The Reel Rejects - TAXI DRIVER (1976) MOVIE REVIEW!! FIRST TIME WATCHING!!
Episode Date: August 20, 2024YOU TALKIN' TO ME?? Save Money & Take Control Of Your Finances: https://rocketmoney.com/rejects Taxi Driver Full Movie Reaction Watch Along: https://www.patreon.com/thereelrejects With films l...ike Joker STILL drawing inspiration, to this day, from Taxi Driver, it's about time Coy Jandreau & Andrew Gordon gave their FIRST TIME Reaction, Commentary, Analysis, Breakdown, & Full Movie Spoiler Review!! Directed by Legendary Cinema Daddy, Martin Scorsese, (Raging Bull, Goodfellas, Killers of the Flower Moon) and featuring Robert De Niro's (Heat, The Irishman, Casino) iconic turn as the volatile & unsettling Travis Bickle - an ex-veteran turned nighttime taxi driver in New York City, where the perceived decadence and sleaze fuels his urge for violent action... This staple of '70s American Cinema also features a young Jodie Foster (The Silence of the Lambs, Panic Room) along with Cybill Shepherd, Albert Brooks, Peter Boyle, Harvey Keitel, Joe Spinell, & a host of other '70s character actors. Coy & Andrew REACT to the Most Memorable Scenes & Most Intense Moments including You Talkin' to Me? , A Sick Passenger (Martin Scorsese Cameo), I Get Organized, Suck On This!, Travis wants to Help Iris, Travis is a Hero, & Beyond. Follow Andrew Gordon on Socials: YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@MovieSource Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/agor711/?hl=en Twitter: https://twitter.com/Agor711 Follow Coy Jandreau: Tik Tok: https://www.tiktok.com/@coyjandreau?l... Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/coyjandreau/?hl=en Twitter: https://twitter.com/CoyJandreau YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCwYH2szDTuU9ImFZ9gBRH8w Support The Channel By Getting Some REEL REJECTS Apparel! https://www.rejectnationshop.com/ Music Used In Manscaped Ad: Hat the Jazz by Twin Musicom is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 license. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ POWERED BY @GFUEL Visit https://gfuel.ly/3wD5Ygo and use code REJECTNATION for 20% off select tubs!! Head Editor: https://www.instagram.com/praperhq/?hl=en Co-Editor: Greg Alba Co-Editor: John Humphrey Music In Video: Airport Lounge - Disco Ultralounge by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 license. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Ask Us A QUESTION On CAMEO: https://www.cameo.com/thereelrejects Follow TheReelRejects On FACEBOOK, TWITTER, & INSTAGRAM: FB: https://www.facebook.com/TheReelRejects/ INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/reelrejects/ TWITTER: https://twitter.com/thereelrejects Follow GREG ON INSTAGRAM & TWITTER: INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/thegregalba/ TWITTER: https://twitter.com/thegregalba Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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I should have seen a decade ago, at least, maybe more. I don't know when you're supposed to watch
taxi driver, but now we're about two and three, two, one. I don't know what I thought of
that. It, it, the whole movie, he did the wrong thing. And then at the end, and then at the end,
It's like, got everything you wanted.
Right.
And it also, like, there was no consequence to the murders, to, like, was he going to pull a gun on a presidential nominee?
Yeah.
And there was never any reason for him to go after the nominee.
That's what I was thinking, too.
I think it was at that point.
He represented her.
Like, that's what she wanted.
Right.
But they didn't have anything.
Like, he started following politics.
That was never a moment of like something he stood for.
Yeah.
Yeah.
By the way, if you guys are listening to us on Apple or Spotify, we just watched Taxi Driver from 1976.
Make sure you give us a five star rating.
Coen I would so appreciate it.
Also, if you want teas like these, real reject nation shop.com, we would so appreciate it.
Yeah, no, I agree with you.
Like when he did go there, I figured it was like to get, you know, some pathos back on like, you know,
with his interactions from her.
Yeah.
But that was never clear.
Yeah, but then he went after,
it seemed like he was about to take him out.
And there was never anything that he had against him.
