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TAXI DRIVER Movie Reaction (Yeah, I'm REACTING TO YOU!!!) 

Amanda Kazzy Cryer
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Taxi Driver (1976)
**Disclaimer** - had a lot of trouble getting this video monetized so some images are blurred, some famous moments had to be omitted (I'm talking to you "you talkin' to me")
**Credit** Seb Swede for giving me the best (AND MOST OBVIOUS) title to this reaction.
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#TaxiDriver #reaction #react
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LOVE to ALL of you

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2 сен 2021

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Комментарии : 542   
@thomasknash
@thomasknash 2 года назад
Second comment: As for the language in the film: I think it reflects not just the period it was made but also the reality of the setting. Criminals, the poor, and blue collar/working class people (like pimps, prostitutes, & cab drivers) are not politically correct people. Especially one who is mentally ill & about to explode in rage like Travis. I think modern movies are too infantile & worrying too much about offending their viewers, especially those that are meant for adults. Adults shouldn’t need things censored to them. If anything so many modern movies are so sanitized they don’t resemble anything like real life.
@gazoontight
@gazoontight 2 года назад
It would be interesting to observe the reaction of modern day people if it would be possible to transport them to 1970s New York City.
@highstimulation2497
@highstimulation2497 2 года назад
adults don't need things censored. indeed. this.
@dx315
@dx315 Год назад
Check out "Good Time" from 2017 if you like Taxi Driver and appreciate a gritty story.
@matthewwhite7473
@matthewwhite7473 Год назад
Couldn't agree more. It's sickening how much modern films and television feel the need to censor every little thing that's offensive. The world is an offensive place, full of evil and torment, if you fail to include that in stories then the audience has nothing to relate the story to. It is no longer grounded in any reality. This is why I think a lot of people collect and re-watch these great films, because they are from an era when film creators could put anything on screen and more often then not, they desired to portray realistic, immersive stories that the audience could learn something from or be impacted by. You remove the harshness of life from a story and you don't have a story anymore. I for one believe if this censorship continues we won't even be able to stream movies like this anymore, it's getting that bad. That's why I still buy DVD's because I'll be damned if I am going to let the government tell me what is safe or unsafe for me and my family to watch. Especially seeing most of the crap they are spewing out these days is far more political and damaging then any of this old stuff.
@dmp1520
@dmp1520 10 месяцев назад
not just that era ANY ERA. ALL civilizations and times have people , most people, certainly street hardened people and certainly men, who use curse words, profanity, insults, breaking balls etc... its the attitude of hollywood the media and univeristies and people these days that is wrong , infantile, stupid and ultimately moe akin to censorship than anything wrong with these films. The sopranos is filled with cursing and insults and colourfull language and thats why its so realistic and fun and hilarious and truthfull! real people dont have a focus group to tell them whihc words can or cant be used ....
@ThomasCorp
@ThomasCorp 2 года назад
Definitely one of Scorsese's most iconic films. A particular highlight of it is the haunting final score by Bernard Herrmann who died shortly after completing it. I would say he should have won the Oscar for it, but to be fair, that was the same year as Jerry Goldsmith's score for The Omen, so there was tough competition.
@jordantaylor260
@jordantaylor260 2 года назад
If by “iconic” you mean “problematic sexist pile of shit” then you’ve nailed it.
@irvinnovik6643
@irvinnovik6643 2 года назад
@@jordantaylor260 whaaa??😂
@jordantaylor260
@jordantaylor260 2 года назад
@@irvinnovik6643 You, my tiny minded friend, are my absolute favourite. It's not enough for you to be a f****wit. You're trying to take it to a different level: that of the indifferent troll. Supposedly someone who knows something we don't. Well, let's see what you know, with your one word, one emoji answers that are supposed to provide all the valid arguments. I can see your name is Eastern European in origin, so (yawn) that's where you're from or it's you're background. What an absolute hive of misogyny, homophobia, superstition and outright backwards thinking, lead by conditioning from a young age into a mindset that suits the status quo. That's the birth place of your non-dimensional idiocy. But do tell me, what do you mean by "whaaaa" (not a full word) or a laughing emoji? I suppose that's supposed to show some level of intellectual superiority, like that Taliban bloke who started laughing a few weeks ago when he was asked if women would be allowed into positions of government in Afghanistan? Is that what you think? I bet it is, Irvin the Moron. Just show misplaced smugness in place of actual intelligence backed by reasoned arguments. That'll work. It's also a sign of somebody with nothing to say. You don't have an opinion or an argument. You simply believe a thing and that's it, because that's what you were told. The worst kind of sheep. Mindless. You're the detritus of humanity. A worthless, thoughtless phantom who flits from one situation to the next, merely existing, never forging anything for yourself. When we rid ourselves of dregs like you it will be a happy day. You will die decrepit and alone, without understanding. Have a nice day.
@cjmacq-vg8um
@cjmacq-vg8um 2 года назад
YES! the score doesn't recieve enough credit. herrmann scored many iconic films including hitchcock's "psycho!" this movie demonstrates the thin line between heroism and psychosis. travis was NO HERO! he was a maniac on the verge of a complete breakdown. he failed to murder his primary target, a politician, and then proceeded to his secondary target, a pimp. he wasn't seeking justice or the common good. he was looking for someone to kill. and because of whom he ultimately murdered he was wrongly declared by society a hero instead of the psychotic villain that he actually was.
