Metacritic.com
Film Video/DVD Music Games Books TV
Metacritic    Metacritic Forums  Hop To Forum Categories  Movies  Hop To Forums  Dramas    Taxi Driver, the City
Go
New
Find
Notify
Tools
Reply
  
-star Rating Rate It!  Login/Join 
Slacker
Posted
i just saw taxi driver the other day and i was wondering what people thought about the role of the city in this film?
thanks
 
Posts: 2 | Registered: 18 March 2005Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Enthusiast
Posted Hide Post
can't wait to see this one! love me some marty
 
Posts: 101 | Location: neverland | Registered: 20 December 2006Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Guru
Posted Hide Post
Yeah, the city is just as big a character in TAXI DRIVER, one of my all time favorite films, as Travis Bickle. What is fascinating as a resident of the city is to compare New York City, circa 1974/1975 when the movie was filmed and released, to what it is today. It is like a galaxy far, far away a long, long time ago.

New York City, particularly Manhattan, is so gentrified today. Some of those areas where the film was shot are now populated by the super rich.
 
Posts: 840 | Registered: 02 December 2005Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Apprentice Guru
Posted Hide Post
I really don't want to push off topic, but a friend of mine and I had a conversation about sex and violence yesterday. We came to the conclusion that most American's are far more willing to sit down and watch a movie with their family where people kill eachother, or kick ass. It really should be the other way though. Sex is natural, and everyone does it, its weird that people become uncomfortable watching movies with it in it.

We've found the base of peoples mild reactions to violence. This is probably nothing new to you people, but cartoons that children watch at age 7 have "NON STOP ACTION" as the commercials advertise. If you watch with a sceptic's eye, its apparent that this is backwards. We are telling children violence is okay, but heaven forbid they know what sex is! PG flicks like the Incredibles are filled with good guys beatin' up bad guys, but there isn't any sexual content. I think parents delay the topic until its completely necessary which is why teens are horndogs. Its not OKAY to have sex, so they do it. However, violence is perfectly fine.

Im sorry I've said so much off topic, but i want someone elses opinion on this.
 
Posts: 352 | Registered: 19 December 2004Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Slacker
Posted Hide Post
what about sex and violence? they seem to go together, right?
 
Posts: 2 | Registered: 18 March 2005Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Apprentice Guru
Posted Hide Post
I think that Travis is distant from the city (as mentioned earlier) but he sees it all through the glass window of his ride. It's like he's on a rollercoaster, strapped in for the ride but incapabled of doing anything (because his job is to drive.) Eventually all of the hate and aggresion pushes him over the top and he goes out seeking his own adventure in the city. That and him going semi-psychotic gives him a feeling of purity, and he kind of is a pure being. He goes to pornos, sure, but he isn't out pimping.
 
Posts: 352 | Registered: 19 December 2004Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
"Forum Moderator"
Super Bad-Ass Jedi
Posted Hide Post
So does Scorsese use the city in Taxi Driver the same way as Schlesinger uses it in Midnight Cowboy? Both Travis and Joe Buck have come from other places to New York City. Travis looks on the bad, but then finds good (the Cybill Shepherd and Jodie Foster characters.) Joe Buck looks on the good and gets screwed, but eventually finds the good from within himself (he finds that his enemy Ratso is actually good too.) I believe the city is depicted much darker and nihilistic in Midnight Cowboy. Travis Bickle could be in the middle of a love affair in a forest somewhere and still want to kill, destroy, etc. His actual world is seen through his interior hatred and misunderstanding. Joe Buck's world is very internal too, yet he seems to have no problem interacting with people, at least until they all take advantage of him. Interesting ideas. Mine are in no way the truth; they're just mine.


"Naked Woman, Naked Man
Where did you get that nice sun tan?"
 
Posts: 12874 | Location: Behind the Orange Curtain | Registered: 14 May 2004Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Upwardly Mobile Participant
Posted Hide Post
The city represents everything he disgusts in life. It contains the prostitutes, drugs, crime, and all that.

Basically the point is that he is alone in amongst millions of people. He can't really connect to anyone despite there being people all around him. I think that's a big theme of the film and why he doesn't like the city too.

Maybe the impersonallness of it. The coldness. He makes a comment in his narration about everyone being cold and distant.


visit www.moviejustce.con , I says.
 
Posts: 73 | Location: Iowa | Registered: 27 October 2004Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
 Previous Topic | Next Topic powered by eve community  
 

Metacritic    Metacritic Forums  Hop To Forum Categories  Movies  Hop To Forums  Dramas    Taxi Driver, the City

©2006 CNET Networks Inc. All rights reserved.
 
Home | FILM | DVD/VIDEO | MUSIC | GAMES | BOOKS | TV | About Metacritic metacritic.com