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Robert De Niro and Jodie Foster star in this highly regarded classic from director Martin Scorsese about a mentally unstable Vietnam War veteran who works as a night-time taxi driver in New York City where the perceived decadence and sleaze feeds his urge for violent action, attempting to save a preadolescent prostitute in the process. (Sony Pictures UK)

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Reviews (12)

kaylin 

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English There was a chance that his fate could have ended well, but Betsy (truly beautiful Cybill Shepherd) should not have blown him off after one date, which he didn't handle organizationally well. The next hope could be the fourteen-year-old prostitute Iris (Jodie Foster, who really was 14), but can she truly save him? Is he capable of acting in a way that will help people? The ending is a fairly expected escalation of events, which only feeds into the great development that the character Travis Bickle has. His life has completely changed, but not here in New York, it changed over there, in Vietnam, New York just showed him that it's not really that different, that it doesn't really make much sense to fight for something so repulsive. Nonetheless, the film still gives us some hope in the end. This is Scorsese's only turning towards hope, towards a higher justice. However, this time he basically completely avoided religious themes and presented us with the fate of one man who will really shake you up. Violence is portrayed here so naturally that you will really think twice about visiting nighttime New York if you ever have the chance. ()

J*A*S*M 

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English Quite shabby and very much “about nothing”. I don’t see anything exceptional about Taxi Driver. De Niro acts like in every film – almost all his roles are the same to me – and I still can’t bring myself to like Scorsese. It’s a shame, but I’ve already come to terms with the fact that the best works of these two gentlemen will never say much to me. ()

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angel74 

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English Legendary American director Martin Scorsese has always had a flair for strong themes and great actors, which he proved with this disturbing crime drama in which the utterly inscrutable Robert De Niro as the frustrated loner Travis navigates the dirty streets of New York in a taxi. Absolutely disgusted with abominable social conditions, he finally decides to take justice into his own hands. The young Jodie Foster as the prostitute Iris gives an emotionally convincing performance here, suggesting that she will one day be a star of the first magnitude. (85%) ()

lamps 

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English Scorsese's first major league feature and still one of his most famous. Once again, the master does what he does best, immersing the protagonist chin-deep in the seedy, prostitute- and small-time gangster-infested corners of New York, where no ethical laws apply. As always, the excellent De Niro is amazing in his role and his slow inner transformation is one of the best things of Taxi Driver and enhances its story. Scorsese manipulates the viewer very skilfully, for an hour and a half he just prepares them as they try to identify with the main character, which is very essential towards the final minutes and crucial for the overall impression. The atmosphere is also greatly enhanced by Herrmann's excellent and mysterious music, whose tones are heard at almost every turn. It's just a pity that the narrative wasn't given a smoother and rawer tone, because the bloody finale seems a bit contrasting and absurd in relation to the story as a whole. Taxi Driver is another impressive film from a directing legend, but I'll probably just pass on it again. 80% ()

POMO 

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English I waited twenty years to see one of Martin Scorsese’s most famous movies on the big screen in a festival atmosphere. It finally happened, moreover with a freshly restored version released by the restorers themselves. And nothing happened – at most, Taxi Driver is a valuable testimony of the period, place and mood of 1970s New York, which gives it historical significance (I’ve recently praised similar qualities in Sidney Lumet’s Serpico). The innovative and creative camerawork and Bernard Herrmann’s dark music are also excellent. However, the screenplay and its treatment of the protagonist are cold and aloof and take too many shortcuts, and the climax looks almost absurd, in a cartoonish fashion, as though it was a dramaturgically botched attempt at editing a more concise and epic work. ()

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