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Taxi Driver (2 Disc Special Edition) [1976] [DVD]

Taxi Driver (2 Disc Special Edition) [1976] [DVD]Director: Martin Scorsese
Actors: Robert De Niro, Jodie Foster, Albert Brooks, Harvey Keitel, Leonard Harris
Studio: Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
Category: DVD

List Price: £15.99
Buy New: £3.39
as of 23/11/2009 05:04 GMT details
You Save: £12.60 (79%)



New (19) Used (4) Collectible (2) from £3.39

Seller: great_entertainment
Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 9 reviews
Sales Rank: 2651

Format: Anamorphic, PAL, Special Edition
Language: English (Original Language)
Rating: Suitable for 18 years and over
Region: 2
Aspect Ratio: 1.78:1
Number Of Discs: 2
Running Time: 109 Minutes
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 7.1 x 5.4 x 0.6

EAN: 5035822001992
ASIN: B000SNUQXA

Theatrical Release Date: 1976
Release Date: August 13, 2007
Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days

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Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.co.uk
iTaxi Driver/i is the definitive cinematic portrait of loneliness and alienation manifested as violence. It is as if director Martin Scorsese and screenwriter Paul Schrader had tapped into precisely the same source of psychological inspiration ("I just knew I had to make this film," Scorsese would later say), combined with a perfectly timed post-Watergate expression of personal, political, and societal anxiety. Robert De Niro, as the tortured, ex-Marine cab driver Travis Bickle, made movie history with his chilling performance as one of the most memorably intense and vividly realized characters ever committed to film. Bickle is a self-appointed vigilante who views his urban beat as an intolerable cesspool of blighted humanity. He plays guardian angel for a young prostitute (Jodie Foster), but not without violently devastating consequences. This masterpiece, which is not for all tastes, is sure to horrify some viewers, but few could deny the film's lasting power and importance. i--Jeff Shannon, Amazon.com/i


Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 9



5 out of 5 stars THE 70's Film   August 1, 2007
S J Buck (Kent, UK)
30 out of 33 found this review helpful

This searing movie from Martin Scorcese is one of the great films of the 1970's. It features Robert DeNiro in the role of a lifetime, as ex-Vietnam vet Travis Bickle, who can't sleep and drives a Cab at night as a form of therapy. Travis also has trouble relating to people and it is this that gives him difficulties when he meets Betsy (played wonderfully by Cybill Shepherd) and things go from bad to worse when he then meets Iris (Jodie Foster) a teenage prostitute.... The supporting cast includes Peter Boyle and Harvey Keitel. br / br /Scorcese works his magic in this film. A number of scenes from this film are unforgettable and some have become iconic. Obviously the "Are you talking to me..." mirror scene is the most well known but there are a number of others. Travis winds up a Secret Service agent, suggesting he would like to join - this is marvellously played. You will notice in a later scene that Travis has made some slight adjustments to his hair! In another classic scene, which certainly influenced Quentin Tarantino for a scene in 'Reservoir Dogs', Travis goes to buy some guns. The dialog is marvellous. Full credit to Paul Schrader for the brilliant script, without his contribution the film would not have as good. br / br /This edition has the following extras: br /Introduction to DVD - Martin Scorsese - this was recorded in 2006 and lasts about 15 minutes during which Scorsese talks about the influences that created Taxi Driver (Jean Luc Goddard etc). br / br /Introduction to DVD - Paul Schrader br /Commentary - Paul Schrader br /Commentary Robert Kolker (Author) br /Loneliness and Inspiration - Documentary br /Cabbie Confessional - Documentary br /Producing a Cult Classic br / br /Appreciation and Influence - this is an interesting series of intereviews about Martin Scorsese with many famous directors and actors. br / br /Taxi Driver Locations - Then and Now br /Animated Photo Gallery br /Storyboard to Film Comparisons br /Behind the Scenes Documentary br /Theatrical Trailer br /Filmographies br / br /The film also contains the last ever film score from Bernard Hermann who had previously done Citizen Kane and Psycho to name but two. This score is really excellent. A Jazzy saxophone with a haunting melody, but that changes menacingly without warning. Quite brilliant. br / br /This is, particularly at the end, a very violent film and one with an ending that may leave you perplexed. Despite this it has a haunting quality because of its running themes of alienation and loneliness. It isn't easy watching but does reward you with repeated viewings. An essential DVD for any film collection. br / br / br /