@vickjr98
@vickjr98 2 года назад
@@jordantaylor260 don't be an idiot
@MrUndersolo
@MrUndersolo 2 года назад
Yeah, that was Martin Scorsese in the backseat. He even had a book about his career named after his role in the film: 'Man Watching Silhouette'. Glad you picked this one... The real monster in the film is loneliness. And it did win awards in '76, including the Palme d'Or at Cannes!
@betsyduane3461
@betsyduane3461 2 года назад
He's also sitting on the wall in the black T-shirt at 4:48
@rheymarvinsalestre4075
@rheymarvinsalestre4075 2 года назад
@@betsyduane3461 Saw that in my first viewing. Some Hitchcock-like cameo he made there. He also did one on Raging Bull, right before the end.
@cjmacq-vg8um
@cjmacq-vg8um 2 года назад
scorcese can also be seen as cybill shepherd makes her entrance to the film walking in slow motion across the screen. you can see him sitting in the background watching her pass by. the real monster in this film IS PSYCHOSIS and DELUSION! notice we, the audience, don't really know if what travis sees is real or a paranoid delusion. this movie demonstrates the thin line between heroism and psychosis. travis was NO HERO! he was a maniac on the verge of a complete breakdown. he failed to murder his primary target, a politician, and then proceeded to his secondary target, a pimp. he wasn't seeking justice or the common good. he was looking for someone to kill. and because of whom he ultimately murdered he was wrongly declared by society a hero instead of the psychotic villain that he actually was.
@highstimulation2497
@highstimulation2497 2 года назад
interesting indeed. I've seen this film more than once, long ago and longer still ago. Sometimes I fancy myself as lonely, but then I hear that this film is about isolation, alienation, then I remember that I in fact have MANY friends, and then I realize that whatever I am, lonely is not it. :)
@robertmartinez2790
@robertmartinez2790 Год назад
Another fact about the scene is the person who was actually supposed to play this character did not follow through so Martin Scorsese played the scene himself.
@dunringill1747
@dunringill1747 2 года назад
The Scorsese movie "The King of Comedy" is another influence on "The Joker".
@thanosjackson
@thanosjackson 2 года назад
I actually like The King Of Comedy more than Taxi Driver ( I still love Taxi Driver a lot). I think Taxi Driver has a better soundtrack though.
@thomasknash
@thomasknash 2 года назад
So is Sidney Lumet’s DOG DAY AFTERNOON and NETWORK.
@Joe-hh8gd
@Joe-hh8gd 2 года назад
Yep. Phoenix even wears the same red jacket as DeNiro.
@paogate1384
@paogate1384 2 года назад
Yup your right, Scorsese was asked the direct The Joker that’s where the influence came from, he declined because of other projects
@paogate1384
@paogate1384 2 года назад
Paul Schroeder was a brilliant screen writer, he also directed a hidden Jem called Blue Collar
@ElliotNesterman
@ElliotNesterman 2 года назад
DeNiro and Jodie Foster were nominated for Oscars, but didn't win. However, they both won Golden Globes. The film won the Palme d'Or at Cannes.
@cesarnarro6013
@cesarnarro6013 2 года назад
I feel that the language in this movie is fairly accurate to what a taxi driver in NYC would have heard in the 70's
@Joe-hh8gd
@Joe-hh8gd 2 года назад
Yep. And not just cabbies. Nearly everybody. And if you need movie verification of that, try Saturday Night Fever, The French Connection, Serpico, etc etc etc
@gazoontight
@gazoontight 2 года назад
I wonder how people nowadays would get along if they woke up in 1970s New York City.
@mohammedashian8094
@mohammedashian8094 2 года назад
De Niro would actually drive taxi passengers in between takes so he could get more in the role and he has a taxi driver’s license and there was one passenger who recognized him
@hieuneo7085
@hieuneo7085 Год назад
@@gazoontight terrible time to woke up
@ramonacosta2647
@ramonacosta2647 Год назад
@@gazoontight They'd be in perpetual shock.
@michaelbuhl4250
@michaelbuhl4250 2 года назад
I disagree with your assessment of the ending of the movie. My take on it is that we, the audience know that Travis is extremely unstable and what he is capable of; however, because of who he kills he is lauded as a hero by the public and allowed to go free. He could just as easily have killed a political candidate. (That could be a set up for jokes about the value of politicians, but we'll set that aside for now.) It just so happens that the mental illness that could have caused Travis to assassinate a politician was, instead, channeled into killing people prostituting a child. There is no moment of reform or realization for Travis. The fact that he continues to blend into society at the end of the film is especially disturbing. I think the ending of the Scorsese movie *The King of Comedy* is a sort of reverse take on this. If you liked Albert Brooks, *Defending Your Life* , *Lost in America* , and *Real Life* are all pretty funny.
@ThomasCorp
@ThomasCorp 2 года назад
I believe that Paul Schrader said that when he wrote this, his intent was more or less word for word your take on the ending.
@ronbock8291
@ronbock8291 2 года назад
I’ve always assumed that the ending was Travis’s hallucination while he died.
@hoagsmash4188
@hoagsmash4188 2 года назад
@@ronbock8291 You're exactly correct. He died on the couch, the rest was hallucinated while he was dying.
@pete_lind
@pete_lind 2 года назад
@@ronbock8291 Also how its filmed from above , suggest Travis is watching his dead body on the sofa .
@carlhartwell7978
@carlhartwell7978 2 года назад
@@pete_lind That may be right, I don't mind sitting on the fence on that one. But regardless, it's entirely likely that Travis would have been seen as a vigilante/anti hero type by at least the public even if he did die and almost a given that Iris' family would have praised him in death in the same way as was portrayed in whatever you perceive the ending to be.
