Contents

TAXI DRIVER


On Every Street In Every City, There's A Nobody Who Dreams Of Being A Somebody.

1976




Taxi Driver (1976)  

Directed by 
Martin Scorsese    
  
Writing credits 
Paul Schrader    
  
Cast (in credits order) verified as complete  
Diahnne Abbott ....  Concession Girl  
Robert De Niro ....  Travis Bickle  
Cybill Shepherd ....  Betsy  
Frank Adu ....  Angry Black Man  
Peter Boyle ....  Wizard  
Victor Argo ....  Deli Owner Melio  
Gino Ardito ....  Policeman at Rally  
Jodie Foster ....  Iris  
Garth Avery ....  Iris' Friend  
Albert Brooks ....  Tom  
Leonard Harris (II) ....  Charles Palantine  
Harvey Keitel ....  Sport  
Norman Matlock ....  Charlie T  
Harry Cohn (II) ....  Cabbie in Bellmore  
Copper Cunningham ....  Hooker in Cab  
Harry Northup ....  Doughboy  
Joe Spinell ....  Personnel Officer  
Brenda Dickson-Weinberg ....  Soap Opera Woman  
Harry Fischler ....  Dispatcher  
Nat Grant ....  Stick-Up Man  
Richard Higgs (I) ....  Tall Secret Service Man  
Beau Kayser ....  Soap Opera Man  
Vic Magnotta ....  Secret Service Photographer  
Bob Maroff ....  Mafioso  
Bill Minkin ....  Tom's Assistant  
Murray Moston ....  Iris' Time Keeper  
Gene Palma ....  Street Drummer  
Carey Poe ....  Campaign Worker  
Steven Prince ....  Andy, Gun Salesman  
Peter Savage ....  The John  
Martin Scorsese ....  Passenger Watching Silhouette  
Robert Shields (I) ....  Palantine Aide  
Ralph S. Singleton ....  T.V. Interviewer  
Maria Turner ....  Angry Hooker on Street  
Robin Utt ....  Campaign Worker  
rest of cast listed alphabetically  
Jean Elliott ....  Clerk at Sam Goody store selling record (uncredited)  
  
Produced by 
Phillip M. Goldfarb   (associate)  
Julia Phillips    
Michael Phillips (II)    
  
Original music by 
Bernard Herrmann    
  
Cinematography by 
Michael Chapman (I)    
  
Film Editing by 
Tom Rolf    
Thelma Schoonmaker   (uncredited)  
Melvin Shapiro    
  
Casting 
Juliet Taylor    
  
Art Direction 
Charles Rosen    
  
Set Decoration 
Herbert F. Mulligan    
  
Costume Design by 
Ruth Morley    
  
Make-up Department 
Irving Buchman ....  make-up artist  
Mona Orr ....  hair stylist  
Dick Smith (II) ....  special make-up  
  
Production Management 
Phillip M. Goldfarb ....  production manager  
  
Assistant Director 
William Eustace ....  second assistant director  
Peter R. Scoppa ....  assistant director  
Ralph S. Singleton ....  second assistant director  
  
Sound Department 
Richard Alexander (III) ....  sound re-recording mixer  
Gordon Davidson ....  sound effects editor  
Jim Fritch ....  sound effects editor  
Sam Gemette ....  sound effects editor  
David Hourton ....  sound effects editor  
Les Lazarowitz ....  sound mixer  
Roger Pietschmann ....  sound recordist  
Vern Poore ....  sound re-recording mixer  
Robert Rogow ....  boom operator  
Tex Rudloff ....  re-recording supervisor  
Frank E. Warner ....  supervising sound effects editor  
  
Special Effects 
Tony Parmelee ....  special effects  
  
Other crew 
Leslie Bloom ....  property master  
Kay Chapin ....  script supervisor  
Al Craine ....  wardrober  
Sylvia Fay ....  atmosphere casting  
Raymond Hartwick ....  transportation co-ordinator  
Alec Hirschfeld ....  first assistant camera  
Bill Johnson (VIII) ....  assistant camera  
Marcia Lucas ....  supervising film editor  
Howard Newman ....  publicist  
David Nichols (I) ....  visual consultant  
Dan Perri ....  title designer  
Richard Quinlan ....  gaffer  
Edward Quinn (I) ....  grip  
Noni Rock ....  production office co-ordinator  
Fred Schuler ....  camera operator  
Steve Shapiro ....  special photography  
Cosmo Sorice ....  scenic artist  
Robert Ward ....  key grip  
William Ward (II) ....  best boy  
Josh Weiner ....  still photographer  
Sandra Weintraub ....  creative consultant  
Shinichi Yamazaki ....  music editor  
Ron Zarilla ....  assistant camera  
Michael Zingale ....  camera operator: second unit  
  
 
 
 


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                                TAXI DRIVER
                       A film review by Steve Rhodes
                        Copyright 1996 Steve Rhodes
RATING (0 TO ****):  ****

One of Martin Scorsese's first and most important pictures was TAXI DRIVER. For its 20th anniversary, there is a new print and a remastered stereo sound track, and the picture has a new theatrical release. Some of the hairdos make look dated, but the message it tells is as powerful and frightening today as it was in 1976. This is a landmark film in the history of the cinema.

Robert De Niro plays 26 year old Vietnam vet Travis Bickle. Travis is a New York City taxi driver who willing works the nightshift in the roughest sections of town. Prostitutes use the back seat of his taxi as a moving bed, and people are stabbed in it. Travis is a psychological misfit, but someone who wants this degradation cleaned up. He, of course, does not realize that he is one of them. He says, "someday a real rain will come and wipe this scum off the streets." He wants to be that rain.

