Taxi Driver Study Guide

 

 

Taxi Driver (1976)

Released by: Columbia

 

Director: Martin Scorsese

Screenwriter: Paul Schrader

 

Historical context

 

The remarkable confluence of events that opened the Hollywood studio gates to a generation of new talent produced a window of time during which creative young filmmakers were, in effect, given their heads. Permitted to produce innovative and challenging films with a minimum of front-office interference, these filmmakers turned out an astonishing quantity of cinema that was often inspired, sometimes dreadful, but always interesting. It was in this historical context that Paul Schrader's dark screenplay called Taxi Driver found its way to the screen. The producers, Michael and Julia Phillips, had just had a smashing success with the light and very entertaining caper film, The Sting (1973), Scorsese was riding high on the success of Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore (1974), and Schrader had made a name for himself on the basis of his work on the screenplay of a thriller called The Yakuza (1975). The combination of these talents represented an opportunity that Columbia felt they couldn't pass up. As long as the filmmakers were willing to keep the budget within reason, they would be allowed to make the movie they wanted to make.

 

Narrative context

 

Is Travis Bickle a sympathetic character? Why do we care what happens to him? How does he assess his own life? What does he look to as solutions for the problems he sees in his own life?

 

Compare and contrast the two women with whom Travis becomes involved during the course of the film. Why is he attracted to each of them? What function does each serve in the narrative?

 

In what ways does the film make use of foreshadowing?

 

Travis seems to spend the first half of the film searching for a purpose. Midway through the film, he seems to find a purpose. What is the nature of the purpose to which he devotes himself? How does his view of the impetus that drives him differ from ours?

 

Aesthetic context

 

Which scenes in the film show an influence of the French New Wave?

 

Do you detect any influence of Italian Neorealism?

 

How does the voice-over narration affect your response to the film, and to Travis?

 

What aesthetic devices does Scorsese use to reinforce our identification with Travis?

 

Genre context

 

Is this a genre film? If so, to what genre does it belong? If not, can you see any genre influences on the film?

 

Rhetorical context

 

Does the filmmaker seem to share Travis Bickle's revulsion over what urban life has become?

 

Is Travis ultimately presented as a hero or as a menace?

 

Is this film fundamentally optimistic or pessimistic?