@mattp.3949
@mattp.3949 2 года назад
The personal officer at the taxi depot at 3:15 who interviews Travis (Robert DeNero) for the taxi driver job is played by the late great Joe Spinell (1936-1989) who played many New York inner city heavy types through his own career.
@sntxrrr
@sntxrrr 2 года назад
Interesting how Taxi Driver, Falling Down and Joker are all about a generation apart.
@davevannatta985
@davevannatta985 2 года назад
That is Martin Scorsese in the back seat. He was also in the black shirt the first time we see Betsy
@DylansPen
@DylansPen 2 года назад
This came out back when we'd go to the drive-in to see movies. Today's generation you are missing out on the drive-in scene, very visceral.
@jdolan74
@jdolan74 2 года назад
The pandemic actually has kinda brought the drive-in BACK! lol
@StevenRice
@StevenRice 2 года назад
Drive-ins never went away. Back east where I am from there are two drive-ins that have been THRIVING - one shows new movies and all (Becky's) and the other (Mahoning) is kind of the art-house horror house drive-in, Joe Bob Briggs had an event there last month and all. Drive-Ins still rule.
@DylansPen
@DylansPen 2 года назад
@@StevenRice The majority are gone and it's too bad. Glad there are some still around, there used to be multiplex drive-ins like there are multi-plex walk-in theaters.
@StevenRice
@StevenRice 2 года назад
@@DylansPen beckys has two separate screens which is fun, usually a family friendly screen and a mature screen. It’s awesome, I miss it now that I’m out west
@ElliotNesterman
@ElliotNesterman 2 года назад
Another important film of the era is 1969's _Midnight Cowboy._ Directed by John Schlesinger, it stars Dustin Hoffman and John Voight, and won three Oscars: Best Director, Best Adapted Screenplay, and Best Picture. It also has a Grammy winning score by John Barry, and a Grammy winning song "Everybody's Talkin'".
@benntura
@benntura 2 года назад
I agree.
@fredrm6023
@fredrm6023 2 года назад
I’m walking here 🚶‍♂️ I’m walking here !
@danwood4171
@danwood4171 2 года назад
As a young man I had no ideas about movies in general and had never heard of Midnight Cowboy. I saw it on TV one evening, pre-cable, pre-internet, and at the end of it I thought to myself this should've won a best picture award. Little did I know.
@cjmacq-vg8um
@cjmacq-vg8um 2 года назад
"midnight cowboy" was the ONLY x-rated movie to win an oscar. now, you can watch the film almost unedited, in its entirity right on broadcast tv. that's where i first saw it and fell in love with it.
@desmondpowell3205
@desmondpowell3205 2 года назад
There is nothing wrong with the language in this movie! I think they know better back than, back when you didn’t get canceled for every little silly thing!!!
@highstimulation2497
@highstimulation2497 2 года назад
I am 46, I am not a right winger, and I don't understand why people would be offended by such language in 'movies,' in stories, particularly stories about the relevant time period, today included, for it's not like there aren't crazy racist people, some of them politicians, actually SAYING racist things today. Yes, it's offensive. Yes it's wrong and yes people shouldn't do it, but being offended that it is even 'depicted,' particularly in a story not only set but MADE 50 years ago is just foolish. Come on, people, life isn't a fairy-tale, and movies and any other stories about culture/the world/existence need to be truthful, they can't pretend people never used racist language, that's in a way almost as bad as the right wingers white-washing real-life slavery itself in actual textbooks in actual schools. Racism and racist language are wrong, but be offended by the right things, by people actually being racist and actually using racist language, not by depictions of them in films for accuracy's sake.
@JedHead77
@JedHead77 2 года назад
“You reacting to me?” 🚕
@lawrenceallen8096
@lawrenceallen8096 2 года назад
Yes, that was a cameo of director Martin Scorsese: the cab passenger who was following his wife.
@carlossaraiva8213
@carlossaraiva8213 2 года назад
And it happened only because the actor who had been hired for the role never showed up at the day of filmming.
@sebswede9005
@sebswede9005 2 года назад
@@carlossaraiva8213 sorry, My bad
@dmb70
@dmb70 2 года назад
It's always interesting to see how young people react to the language & violence of these 70's movies. The other Scorsese movie that is a major influence on Joker is 1982's King of Comedy staring DeNiro & Jerry Lewis, it's another must watch.
@jeffreynolin9339
@jeffreynolin9339 2 года назад
The King of Comedy was a great movie and perhaps even more of an influence.
2 года назад
Excellent movie.
@darrellpalmer
@darrellpalmer 2 года назад
"We know better now." I disagree. Your surprise at the breadth of the language we spoke back then points to the way "acceptable" has become so incredibly narrowly defined that an increasing number of people find themselves to be them instead of us. Social media has provided a gathering place for them to band together. The polarization of our country is the result of this us and them mentality.
@sjw5797
@sjw5797 2 года назад
I wouldn't sweat it too much. Trends in fashionable speech come and go. Most people shrug a lot of it off learn from other parts of it (like, the N-word really, really is offensive), and end up with a somewhat modified form of the kind of speech that seems natural to them. The more unnatural aspects of newfangled speech (some of the pronoun stuff) will prove to be a passing fad.
@harveybojangle475
@harveybojangle475 2 года назад
I think this has less to do with economic disadvantage and more to do with loneliness itself. Bickle's quote, "There's no escape. I'm God's lonely man" is the driving force here, I think.
@petercofrancesco9812
@petercofrancesco9812 2 года назад
This movie is an insight into the mind of people who go on shooting sprees. There is a desire in all of us to loved, to accomplish something meaningful and to be recognized. These desires for someone who is a little off mentally can easily become twisted. I don't view the language or violence as a negative. Most movies today are overly sanitized so as not offend. True art is unapologetic.
