Taxi Driver (1976) Movie Reaction [ First Time Watching ]

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MJoy4Fun

MJoy4Fun

2 жыл бұрын

we enjoyed watching this film. He was a tough character that we had to figure out. We hope you will enjoy it too 😊
0:01 - intro
1:22 - Reaction
3:01 - Hello, besty
15:40 - "you talking to me"
16:22 - Supermarket robbery
18:43 - Iris
24:30 - Vote for Palantine
25:43 - Rescue Iris
29:49 - Post Movie disccussion/review
For full-length or unedited reactions,
👉 / mjoy4fun
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➡ MJoy4Fun is an interracial couple from Romania and the Philippines. We mainly post reactions and vlogs on our channel! if you enjoyed this video, leave us a comment below! 😊
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Пікірлер: 268
@zeus6793
@zeus6793 2 жыл бұрын
When this movie came out, we were absolutely stunned. Nothing like it was every done before, and it is an utter masterpiece. I cannot tell you how many of us would mess with your buddies with the whole "You lookin at me? You looking at me?". And don't forget the music....that sax just jazzes through the movie. So glad to see you guys react to it! Now you need to do another Scorsese/De Niro film...."The King of Comedy". Another De Niro classic character....Rupert Pupkin!
@TTM9691
@TTM9691 2 жыл бұрын
It's an alto sax, actually, not a clarinet.
@SuperEfedrina
@SuperEfedrina 2 жыл бұрын
09:34 MARTIN SCORCESSE NO COMMENTS
@zeus6793
@zeus6793 2 жыл бұрын
@@SuperEfedrina Yes...good point. The man watching his wife in the window IS Martin Scorsese.
@zeus6793
@zeus6793 2 жыл бұрын
@@TTM9691 Yeah, I know. I was high. I fixed it. 🙂
@TTM9691
@TTM9691 2 жыл бұрын
@@zeus6793 I'm high right now. ;)
@lynnie6633
@lynnie6633 2 жыл бұрын
Great acting by DeNiro!! The "You talking to me?" scene was all improvisation. The direction was "Travis looks in the mirror". Brilliant.
@actuariallurker9650
@actuariallurker9650 2 жыл бұрын
Jodie foster was 12 years old when they made the movie and was 13 when nominated for an Oscar award in the film
@pigpiggypigbigpig681
@pigpiggypigbigpig681 2 жыл бұрын
As for the end, Travis looks in the rearview mirror and sees his own wild eyes staring back. He panics and adjusts it away, afraid of what he saw in himself. "But what does Martin Scorsese have to say about the ending? Well, according to the director, Travis survived the shoot-out…and chances are good he’s going to erupt again. In the last seconds of the film, Travis looks into his rearview mirror and sees his own wild eyes looking back. We get one last glimpse of his insanity, churning under the surface, and there’s suddenly a harsh, strange note on the soundtrack as Travis adjusts his mirror and looks away from his reflection. According to Scorsese, “I decided I’d put something on that shows that the timer in Travis starts to tick again, the bomb that’s about to explode again.” "
@johnfredericks4376
@johnfredericks4376 2 жыл бұрын
The Joker movie took a lot of inspiration from this film. You also have to take into account he is a Vietnam veteran with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder.
@BarryHart-xo1oy
@BarryHart-xo1oy 7 ай бұрын
Very true.
@ericjanssen394
@ericjanssen394 2 жыл бұрын
When Travis takes Betsy to a porn movie, people in the 70’s ACTUALLY thought that was sophisticated….for a while. The Supreme Court case over “Deep Throat” had blown up into an argument over the social sexual revolution, and upscale swingers used to brag “We’re going to an adult movie!” By 1976, though, most weren’t saying that. 😅 As usual Travis is a little out of the loop on the outside world’s trends.
@jamesoblivion
@jamesoblivion Жыл бұрын
Also, it was NEVER good form to take a first date to a porno without their input. 😆 It's interesting because Travis does take Betsy to a much fancier porno theater than the place he usually goes...like he was gonna impress her by taking her to the NICE porno theater. 😂
@saharafox8209
@saharafox8209 Жыл бұрын
I didn't know that I always thought it was to test her cause he viewed it as trash along with the rest of the people and city, basically a misguided test
@barrycohen311
@barrycohen311 Жыл бұрын
Travis tried to take her into "his world.' The only word he knew. Very sad and tragic. He said something to the effect of- "I know there are other kinds or places, other kinds of movies, I don't know much about them, but I will take you there." Excellent film.
@jameshitt3263
@jameshitt3263 6 ай бұрын
The 70s were definitely weird in a lot of ways that would shock us today.
@robertjewell9727
@robertjewell9727 2 жыл бұрын
My friend Dorothy's father composed the music for this film and was nominated for an Oscar for it.
@blanketstarry7725
@blanketstarry7725 2 жыл бұрын
Your friends father is Bernard Herrmann!? That is sooo cool!
@jamesalexander5623
@jamesalexander5623 2 жыл бұрын
Bernard Herrmann is one of the 5 Best Film Composers of all time!