5 out of 5 stars "Gods lonely man"   August 20, 2007
russell clarke (halifax, west yorks)
11 out of 12 found this review helpful

A little known fact about Martin Scorsese,s 1976 masterpiece is that singer Neil Diamond was actually considered for the role of Travis Bickle by one studio when it was being hawked around .How different the film would have ended up should that piece of casting borne fruit is hard to envisage .Suffice to say it wouldn't have become the definitive study of alienation and madness that it did. Instead of the famous" You talking to me?" mirror scene (incidentally , improvised by De Niro, but actually inspired by a scene in the classic western "Shane")we would probably have ended up with a toe curling gun as a microphone vocal number. I like Diamond incidentally as a singer but he would have ended up doing the soundtrack instead if Bernard Hermann's eerie score as well. It doesn't bear thinking about in all honesty . br /Thankfully history decreed that the legendary pairing of Scorsese and De Niro re-united for the film ,indeed Scorsese was given the film only on the proviso that he could he bring De Niro on board .Brian De Palma had been slated as director but a viewing of "Mean Streets" changed the studios mind. The film is centred on a screenplay written in five days by Paul Schrader and contains elements of autobiography -Schrader suffered from depression and self enforced isolation for months after moving to L.A, also developing an obsession with guns and porn theatres. br /Travis Bickle is a Vietnam veteran who returns to New York(he is originally from the mid-west)and works the night shift as a taxi driver. A chronic insomniac , he prowls the neighbourhood during the day as well , cruising round and visiting porn theatres. He is disgusted by the everyday sights he see's on the streets" whores, skunk pussies ,b***ers, queens , fairies"etc and longs for a "real rain " to come and wash the scum off the streets. He forms a tentative relationship with Betsy (Cybil Shepherd) ,an aide to New York senator Charles Palantine(Leonard Harris) , who is running for the presidential nomination . She rejects him after he takes her on a date to a porn film , a move that shows us early on that Bickle is a man disassociated from society's norms, , and this triggers his descent into vigilantism and violent assertiveness . br /Bickle buys a small arsenal of weapons and becomes obsessed with saving a 13 year old prostitute Iris( Jodie Foster).He fixates his anger on Iris's pimp Sport(Harvey Keitel. The pimp was originally meant to have been black but it was felt it would append a racist undertone to the film so it was changed) a man who he thinks is "The worst sucking scum I have ever seen ". Their brief exchanges vibrate with tension and awkwardness. Bickle then , for rather murky reasons decides to assassinate Palantine , cutting his hair into a Mohawk in thrall to his marine past- a man on a mission ready to act out the " bad ideas in my head". When this fails he descends further into psychosis until he returns to the brothel where he knows he will find Iris and goes on a killing spree thus saving her from her degrading existence. br /The ending , with Travis feted as a hero and meeting up with Betty again is viewed by many as a fantasy sequence but I feel it serves as an allegorical commentary on the vagaries of fate though Schrader has said it is a commentary on how criminals can become celebrities . Had Travis shot Palatine , as he originally intended, he would have been a figure of loathing , as it is he is feted as a hero and through that comes some sort of redemption, a common theme of Scorsese films. br /This DVD comes complete with numerous documentaries, the most revealing of which is a 15 minute piece with Martin Scorsese . There is also a Paul Schrader commentary which is useful from a narrative point of view but misses out the nuances a director can bring .The interviews with other directors and stars about Scorsese is fascinating and the film score is also included which is a nice bonus. br /Taxi Driver is not an easy film to like but it is magnetically compelling and a quite brilliant piece of cinema , with Scorsese utilising lots of cinematic quirks to put the audience in Bickles head. There is barely a moment in the film where he isn't centre stage. It also helps that the performances particularly those of De Niro, who is magnetically subtle in his delineation of his characters escalating madness, and Foster are so magnificent. It is ultimately a study of alienation and loneliness , how one person even in a place teeming with others can be become disenfranchised and isolated or as he puts it "Gods lonely man". In an increasingly , or so it would seem amoral society, where innocent people are in mortal danger just from standing up for what is just this film connects more than ever. Travis Bickle is delusional and borderline insane but his desire to have the scum washed off the streets evinces more sympathy now than it did then I would suggest. There is a kernel of Travis Bickle in most of us , that we are all "Just waiting for the sun to shine". br / br /