Yeah, because they had a good conversation
and, like, they had an agreement in it.
And they also wanted to clean up things, had to get fixed.
Yeah, and he was following him.
So it was like, I was a little confused.
I'm sure you guys are going to last know in the comments about that.
So I was a little confused by that.
Maybe he just wanted his life to end.
I don't know.
Yeah, maybe it was like a murder, suicide,
where it's just that's the biggest impact he could leave.
Right, right.
So I was a little confused by that.
the whole thing with...
But the obvious thing was the thing that they did.
Like, why wouldn't he go after the, like, the bad people?
Yeah.
Which he did.
Yeah. Like that all I totally get.
I mean, because, again, the whole how he feels about, you know, like, because he made it very clear in his narration, how he feels about, you know, prostitutes and pimps and all that.
And he just, he feels like they're filth and scum and all that.
So he made that very clear.
And then seeing, again, we've, us and just normal human beings who, you know, have a moral compass, like,
what he was doing with iris that's disgusting yeah i mean that's emotional manipulation using a 12
12 and a half per hour year old she was um that's disgusting it's ridiculous and you know using her
as well not only from the emotional manipulation that he was but also for financial gain like
that um is is awful he's an awful human being so i felt no remorse um you know and obviously i'm
not a violent human being but i did not feel bad what he did like what they were doing to that
young woman is disgusting.
So I did not feel bad that Travis did that and was pushed to the limit to doing that.
It's just, again, like you said, I was just a little confused with the whole when he was going
after the politician.
Again, I thought he would have gone for maybe Albert Brooks and Sybil Shepard when he did that.
And then, like, again, he wanted his life to end in that situation.
But I was a little confused by there.
But yeah, no, overall, though, I thought the film did a great job.
like usually slow burn films, it's hit or miss for me.
It just depends.
Like, I thought this was great in terms of character study,
in terms of you got a guy who's a Marine, PTSD,
just how he feels about the world.
He's detached from reality.
I thought all that and Robert De Niro's performance
in Scorsese's direction, chef's kiss.
Sure.
All that was great.
And again, like I said, I think slow build,
slow burn type films can be hit and miss.
You just really got to nail it.
I just, there were times, like, especially there towards the ending where I just didn't feel like it, I think just the consequences I didn't, because of how it did end up, like he's like, oh, just back to normal.
Yeah, the cabin.
I was like, it felt like a dream team.
Yeah, yeah, that's, I'm just, again, I'm just really fresh off this.
I know this is a classic.
I'm not even saying I didn't like it.
It was an enjoyable watch or, I don't know if enjoyable is the right word.
Yeah.
Capitating?
Yeah, yeah.
No, it's, it's an impressive piece of cinema and the performance, by.
De Niro, and again, the direction by Scorsese, phenomenal.
Absolutely phenomenal.
I know why this is a classic, but I just, like you said,
I would have liked, not consequence for what he did with Kytel and those other guys.
They were pieces of shits.
Just like for his actions in general and like what he did with the politician and all that.
And I get that crime was insane in the 70s.
So maybe it's like, well, this is kind of part for the course, back to work.
But it also just, the movie itself just kind of had an odd denouement.
Like just the movie, the weird ending to it.
I don't know
I was definitely
like captivated
at the characterization
I was definitely interested
that the cinematography
and directing was astounding
like it's Scorsese for a reason
but then even like near the end
some of the that felt like it
not rushed but it didn't feel as
calculated like a lot of the shots
in the beginning were very intentional
and then by the end
the shootout felt very jilted
and like why didn't he kill that guy
like the guy was on his back for like 10 minutes
like there was so many moments
and he kept rushing out of him too
and I was like kill him
and then like it just I don't know
I liked it
I liked the first two acts more than the third
by a comfortable margin
I don't know I would totally agree with that
no there were times where at the end
I was like just I'm questioning things
yeah and uh
I actually didn't like the in self-fulfillment
of the movie like I felt like it was very like
the world wrong me I'm a shoot it
yeah and I don't think that's something to
espouse or something to celebrate
and then at the end celebrates it like
the end is literally like now the girl wants him
and now he's got a
purpose.
Right.