@bronzewand
@bronzewand Жыл бұрын
The soundtrack to "Vertigo" is one of my favorites of all time
@Joe-hh8gd
@Joe-hh8gd Жыл бұрын
To me, Bernard Herrmann is the greatest film composer in history. From Citizen Kane to Its Alive...no one better
@robertjewell9727
@robertjewell9727 Жыл бұрын
@@Joe-hh8gd , my friend Bill is currently working on a single album with the complete scores for On Dangerous Ground and The Man Who Knew Too Much.
@harveybojangle475
@harveybojangle475 2 жыл бұрын
He simply wanted to kill Palentine to give his life meaning (as misguided as it sounds). Sadly, there are still many examples of these people in the news today. Also, Jodie Foster had a standard American accent in this film. In Silence of the Lambs, she was putting on a West Virginian accent.
@joonaa2751
@joonaa2751 2 жыл бұрын
An obtuse nitpick perhaps, but you’re talking about the ”GENERAL American” accent, as ”STANDARD American” (or ”Eastern Standard”) actually refers to the extinct upper crust East Coast accent that many nowadays call ”Transatlantic”.
@beevezeepe6615
@beevezeepe6615 Жыл бұрын
Plus, Travis wanted to get back at Betsy by destroying something she loved. It amazes me how people don't get this.
@Peter-733
@Peter-733 Жыл бұрын
@@beevezeepe6615 I thought travis was just jealous of palantine because betsy liked him and so many people were supporting him.
@harveybojangle475
@harveybojangle475 Жыл бұрын
@@B_baldy What does Palestine being a good or bad guy have to do with why Travis wanted to kill him?
@harveybojangle475
@harveybojangle475 Жыл бұрын
@@B_baldy Since murder is wrong, regardless of what type of person the victim may be, I was interested in what the Travis character’s motivations were.
@fashizzle78
@fashizzle78 2 жыл бұрын
Fun Fact..at the movie theater ticket booth the black woman that sold the tickets was in real life Robert De Niro's first wife at the time
@jamesalexander5623
@jamesalexander5623 2 жыл бұрын
The Guy in Travis's Cab that wanted to kill his Wife was the Director of the Film! The soundtrack was done by the Composer who did "Citizen Kane". The tall, bald taxi driver was the "Monster" in "Young Frankenstein"!
@nachoxm
@nachoxm 2 жыл бұрын
Scorsese is also the bearded guy sitting next the the steps to the campaign office when Betsy's walking into to work. 😊
@jaywoolston2851
@jaywoolston2851 2 жыл бұрын
Also, the woman working at the porno theater was De Niro's first wife. And the guy who hires him is the loan shark Rocky works for.
@Fedorevsky
@Fedorevsky Жыл бұрын
@@jaywoolston2851 Yes, Joe Spinell who was also in the Godfather trilogy. He was the best paid actor in that because of a stunt he pulled with the union. A very interesting man inside and outside of the movies.
@dr.burtgummerfan439
@dr.burtgummerfan439 2 жыл бұрын
Matthew "Sport" was played by Harvey Keitel (from Pulp Fiction, among others) The balding cab driver who Travis talked to was played by Peter Boyle (who played the creature in Young Frankenstein and Ray's father on Everybody Loves Raymond), Betsy was played by actress/model Cybil Shepard (star of The Last Picture Show and the 80s TV series Moonlighting with Bruce Willis), Betsy's coworker with the glasses was played by actor/writer/director/comedian Albert Brooks (who has made and starred in some hilarious comedies including Lost In America and Defending Your Life). LOT of talent in this movie.
@dr.burtgummerfan439
@dr.burtgummerfan439 2 жыл бұрын
@Erik Hatzenbuehler Another commenter had already mentioned that.
@clarencewalker3925
@clarencewalker3925 2 жыл бұрын
You know your actors and their work. Nice to see an aficionado who appreciates fine acting.
@christopherbrown6049
@christopherbrown6049 2 жыл бұрын
Balding? Did Frank barone ever have hair😂✌
@IChooseJesus9091
@IChooseJesus9091 2 жыл бұрын
My favorite Cybil Shepard movie is "Chances Are " with Robert Downey Jr. Harvey Keitel was the mob boss in Sister Act also.
@Paul77ozee
@Paul77ozee 2 жыл бұрын
How about the guy who played easy Andy (Gun Dealer). He used to live in a house in Wonderland drive in California. The same house that had 4 murders that were linked to porn actor John Holmes. You can see the horrific crime scene video that the police recorded and is on KZfaq.
@justinatest9456
@justinatest9456 2 жыл бұрын
Once again you guys did a great job. Your reactions are very natural and honest, and you're always so engaged in the movies you're watching. This isn't a very easy movie to watch but you were with it the whole way. You guys are great.
@MJoy4Fun
@MJoy4Fun 2 жыл бұрын
thank you so much! we might not totally understand Travis as a character but it was challenging to try to understand who he was.. .and that's mainly why we enjoyed this film.
@pigpiggypigbigpig681
@pigpiggypigbigpig681 2 жыл бұрын
FINALLY something I want to watch on YT today.