@HkFinn83
@HkFinn83 2 года назад
Yeh it’s an amazing thing that when this film came out and for years after we didn’t even know WHAT he was, he was just so well portrayed he was real. Now we have a name for him; a shooter, incel, autistic, etc etc
@matthunter983
@matthunter983 2 года назад
"language can be horrible"?...Shakespeare gasps
@nosyrosie6947
@nosyrosie6947 Год назад
Taxi Driver has two of the greatest cameo scene's in a movie. Martin Scorsese stalking his wife, and Easy Andy as the gun dealer.
@Silly81
@Silly81 7 месяцев назад
Speaking of Easy Andy or the guy portraying him, he told the story of a person who ODed and someone had to use a syringe with a long needle and slam it into their heart and the person came to instantly. Quentin Tarantino borrowed (or stole) the story and used it in his movie, you can probably guess what movie it is.
@karlmoles6530
@karlmoles6530 2 года назад
I was a cab driver for a long time, we definitely see some shit. I had to fight an abusive crackhead once.
@DerDrecksack87
@DerDrecksack87 2 года назад
The ending is the fewer dream of a dying man, many think he died on the couch in the end and imagined the rest while bleeding out.
@highstimulation2497
@highstimulation2497 2 года назад
fewer??????????
@golf5739
@golf5739 2 года назад
"You talkin' to me?" All time favorite line
@dr.burtgummerfan439
@dr.burtgummerfan439 2 года назад
I also like when he says women are "like a union" 🤣
@styot
@styot 2 года назад
King of Comedy, another of Scorsese's older movies, is far more similar to Joker, it's pretty close to a remake just set in the DC world. 😂 But I get the Taxi Driver comparisons as well.
@jaywoolston2851
@jaywoolston2851 2 года назад
I'm not sure if anyone has mentioned it, but the woman working in the porno theater was De Niro's wife, Diahnne Abbott.
@Weaseldog2001
@Weaseldog2001 2 года назад
Peter Boyle was in this film, and is in 'Young Frankenstein'. You might remember him from ' Everyone Lives Ramon'.
@jksgameshelf3378
@jksgameshelf3378 2 года назад
So many great, gritty films came out of the '70's. You should watch "Network" (one of my top ten favorite films of all time), "Deliverance", "Chinatown", "The French Connection", and another of my all time favorites is "Marathon Man" with Dustin Hoffman, Roy Scheider, and Sir Laurence Olivier. It's a long list from that decade. Some of the greatest films ever made.
@benntura
@benntura 2 года назад
I'd like to add Dog Day Afternoon starring Al Pacino.
@jksgameshelf3378
@jksgameshelf3378 2 года назад
@@benntura - oh, absolutely. Fantastic film.
@cesarnarro6013
@cesarnarro6013 2 года назад
Yes so true ! I always wondered why films changed so much in the 80's ( also music )
@craigplatel813
@craigplatel813 2 года назад
5 easy pieces
2 года назад
What I really like about Scorssess, and this movie is a great example, is that he didn't romantice violence. Violence is cruel, scary, crazy, awkard and it hurts. And you can see that in scorssesse movies very, very well.
@FadeToBlack888
@FadeToBlack888 2 года назад
Finallyyy you're taking a break from all of that trash tv to watch 'REAL CINEMA' as Mr Scorsese would say ;)
@piyushchatterjee1576
@piyushchatterjee1576 2 года назад
I cry whenever I see's it ,because the way Robert Deniro acted ,the sadness ,frustrated,madness, emotional all the expression s u can see on his face, that's magnificent.
@stefanconradsson
@stefanconradsson 2 года назад
Big shout out to Paul Schrader, who wrote this, he is an unhinged genius who should write more scripts. Cheers 🍺
@essaywhu
@essaywhu 11 месяцев назад
There’s one thing you are wrong about at the end. He is not economically disadvantaged at all. He said he is making 3-400 a week and I would be surprised if his rent for his room wasn’t somewhere between $80 to $120 a month for that shitty room. Maybe even lower. He is pulling at least ten times his rent just driving a cab.
@thomasknash
@thomasknash 2 года назад
Ok first comment: reminder how violent & crime ridden New York City (and America) was at that time. In a span of 10 years, from 1966 to 1976 (the year this movie was released) NYC saw the number of murders go up from 654 in 1966 to 1,622 in 1976. The US itself saw murders go up in just 5 years from 16,000 in 1970 to 20,510 in 1975. By comparison in 2020 (after a 151 additional murder spike for 2019) NYC still only had 462 murders (that’s 1,160 less murders than 1976). The US, even after a 25% homicide spike last year has a murder rate 25%-30% less than they had in the 70s. On top of all that, NYC was a city completely falling apart. It lost a million resident from 1970 to 1980 because it was so dysfunctional they fled the city. The city went bankrupt, had a garbage strike, black & brown outs, and a number of riots (including the infamous 1977 one). Prostitution, street crime, gangs, mugging, drugs, etc. we’re everywhere. The city was so crime ridden & underfunded NYPD released a pamphlet entitled “Fear City” warning tourist to stay away. I bring this up because this is the City & world Travis is living in and feeling pressure from. It plays a big part in both Travis’s motivation & why the film was part of the zeitgeist of the time (and why JOKER had to be set back then).
@dan-mv7hk
@dan-mv7hk 2 года назад
And in 1976-77, the Son of Sam killer was walking in the streets of the City..
