15 April 2015

BEST SHOT: TAXI DRIVER

Unpopular opinion time! To me, Taxi Driver is Martin Scorsese's most overrated movie and almost his least-interesting feature of the '70s, beaten only by the insufferable Boxcar Bertha. I find it takes all of the director's control and Robert De Niro's savage animal power to redeem - barely - Paul Schrader's obnoxious screenplay, and even then it's neither as insightful about codes of violent masculinity or the gritty awfulness of '70s New York City, nor as interesting to look at, as Scorsese and De Niro's masterful first collaboration, Mean Streets.

So now that I've gone and ruined all my credibility forever, we can turn to the business of Hit Me with Your Best Shot, which this week journeys to Scorsese's career for the very first time with the aforementioned story of an unhinged cabbie and his antisocial attitudes and cruel behavior. It's also, at its best, a superb document of New York at its filthiest, when Time Square was a hellpit of dead-eyed whores, sex shows, and trash littering every flat surface, and it honestly hadn't occurred to me that I could possibly make it all the way through the movie without picking an image of all that squalor, preferably one that juxtaposed the ratty ugliness of the city with the even rattier soul of its broken, misanthropic title character. And yet I went somewhere completely different.

Travis Bickle (De Niro), having received his taxi and begun making his pronouncements against the deviants and minorities and all things and people he regards as scum, has begun to drive through the city in a fashion I can only describe as "prowling", his taxi viewed in isolated pieces that slice through the night air like a shark's dorsal fin.

And that image having occurred to me, it was with giddy delight that I ran across a shot that perfectly summed up that aspect of the protagonist as silent predator, gliding into the shot smoothly and silently, casually sucking on his drink like he doesn't care about anything in the world, and then catching sight of the resolutely decent and normal political campaign worker Betsy (Cybill Shepherd), and just... stopping.... staring her down with that that one bright eye of his, shining in the center of the frame, perfectly spotted by the great cinematographer Michael Chapman as the piercing focal point of the whole shot. That's a cold, predatory eye, one that sizes Betsy up less as a woman than as a target, and the first half of the movie largely plays out as an exercise in seeing what happens when that kind of devouring attitude is let loose in a world that wants really badly to believe that people are basically nice.

My biggest concern with the screenplay has always been that Schrader seems entirely too interested in siding with Bickle; my greatest appreciation for Scorsese's direction is that he never gives into that impulse - even in the scenes that allow us to understand Bickle as a sad dope who has been broken by society as much as anybody, the director and the lead actor both understand that there's something red and raw and deadly dangerous about him. And that, to me, is the heart and soul of this shot: a stalker, a shark, a silent killer moving in for the attack with a loose physical carriage that borders on disinterest. It's a great moment of menace, flawlessly choreographed down to the way that De Niro's right eye is blocked out by the door frame, and immaculately acted without any words to support it, without any action at all other than the conscious lack of action.

Look, I said it was overrated. I never said it wasn't extraordinarily well-made.

6 comments:

  1. Great choice, Tim!

    Best 70s Scorsese movie is Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore...which doesn't have a Blu-Ray yet because the world we live is cruel and evil.

    What a different career that would have been, had Scorsese realized he was actually a great director of women. I wish he made something that small, and intimate, and raw again. Now he's got so much fuckin' money and power as The Great American Auteur Of Our Time(because Spielberg is too popular, and nothing kills movie critic cred like popularity), so all his recent movies are bloated beached whales filled with a lot of undeniable craftsmanship. Even Goodfellas, my vote for best American film of the '90s, gets a bit long at 146 minutes, nevermind the gargantuan mountain of excess that is Casino.

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  2. I agree with literally every thought and sub-thought in your comment, except for "best American film of the '90s". It's in my top 10 though. Probably top 5.

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  3. i also agree with this comment to an extent (though i love Taxi Driver).... but I don't think i would love Taxi Driver if I didn't believe as I do that several scenes are fantasy rather than "reality" in-movie.

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  4. Speaking of underrated women's pictures helmed by Scorsese, I've always found that not enough people are excited to talk about The Age of Innocence. A lush period picture that adapts a (excellent to my mind) book into cinema through swirling delirious melodrama? Yes, please.

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  5. While I don't agree that the film is overrated, I encourage all to be as honest about their personal feelings towards any cinema, and so I applaud you for not holding back. I can see how someone would feel as though the script wanted too boldly to side with Bickle, but I've always felt that the juxtaposition of 'understanding his madness' and even sympathizing with it to a degree and the stark and grizzly nature of the beast was well balanced and presented. I also agree with Nathaniel that the idea that a good portion of this film is 'fantasy' helps make it a better film.

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  6. I think the film is sympathetic to Bickle to the degree that it isn't his fault he's a psychopathic nutcase. But I never got the impression that the film cheered on his violent acts, rather that it stood gaping in horror at them. Of course, I haven't seen it in a while.

    I think of Taxi Driver as a horror film, like Noe's "I Stand Alone" or Kargl's "Angst". These films don't bother to condemn their protagonists explicitly because his awfulness should be obvious to anyone watching.

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