Taxi Driver

Started by Keener, April 25, 2003, 08:49:16 PM

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Alethia

Quote from: Lucinda BryteI didn't like Taxi Driver much...

Flame me please...

I want to love this movie but I can't!

Why?!

diff'rent strokes i guess.  i'm not a fan of casino, and many others think it is brilliant.  taxi driver is wonderful tho, by the way.

MacGuffin

Quote from: Lucinda BryteI didn't like Taxi Driver much...

Flame me please...

I want to love this movie but I can't!

Why?!

Please expand on why you didn't like it. What didn't you like about it?
"Don't think about making art, just get it done. Let everyone else decide if it's good or bad, whether they love it or hate it. While they are deciding, make even more art." - Andy Warhol


Skeleton FilmWorks

Lucinda Bryte

Quote from: MacGuffin
Quote from: Lucinda BryteI didn't like Taxi Driver much...

Flame me please...

I want to love this movie but I can't!

Why?!

Please expand on why you didn't like it. What didn't you like about it?

Well I saw it a long time ago (i.e. 3-4 years ago) and I was young then so maybe I just didn't understand it?

I just remember thinking that it jumped around too much. And the ending sucked.  :?:

I rented it the other week but I never ended up watching it. Maybe I should rent it again.

SoNowThen

How old are you?

Cuz I watched it in my mid-teens and thought it was just okay.

Then, when I was twenty, living on my own in a big city, and working the night shift, I re-watched it. That's when it became my favorite movie ever (barring my optimistic days, then it's behind Magnolia).

It has a kind of lonliness, and rage, and sick sexuality about it. Thinking you could "help" others when you can't even help yourself. The story, acting, and shots are all perfection to me.
Those who say that the totalitarian state of the Soviet Union was not "real" Marxism also cannot admit that one simple feature of Marxism makes totalitarianism necessary:  the rejection of civil society. Since civil society is the sphere of private activity, its abolition and replacement by political society means that nothing private remains. That is already the essence of totalitarianism; and the moralistic practice of the trendy Left, which regards everything as political and sometimes reveals its hostility to free speech, does nothing to contradict this implication.

When those who hated capital and consumption (and Jews) in the 20th century murdered some hundred million people, and the poster children for the struggle against international capitalism and America are now fanatical Islamic terrorists, this puts recent enthusiasts in an awkward position. Most of them are too dense and shameless to appreciate it, and far too many are taken in by the moralistic and paternalistic rhetoric of the Left.

chainsmoking insomniac

Indeed.  I hate to sound cheesy, but many of the shots in it are pure poetry, and with the VO narration (which I typicaly frown upon) it really did become something of a visual poem (to me anyway.)
Also, I read something about DeNiro acquiring a cabbie license and driving around, chillin with other drivers...and that just elevated him in my eyes, not to mention the film itself because it showed how much passion and dedication everyone invested in the film.  That's how every movie should be made IMHO.
"Ernest Hemingway once wrote: 'The world's a fine place, and worth fighting for.'  I agree with the second part."
    --Morgan Freeman, Se7en

"Have you ever fucking seen that...? Ever seen a mistake in nature?  Have you ever seen an animal make a mistake?"
 --Paul Schneider, All the Real Girls

Pubrick



Quote from: chainsmoking insomniacThat's how every movie should be made IMHO.
under the paving stones.

Lucinda Bryte

Quote from: SoNowThenHow old are you?


I'm eighteen.

There are certain movies I watch and when I get done with them, I'm not sure if I liked them or not because I have to take it all in. Then when I watch it again (usually by the second or third time) I fall in love with it.

When I watched Mulholland Dr. for the first time I turned it off after the man behind Winkie's scene because it was boring and weird. Then I watched it the whole way through and felt really stupid, heh.

Then when I watched it again I started putting the pieces together and really liked it.

chainsmoking insomniac

Quote from: P

Quote from: chainsmoking insomniacThat's how every movie should be made IMHO.

This av's staying up for a while.   :)
"Ernest Hemingway once wrote: 'The world's a fine place, and worth fighting for.'  I agree with the second part."
    --Morgan Freeman, Se7en

"Have you ever fucking seen that...? Ever seen a mistake in nature?  Have you ever seen an animal make a mistake?"
 --Paul Schneider, All the Real Girls

©brad

keep the avatar, change that username.

cine

Quote from: SoNowThenIt has a kind of lonliness, and rage, and sick sexuality about it. Thinking you could "help" others when you can't even help yourself.

More to the point: helping others when they don't want it and insisting they need it.

nix

Taxi Driver... too good... too influential... mustn't think about Taxi Driver when I sit down to write... help me... :(  :puppydogeyes:
"Sex relieves stress, love causes it."
-Woddy Allen

chainsmoking insomniac

Quote from: ©bradkeep the avatar, change that username.

nah, the username fits me to a T.
"Ernest Hemingway once wrote: 'The world's a fine place, and worth fighting for.'  I agree with the second part."
    --Morgan Freeman, Se7en

"Have you ever fucking seen that...? Ever seen a mistake in nature?  Have you ever seen an animal make a mistake?"
 --Paul Schneider, All the Real Girls

cine

When I saw this film for the very first time, the number one thing that pulled me into its world was the score. I've recently debated with someone who actually really disliked the score. As far as I know, he's the only idiot.. er.. one. Anyone here detest Herrmann's final score?

Lucinda Bryte

I still think I am missing something. Usually I am so good at understanding films but...

It seemed like Taxi Driver had no story whatsoever and it was just about his isolation from society and then it ended. It just seemed like the film had no point. I DO like how it was shot though.

Someone please prove me wrong.. Or agree with me or something. I just keep hearing how great this film is and I watched it again and I either didn't get it, or didn't like it.

ShanghaiOrange

Lucinda Bryte, you are a wonderful human being and have alot to live for. I love you!
Last five films (theater)
-The Da Vinci Code: *
-Thank You For Smoking: ***
-Silent Hill: ***1/2 (high)
-Happy Together: ***1/2
-Slither: **

Last five films (video)
-Solaris: ***1/2
-Cobra Verde: ***1/2
-My Best Fiend: **1/2
-Days of Heaven: ****
-The Thin Red Line: ***