@whysoserious652
@whysoserious652 2 года назад
Kazzy: oh its palantine not palpatine, hahaha. Palps: its treason then😂😁😅😃
@P.HATHCOX
@P.HATHCOX 2 года назад
Now I'm always going to think of Kazzy saying Palpatine when I watch this movie 😆
@indridcold3762
@indridcold3762 2 года назад
I loved the language back then. We should use it more today.
@sebswede9005
@sebswede9005 2 года назад
Taxi Driver: "You're reacting to me?"
@KazzyCreates
@KazzyCreates 2 года назад
That's good!
@johnclaeys9514
@johnclaeys9514 2 года назад
At the very end in the taxi, Travis “looks at his own eyeballs in the mirror” with a disturbing dissonant reverse musical sting in the background, and sees that the violence is still inside of him and could and probably will resurface.
@kwadwotuffour5529
@kwadwotuffour5529 2 года назад
Wow, Kazzy. I just came across you for the very first time today. I have to say I am SO enjoying your reactions, even though, I haven't even watched any of the movies or shows you have reacted to. I came across your 'taxi driver's reaction. That was the first time I've enjoyed a reaction that much over something I haven't seen or watched, lol. I could actually fall asleep listening to you. You have a whole different style. So calm, professional, relaxing.
@KazzyCreates
@KazzyCreates 2 года назад
Welcome aboard! Thank you so much! I'm here to be your ASMR Movie Reactor! Ahahaha. I hope you enjoy all of my reactions. 🙏💛
@kwadwotuffour5529
@kwadwotuffour5529 2 года назад
@@KazzyCreates yea, that's one of the things you're style made me think of. Like mr. Roger's or one of those people presenting a show over tv to an audience. Also, I thought of like someone conducting a session of something(anything; yoga, a book club, support group, etc.).
@stynershiner1854
@stynershiner1854 2 года назад
Just admit, you're in love with her.
@kwadwotuffour5529
@kwadwotuffour5529 2 года назад
@@stynershiner1854 haha, I probably am a little in love with her.
@bobbobberson5897
@bobbobberson5897 2 года назад
My interpretation to the ending is... He's dead, and his afterlife is just what he's familiar with
@billshire2681
@billshire2681 2 года назад
"Insomniac ?" He's on speed, lady...!
@dontbstingy3587
@dontbstingy3587 2 года назад
King of Comedy, another Deniro/Scorsese film is the other one that really influenced the Joker.
@davidgagnon7806
@davidgagnon7806 Год назад
The song playing during American Bandstand is Jackson Browne's "Late For The Sky." The loneliest song for the loneliest scene.
@frankrossi6972
@frankrossi6972 2 года назад
Many people want to dismiss films like this and "Falling Down" and "Joker," as toxic-masculinity, angry-white-guy movies and attribute that anger to some sort of rage over changing demographics in the U.S. or feminism, but it's deeper than that. You don't need to be a bigot or a chauvinist to be unable to pinpoint why your life feels empty and you're angry about injustices that you see every day. The men in these movies have different motivations---loneliness, frustration over a divorce, alienation---that go beyond race and politics. They grew up consuming mass media that told them that they won't be happy unless they have this and that----cars, a family, money, etc. --- and when expectations fall short, they cannot express themselves/seek help/reach out to anyone/deal with reality. My advice to parents: Stop telling your kids they're "special" and are "going to change the world." Most people don't change the world, and that's OK if you're a good person. Kids need to be told that it's more important to be a good person. like Travis, than a great or famous one, like the senator.
@ElliotNesterman
@ElliotNesterman 2 года назад
Speaking of _Young Frankenstein,_ Peter Boyle, who plays Wizard here, plays the creature in _Young Frankenstein._
@hannahpumpkins4359
@hannahpumpkins4359 2 года назад
I was gonna make espresso!
@ElliotNesterman
@ElliotNesterman 2 года назад
Speaking of Gene Hackman, _The French Connection_ is a thriller that ought to be on everyone's list. It's got all the things that make for a great reaction: cops, criminals, shootouts, a spectacular car chase, and Hackman's Oscar-winning performance.
@rodentnolastname6612
@rodentnolastname6612 2 года назад
"King Of Comedy" (1982) also inspired "Joker". Very underrated film.
@ericpederson3105
@ericpederson3105 2 года назад
Go out amongst the people, the real workaday people and you'll still hear all the same language still being spoken.
@Jared_Wignall
@Jared_Wignall 2 года назад
That was defiantly Scorsese in the taxi with De Niro. He was in the first scene we saw Cybil Shepard in as well at the beginning and only did the scene as the guy who is in the taxi when the original guy didn’t show up. This is a defiant masterpiece.
@norwegianblue2017
@norwegianblue2017 2 года назад
My mom looked just like Cybil Shepherd when she was young.
@nonplayerzealot4
@nonplayerzealot4 2 года назад
My keyboard died on me a week ago, so it was a pain to point and click every character w/ the comp's internal KB, but now that I have a new KB, one thing I forgot to mention was the sad juxtaposition of this movie and Travis Bickle as a character w/ John Lennon and Mark Chapman, the slug who killed him. Both of them had seen this movie 4-5x and Chapman was obsessed with it. Not only that, but John Hinckley, who shot Ronald Reagan in 81, was also obsessed with this movie and was stalking and harassing Jodie Foster at her university. Hinckley probably would've killed her if he had actually encountered her. They found a hit list of his w/ a bunch of famous people including Jimmy Carter, who was president in the late 70s. He apparently moved onto Reagan as far as I know because he was about 2 months into office at the time he decided to do it. They let Hinckley out for visits with his parents. Iirc, they did agree that he was criminally insane at the time of the act. Sort of coincidentally, one of Lennon's favorite drinks was the Brandy Alexander which is cognac (which is just "plain" brandy as opposed to fruit brandy=peach, apricot, plum,etc), creme de cacao (choc syrup) and cream (milk can be used as a ghetto version). Lennon enjoyed them because he was also fond of the milkshakes he got in NYC.
