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Fire at Will!'s Review

Created Jan 18, 2009 12:37AM PST • Edited Jan 18, 2009 12:37AM PST

  1. Quality
  2. Barely OK 2.0

    What an overrated movie. Taxi Driver, for all the praise and plaudits given to it, is at its root a disturbing and repetitive joke, and unfortunately one starring De Niro and directed by Scorcese.

  3. Barely OK 2.0

    De Niro is engaging as nutcase Travis Bickle, but he lacks the intensity that the actor has shown in more recent times. Jodie Foster is in it for about ten minutes, and doesn’t really make an impression, whilst Cybill Shepherd, Peter Boyle and Scorcese himself make appearances.

  4. Male Stars Barely OK 2.0

    De Niro, revered for this role by critics over the last thirty years, is good at playing psychopaths. Just watch Cape Fear; he’s better in that in than here. Travis Bickle is an immature, pathetic man who thinks he can change New York single handedly, and to that end De Niro does present the near-harmless level of oddness in the man. However, I couldn’t help but imagine a newer actor (say Ed Norton) in the role throughout, because they’d be better; the man is blank – and it’s hard to see how De Niro made a career from this.

  5. Female Stars OK 2.5

    Jodie Foster can hardly be called a star of the film, but she and Cybill Shepherd share about the same amount of time on-screen as the focus of Bickle’s crusades. Foster, at twelve, plays a child prostitute, and it is a pretty amazing performance (for what little performance it is) by the young actress.

  6. Female Costars Barely OK 2.0

    Shepherd plays a campaign worker for the presidential candidate featured in the film, and she at least presents the character as more than one-dimensional, a woman who makes the wrong assumptions about the wrong man.

  7. Male Costars OK 2.5

    Peter Boyle, Martin Scorcese, Leonard Harris and Harvey Keitel play small roles in the movie as counters to Bickle, with Boyle his co-worker at the taxi company – giving him advice on his life, and as such, not a particularly strong performance. Harris plays the slightly slimy politician Palantine, whom Bickle supports simply through his obsession with Shepherd’s Betsy working for him. Keitel is bizarre as Foster’s pimp – it’s strange to even comprehend that it is Keitel, as the role is so small and the performance so poor that the actor seems miscast. Scorcese himself seems to make the biggest impact in his cameo as a deranged customer of Bickle’s – his little diatribe about his wife and what he plans to do is probably one of the better scenes in the movie.

  8. Barely OK 2.0

    The film is gritty – the very definition of the word in fact. Manhattan looks fantastic, but the movie is nearly ruined by the ridiculous repetition of the same piece of score. The infamous dialogue is so hackneyed as to appear laughable now – a sad by-product of popular culture.

  9. Direction OK 2.5

    Scorcese does direct the film well – the insight into this one man’s insanity is well-synchronised with the degraded Manhattan presented on-screen. It’s just not that fantastic – not as good as the hype would suggest it is. In fact, some of the scenes are quite weak to behold, in particular those featuring Shepherd and her co-worker – almost unnecessary and quite out of place.

  10. Play Barely OK 2.0

    The infamous line is somewhat lessened in impact thanks to its many impersonators through the years, and in looking at the rest of the dialogue, only Bickle’s descent into anarchy is intelligent in its construction. His uncertainty in voice-over reflects well on the film, with the constant stumble for articulation and justification. The scenes featuring Shepherd and her co-worker mentioned above are stupid however – it seems like Scorcese was trying too hard to get an indie-style conversation in the movie, and as such it feels staged and ridiculous in context – Bickle’s simple humanity clashes wildly with their inane, bohemian-style chat.

  11. Music Pretty Awful 0.5

    This was terrible. I mean, hearing the theme score by Bernard Herrmann at the onset, it is incredibly good – a piece that seems to match Bickle’s bizzare personality with the metropolitan sprawl of Manhattan. However, it’s about ten minutes in when you realise Scorcese is going to use it over and over again – and by the conclusion you just won’t ever, EVER want to hear it again. A prime example of good intentions gone wildly wrong.

  12. Visuals Barely OK 2.0

    The city of Manhattan, shot by Scorcese, looks amazing here. The blurred lights, contrasted with the multitudes of people, give the night scenes that sense of urban life that many films miss – and some scenes present the darker side of the city at night convincingly well. The violence at the conclusion is also vividly brutal – shocking considering the plodding, harmless tone of much of the rest of the film.

  13. Content
  14. Horrid 4.5

    The sex that’s on show is shortly shown but explicit – Bickle is watching porn at an adult cinema after all. The violence is nowhere to be seen until the conclusion, and when it comes it is very brutal – perhaps to show the realism of what such a situation would be like. The swearing is constant and profane.

  15. Sex Explicit 5.0
  16. Violence Savage 4.5
  17. Rudeness Nasty 4.0
  18. Natural 1.0

    The idea that one person could get angered at the state of the world is totally feasible, and, unfortunately as a consequence of this film, the events depicted can happen – children are forced to work as prostitutes, people do become obsessed with others, and people do assassinate (or attempt to) public figures.

  19. Circumstantial Natural 1.0
  20. Biological Natural 1.0
  21. Physical Natural 1.0

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Jan 24, 2009 2:09AM
Fire at Will!

Regarding willjros’s Review
Thanks Wick! This should stand as a warning – some reviewers will club together and champion movies, but at the end of it all it’s the individual who decides if the hype is worth it! I’m glad to add a dissenting voice to the discussion.

Jan 18, 2009 1:06AM
Wick

Way to go Will! Take a stand. No sacred cows here. More precisely, no unslaughtered sacred cows.

Its been at least a couple decades since I saw Taxi Driver, but your review rings true to my recollection. Nice job nailing it.