Taxi Driver Essays

  • Taxi Driver Disability

    540 Words  | 2 Pages

    Taxi Driver is an American Physiological Thriller and Drama directed by Martin Scorsese. The film is about a loner, Travis Bickle, who is played by Robert Di Nero. Travis is a recently discharged Marine who decides to be a taxi driver in New York City. He has chronic insomnia so he spends his nights driving and days in porn theaters. He becomes friends with Iris, played by Jodie Foster, who is a teenage prostitute. He eventually helps Iris get out of prostitution and back home to her family. Travis

  • Martin Scorsese's Taxi Driver

    857 Words  | 2 Pages

    Martin Scorsese's "Taxi Driver" presents the viewer with a disturbing and violent vision of urban America in the aftermath of the Vietnam war. Travis Bickle the protagonist, is a Vietnam veteran who finds himself adrift in the urban wasteland of the 1970s. He suffers with many psychological problems such as depression, post traumatic stress disorder, and isolation in result of the vietnam war. Travis is a late night taxi driver who drives to any part of New York city (including the ghetto), which

  • Martin Scorcese's Taxi Driver

    1225 Words  | 3 Pages

    The famous line “You talkin’ to me?” was spoken by Robert DeNiro in the 1976 film Taxi Driver. Robert DeNiro’s character, Travis Bickle, experiences life in the big city as a taxi driver. As the movie progress he encounters people and situations that affect Travis both physically and mentally. Martin Scorsese directed the film making it a great success in the 1970’s. In order to make the film successful he utilized a series of film elements. Scorsese made use of camera components, repetition of music

  • Theme Of Loneliness In Taxi Driver

    1577 Words  | 4 Pages

    Scorsese’s neo noir: Taxi Driver (1976) Scorsese channels his theme of loneliness through the questionable motives of a young man called Travis Bickle, an all night taxi driver suffering from insomnia and living alone in downtown New York. From the outset Travis vocalizes and addresses his loneliness through a diary he keeps and updates, “Loneliness has followed me my whole life, everywhere. In bars, in cars, sidewalks, stores, everywhere. There's no escape. I’m God's lonely man (Taxi Driver). This honest

  • Martin Scorsese's Taxi Driver

    921 Words  | 2 Pages

    Taxi Driver is a classic cinematic masterpiece and one of Martin Scorsese’s best films of all time. This is a hard-edge, violent film that pull no punches with its compelling portrayal of a derange loner named Travis Bickle embodied by the remarkably young and talented Robert De Niro. Film critics raved over its social, political, mental, urban decay it vividly presented, and audiences were deeply drawn to it, adding to its success as film. Roger Ebert mentions the film in his book, The Great Movies

  • Religion & Purification in Taxi Driver

    1589 Words  | 4 Pages

    "He's a profit and a pusher. Partly truth partly fiction. A walking contradiction." - Kris Kirstofferson In Martin Scorcese's Taxi Driver, Travis Bickle repeatedly expresses two ideas that are central to the film. First, Travis has an undying wish to purify the world. He wants to rid his city of all the evil and scum that currently inhabits the city's cold and damp streets. Second, is the method by which Travis tries to obtain his goals. Travis Bickle tries to clean up his city by methods

  • Taxi Driver, Directed by Martin Scorsese

    1070 Words  | 3 Pages

    “Taxi Driver” New York City that is depicted in Taxi Driver seems to be too real to be true. It is a place where violence runs rampant, drugs are cheap, and sex is easy. This world may be all too familiar to many that live in major metropolitan areas. But, in the film there is something interesting, and vibrant about the streets that Travis Bickle drives alone, despite the amount of danger and turmoil that overshadows everything in the nights of the city. In the film “Taxi Driver” director Martin

  • Analysis Of The Taxi Driver

    1209 Words  | 3 Pages

    “The taxi driver” by Friedman (2006) express a modern day situation where a passenger and a taxi driver both focus on their devices instead of communicate to each other. While the taxi driver is talking on the phone and playing a movie on the panel instead of the G.P.S. road map. Friedman which the passenger also try to finish his work on his laptop and listen to the music from his iPod. Friedman believes that the improvement technology is the reason he did not get to have a conversation with the

  • Taxi Driver Masculinity Theory Analysis

    611 Words  | 2 Pages

    Taxi Driver Masculinity Theory analysis Released in 1976, the screenplay is set in a post-Vietnam War America. Robert DiNiro, the main character in the movie by the name of Travis Bickle, claims to be an ex marine and a Vietnam War veteran who drives a taxi at night in NYC. In his screenplay, the Taxi Driver, Martin Scoses suggests Travis Bickle a main character who undertakes the role of a cowboy, to be someone who embodies the masculine and violent traits in pre counter culture America, but also

  • Dostoyevsky's Notes From the Underground and Martin Scorcese's Taxi Driver

    1562 Words  | 4 Pages

    Dostoevsky’s Notes from the Underground and Martin Scorsese’s Taxi Driver, written by Paul Schrader, both tell the same story about a man who is lonely and blames the world around him for his loneliness. The characters of Underground Man and Travis Bickle mirror each other; they both live in the underground, narrating their respective stories, experiencing aches and maladies which they leave unchecked, seeing the city they live in as a modern-day hell filled with the fake and corrupt. However, time

  • Uber Vs. Taxi Drivers: Are They Both Liable?