@k.t.5405
@k.t.5405 2 года назад
min 26:40 funny, Foster's hair in this particular shot looks kind of like the Princess Leia do from Star Wars. Jodie Foster actually DID audition for George Lucas around this time (1975-76) for the role of Princess Leia (striking resemblance to a young Mark Hamill) on Scorsese and 20th Century Fox's urging. She made the shortlist along with Fischer and Amy Irving, but Lucas wanted NEW faces, hence Carrie Fischer... Jodie Foster would have been SPECTACULAR in Star Wars.
@kidgforce1
@kidgforce1 2 года назад
So Travs is Han Solo, the guy who shoots first
@k.t.5405
@k.t.5405 2 года назад
@@kidgforce1 kaboom tishhhhhhh
@creaturecaldwell9858
@creaturecaldwell9858 2 года назад
The song " Red Angle Dragnet " by The Clash is about this movie..its a good song
@dr.burtgummerfan439
@dr.burtgummerfan439 2 года назад
Iris: "I don't know who's weirder, me or you." Me: "Uh, he is." Fun fact: Cybill Shepherd's dress in the coffee shop scene is the same pattern as the upholstery in the Partridge Family's bus.
@cjmacq-vg8um
@cjmacq-vg8um 2 года назад
... you know they killed that bus just make shepherd's dress. it was horrible. there was grease, oil and gasoline everywhere! actually, that's an interesting observation. i never noticed that before.
@TTM9691
@TTM9691 2 года назад
As soon as you noticed Paul Schrader's name in the credits, I knew I was in good hands! :D Great reaction, Kazzy. I know this has been on your Patreon for a while, and that you just did a live premiere, so I won't add anything that's already been said other than to say fantastic reaction and edit! You include little bits and scenes that NO ONE does! Thank you so much for editing this down and sharing this with us!
@kdizzle901
@kdizzle901 2 года назад
Most people don’t even know who Paul Schroeder is lol which is sad
@TTM9691
@TTM9691 2 года назад
@@kdizzle901 Schrader, not Schroeder, lol. Most people don't take note of the writers, not just Schrader, that's why it was so cool that she did! To be fair, although there are famous screenwriters I know (Robert Towne, Frances Marion, Paddy Chayefsky, Anita Loos, Buck Henry, etc), there are lots of my favorite movies that I can't tell you who wrote the script. (or who is credited with it, since that's a whole other thing)
@kdizzle901
@kdizzle901 2 года назад
@@TTM9691 I typed Schrader my phone atucorrects weird shit…..there’s so many great writers from the 70s…Frank Pierson is another one
@TTM9691
@TTM9691 2 года назад
@@kdizzle901 Ah, sorry, of course. Autocorrect sucks! It's not just your phone. So annoying!
@kdizzle901
@kdizzle901 2 года назад
@@TTM9691 it autocorrects the weirdest words
@davidgagnon7806
@davidgagnon7806 Год назад
The guy who wanted to kill his wife with a 44 Magnum pistol WAS Scorsese. The guy who was supposed to play that part didn't show up that day.
@virtualsnake1994
@virtualsnake1994 2 года назад
i like to think he died and the ending is his dream of how his life ended up. in peace, adored and admired, with the girl he wanted... even the way betsy appears in the cab is very dreamlike.
@imjonathan6745
@imjonathan6745 2 года назад
Sadly its not
@vee__7
@vee__7 2 года назад
that glance in the mirror at the end is so weirdly horrifying
@robertjewell9727
@robertjewell9727 2 года назад
My friend Dorothy's father did the music for this film. It was his last film and there's a dedication to him at the end of the credits. And speaking of JOKER, TAXI DRIVER inspires it much, but so does to a great deal Scorsese's film THE KING OF COMEDY also with DeNiro playing a want-to-be deluded comic. So check that film out when you can. My feelings about Travis being a hero at the end is part of the delusion society abd media puts on psychopaths to make a name for themselves in some iconic way because he's not a hero, but a deranged individual who in the end gets a pat on the back. Yes, he saves Iris, but it's a secondary alternative to not having been able to assassinate a presidential candidate and show up Betsy so his madness gets no release. He's still crazy, but he gets a reprieve because the press calls him a hero.
@Ghost-vg6iq
@Ghost-vg6iq 9 месяцев назад
Funny how you call him a psychopath while the studies show that most of the times psychopaths are likely to be politicians or ceos of big corps. Travis is mentally ill but i'm sure is not a psychopath.
@spiderfingers86
@spiderfingers86 2 года назад
You would recognize the bald man from the movie 'Young Frankenstein' as the creation
@mikenadanada7430
@mikenadanada7430 2 года назад
Oh my ... Your in the deep & dark end of the pool with this one lol.. Can't wait to see this reaction , please tell me you're not totally traumatized. And Oh btw , are you talking to me lol...
@highstimulation2497
@highstimulation2497 2 года назад
I wonder how a film like this could traumatize a person. I mean, could it? my mother thought it would traumatize her, when I finally convinced her to see it, maybe 12 years ago, she found it quaint, like a period piece from the 70s, not NEARLY as visceral as she had always feared.
@henrytjernlund
@henrytjernlund 2 года назад
Been a looooong time since I've seen this movie. Thanks.