5 out of 5 stars One of the greatest films ever. 5 Stars.   October 16, 2008
J. Pike (Guernsey, Channel Islands)
4 out of 4 found this review helpful

A truly great film deserving of the maximum 5 stars. br / br /Controversy surrounded this film upon it's release and it's easy to see why upon watching. They just don't make films like this today. br / br /I can't think of a bad thing to say about any part of the film. Keep an eye out for Scorsese's 2 cameo appearances during the film. br / br /If you want to see what New York was like in the 1970's grime and all, buy this film. br /


5 out of 5 stars Superb Oscar-Winning Films. One of Scorsese's strongest   November 12, 2007
I. Thomson (Kirkcaldy, Fife, Scotland)
2 out of 8 found this review helpful

(Warning: This film contains one blood glore scene, gun references and strong language, it is also has a rather dark and depressing theme, so please be careful when viewing if you may be affected by this) br / br /Taxi Driver cemented the second masterpiece in my opinion from director, Martin Scorsese after his work on low budget Mean Streets in 1973. Taxi Driver is chilling, grasping, realistic and horrifying to say the least. Travis Bickle, a former US navy solider, back on US soil, applies to become a New York taxi driver, to reduce his paranoysis and insomnia from travelling on public transport every night. Here he discovers, the country landscape and appearance have declined and it is falling into derelict ruin, which he is determined to save........ br / br /Taxi Driver was a controversial film, which tackled the heavy themes of lonliness, depression and intorable to violent motivies and actions. The basis was to show how a polluted driven city like New York City with a mix of wealth, an underworld and povetry slums, make people like Travis feel annoyed with the way they had been abused, betrayed and treated by the government. Travis was in no means, a nice person, he was repulsive, depressive, arrogative and crazy, his personality was a flaw, he presented himself as one who needed assistant to get back on track, he didn't care, he wanted people to care about him, he also became vulenrable to violence and sex to preserve his mood. Maybe this was the time that unreleased his true flavour. br / br /However, his obession to warrant attention to improve the mean streets of New York he has come back to from being a Vietnam Vet, gives the audience the impression he does cares, shows loyalty and respect to the people of the city despite the fact he no longer believes in his country's attitude. No matter what we think of Bickle who intially is described as being cold, callious and fierce we are made to be sympathic with his cause (could this be a reference to Peeping Tom, a film Scorsese loved by Michael Powell) trying to understand the man behind the face and the sad life he leads. br / br /Robert DeNiro in one of his most famous and well-loved performances is the stick thin Travis Bickle. DeNiro gives Bickle a rebellious mind, long cold stares and the opportunity of warmth as a means to care to hide his resentment for blowing up in anger in his pathetic but troubled life. Jodie Foster shines as the spoilt and dependant hooker, Iris and Peter Boyle gives a wonderful turn as the witty Wizard whom Travis looks up to as a legend. br / br /Taxi Driver has a neatly balanced narrative to express Travis' somber tone of his morbid personal thoughts of the washed away reds and oranges that dominate the neon look of the New York underworld. The editing also emphasised heavily on his own montions during his taxi hours, showing how nervous, worn and battered he was starting to look as the night progressed. br / br /Bernard Hermannan whom the film was dedicated to, provides a beautiful and soothing score (his last) which describes the failed man that Travis Bickle is in life. Starting off with a prominant percussion drum roll highlighting the taxi coming into view observing which blends down into a love ballad. Played by a saxophone of the lonely eyes of the farout dreams Travis can only wish for consisting mainly of a good job, a well governed country and family, how he is only making a desperate living to keep himself alive to hold on. br / br /Taxi Driver is truly one of the finest films of the seventies. The lasting appeal can apply to both five Oscar nominations and winning the Palme D'Or at Cannes in 1977 which the film did. A must-have. br / br / br / br /


5 out of 5 stars TAXI !!!   June 22, 2009
Jason Thorne (England / Oxford)
Great film from start to finish with one full on scene that makes you sit up in your chair so you don't miss it. Is this Mr De Niro finest work can't be far off with the likes of Heat,Raging Bull and The Deer Hunter to choose from. What ever is your top film this has to been seen a true classic and is worthy of a slot in anybodys DVD collection.

Showing reviews 1-5 of 9


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