Taxi Driver and New Hollywood |
|
|
01:00:07.6 |
|
Narrator: The brief opening sequence of Martin
Scorsese’s Taxi Driver sets the
film’s style and themes and, without dialog or narrative exposition, hints at
its place in both American and film history. The first image we see is of a taxi at night emerging from a cloud of
smoke as if rising up from hell, and the film’s title appears in taxi cab
yellow on the smoke followed by the opening credits. The film cuts to an extreme close-up of a
man’s gaze lit alternately by red and white lights; this is the taxi driver of
the title. We see a point of view shot
of a rain- |
01:00:42.7 |
|
smeared
windshield. Neon streaks of red, white
and blue dissolve into jittery patterns abstracting the city streets. Another dissolve and then the director’s
credit is superimposed on a shot of pedestrians crossing, turned to gaze at the
driver and at us. When the film cuts
back to the extreme close-up, the taxi driver’s straining eyes shift like
windshield wipers. Travis Bickle, the
alienated Vietnam vet who is the |
01:01:11.3 |
|
film’s protagonist,
has not yet said a word. Later, in
similar nighttime cruising sequences, Travis’s voiceover will share an
apocalyptic vision of New York as a city of filth and sin awaiting redemption. But already in the opening sequence, the
colors of the American flag bleed together and the taciturn protagonist evokes
iconic American genre heroes. Scorsese’s
film is perhaps the iconic text of New American Cinema of the 1970s; it pays
tribute to studio filmmaking of Hollywood’s classical era while |
01:01:44.0 |
|
taking the violence
of westerns and gangster films to unheard of extremes. In doing so, it perverts the western standard
of heroism and produces a vision shaped in equal measure by the existential
questioning and innovative style of the French New Wave and by the horrors of a
televised war and political violence at home. |
01:02:06.4 |
|
Narrator: Bickle drives a cab because he can’t sleep
nights. As his paranoia grows, he arms
himself, gets in shape, and keeps a diary of his misguided ambitions to clean up
the city. A famous and disturbing
central sequence opens with a shot of Travis twirling a pistol gunslinger style
as he faces himself in the mirror. A cut
shows him shrugging on his Army jacket over his weaponry. We see him framed in the mirror. A rapid pan takes in his apartment and stops
on Travis, now |
01:02:36.4 |
|
facing the mirror and
facing us. He draws his gun. “Faster than you,” he mutters. As he continues to confront his reflection he
appears to become more and more disassociated. The film doesn’t show us the reverse shot, Travis’s reflection, but we
can imagine how provoking its gaze and words must be to the paranoid character
onscreen, the reflection’s double. “You
talkin’ to me?” he famously demands. |
01:03:04.2 |
|
Narrator: Time elapses, signaled by dissolves and
accompanied by Travis’s asynchronous, expletive-laden voiceover. We are seeing repeated action now. The film uses overlapping editing—its own
narration becomes jumpy like Travis’s. The film then cuts to an overhead shot of Travis stretched out on his
bed. The text is inspired by the diaries
of a would-be assassin, Arthur Bremer, and it speaks of Travis in the third
person: “Here is a man who would not take it any longer.” The jump cuts show the revolutionary |
01:03:35.5 |
|
influence of European
art cinema style on New Hollywood cinema. At the same time, the breakdown in classical continuity editing is
motivated by the protagonist’s mental breakdown. Travis’s last comment “You’re dead,” is
seemingly addressed to us. We’ve become
completely disassociated from our forced identification with Bickle, whose
point of view has been foisted on us from the first extreme close-up of his
eyes. How can the rest of the film play
out after this psychotic break? |
01:04:12.8 |
|
Narrator: The rupture of everyday reality figured in
the film also refers to a historical break: the trauma of Vietnam, student
protests, and assassinations meant that the heroics of Cold War genre films
could no longer appear innocent. |
01:04:28.9 |
|
Narrator: At the film’s conclusion, Travis has
transformed into a vigilante killer, shooting everyone in sight in an attempt
to rescue the young prostitute played by Jodie Foster. |
01:05:05.7 |
|
Narrator: The ghastly image of Travis with his
bloodied finger pointed at his temple at the end of this sequence resembles the
mirror sequence in its disturbing confusion between self and other and subject
and object of violence. |
01:05:21.2 |
|
Narrator: John Ford’s The Searchers is the model for this rescue of a young girl who
doesn’t want to be saved, and Travis’s Mohawk and blood-spattered face bring out
the savage violence of the classical western. |
01:05:38.2 |
|
Narrator: The camera retraces Travis’s path of entry
into the building with a smooth backward sweep that takes in the carnage he’s
left in his wake before showing the neighborhood commotion, paying homage to
the virtuosic camera movements of a filmmaker like Orson Welles. The audience’s point of view, linked to
Travis’s from the opening credits, has finally been severed from his
perspective. |
01:06:10.3 |
|
Narrator: Blue police cars and white lights
replace—but in some sense complete—the horrific tableau of red from the
blood. |
01:06:20.8 |
|
Narrator: In a coda, we find that Travis has become a
hero for his actions and so one of the most influential New Hollywood films
ends with a cynical take on American media and its audiences. |