed in Saigon, underscoring Bickle's shift toward self-perceived warrior status amid psychological unraveling. While not directly originating punk aesthetics, the image has been retrospectively linked to countercultural hairstyles symbolizing rebellion. Voiceover diary entries provide introspective narration, with lines like "Loneliness has followed me my whole life, everywhere... I'm God's lonely man" articulating Bickle's profound alienation. Another recurrent quotation, "Someday a real rain will come and wash all this scum off the streets," encapsulates his revulsion toward perceived moral corruption in , recurring in cultural analyses of urban vigilantism and societal purification fantasies. These phrases, sourced from Paul Schrader's screenplay, have been quoted in discussions of isolation and decay, appearing in compilations of film dialogue and referenced in media commentary on analogous real-world sentiments.

Influence on Film and Broader Culture

Taxi Driver solidified Martin Scorsese's reputation as a leading at age 33, shaping the stylistic approaches of subsequent directors including , who ranked it among his top five films and lauded it as "the greatest first-person character study ever committed to film," and . The film's innovative use of narration, shots, and gritty urban cinematography influenced portrayals of psychological descent and moral ambiguity in and beyond. Robert De Niro's immersive as , involving extensive taxi driving and diary-keeping, set a benchmark for intense character immersion in roles depicting societal outcasts. The film's themes of isolation, urban decay, and self-appointed vigilantism resonated in later works exploring alienated protagonists, such as Todd Phillips's Joker (2019), where Arthur Fleck's transformation echoes Travis's spiral into violence amid societal neglect, drawing direct stylistic and thematic cues from Scorsese's oeuvre. Similar parallels appear in Nightcrawler (2014), with Jake Gyllenhaal's Lou Bloom mirroring Travis's opportunistic detachment and moral erosion, and (1999), which adopts motifs of disgruntled loners channeling rage against perceived cultural filth. These influences highlight Taxi Driver's role in normalizing ambiguous antiheroes whose actions blur lines between critique and catharsis, though the original film's ending deliberately subverts straightforward heroism by framing Travis's acclaim as delusional. In broader culture, the improvised mirror monologue—"You talkin' to me?"—delivered by De Niro, became an enduring pop culture staple, ranking among the American Film Institute's top 10 movie quotes and inspiring parodies in media from television sketches to . Its depiction of 1970s New York as a symbol of institutional failure and moral squalor informed ongoing discourses on urban alienation and individual responses to systemic breakdown, evidenced in references across series like , which echoes its themes of isolation and mental unraveling. The narrative's vigilante arc, while not endorsing extralegal justice, contributed to cinematic explorations of it, influencing films like Jacques Audiard's (2015), though real-world copycat incidents, such as 's 1981 obsession leading to the Reagan assassination attempt, underscore risks of misinterpretation amid untreated mental instability rather than causal endorsement by the film.

Modern Reassessments and Parallels

In recent analyses, Taxi Driver has been reassessed as prescient in depicting male isolation and societal alienation, themes echoed in contemporary discussions of urban and crises. Critics note that Travis Bickle's insomnia-driven nocturnal existence and failed romantic pursuits mirror modern phenomena like the rise in single male households and social disconnection in cities, where digital isolation exacerbates real-world detachment. A 2024 review highlights how the film's portrayal of a seeking purpose through extreme action resonates with ongoing debates about unaddressed male psychological distress, distinct from politically motivated narratives that sometimes frame such stories through ideological lenses. The film's exploration of vigilante violence has drawn parallels to recent political unrest, particularly in the context of the U.S. presidential cycle, where themes of in elites and street-level disorder evoke Bickle's . An article from July describes the election as a "Taxi Driver election," linking Bickle's rejection of corrupt systems to populist sentiments against entrenched power, though emphasizing that the film critiques unchecked individual action rather than endorsing it. Similarly, post-assassination attempt commentary on , , referenced Bickle's iconic mirror monologue in discussions of escalating rhetoric, underscoring the movie's warning against glorifying lone-wolf responses to perceived societal decay. These interpretations, often from outlets skeptical of narratives, contrast with actor Robert De Niro's 2023 remarks tying the film to violence, which align with his public opposition to certain political figures but overlook the story's ambiguity on heroism. Urban decay motifs in Taxi Driver—depicting a crime-ridden New York with 1,691 murders in —continue to parallel conditions in modern American cities, where homicide rates spiked 30% from 2019 to 2020 amid policy shifts on policing and enforcement. Analyses from 2022 and 2024 argue that Bickle's revulsion at , drugs, and filth reflects persistent failures in municipal governance, as seen in post-2020 disorder in locales like and , where visible and encampments evoke the film's "jungle" metaphor without the era's fiscal crisis extenuation. This reassessment privileges the film's causal depiction of environmental triggers for personal breakdown over romanticized views of grit, noting how contemporary data on urban rates—such as New York's 386 homicides in 2023—sustains its relevance despite partial revivals through aggressive policing. Some modern viewers, influenced by subcultures, have reinterpreted Bickle as a proto-incel archetype, citing his romantic rejection and violent as blueprints for mass shooter manifestos, though this overlooks his status and the film's 1976 context predating radicalization. A 2024 Reddit discussion cautions against such projections, arguing the movie indicts societal hypocrisy in lionizing violence—Bickle is hailed a post-shootout despite unchanged pathology—rather than validating fringe ideologies, a nuance often diluted in biased academic framings that prioritize identity over individual agency. Empirical parallels to real events, like the 1981 Reagan attempt inspired partly by the film, reinforce its cautionary status on media-fueled emulation.

Adaptation Attempts and Recent Projects

In the years following the film's 1976 release, director and star expressed interest in developing a exploring Travis Bickle's fate, with discussions surfacing as early as 2005 when De Niro confirmed plans were underway during an interview. By 2010, De Niro reiterated intentions to reprise the role, potentially continuing Bickle's story amid New York's changing landscape, though details on plot or format remained vague. Screenwriter , however, dismissed the concept outright, labeling a the "dumbest" idea he had encountered and arguing it would undermine the original's ambiguous, self-contained ending. De Niro persisted in pitching ideas into the , including unfeasible notions like Bickle running for office, but Scorsese and Schrader rejected them, citing risks to the film's integrity; no script advanced to production. Beyond cinematic sequels, a adaptation positioned as a direct sequel entered development in the early , aiming to extend Bickle's through interactive gameplay focused on urban and psychological descent. The project, which would have allowed players to navigate New York's underbelly via taxi routes and confront moral dilemmas, was ultimately cancelled amid concerns over tonal mismatch and feasibility, with reports indicating it risked diluting the film's introspective essence into action-oriented mechanics. Scorsese's known aversion to video games as an art form further doomed the effort, aligning with his public criticisms of the medium's limitations. Recent projects have leaned toward experimental reinterpretations rather than commercial adaptations. In , artist created an installation recasting the film's climactic ending, excluding original stars and to emphasize racial and social reinterpretations of Bickle's vigilante arc, drawing on archival footage and new staging to the original's white-centric heroism. Parodic takes, such as a sketch in James Corden's "Inappropriate Musicals" series envisioning Taxi Driver as a lighthearted musical with Dan as Bickle, highlighted the absurdity of adapting its dark themes to song-and-dance formats but did not spur serious efforts. No official remakes, productions, or series directly based on Schrader's have materialized, preserving the film's standalone status despite periodic fan speculation and loose homages in media like the South Korean series Taxi Driver, which draws from a separate rather than the source material.

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