@allyourmoney
@allyourmoney 2 жыл бұрын
The line between hero & maniac can be razor thin. Sometimes there is no line. Travis got lucky & fate chose for him. But by doing the heroic thing, even accidentally, it elevated his self-esteem & at the end he's more well-adjusted. ( Although that little moment of paranoia in his taxi shows that he'll never be completely free of his dark side. )
@MrGpschmidt
@MrGpschmidt 2 жыл бұрын
MEAN STREETS was actually Scorsese's 1st collab w/DeNiro (and their 1st big hit w/the critics at least) but this is their 1st true masterpiece. De Niro's iconic Travis Bickle ("I'm God's lonely man") is one of cinema's greatest anti-heroes. While many depict him as sociopathic it's misinterpreted in many ways of who he is (or represents) - Bickle was a Vietnam vet (obviously having PTSD and not able to re-adjust to civilian life - hence his headaches and insomnia) who was an outsider desperately wanting to connect (the 1st scene w/Betsy it's pretty much him talking about himself and not how she perceives to him even). Isolated in a huge city is truly a metaphor for Life itself (the screenwriter Paul Schrader wrote this while hacking cabs in NYC and was going thru a deep depression after a breakup and was channeling all his angst/rage into this - nice job by the way in saying it's alike a novel - it is very much like that). Fun facts: Scorsese has 2 onscreen cameos - when Travis 1st sees Betsy in slo-mo outside the campaign headquarters he's wearing an inside out COLUMBIA STUDIOS t-shirt and he's the psychotic passenger telling Travis he's going to kill his philladandering wife). The legendary Bernard Herrmann (who is best known for PSYCHO & VERTIGO among dozens of films & TV) literally passed away the night he finished writing the score (this was his finale). And I'm sure it's been mentioned sadly the film 'inspired' the Reagan asaassination attempt by John Hinckley who was obsessed with the film and namely Jodie Foster (who is truly amazing in this, her breakthrough performance). Great job guys!
@isabelsilva62023
@isabelsilva62023 Жыл бұрын
Harvey Keitel was still at his daytime job when they made "Mean Streets".
@snootybaronet
@snootybaronet 2 жыл бұрын
Travis is a lost soul looking for meaning. He can't change himself so thinks the only answer is dealing with all the evil around him. When he tries to take action in his own life he comes up with failure and disappointment. He sees this failure as the fault of the fakery and phoniness of others. Betsy is a phony and disappoints him. Palatine is the societal image of all this phoniness and Travis wants to lash out at it all by assassinating him. He fails so goes to the next thing, the innocence he sees in Iris. If he can save her and destroy the evil around her he will have done something. This leads to psychosis and his death spree. Great movie.
@MarkL1968
@MarkL1968 2 ай бұрын
It’s a disturbing movie for sure! Brilliant, but disturbing. Trivia: the director, Martin Scorsese, is the passenger in the cab who’s talking about killing his wife.
@harlanginsberg7269
@harlanginsberg7269 2 жыл бұрын
You do realize that De Niro was going crazy throughout the movie right. He wasn't a hero or a bad man he was a troubled guy who went crazy.
@zatoichi1
@zatoichi1 2 жыл бұрын
I think a lot of the younger people miss the context that he was a Vietnam vet. Dealing with life like many others, PTSD, nightmares and returning to an ungrateful, uncaring nation that was falling apart in places like NYC. Vets often had to come back to low wage jobs and in Manhattan, a life in a concrete block apartment like a jail cell. These were all represented in the opening scenes.
@harlanginsberg7269
@harlanginsberg7269 2 жыл бұрын
@@zatoichi1 That's definitely true and also this movie was really a lot about a specific place in at that time. I lived in NY most of my life. At the time of the movie NY was a cesspool unhealthy for humans. This movie breathed that from beginning til end
@sparky6086
@sparky6086 2 жыл бұрын
De Niro did a great job on "Raging Bull" too. Watch it, when you get a chance. It was also directed by Martin Scorsese.
@Divamarja_CA
@Divamarja_CA 2 жыл бұрын
Sometimes movies are too serious or sad for me to watch, even if I know it’s an important, heralded, well-acted, etc. Taxi Driver is that for me. So, watching this abridged version, with your reactions, was just the right amount of exposure to the movie for me. This is a descent into mental illness, I think, and is a serious movie to think about. And it’s easy to see a comparison to Todd Phillips’ Joker.
@actuariallurker9650
@actuariallurker9650 2 жыл бұрын
The guy in the cab spying in his wife having the affair who wants to pay the meter is the director Martin Scorsese acting in his own movie
@bsjett
@bsjett 2 жыл бұрын
He's also sitting outside of Palantine's office when Travis first sees Betsy.
@lepuuttelu
@lepuuttelu 2 жыл бұрын
@@bsjett Note how he's also laying his eyes on Betsy. Sets us up for analyzing both a parallel between himself and Travis, as well as the parallel between himself eyeing a woman by the office and himself at the cab thinking out loud about killing his wife for infidelity.
