Paul Schrader's screenplay came from somewhere silmiar. No military service but estrangement from two relationships and a kind of PTSD from a severe ascetic religious upbringing and lost in LA, holed up in a motel, he kept to himself and remembers not talking to anyone else for weeks at a time. Noting where his own thought trains took him in that state, he conjured Travis Bickle, God's Lonely Man, a self-appointed champion looking for a cause.
Travis does try the conventional lane, all but stalking a woman he has seen who is working for a political candidate and simmering up the courage to ask her out. Over coffee and pie Betsy is intrigued if not openly attracted and agrees to see a movie with him. Ok, so the only movies he has any idea about are the ones he tried to use on his insomnia and they go off to one of the era's attempts at legitimising pornography (Deep Throat, Last Tango in Paris, I am Curious) except this one ingtercuts quasi expert panels with clips of orgies. Besty storms out, rails at him when he follows her out. And he still doesn't understand. His attempts at reconcilation result in bouquets of returned flowers, disintegrating in his apartment and a cringing phone call that sees even the camera avert its eye, preferring the void of the corridor.
Ok, well that didn't work, why not centre his attention on her precious presidential candidate. Travis works out, gets cleaner and the tone of his voiceover monologue more delusional and violent. He buys guns, fashions wearable rigs for them and goes to the Senator's rallies. Greatness thrust upon him? He gets chased off but it'll keep. Besides, he's found someone else.
Iris is a twelve year old sex worker wjho almost escaped her bondage in his cab one night. He cases her situation and identifies the bad guys. You know where this is going.
How this story got the attention and then the directorial custody of Martin Scorsese is a compelling story in itself. What resulted from a few years of Schrader hawking the script and Marty building his rap sheet was a perfect storm of cinematic power. Fifty years on, Taxi Driver remains vital, engaging and terrifying. I've known people from more recent generations to be astonished by its vintage. It still feels contemporary the same way that Bowie's Heroes still sounds like the future. How contemporary? Well, when podcaster Jamie Loftus referred to Travis Bickle as the Incel King, in the past few years, I didn't bat an eyelid.
This was from Loftus' Lolita Podcast which is well worth your ear's capacity. She wasn't laying the charge of incel advocacy, proto or not, at the feet of Taxi Driver as much as exposing its advocacy by that community. Travis' monologues about Betsy are of an idealism that is stretched so thin that the hostility behind them shows through like a radiant ghost: one step of hers toward realistic behaviour would unleash it and indeed does. Is there some inherent decency in his later championing of Iris? Maybe, but the championing reminds me of something I read online. A woman was reposting comments sent her by a stalker who was attempting to woo her but then hoisted his own crimson pennant with something like: ... and I will crush the life from any creep who dares to bother you. Beyond a certain point, Travis his right to your pity. He's a naif only as long as he keeps away from the creepy gun dealer and plans for assassination or urban "clean up".
He's racist, naively puritanical, violent. Scorsese's cameo as the would be wife killer who forces Travis to listen a ghastly game plan that gives him the idea of buying a particular overqualified pistol, is an encounter with a being of equally lethal thought but the will to enact it without more justification than personal vengeance. The scene is there to plant a seed in Travis' head. "If this guy can do it..."
But nowhere does this get weirder or darker than the scene where Iris' pimp, Sport, reassures her of his love and gaslights her fears for her own life and future. They embrace to the sound of a song on the record player as he recites what is often called a Barry White seduction number. It is tender and sounds real, a declaration of devotion from a thirty year old to a twelve year old. The icky boldness of the scene has not lessened. It's a marvel of performance between Harvey Keitel and Jodie Foster (who was replaced by her of-age sister for all intimate and sexual shots) and is a direct contrast between the breakfast Iris has with Travis who, in contrast at that moment, briefly comes across as benign.