Like, I just, like, great.
Yeah.
I don't know.
I mean, I did like the whole thing of, like, while he was becoming unhinged, he still
did have, like, he's a guy who served his country, and he did have this moral compass
in terms of being empathetic towards this young girl who was being completely wronged
by disgusting pigs.
But he had no empathy for anyone else in the city.
No, no, no, for sure, for sure.
And I'm not defending him on that, absolutely.
But I just mean towards Jody Foster.
I did, at that point, I liked this character from that.
Yeah.
Yeah, that's the only thing I could resonate from with the character.
Everything else, again, becoming unhinged.
And again, I'm not, I was never in the Army or Marines or whatever.
I did not, I think they said Vietnam, I don't know.
But wherever he was, wherever he went into battle, I don't know what he experienced.
I don't have PTSD, not in terms of that.
So I can't imagine what goes on through someone, you know, who went to war like that.
So, you know, the point I'm making is like I can totally.
empathize with someone like that who their brain is not working in the right way like mentally it's
it's a real stigma and i i felt for him there and that's where i say like again just a brilliant
performance in relating to that like i felt for him there and i felt bad for him and that he was so
detached from reality so um but again i'm glad at least in one instance i could uh relate to him
like with how we felt towards joddy foster that's disgusting like when he had that that that
that long conversation with her and the
diner or whatever
like yes
I was like oh my god
finally on the same level with this character
in terms of what he's saying here
yeah I think overall I this is
kind of in that same genre
of if you've got a poster of this in your wall
I probably don't think we'd be friends
of like classic movies that I'm just like
I don't think it's my kind of story
I don't think it lands with a
either
a cautionary tale
or a moral compass.
And I think that you need to kind of have a resolution
that either says this is how you should choose not to be
or this is a good way to grow.
And the growth was towards the negative
and then it wasn't cautionary.
So it overall just painted a picture of
this is a net positive way to go about the world.
And the whole movie he spent judging everyone
not doing anything about it,
blaming others.
And then at the end it's like,
but the pretty blonde's in the car.
Yeah, no.
Again, I'm not, I was, again, it's not crazy about that.
Had they finished the ending, again, this is just my personal preference,
and I think you're on the same boat as me.
If it would have just been, he either dies or he just ends up in a coma and gets that nice letter,
I think that's fine.
I'm going up until the letter, because I, because like he's a captivating enough character.
You want to know someone appreciated it.
Yeah, yeah.
But beyond that.
Yeah, but like, okay, he's just back to cabla.
Yeah.
I'm like, okay, the cops are just totally cool with this guy going back to Cablet.
And again, did Harvey Keitel and the other two that he shot?
Absolutely.
But I don't know if you can just cold blood do that.
And have four guns unregistered and just kill people with him.
Yeah, because he even said, and he was a horrible shot after all that train.
Yeah, and he even said in the bodega, I don't have a permit to do it.
It was a line in the film.
And that was a great example of like it being bad people wish fulfillment.
He killed a guy in cold blood.
And then the other guy beat him while he was dead.
And then they see that as like, that's his training.
Right.
Like that to me is just like, oh, that was the right thing to do was killed.
We don't know the guy that was robbing the guy's, like, story.
Right.
That guy could have been.
In another movie, that guy was someone that, like, didn't have food to feed his family.
Yeah.
Like, I'm not.
I'm not saying, like, robberies acceptable.
Of course not.
Of course not.
They beat a young boy who was cast young with a wrought iron.
Like, I don't know.
I just, I feel, I feel like, I feel like the opening monologue.
Like, I feel like New York in 76.
Like, I just don't know.
I don't know.
I might think.
Yeah.
Everyone thinks I love everything.
I feel you.
Not taxi drive.
And again, at first, too, I wasn't crazy.
I'm not the biggest person, uh, fan rather, of narration in films.
Again, it's hit or miss for me.
But I understand like getting in the mind of him and I do like, like, like, how aggressive
as he was becoming more unhinged.
I do think it was an interesting choice that they chose to go with that.
And if it landed with it being a negative, then I would have really liked it.
If the movie decided to say, Travis Bickle,
not someone to aspire to.