@flibber123
@flibber123 2 жыл бұрын
I thought the movie did a good job establishing early on that this guy has problems. He mentions insomnia, he says 'clean like my conscience'. There are all these little things that are a little off about him. It makes sense to me that later on things get worse and worse for him. He gets delusional and his pent up rage turns to violent thoughts. I believe he went after Palantine as a way of lashing out at Betsy. He expected to be killed by the Secret Service, so then everyone would know who he is. Betsy would realize it's the guy she dumped, and she'd feel guilty that Palantine was dead because of it. When that didn't work out, he went to get Iris. Back in the early '70s in the US it was trendy for couples to go see a porn movie together. Travis was not wrong about that. His problem is he's so alienated from other people that he can only observe how they act. He can't understand the more subtle aspects of people's behavior. That's why he made the mistake of taking Betsy there.
@susanbotwinski5584
@susanbotwinski5584 2 жыл бұрын
Anyone else see the bag of Doritos on his table? Totally awesome. It's so vintage! That's what they looked like back then. So cool. 😀👍 Great reaction. You two handled it well. ❤️👏
@user-hf6wr8hu8w
@user-hf6wr8hu8w 2 жыл бұрын
You guys are awesome! 👍
@seansersmylie
@seansersmylie 2 жыл бұрын
The Raging Bull is regarded as De Niro's best performance, it's also directed by Scorsese.
@jamesalexander5623
@jamesalexander5623 2 жыл бұрын
Scorsese was the Guy in Travis' Cab who wanted to kill his cheating Wife!
@MJoy4Fun
@MJoy4Fun 2 жыл бұрын
We will definitely watch Raging Bull!
@thunderstruck5484
@thunderstruck5484 2 жыл бұрын
Great movie and never gets old , thanks again!
@FilterHQ
@FilterHQ 2 жыл бұрын
Amazing portayal of a mans mind unwinding as he searches for meaning and connection in his life.
@jesterforhire
@jesterforhire Жыл бұрын
Great reaction gang! Love from Seattle. You are terrific to watch and so respectful of the art. Thanks!
@rich_t
@rich_t 2 жыл бұрын
It wasn't the first movie where Martin Scorsese worked with Robert DeNiro. I believe that would be "Mean Streets" which was 1973.
@MJoy4Fun
@MJoy4Fun 2 жыл бұрын
quite a few movies they worked together and they are all great!
@Psergiorivera
@Psergiorivera 3 ай бұрын
This movie is SPECTACULAR. This character goes thru it and that shootout, MY GOD.
@serinx
@serinx 2 жыл бұрын
Cape Fear (1991) is worth watching [Scorsese / De Niro remake] ( slightly biased since they filmed a few scenes @ where I was living as a teenager in FL ).
@MJoy4Fun
@MJoy4Fun 2 жыл бұрын
Cape Fear has been suggested a lot lately..so we might do it soon
@shainewhite2781
@shainewhite2781 2 жыл бұрын
This movie as well inspired Joker 2019. Nominated for 4 Oscars including Best Picture but lost 3 to ROCKY.
@GetMeThere1
@GetMeThere1 2 жыл бұрын
This is back when Robert De Niro was making films with significant artistic content. There are two other great movies with him as a "crazy" which are well worth a viewing from you: Cape Fear (1991) and Raging Bull (1980). Each is quite amazing in its own right. Oh, and...they're BOTH directed by Martin Scorsese. Many people consider Raging Bull to be the best movie made by Scorsese (and De Niro). It's especially interesting because it's based on a real person: the champion boxer Jake LaMotta. These films are VERY moving and intense.
@jamesalexander5623
@jamesalexander5623 Жыл бұрын
Hey are you knocking "Meet the Fockers"?
@beevezeepe6615
@beevezeepe6615 Жыл бұрын
Add "The King of Comedy" to that "crazy" DeNiro series. Both that and "Taxi Driver" were highly influential on "Joker."
@GetMeThere1
@GetMeThere1 Жыл бұрын
@@beevezeepe6615 The King of Comedy was AWESOME! Thanks for reminding me.
@Fedorevsky
@Fedorevsky Жыл бұрын
@@beevezeepe6615 Yeah, The Joker is almost an amalgamation of the two with a little comic book stuff thrown in for good measure.
@yskim2636
@yskim2636 2 жыл бұрын
Finally back to good movies! 🤣🤣🤣
@nettricegaskins1871
@nettricegaskins1871 2 жыл бұрын
Factoids: The Black woman at the concession stand at the beginning of the film was Robert DeNiro's first wife Diahnne Abbott. The man in the back of the taxi who was watching his wife in a window was the filmmaker himself (Martin Scorsese).
@thunderstruck5484
@thunderstruck5484 2 жыл бұрын
The curly hair guy working with Betsy is the great Albert Brooks, very creative funny guy with several classic comedy movies, thanks
@thundernels
@thundernels 2 жыл бұрын
After watching this again, you can really see how this (and King of Comedy) was hugely influential on the movie Joker.