This scene would be impossible to fund in current cinema. One critic's insistence that it shows what the audiences for John Ford's The Searchers never got to see, the possible benevolence of the Native Americans to the abducted Debbie. The hyper-racist ethics of that film could fill encyclopedias but its scaled down redress in this scene might remind us that Ford's film did not embrace the revenger's compulsion (while indulging in its own goofy version of othering). The difficulty of the passage, intentional in production, calls out over decades. It's still there. What do we think? What can we think?
Scorsese's craft sets this story in a New York of neon, sleaze and brutal barganing that has made its way into any film since that needs to convey the Hellscape of urban life. It's there in Seven, decades on, in clear tribute as the aged Detective Somerset tells his own cabby to take him, "anywhere but here." Scorsese and his cinematographer Mike Champman used available light and avoiding towing for the car shots, giving us a Manhattan both crisply beautiful and contagiously ugly. The contrast with the pastels and daylight of the honest world is like salt and sugar. The two collide when the Senator happens into Travis' cab one night and Travis lets loose one of his repulsive rants. The politician's restrained response is delivered through a mask of professional performance less contrived than Travis' gushing fandom.
When the bonds between the authority of the status quo and the self-styled knight errant drive toward the third-act massacre, it does feel like fulfilled action but also catastrophic contempt for all the convention that it professeses to be defending. The coda, after Travis has been media-ed up as a celebrtity vigilante and gets a surprise fare from a clearly revising Betsy, has often been considered Travis' fantasy. That does work but I think in the same year as the Mosaicly judgemental satire Network, a literal take on the ending carries even more poignancy.
Almost forgot, Bernard Hermann's cool jazzy score was his last; he died the day after handing it in. It was unusual in its day for its unapologetic retro flavour when other films of the time were opting for irony in needledrops or going electronic. It used to irritate me but, more recently, it just feels accurate. I love it.
What else? Part of the perfect storm that made this film is the casting. A young Robert De Niro as Travis brings all his method and intensity to the role, double taking at every point of incomprehension, bearing and revealing a scary personal power. The famous, "you talkin' to me," scene had none of his lines scripted. It came out in rehearsal and Scorsese went with it, adding the disconcerting jump cuts as Travis revises his own routine. Cybil Shepherd gives Betsy the full '70s urban professional woman about town, finding (at least initially) Travis' menace attractive then horrifying. Her pushback deserves a cheer. Harvey Keitel has the thankless task of making Sport palatable and mostly does so through humour but then there is his Barry White moment which still challenges us. Jodie Foster both shocks and rends hearts as Iris, her vulnerability a thin suggestion from exposure. Albert Brooks is correct when he says he plays Betsy's workmate as a guy who can be funny, not a comedian. All of this falls under the masterful hand of one perfect with timing, Scorsese himself who deserves his own cheer as the chilling murderous husband who not only knows what a Magnum 44 will do to a woman's face but also to her "pussy" ("Now THAT you gotta see!). His one scene contains the art of his realisation of the whole screenplay.
Considering the current critical response by the culture to the Manosphere and its grifting advantage over the faceless and numberless hoardes of keyboard-clicking handles of vengeful construction, it's likely that Taxi Driver will never fall from relevance. Holy hell, my own generation of cinephiles could fire its infamous dialogue between each other as though it was a stock of passwords. If there is a fault to current reception of the cinema of codes it lies in the preference for literal interpretation. This is not a literal text. We are not offered Travis' manifesto-like garbage as touch points, nor Sport's seduction of Iris as cosily as it is presented. Taxi Driver puts it all up there on screen and leaves it to us. We need to read.
Viewing notes: I first saw this movie on a Steenbeck editing desk at Griffith University. I came in halfway and had to supplement that with the VHS when I went home for the holidays. I have seen it at a cinema but mostly on home formats. The result, nothing damages its core. For this blog, I watched my 4K edition which looks as close to the projected film as you'd want, grain in lower light and perfect rich colour for anything else. You can get the DVD for about $10 or rent it from the usual streamers and VOD.






