Saturday, June 03, 2006

Taxi Driver

Loneliness has always been an interesting human trait, combine it with a sleeping disorder and confused morality caused by service in the Vietnam War and a general hatred towards a morally degenerate society and you get Travis Bickle (Robert Deniro). Just trying to find his place in the world after fighting for a country he believes in, Travis is drawn to a New York City Cab company for work because the nights just don’t put him to sleep anymore. Night after night, Travis drives the slums of NYC, picking up and dropping off drug dealers, Users, prostitutes and other generally scum ridden “people of the night”. After running into a 14 year old prostitute (Jody Foster) trying to escape her pimp (Harvey Keitel), Travis decides he has seen enough and is driven into the idea of making a change in big tough NYC. But how far would you go to make your point, to make a change in a world full of callous, seemingly uncaring human beings. Is vigilante justice enough to make Travis the hero he seeks to be or just another hate monger using blinded violence to make the front page of the New York Times.
The best Vigilante movie ever made. Martin Scorsese (director) does such an amazing job of letting his audience fill Travis’s Loneliness and despair that leads you to one of the most climactic endings in cinematic history. It was no joke when The American Film Institute named this movie one of the 100 best films of all time. If you like vigilante justices try on: The Boondock Saints, Batman, Batman Returns, Batman Begins and One hour Photo.

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