@smichelle65
@smichelle65 2 жыл бұрын
"Taxi Driver" was the second DeNiro/Scorsese pairing; the first was "Mean Streets" in 1973. It's the movie that put them both on the map, and DeNiro's character is wild! "Mean Streets" is Scorsese's first "gangster" film.
@kelvinthompson1660
@kelvinthompson1660 2 жыл бұрын
Lol. I call him Palpatine too!
@FrankOdonnell-ej3hd
@FrankOdonnell-ej3hd Жыл бұрын
this is the one where director scorcese "made his bones" establishing him as great film maker the ending was so outrageous and unexpected I almost burst out laughing⚛
@vincecommando7575
@vincecommando7575 Жыл бұрын
The personnel officer who interviews Travis is played by Joe Spinell. He did a lot of movies with Sylvester Stallone. Two of my favorite movies with him is Nighthawks (1981) and Vigilante (1983). Also the crazy guy in the cab with Travis was the director Martin Scorsese. The picture of Iris' parents were of Martin Scorsese's parents Charles Scorsese and Catherine Scorsese.
@tomloft2000
@tomloft2000 2 жыл бұрын
much of this movie is loosely based on the life of Arthur Bremer, a ne'er-do-well that decided to kill a politician.he first thought of killing Richard Nixon,but decided that would be too difficult.he did attempt to kill George Wallace, a presidential candidate in 1972.Wallace survived,but was wheelchair bound for the rest of his life.
@richardrobbins8067
@richardrobbins8067 2 жыл бұрын
...and then it inspired (some might say indirectly) John Hinckley Jr. to take a shot at Reagan just to get Jodie Foster's attention.
@Joe-hh8gd
@Joe-hh8gd Жыл бұрын
NOT Scorcese's first movie with DeNiro and Keitel. The three first worked together in MEAN STREETS, another fine film... very real.
@sparky6086
@sparky6086 2 жыл бұрын
I used to do that, "You talkin' to me?" thing, when I was in the service to give my friends some good natured trouble to make them laugh. I'd never seen "Taxi Driver" & just invented it on my own to pretend, that I was ignoring them or pretending, that I wasn't guilty of something. I didn't realize, that Travis Bickle did the same thing in "Taxi Driver", until I saw it many years later.
@Curraghmore
@Curraghmore 2 жыл бұрын
I'm sure you learned already that the man in Travis' cab talking about shooting his wife in the face was the director, Martin Scorsese. But Scorsese first appears in the background earlier in the film. When we see Betsy for the first time walking into the campaign office, Martin Scorsese was sitting outside the office door leaning against the wall.
@gazoontight
@gazoontight Жыл бұрын
That hairstyle Travis has is used in military by men going on a suicide mission. Like he wrote in his note to Iris, he intended to die.
@sametucar9544
@sametucar9544 11 ай бұрын
👍
@davemchard1530
@davemchard1530 Жыл бұрын
Mean Streets was DeNiro and Scorsese's first film together. Another one for the list.👍
@peterengelen2794
@peterengelen2794 2 жыл бұрын
Y'all gotta watch Martin Scorsese's ''Mean Streets'' (1973) the first movie (his actual breakthrough role) he did with Robert De Niro and with Harvey Keitel (''Sport'') as the lead character, and Martin Scorsese's ''The King of Comedy'' with Robert De Niro (then watch the 2019 DC movie ''Joker''). Other legendary 1970s performances by Robert De Niro is ''The Deer Hunter'' (1978) and also ''Novecento'' (1977). Btw, this was the greatest and funniest reaction on the very iconic ''Are you talkin' to me?'' sequence
@kennewton7518
@kennewton7518 3 ай бұрын
When Travis text on the criminals it's " Game over right? ".😊
@BigBoss-zi5ss
@BigBoss-zi5ss 2 жыл бұрын
In case you didn't know already Mean Streets was the first deniro/Scorsese movie together
@goldieschooch8512
@goldieschooch8512 Жыл бұрын
It’s been a long long time since I’ve watched this movie. It was like watching it for the 1st time with some new friends! ✌🏻☀️
@sergiodavila5269
@sergiodavila5269 2 жыл бұрын
“You talkin to me?!” 👊🏽👊🏽👊🏽👊🏽
@ProWrestlingFiend
@ProWrestlingFiend 2 жыл бұрын
I don't always comment...but i love your videos
@MJoy4Fun
@MJoy4Fun 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you! We appreciate your comment very much 💚
@BlueSummers101
@BlueSummers101 2 жыл бұрын
@9:46 I legit spat coke over myself laughing at this comment XD
@youngboy5285
@youngboy5285 2 жыл бұрын
Yalll always pick the best movies, keep it up I love y’all
@petercofrancesco9812
@petercofrancesco9812 Жыл бұрын
The reason he wants to kill the politician is to give his life meaning. He tries to date Betsy but because he is so lonely and socially awkward he is rejected. The guy in the cab who wants to shoot his cheating wife, gives Travis the idea that getting a gun is best way to gain power to do something. The next step is deciding on who to shoot which would get people to notice him. The first target is the robber holding up the store, the next is the politician. When that fails he then decides to free Iris. Ironically by chance he becomes a hero instead of villain by killing the pimps. In the end do to his fame the roles reverse and its he who rejects Betsy.