@davevannatta985
@davevannatta985 2 года назад
To prepare for this role,DeNiro actually drove a cab for several weeks
@SaRENRampaiger
@SaRENRampaiger 2 года назад
Not to mention he even required a Taxi license for it as well.
@winstonmarlowe5254
@winstonmarlowe5254 2 года назад
To prepare for this role, DeNiro beat off in several adult movie theaters.
@firstpower100
@firstpower100 2 года назад
That comment Jodie Foster makes to Robert De Niro about looking at himself is almost the same line that her character Clarice says to Anthony Hopkins as Hannibal Lecter in Silence of the Lambs years later.
@betsyduane3461
@betsyduane3461 2 года назад
On a low budget of $1.9 million, various actors took pay cuts to create the project. De Niro and Cybill Shepherd each received only $35,000 each.
@Nay-kp6uu
@Nay-kp6uu 2 года назад
It's cool the top two winners of the poll both have Peter Boyle in it.
@TTM9691
@TTM9691 2 года назад
I thought the same thing! I think the most underrated scene in "Taxi Driver" is when De Niro goes to Boyle to ask for advice......and Boyle tries to help, but ultimately has no answers. Also, his (and Susan Sarandon's) first movie, "Joe" is one of the more underrated (or overlooked) movies of the '70s; that was a cultural phenomenon the summer it was released, and unfortunately, still very pertinent to this day.
@gryphon9507
@gryphon9507 2 года назад
In the seventies films were very different, the rating system was new and producers pushed things. They did anything and everything. A main character, like Travis, isn't even a hero or even an anti-hero just a guy who's having his story told. They can even die for no reason at the end. By the eighties the studios started to self censor the stories started to go into formula even though some of the best movies happened in the eighties. By the nineties the new rating system was in, no longer G PG R X but G PG PG13 R NC-17 X. Before a lot of stuff that used to get a PG, like certain types of cussing or even real scary things could only be seen in PG-13. PG-13 became then the benchmark for profit as it lets older kids and adults in, just edgy enough to get a large cross section of the populous in the seats and things got very formulaic. Edgy flicks like Taxi Driver with an R ratings which are unique an well made might not even be made due to the fact you can't show it to kids, it might have been cut to hell to get the PG-13 rating just to try and get more money, which usually doesn't pan out. That why I love The Joker, it had an almost Taxi Driver kind of feel, dark, edgy, and the main character was not a hero.
@spiderfingers86
@spiderfingers86 2 года назад
That is Martin Scorsese who won his oscar for best director and best picture for the movie, 'The Departed'
2 года назад
Legend has it that after DeNiro's shootout Jodie Foster went back to school and graduated with straight A's. 😂
@MrSuperHappyPants
@MrSuperHappyPants 2 года назад
I think the most important question is that of how much of the story is real and how much is Travis' delusion. Thank you for the video.
@xbox0615
@xbox0615 Год назад
Man the 70s is like the wild west
@joevaldez6457
@joevaldez6457 2 года назад
Fantastic video, Kazzy. _Taxi Driver_ is one of my three favorite films of all time. Your observations were so spot-on. It is shocking to hear how people of color or women were often talked about (by white men) in the 1970s but this was an anything goes era. The filmmakers were young and full of beans. Paul Schrader wrote the script when he was the same age and in the same head space as Travis Bickle, while the director Martin Scorsese and the producers Michael & Julia Phillips were in their early 30s. People that young are not trusted to make final decisions for something as big as a major studio release these days. We can see the results too.
@kidgforce1
@kidgforce1 2 года назад
my favourite movie too, besides Blue Velvet by David Lynch
@Mrster
@Mrster 2 года назад
I love that you didn't watch Young Frankenstein, but you did see his monster in this movie haha.
@madmark1957
@madmark1957 Год назад
Although he never says it all the clues are there that Travis was in the Vietnam war. Notice he only started thinking about killing Palantine after Palantine delivers a speech saying " Vietnam we were all there". Also the language was not forrible, ut was how people talked ina time when it wasn't fashionable to be offended.
@JW666
@JW666 2 года назад
It's not only Taxi Driver, but also another Scorsese/DeNiro movie King of Comedy was also an influence to Joker.
@johnnyzeee5215
@johnnyzeee5215 2 года назад
Peter Boyle, as " Wizard ", also appears as ' The Monster ', in " Young Frankenstein.":
@puerrodios8013
@puerrodios8013 5 месяцев назад
Taxi Driver is about isolation and loneliness. It is a visceral social commentary regarding urban life. Same thing happens nowadays, especially in New York! There aren't people who are willing to take action, like Travis, anymore though.
@PedroCastillo_1980
@PedroCastillo_1980 2 года назад
One of the greatest films ever made a true masterpiece very classic Taxi Driver directed by Martin Scorsese written by Paul Schrader produced by Michael Phillips and Julia Phillips starring Robert De Niro, Jodie Foster, Albert Brooks, Harvey Keitel, Peter Boyle, Cybill Shepherd and music score by Bernard Herrmann. Considered one of the greatest films ever made, the film received numerous accolades including the 1976 Cannes Film Festival's Palme d'Or, and 4 nominations at the 49th Oscars including for best picture, best actor by Robert De Niro and best supporting actress by Jodie Foster, the famous line in this film is "You talkin' to me?". Thank you so much Kazzy Reacts great reaction very nice awesome😊😊😊
@deeem2628
@deeem2628 2 года назад
Omg a cut from the movie Belly at 8:59!! I absolutely love that you did that lol. Props to the editing!