For sure.
I have enjoyed this film.
But since it ended with like reward this man.
You get the pretty blonde.
Yeah.
It's the most cliche.
If you save the 12 and a half year old prostitute.
And like I definitely enjoyed the death of all those people because they made us like well because they did such a good job making us endeared Jody Foster so quickly.
Yes.
Like she didn't have that much screen time and she was incredible.
Fantastic.
But just your human nature is my God that's a child.
This is awful.
But that would have been his his, if he had died or was in the comment.
that would have been like, this broken man
at least saved this girl.
The problem was the denouement after the letter.
Yeah.
Because that's reward-based.
Absolutely.
No, I completely agree with you.
I think that would have been a more satisfactory ending personally.
My cut, it ends in the letter.
Yeah, no, for sure.
And again, I just, I thought it was a dream or he was in a coma or something.
It was just so random.
Like, what?
That's...
But performance great directing.
Like, all the things I knew this movie of, great.
And if you love this movie, I don't mean to insult you.
I just, after years of expectation, I did not expect it to land that way.
But I'm glad that you enjoy it if you do.
Yeah.
And again, we're not like talking crap about it.
No, just like at the ending just didn't feel right.
What did Paul Schrader do as he wrote it?
No, no, no, I mean, other than this?
Yeah.
He did something in like the, hold on.
I think he did Rules of Attraction.
Is that all of his filmography?
Yeah.
Oh, it's like the ones he's known for.
Yeah.
If you go to all, I'm pretty sure he did Rules of Attraction, which is the movie I love.
Is that the one with Samuel and,
Tommy Lee Jones?
No, rules of attraction.
Oh, no way.
Oh, no way. Oh, shit.
Rules of attraction is, um, it's in the 90s.
So now I'm second guessing if it's him because he would have been very old.
This one?
Oh, yeah.
It's in 2002, not even 90s.
Who wrote that?
Roger Avery.
Oh, I think I did see that movie.
Love that movie.
Yeah, that's a good one.
It's a real messed up dark comedy.
It's based on the Barry Snellis book and it's written by Roger Avery.
I don't know what Paul Schrader did that I, that I accredited him to.
okay so let's go into some trivia get some facts here why you do that i'm going to look at other
pulse reader things to see if there's something okay so robert de nero has said that despite having
won an oscar for the godfather part two in 1974 he was still a relatively unfamiliar face
social media would have saved him on that um and was only recognized once while driving a new york
cab during his research for this film interesting i mean i guess back in 74 75
576, I guess, like, yeah, but that's still interesting.
After you win an Oscar, you're still barely recognizable after winning an Oscar.
I feel like the whole world's all Godfather Part 2.
That's really interesting.
Yeah.
Robert De Niro prepared for the role by working as a late-night cab driver in New York City early 1975.
One of his fares was a struggling actor who recognized him from the Godfather Part 2.
The young actor said to DeNiro discouragingly, and I quote, wait a minute, you just won an Oscar.
My God, is it that hard to get work?
Like we just said about.
That's funny.
Director Martin Scorsese claims that the most important shot in the entire film is when Bickle is on the phone trying to get another date with Betsy.
The camera moves to the side slowly, we're talking about that shot, and pans down the long, empty hallway next to Bickle, as if to suggest that the phone conversation is too painful and pathetic to bear.
The shot also showcases his isolation and loneliness.
I was wondering, too, about that, but I'm like, what's, okay, it's symbolic.
I definitely felt like it's making me uncomfortable, but I like how pointed that apparently is.
Yeah, no, it makes sense.
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Do not know this man's work. I take it all
back. Yeah, did say you did Last
Cemptation of Christ there, I think, right? I've never
seen that. There's a lot of Scraise
films I have not seen still.
Robert De Niro worked 15-hour
days for a month driving
cabs. Damn, this man prepared
as preparation for this role.
He also studied mental illness
and during his off time when filming the film 1900,
which also came out in 76,
visited a U.S. Army base in northern Italy
and tape recorded conversations with Midwestern soldiers
so that he could pick up their accent.
Well, dude, that's putting in your timing, your effort.