@deckofcards87
@deckofcards87 Жыл бұрын
Marian and Joy, here's some other greatest 70s movies you should definitely check out: Spielberg's 'Close Encounters Of The Third Kind' (1977) Francis Coppola's 'Apocalypse Now' (1979) & 'The Conversation' (1974)
@1amsdfmdf691
@1amsdfmdf691 2 жыл бұрын
Now you need to see "8mm" with Nicolas Cage and "you were never really here" with Joaquin Phoenix. Great reaction. Thanks.
@terryprust9604
@terryprust9604 2 жыл бұрын
Try watching Deer Hunter with Deniro its amazing movie.
@TonyMontana-ys5xz
@TonyMontana-ys5xz 2 жыл бұрын
I think might be his best performance
@mralfonzohoward5175
@mralfonzohoward5175 2 жыл бұрын
the joker movie was based on this movie and the king of comedy both starring Robert Dinero and that is why Dinero is in the joker and the movie takes place in 1981 the king of comedy came out in 1983 they are both Martin Scorsese movies and Todd Phillips is a Scorsese fan boy so he made this movie in honor to Scorsese
@richardrobbins8067
@richardrobbins8067 2 жыл бұрын
Great reaction guys!! Check out "Mad Dog and Glory" (1993) somewhat younger De Niro playing against his usual type. With Uma Thurman and Bill Murray, it's a comedy with some serious moments.
@anthonyprezioso8115
@anthonyprezioso8115 6 ай бұрын
Nice reaction ! I saw this in a movie theater in the 1970 s. Take care ,happy new year blessings
@tonyb6354
@tonyb6354 2 жыл бұрын
De Niro is awesome in taxi driver. Another movie with Scorcese directing and De Niro and Joe Pesci in is, Raging bull. True story about boxer, Jake La Motta. It's arguably De Niro's greatest performance. He won an Oscar for it.👍
@ninjavigilante5311
@ninjavigilante5311 Жыл бұрын
This movie is a different level man! Lol
@TBCreek
@TBCreek 2 жыл бұрын
Marian, the way you described the feeling of watching the movie at 33:45 mark makes me think all the more you would appreciate the film THE DUELLISTS (1977). Glad to see some one who can watch a slower paced movie and enjoy the story.
@mikegarcia6979
@mikegarcia6979 2 жыл бұрын
I agree that it's possible to see Travis' actions at the end as heroic -- the media and the girl's parents certainly did. But that's from an outsider's perspective. Within Travis' mind, the motivations were all wrong, and the next time he kills someone (which clearly he will), it probably won't be as possible to justify. You were right in calling him "lost," even if he did stumble into being a hero.
@davaodon4160
@davaodon4160 2 жыл бұрын
The angry guy in the cab looking at his wife in the window was the director Martin Scorsese
@blacklexus3965
@blacklexus3965 2 жыл бұрын
“I’m just here to react man” Marian in the best 👌🏼
@Paul77ozee
@Paul77ozee 2 жыл бұрын
A little trivia for you. The guy who played easy Andy (Gun Dealer). He used to live in a house in Wonderland drive in California. The same house that had 4 murders that were linked to porn actor John Holmes. You can see the horrific crime scene video that the police recorded and is on KZfaq.
@CAPTEINRIGGS
@CAPTEINRIGGS 2 жыл бұрын
9:37 That's Martin Scorsese (on coke), guys. 😃
@Psergiorivera
@Psergiorivera 3 ай бұрын
I love the guy that gets in Travis’s cab following his wife…… yep, that be Martin Scorsese
@WiseGuy5674
@WiseGuy5674 2 жыл бұрын
I know you guys saw ‘Joker’. Don’t you recognize the similarities? Look at Travis’s red suit, for example. There was a reason Deniro was cast as Murray Franklin.😎
@kyleshockley1573
@kyleshockley1573 Жыл бұрын
I think Palantine represented the Normieworld / professional class that Betsy was all caught up and enamored with, but without any passion on her part. Strictly status. A world he was never a part of and in his mind could never be with his one suit and blue collar job. Albert Brooks' character reinforced that with his "We're gonna call the cops on you" and constantly trying to block Travis' every step to entry before that. Sport, the brothel, represented the degenerate and transactional side, the same world that alienated him when he tried to move past the "business" part with the girl working the snack bar, when she gave him the cold shoulder then hostility. This also ruined his chances with Betsy when he took her to the adult theater. It also revealed its true self when it wasn't just on film, but was Sport manhandling Iris out of the cab and calling her a b*tch. Basically NYC was the unspoken character or monster through all of this. It was alienating, superficial, degenerate, and unforgiving. It's like a drug. Travis partook of it, and then resented it when it ruined his chances to have what he thought was something better. But even the better turned out to be superficial and reject him as well. (And being superficial, it also accepted him again, when Betsy became interested only after Travis won some notoriety in the respectable press for being a vigilante.) In his own confused and f*cked up way he tried to regain some humanity out of it by getting his revenge on both ends of "the creature" of NYC, the high and low parts, for being the abuser he felt he could never escape. Which I think is why he tried to get Iris out of it, the one bit of good he felt he could do for someone else, but not himself.
