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Taxi Driver : The BFI Film Classics - Amy Taubin

Taxi Driver

The BFI Film Classics

By: Amy Taubin

Paperback | 31 July 2012 | Edition Number 2

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Paul Schrader was in meltdown in 1972. Drinking heavily, living in his car, he was hospitalised with a gastric ulcer. There he read about Arthur Bremer's attempt to assassinate Alabama Governor George Wallace: the story was the germ of his screenplay for Taxi Driver (1976). Executives at Columbia hated the script, but when Martin Scorsese and Robert De Niro, who were flying high after the triumphs of Mean Streets (1973) and The Godfather Part II (1974), signed up, Taxi Driver became too good a package to refuse. Scorsese transformed the script into what is now considered one of the two or three definitive films of the 1970s. De Niro is mesmerising as Travis Bickle - pent-up, bigoted, steadily slipping into psychosis, the personification of American masculinity post-Vietnam. Cybill Shepherd and Jodie Foster give fine support and Scorsese brought in Bernard Herrmann, the greatest of film composers, to write what turned out to be his last score.

Crucially, Scorsese rooted Taxi Driver in its New York locations, tuning the film's violence into the hard reality of the city. Technically thrilling though it is, Taxi Driver is profoundly disturbing - finding, as Amy Taubin shows, racism, misogyny and gun fetishism at the heart of American culture. In her foreword to this special edition, published to celebrate the 20th anniversary of the BFI Film Classics series, Amy Taubin considers Taxi Driver a new in the context of contemporary politics of race and masculinity in the US, and draws on an exclusive interview with Robert De Niro about his memories of making the film.

About the Author

Amy Taubin is a contributing editor of Film Comment and Sight & Sound and writes frequently for Artforum.

The BFI Film Classics Series

Bicycle Thieves : BFI Film Classics - Robert S. C. Gordon
Enfants du Paradis : The BFI Film Classics - Jill Forbes
Blackmail : BFI Film Classics - Tom Ryall
Bringing Up Baby : The BFI Film Classics - Peter Swaab
Shoah : The BFI Film Classics - Sue Vice
Victim : Bfi Cinema - John Coldstream

$35.75

La Grande Illusion : The BFI Film Classics - Julian  Jackson
The Bigamist : The BFI Film Classics - Amelie Hastie
Written on the Wind : The BFI Film Classics - Peter William Evans
Taxi Driver : The BFI Film Classics - Amy Taubin
Went the Day Well? : The BFI Film Classics - Penelope Houston
The Wizard of Oz : The BFI Film Classics - Salman Rushdie
Blade Runner : The BFI Film Classics - Scott Bukatman
The Innocents : BFI Film Classics - Christopher Frayling
Cat People : BFI Film Classics - Kim Newman
Vampyr : BFI Film Classics - David Rudkin
Nosferatu (1979) : Phantom Der Nacht - S. S. Prawer
Ivan the Terrible : The BFI Film Classics - Yuri  Tsivian