He falls in love with a beautiful woman in the window of a Senator Charles Palantine (Leonard Harris) for President campaign headquarters. He finds her name is Betsy (Cybill Shepherd), and he even gets her to go on a date with him. They both have an outward innocence that make them appear well matched in some strange sense. When Betsy realizes that his idea of a date is a porn movie in the sleaziest area of town, she walks out and refuses to ever speak to him again. He is so naive that he does not realize that taking her to a porn movie on their first date is a faux pas.

Some of the movie has the taxi drivers at a coffee shop, a la DINER, discussing life. After Betsy ditches him, Travis tries to understand it all so he turns to the oldest and hence wisest taxi driver, who goes by the nickname of Wizard (Peter Boyle). Wizard sees his job as the shaper of his destiny and tells Travis, "You get a job. You become the job."

The show is full of great visuals. Travis sits in front of the TV staring with a wasted look and glazed eyes while eating his breakfast, which consists of white bread clumps with large quantities of brandy, sugar, and milk poured on top. In another he glares at American Bandstand while holding a gun with a foot long barrel resting on his temple.

There are many great minor characters. One of my favorites has Martin Scorsese as a husband sitting in Travis's taxi watching his philandering wife's silhouette in the window of an apartment. He turns out to be as evil as Travis. Eventually Travis buys himself a small arsenal of weapons. He practices the classic cinematic line, "You talkin' to me," in the mirror while practicing drawing his guns quasi-cowboy style. He tells himself, "Listen world. Here is a man who stood up against the scum."

Travis meets a 12 1/2 year old prostitute named Iris who calls herself Easy (Jodie Foster). He decides he wants to save her in particular and mankind in general, but the problem is that she does not want to be saved since she is used to staying with her pimp Matthew, whom she calls Sport (Harvey Keitel). To Travis this is all a mission as if from God, although he claims no divine inspiration. Travis says, "Now I see this clearly. My whole life is pointed in one direction. There never has been a choice for me."

In a scene reminiscent of John Hinkley, Travis goes fully armed to a Palantine rally. The senator is delivering a pompous and meaningless speech that parallels Travis's vision of life. The senator proclaims, "We meet at a crossroads in history. No longer will the wrong roads be taken." In a movie full of make up and hair styles that make a statement, Travis shows up at the rally with a Mohawk. The ending is suspenseful, extremely gory, and somewhat surprising. The epilogue after that is really surprising.

So much of this study of evil is brilliant. Certainly at the top of the list is the acting by De Niro, but close behind would be the directing and the writing (Paul Schrader). Everyone knows what an excellent job Jodie Foster did, but I was impressed at how Cybill Shepherd took the almost coquettish but naive minor part and made it interesting. Harvey Keitel had a tiny part, but managed to put a lot into it.

The cinematography (Michael Chapman) throughout the picture is quite effective showing the grit and the garish lights of the city, but the slow motion sequences at the end are the best. The sets (Charles Rosen) of New York City are suitably ugly, thus creating just the right images. The costume design (Ruth Morley) ranged from a lovely set of sweet dress complete with beautiful neck bands for Betsy to sinister outfits for Travis. An impressive range.

I certainly was pleased with the remastered sound since the show had great movie music (Bernard Herrmann). It started off with sad and melancholic tunes and then switched to ominous ones created with a muted trumpet. Rarely these days do films dare to have any music to speak of, and if they do, it is frequently nothing more that loud and overpowering rock music that turns the show into a long rock video more suitable for MTV.

TAXI DRIVER runs a well edited, thanks to Marcia Lucas, Tom Rolf, and Melvin Shapiro, and fast 1:53. It is rated R, but borders on NC-17. There is no sex or nudity. The language is frequently obscene, and there are some racial epithets. The reason I say it is almost NC-17 is solely for the gory ending. I do not think the violence is gratuitous, and I am glad the studio did not demand a more saleable version without the scenes. I think the picture as delivered is brilliant. I would let teenagers see it if they are mature. I recommend the film highly, and give it my top rating of ****.


**** = One of the top few films of this or any year. A must see film. *** = Excellent show. Look for it. ** = Average movie. Kind of enjoyable. * = Poor show. Don't waste your money. 0 = One of the worst films of this or any year. Totally unbearable.

REVIEW WRITTEN ON: March 5, 1996

Have I Seen This Movie: Yes
And What Did I Think?: Martin Scorsese's movie about a taxi driver who is driven to a pyschotic rage from his environment is a classic portrayal and one of AFI's top 100 movies of all time. Robert DeNiro gives a chilling performance as Travis Bickle, a lonely taxi driver who spends time in porno houses and works too many hours. He hates the lowlifes of the city... the animals, and wishes that "someday a real rain will come and wash this scum off the streets." Like Raging Bull, this is one of DeNiro's best roles, although he has so many of them. Costarring with him is a very young Jodi Foster, Cybill Sheperd, Harvey Keitel and Albert Brooks. Most of the movie is Travis's growing rage from his surroundings, and his isolation. His attempt to date Betsy, played by Cybill Sheperd goes down in flames after he takes her to a porno movie on their first date. Later he meets Iris, a 12 year old prostitute played by Jodi Foster. He tries to rescue her from the life she leads. His plan also includes an assassination attempt at Palentine, a presidential candidate whom Betsy was a supporter of. It all escalates to the thrilling and bloody climax and Travis comes out as the hero after the media builds him up as one. There is some stunning cinematography and great directing work from Martin Scorsese who even has a small role in the film. If you have a DVD player, buy this because it has a nice long feature on the making of the movie along with some other nice goodies as well.

I give Taxi Driver 4.5 out of 5 stars.

Review written August 4, 1999

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