@danielman4057
@danielman4057 Жыл бұрын
Joker was 100% inspired by this
@jennym2276
@jennym2276 2 жыл бұрын
Mean Streets was a younger DeNiro, and his first film with Scorcese
@richardzion1828
@richardzion1828 Жыл бұрын
Im looking at your faces, Your seeing that pain,because they got this movie right,There are people like this!
@757optim
@757optim 2 жыл бұрын
Thumb 4 In real life a guy shot President Reagan to impress................Jodie Foster.
@stonepasta5296
@stonepasta5296 2 жыл бұрын
If you liked this one, check out Falling Down with Michael Douglas.
@jefmay3053
@jefmay3053 2 жыл бұрын
10:41 Marian nails it!!
@jamesoblivion
@jamesoblivion Жыл бұрын
The young lady working the concession stand at the porno theater, that Travis hits on until she gets annoyed, is played by Robert De Niro's first wife.
@JW666
@JW666 2 жыл бұрын
When she said "hala" (might have spelled it wrong) I knew right away she's from The Philipines cause my mom has also said that word & she's from Philipines too.
@blunt2416
@blunt2416 2 жыл бұрын
Another good Scorcese Film is Shutter island, I can't remember if you guys reacted to that.
@mikecaetano
@mikecaetano 2 жыл бұрын
To see a young Robert DeNiro in action, check out Martin Scorsese's 1973 film, Mean Streets, starring Harvey Keitel and Robert De Niro as two wayward young men from Lower Manhattan who make a stand confronting their fates. Also check out The Deer Hunter (1978) and Raging Bull (1980). Cybill Shepherd made her cinematic debut in the Peter Bogdanovich film The Last Picture Show (1971), where she makes good with Jeff Bridges. She also starred opposite Bruce Willis in the detective comedy-drama television show Moonlighting (1985-1989).
@Mokoflama
@Mokoflama 2 жыл бұрын
The customer who says hes going to kill his wife with a .44 magnum is the director Martin Scorsese
@wesleyrodgers886
@wesleyrodgers886 2 жыл бұрын
Now THAT is great movie making. 10/10.
@et2petty
@et2petty 2 жыл бұрын
It was all a dream. He was so alone and isolated from life itself, that he dreamed of being important when he knew deep inside, that he was a nobody. Unimportant and alone. That is the profile of the asassin. And the deeply disturbed people that have a "hero-complex". One can take it literrally or as a dream, I believe the latter.
@scottjo63
@scottjo63 Жыл бұрын
9:37, the director, Martin Scorsese himself who directed this masterpiece, just in case you didn't know.
@TheNeonRabbit
@TheNeonRabbit 2 жыл бұрын
14:29 Palpatine LOL
@jamesoblivion
@jamesoblivion Жыл бұрын
This is a movie that I've watched at least 100 times in the last 25 years, and it still reveals things to me. Travis is a very sick man. He is indeed, as Betsy says, a walking contradiction. He writes obsessively about getting healthy and training, but never really stops eating exclusively junk food, or drinking, or popping pills, even after he writes that he's going to quit all of it. And perhaps most pointedly, he writes that one should not devote oneself to morbid self attention, and yet, that is his entire existence. He's not just lonely, he's stuck in a cycle of self imposed loneliness. He can call himself 'God's lonely man,' but he's the one who won't tell his parents where he's living, and lies to them via occasional postcards about everything in his life. He's the one who musters the courage to ask Betsy on a date, but doesn't think to ask her last name, and blindsides her with a porno. Because Travis's idea of a good first date is to go to the FANCY porno theater, where they show the highbrow Swedish stuff, rather than the grimier places he usually watches porn. But he clearly sabotaged his chances with Betsy by not understanding the most basic social interactions. He can't really have a functional relationship. He keeps trying to reach out to people, and failing miserably. And it's not that the people are cold and distant, as he egotistically writes in his journal. When he engages with Betsy, she's very open to getting to know him...until the porno thing. When he goes to Wizard for advice, he's trying to open up about all his bad, violent thoughts (like the passenger did to him, about wanting to murder his cheating wife, in the previous scene). Wizard is keen to offer a friendly ear, and advice, but the best Travis can manage is to stutter and stammer and vaguely allude to having bad thoughts. Wizard doesn't offer great advice, but Travis barely gives him any idea of what his problem is. And his problem is that he's a ticking time bomb...he wants to kill someone, and for the most part, it matters to him less and less who it will be. He's about to buy a shitload of guns, and prepare for a suicide mission, not because people are cold to him, but because he cannot communicate with them. It's very true to what you see in a lot of these types of people, be they assassins or mass shooters, that they're acting out a violent fantasy that they've obsessed over for a long time. Travis is lonely because he makes himself lonely, but he blames it on the world, and it makes him so angry, the only way he can communicate is through violence. It is a harrowing portrait of an antisocial loner with a grudge against the world...and several guns. If made today, I'm sure he'd have a couple of military style rifles with him, as well. Travis was clearly wounded pretty badly in Vietnam, based on his scars, and his service may have left some psychological scars, as well. Sorry for the long rant. Taxi Driver is just one of my all time top five favorite films, and I think Travis Bickle is one of the greatest film performances of the 20th century. What De Niro, along with Scorsese and Schrader, achieved is a haunting character study that leaves so much unsaid about our protagonist, even though we almost never leave his side throughout the entire film. It doesn't tell us what Travis's whole deal is, psychologically...but it does show us. And you really pick up so much on repeat viewings, that reveal his mental state. Loved the video. Great reaction. But never forget...Travis is not a well man, killing a pimp doesn't fix him, and making him a hero for killing, only makes him worse.