I mean, in three different facets.
You got the cab driver, you got the army thing,
and then the mental illness stuff.
I mean, that's, damn.
No, I mean, they've got two BAFTAs.
And I think De Niro, like,
well, this is one of his top five performances
that he's known for, and he's got 80 performances.
Yeah. And I mean, that's one of the things we clearly praised in our review. It was his performance. So when Paul Schrader was first writing the script, he believed that he was just writing about loneliness. But as the process went on, he realized he was writing about the pathology of loneliness. His theory being that for some reason, some young men such as Schrader himself subconsciously push others away to maintain their isolation, even though the main source of their torment is this very isolation.
In the diner, you know, it's interesting.
Yeah.
In the diner scene, 12-year-old Iris add sugar to her toast, which is already covered in jelly.
Some viewers interpret this character trait as Iris still being a kid at heart.
However, this was not the intention.
The other hooker who walks the streets with Iris in the film was an actual prostitute whom Jody Foster shadowed to prepare for her role.
The prostitute played by Garth Avery
was also a heroin addict
and one way
in which she would quell her addiction
was to add extra sugar to her meals.
Jody, being a very young actress
but very observant and intuitive
young actress, incorporated this character
trait into the same.
Wow.
The way these actors prepared for this film
cannot go unnoticed.
Jesus.
Between the time, Robert,
De Niro signed a $35,000 contract to appear in this film.
And when it began filming, he won the Oscar for his role in The Godfather Part 2 and his profile soared.
The producers were worried that De Niro would ask for a deserved large pay raise since Columbia Pictures was very concerned about the project.
And we're looking for excuses to pull the plug on it.
But De Niro said he would honor his original deal so the film would get made.
I respect that.
Nice job, De Niro.
Commendable.
Became a class.
And now they worked together all the time.
Clearly that caused a good bomb.
Yeah, right.
The producers were looking for a Sybil Shepard type to play the female lead in the film.
When Agent Sue Menger's heard this, she reportedly called them and asked,
Why not hire Sybil Shepard?
Perfect. Perfect.
Okay, let's find a do a couple more, and I'll call it.
Harvey Keitel rehearsed with Pimp.
The preparedness for this shit, it's unbelievable.
Harvey Kytel rehearsed with pimps to prepare for his role.
The scene where Sport and Iris dance was improvised.
and is one of only two scenes in the film that don't focus on Bickle.
That's right.
I mean, he's in like 99% of the film.
Jesus.
In like almost every scene, yeah, that's true.
The scene where Travis Bickle is talking to himself in the mirror,
talking to me, was completely ad-libbed by Robert De Niro.
The screenplay details just said Travis looks in the mirror.
Martin Scorsese claims that he got the inspiration for the scene
from Marlon Brando, mouthing words in front of a mirror
and reflections in a golden eye.
That's fantastic.
Damn.
All right, let me just go to a couple spoilers and we'll call it
because there's like 10,000 trivia facts on there.
The movie's pretty popular.
Oh, my God.
It's taken me forever just to scroll down to the spoilers.
I've heard of this taxi driver.
Yeah, right.
Martin Scorsese was reluctant to edit
the climactic and very bloody shootout
to avoid an X rating.
However, he was amused by the changes ordered by the MPAA
because they made the final scene even more
shocking than it originally had been intended.
Cool.
Robert De Niro's Mohawk was not real due to the fact that De Niro still had to shoot scenes for the film with hair after the Mohawk.
So it wasn't in order.
So I was wrong.
Yep.
Makeup artist Dick Smith created a bald cap that was glued to, it looks so real, created a bald cap that was glued to De Niro's head.
And the mohawk was made of thick horsehair.
The hair piece is on display at the Museum of Moving Image in Astoria, New York.
Well, if I ever go to Astoria, New York again.
That is incredible.
I shall look for it.
I'll do two more.
We'll call it.
Paul Schrader revealed that in the original script,
Travis Bickle, was a racist and only targeted black men.
I'm glad they changed that.
After discussion, it was decided that a film ending
with a white man killing multiple black men
and going unpunished would be morally irresponsible
given the racial tensions of the time.