@betsyduane3461
@betsyduane3461 2 года назад
The great Albert Brooks is the guy talking to Sybil with the white jacket. He's a great director and actor. 1981 Modern Romance 1985 Lost in America 1991 Defending Your Life
@jessecaldwell9970
@jessecaldwell9970 2 года назад
A punk music band called " The Clash" made a song called " Red Angel Dragnet " about this movie ..good song
@MrRondonmon
@MrRondonmon 2 года назад
The name of that Song by Kris is, The Pilgrim Chapter 33.
@nonplayerzealot4
@nonplayerzealot4 2 года назад
Also, I think you were noticing what appeared to be latent racism by Travis, tho he only clashes w/ pimps, an armed robber, and a street hoodlum. In the scene where he and The Wizard exit the restaurant, a gang of hoods walk by and he glares at a black member. NYC in the 70s actually had such roving gangs of teens and they carried implements w/ them to mug/beat people. NYC today still has a high crime/murder rate, so imagine how nasty it was in the 70s. It was pure grit in those days, garbage strikes let piles and piles of trash to collect in the streets, they had a severe brownout one year right as the Son of Sam murders were taking place. Very dour decade for the city. But back to Travis, Scorsese initially planned to have Foster's pimp be black, but somehow he changed his mind or the studio said it would've been too controversial and he casted Keitel for the part. Even still, I don't think it's imaginary that Travis had some inclinations in there, even if he did talk about "the scum"/"the filth" as one giant, colorless entity.
@Corn_Pone_Flicks
@Corn_Pone_Flicks 2 года назад
Oh, there are still people who talk like that...most movies just don't have the guts to show it for fear that the film itself will be accused of promoting those attitudes, rather than just portraying those kinds of characters accurately. Tarantino at least has gone on record saying that he feel he doesn't have the right to be dishonest about how people speak in those situations. Eastwood's Gran Turino is a more recent film you should check out.
@kidgforce1
@kidgforce1 2 года назад
family friendly cinema killed realistic cinema
@chrislawson1988
@chrislawson1988 2 года назад
Yeah I noticed the Palpatine thing too lol. Funny lol
@st0n3p0ny
@st0n3p0ny 2 года назад
Did you notice Frankenstein's monster from Young Frankenstein is in this movie? The guy at the table telling the BS story about the back seat hookup.
@NecropsY1
@NecropsY1 2 года назад
Falling Down is amazing - Its Douglas fav movie he was in
@csmelen
@csmelen 2 года назад
Albert Brooks was the coworker of Betsy. Btw, it was Martin Scorsese talking about killing his wife in Travis' cab.
@dirtypink3197
@dirtypink3197 2 года назад
It's a crime watching this movie in daylight. It has full effect at 03:00 in the morning
@scottjo63
@scottjo63 2 года назад
6:07, well you may not have got Young Frankenstein, but you did get Young Frankenstein's creation. Actor, Peter Boyle here and as the Young Frankenstein's monster.
@johnpittsii7524
@johnpittsii7524 2 года назад
Hey Kazzy hope you have an great and awesome day 😀. Much ❤ as always 😊
@brads2362
@brads2362 2 года назад
The ending is open for interpretation. Note the strange look at his mirror at the very end. To me, that does not indicate wellness. I suspect that if the movie were to follow Travis longer, Betsy’s head would end up in the trunk of his cab.
@markdodson6453
@markdodson6453 2 года назад
I agree. I've always found the ending terrifying, as if Schrader is saying something about the [American?] impulse to willfully re-frame sociopathic violence as heroic virtue. The idea that Travis has exorcised his demons is willful delusion.
@Joe-hh8gd
@Joe-hh8gd 2 года назад
That was further punctuated by the musical sting during that shot.
@carlossaraiva8213
@carlossaraiva8213 2 года назад
Notice that final shot was in fact filmed in reserve then played end to finish to create an unsettling effect. Sadly the ending of this movie is often misunderstood, expecially by people of right winger political inclinations, something that has horrified Scorsese and Shraeder to this day.
@Joe-hh8gd
@Joe-hh8gd 2 года назад
@@carlossaraiva8213 When I saw Taxi Driver theatrically, I didn't really get the ending, Thought it stretched reality. But today of course...a different matter.
@mrcrhartman
@mrcrhartman 2 года назад
The screenwriter told Martin Scorcese that Travis died some violent death within a year of this story, lol.
@gabrielramirez-xy9ft
@gabrielramirez-xy9ft 2 года назад
Love your reactions, you are amazing! ❤️
@juandesalgado
@juandesalgado 2 года назад
Script by Paul Schrader. Check "Affliction" (1997) for more.
@sntxrrr
@sntxrrr 2 года назад
The only right response to 'You're a funny man' is 'Funny how?'
@germancito2501
@germancito2501 2 года назад
what a piece of art
@spiderfingers86
@spiderfingers86 2 года назад
The scene when he's talking to himself in the mirror was improvised
@chrislawson1988
@chrislawson1988 2 года назад
Yeah that's Martin. He was in it earlier too first time they showed Betsy. Sitting down lol
@SebaVDP
@SebaVDP 2 года назад
Are you talking to me!!🤪 great movie!!! Happy Friday Kazzy🌹🤗
@houssemabbassi9063
@houssemabbassi9063 2 года назад
travis was still unsstable as ever,the little mirror check at the end is the sign of that..still a bomb ticking
@chrisdixon5193
@chrisdixon5193 11 месяцев назад
Loved your reaction! But it was kind of condescending when you said we just don't talk like that anymore because we know better.
@tamaravujacic
@tamaravujacic 9 месяцев назад
Same hate that part.
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