@greaserman95
@greaserman95 2 жыл бұрын
Yes! Finally!😁
@ben159xbox
@ben159xbox 2 жыл бұрын
one of my favs, travis character is iconic
@MJoy4Fun
@MJoy4Fun 2 жыл бұрын
truly he is!
@robertjewell9727
@robertjewell9727 2 жыл бұрын
BTW, he wanted to assassinate Pallentine as a jealous veangance against Betsy rejecting him. Travis is not a hero, but a sociopath and it is society that determines whether he's a valuable sociopath or not.
@lawrenceallen8096
@lawrenceallen8096 2 жыл бұрын
Nonsense. You completely missed the point. He was a fundamentally moral guy who was disgusted with the social filth and immorality around him: the immorality of politics and the immorality of "the street," where a young girl was being exploited. It didn't matter to him which: but he was on a mission to end something!
@mckeldin1961
@mckeldin1961 2 жыл бұрын
I mostly agree, I’m not sure I’d classify him as a sociopath though… but he’s clearly mentally ill… he’s also portrayed as a rabid racist (count the number of shots of him staring at threatening Black characters). His morality is of a twisted Calvinist variety (screenwriter, Paul Schrader, grew up in that environment), replete with screwed up sexuality, misogyny, homophobia and fear and repulsion of the “other.” The great irony of the film is that his inevitable explosion resulted in a great social good that gave him (temporary) fame as a hero. However, if his original plan had worked out, he’d have been vilified. As far as I’m concerned the movie is a masterpiece… but I find it distressing that people can come away from it admiring Travis Bickle.
@FrancoisDressler
@FrancoisDressler 2 жыл бұрын
@@lawrenceallen8096 No, you missed the point. Travis is mentally ill.
@sting0277
@sting0277 Жыл бұрын
Way to miss the point of the movie
@robertjewell9727
@robertjewell9727 Жыл бұрын
@@sting0277 huh? What do you think the point is?
@OneThousandHomoDJs
@OneThousandHomoDJs Жыл бұрын
9:40 -- the passenger here is the director.
@MrRondonmon
@MrRondonmon 2 жыл бұрын
He was a Vietnam Vet, he had Insomnia, people who do not sleep can go mad, after the "Coma" he whole up OK. The back seat guy watching his wife was the Director. This is an all time great movie. You just have to understand all of those factors then you understand WHY he snapped.
@MJoy4Fun
@MJoy4Fun 2 жыл бұрын
he was such an interesting character ,and this movie deserves a second watch
@anthonyzarate9807
@anthonyzarate9807 2 жыл бұрын
First, that is actually Marty Scorsese in the back of Taxi watching his wife in another man's apartment. Second, the "you talking to me" scene is one of the most copied and famous lines in a movie, ever. Finally, I remember Mrs. saying that the shooting at convenience store was first time that Travis Bickle, Robert De Niro character, shot somebody. He was a marine and in the Vietnam war. I would assume he has handled many types of guns and shot and killed plenty of soldiers. This is arguably my favorite movie reaction channel. Keep up the good work and great content! P.S. Try and get Breaking Bad episodes out quicker😉
@Ootlander
@Ootlander 2 жыл бұрын
You guys should check out Awakenings, amazing performances by Robert De Niro and Robin Williams.
@antoniocunha8772
@antoniocunha8772 2 жыл бұрын
masterpiece tnks from brazil
@CAPTEINRIGGS
@CAPTEINRIGGS 2 жыл бұрын
If I remember correctly, Travis dies when he sits on the couch. Everything after that is in his head. Like, when the police come and he points the imaginary gun to his head is not real. The hospital coma, letters and the ending scene with Betsy are all in his head while his dying on the couch.
@blanketstarry7725
@blanketstarry7725 2 жыл бұрын
That's a rumor...Scorsese, himself, has confirmed that the ending is real life.
@ZzaphodD
@ZzaphodD 9 ай бұрын
Haha, he's taking her to a dirty movie from my country, Sweden ;-)
@lawrenceallen8096
@lawrenceallen8096 2 жыл бұрын
They guy in the back seat who was following his wife and was planning on killing her? That was Martin Scorsese, the film's director.
@barrycohen311
@barrycohen311 Жыл бұрын
That is Martin Scorsese as the Taxi passenger. The guy who wants to kill his wife for cheating on him.
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