So Travis racist motivation was cut from the script
and sport was rewritten as a white man.
I mean, I still felt like he was pretty right.
Like those elements were taken down, but I still feel like he's not a good dude.
Yeah.
Oh, direct, this is what I was telling you, director, Martin Scorsese's parents, Charles Scorsese and Catherine Scorsese,
appear as Iris's parents in the newspaper article hanging on Travis's wall at the end of the movie.
I knew that was his mom and Goodfellas.
Yeah, yeah.
Because that's why I knew it was her from Goodfellas and she was also in Casino.
So that's why I recognize it was like, that looks like his mother.
Love that.
I just didn't realize it was his, I'd never seen his father before.
so now we have in the paper now we have in the paper but uh interesting facts again that is
the preparedness the preparedness seriously now but it it reflects in the screen like when you see
again that was one of the things we were praising is uh the the uh we praised how incredible
the performances were by these actors like that is it was commendable yeah you can see why
yeah i mean the time they took uh well that was taxi driver one of the classics we had not seen
let us know in the comments below if there are others we had
had mentioned Kings of Comedy.
Yes.
Have you seen mean streets?
No.
I have not seen mean streets.
I haven't seen casino.
Oh, God.
I've never seen casino.
I've never seen casino.
It's one of my all-time favorites.
I love that movie.
Did he direct the Jesus one with Last Temptations of Christ?
I have not,
I've never seen that.
That's with Willem Defoe.
Yeah.
We both love that of foe.
What an angel.
An angel is right.
Apparently he's got a giant crucifix.
Oh,
really?
Yeah.
They had to put a fake one on him for Ant,
or what did that one he did with Lars?
Because he's disproportionately hung.
Oh.
I don't know that.
Good for Willem.
Good for you.
Twice so job.
Yeah, no, let us drop some other Scraise films that you'd like us to react to
because, again, there's quite a few I have not seen.
Yeah, let us know in the comments, share this video, like this video, do stuff with this video.
Much appreciated.
And we'll see you guys soon.
Bye.
Pandemic Jones.
Wow.
If there's anyone who is likely to have a xenomorph child.
Oh, yeah.
It's you.
Let's do it, pandemic.
It's you.
Let's go.
That is a pandemic.
Yeah, a weird pandemic of sorts.
An outbreak.
My God.
That disgusting.
Have you seen alien resurrection?
Not yet.
Well, you're in luck.
I'm excited.
It's okay.
I just is alien three so I can review that footage.
And it's only going to get better from here.
Yeah, man.
If there's anyone who's likely to be resurrected via a lab,
because we need them now more than ever
it's pandemic Jones
says let's face it, people want to
talk about the pandemic being a
traumatizing time
and maybe for a few
but you know what
for the vast majority I'd say
we were all living the high life
we got to stay at home
we got to just
not ever
interact with people
because people suck
we have except you
Got addicted to games like that one with the weird little people that's getting a show now.
What's that called? Above us.
Below me.
What's that called?
Among us?
Among us.
Yeah, among us.
It's a great game.
We need to bring it back.
We need another pandemic because it's faced a pandemic.
You have given us some version of stockhold syndrome.
We were traumatized and we felt trapped.
But at the end of the day, we want it.
And now we feel traumatized and trapped without you, which is the ultimate irony.
I feel vacant.
So, you know, come and fill us up.
Come and occupy us.
PJ.
Pando, Marlon Pando.
What?
Pandemic.
What I come from?
I don't know.
Just a little cherry on top of the shadow.
This is just for you.
I'm like, how...
That could have been reserved for a Marlon Brando movie.
Okay, I'll take it back.
As soon as Marlon Brando...
Roxy and Tara are...
covering Don Juan DeMarco.
Are there?
Really?
Cool.
I'd like to see the reaction to Don Juan de Marco, I guess.
That's my favorite Brando movie.
I'm reading Wild Jack.
They're covering the island of Dr. Bro.
A big lineup of Brando movies coming around all right, man.
Brando month.
Get ready, Marlon Pando.
That's right.
It's these shoutouts that decide.
what gets covered on the channel so thank you