    796 Words  | 2 Pages

    Uber vs. Taxi Drivers: Are They Both Liable? The definition of a taxi cab is a car licensed to transport passengers in return for payment of a fare. The popular driving app Uber is a transportation network company that allows people to gain transportation in exchange for paying a fare. When it comes to taxi drivers, they offer around $250,000 to $500,000 in liability coverages. Meanwhile, for Uber, they offer up to $100,000,000 in liability coverages. There are many similarities between

  • Martin Scorsese's Film, Taxi Driver

    2210 Words  | 5 Pages

    Synopsis Vietnam veteran Travis Bicklea finds that his life has been turned upside down after returning America from the battle-field. He suffers from the insomnia and sense of isolation, which leads him to take a job as taxi-driver at night; many of his customers represent the people from the lowest class of society: prostitutes, adulterous husbands and wenchers. Since Travis has promised the cab company that he will drive anywhere, at anytime, his likelihood of seeing the best of human nature

  • Taxi Driver A Representation of Deteriorated New York City in the 1970’s

    740 Words  | 2 Pages

    crit... ... middle of paper ... ... create a realistic representation of what life in NYC was like. As a result, Taxi Driver more realistically conveyed the condition of the city and the accompanying sense of helplessness. According to Scorsese, this was accomplished both visually and through the actions of Travis. Scorsese asserts that considerable visual influence from Taxi Driver derived from, “[my] impressions I have as a result of growing up in New York and living in the city.” As for the

  • Comparing Crime and Punishment and Taxi Driver

    751 Words  | 2 Pages

    Crime and Punishment and Taxi Driver He is a man whose psychological workings are dark, twisted, horrifying, and lonely. He is an absurd, anti-hero who is absolutely repulsed by his surroundings, and because he is unable to remove himself from them, he feels justified in removing other people. This profile fits Travis, portrayed by Robert DeNiro in Scorsese's film "Taxi Driver,", and Raskolnikov, the main character of Dostoevsky's novel Crime and Punishment. Their revulsion for life leads

  • The Western Revisited in Martin Scorsese's Taxi Driver

    1767 Words  | 4 Pages

    Scorsese's Taxi Driver One need only peruse his impressive filmography to realize that Martin Scorsese's corpus spans several decades and extends across as many genres. As a veteran filmmaker (and self professed cinephile) Scorsese must understand that the Western is the oldest Hollywood genre which, like all genres, is defined according to specific motifs, iconography, conventions and themes (Mast, 468). In fact, by deliberately invoking the codes and conventions of the Western to underpin Taxi Driver

  • Taxi Driver and the Hollywood Renaissance

    2352 Words  | 5 Pages

    Largely influenced by the French New Wave and other international film movements, many American filmmakers in the late 1960s to 1970s sought to revolutionize Hollywood cinema in a similar way. The New Hollywood movement, also referred to as the “American New Wave” and the “Hollywood Renaissance,” defied traditional Hollywood standards and practices in countless ways, creating a more innovative and artistic style of filmmaking. Due to the advent and popularity of television, significant decrease in

  • Pros And Disadvantages Of Uber

    1177 Words  | 3 Pages

    to have a long way trip. Taxi, is the way that has been seemed as the most convenient choice for us to choose whenever we want to go outside for many years. However, in recent years, a new way that more and more people would like to choose when they go outside is to take a Uber drive. Uber, a startup and traffic network company with it’s own app on the mobile phones is gradually becoming popular among young people and even interferes the business of the traditional taxi industry. Nowadays, Uber

  • Government Deregulation on The Taxi Industry

    589 Words  | 2 Pages

    outrage at the high prices of taxi fares. The last significant change to the taxi industry was caused by government deregulation, in 1989. This economic inquiry report is going to investigate the impact of this government policy, and the unintended consequences for both consumers and taxi drivers. SUPPLY AND DEMAND Deregulation decreased the barriers to entry for people wanting to become taxi drivers. This is due to a removal of a restriction on the number of taxis operating in specific areas, thus

  • Moral Dualism In Taxi Driver

    1301 Words  | 3 Pages

    perspective voiceover and insertion of self-conscious viewpoint shots (Berliner 2010, p. 158) violate the norms of classical Hollywood objective story telling. Instead of relying on motions and conversations to portray the character state of mind, Taxi Driver employed stylized tableau and infiltrated music to

  • Women Driving Case Study

    1247 Words  | 3 Pages

    Overturn the regulation on women driving: Challenges and solutions Zeyad Danish Virginia Tech Language and Culture Institute Introduction: According to Suad Khaled ““We sometimes finish work at 11pm. Taking a taxi at that time could cost us up to SR50 ($13.50). Our night shifts are costing us SR1300 ($347) a month one-way. We still can’t drive, so why aren’t there alternatives that are suitable for everyone?”(Whitaker, 2014).All countries has been allowed both gender men and women to drive