: By the end, Travis appears to have channeled his pent-up aggression into his job. Analysts suggest he has "fully exorcised" his marine identity to simply become the "Taxi Driver," an empty vessel defined by his environment.
The film’s climax and subsequent resolution offer a chilling commentary on the thin line between a criminal and a hero. Following a bloody rescue of Iris, the media and the public hail Travis as a vigilante hero rather than the mentally unstable individual he is. subtitle Taxi.Driver.1976.DVDRip.XviD-NaNDo.[sh...
: The film's impact is so significant that it has been cited as a primary influence for other stylised noir dramas, such as Nicolas Winding Refn’s Drive . Conclusion : By the end, Travis appears to have
This long essay explores the 1976 cinematic masterpiece , directed by Martin Scorsese and written by Paul Schrader. The film, featuring Robert De Niro as Travis Bickle, remains a profound study of urban isolation and the descent into vigilantism. The Loneliness of the Long-Distance Driver Following a bloody rescue of Iris, the media
His focus shifts to Iris, a 12-year-old prostitute, whom he decides must be saved. This mission provides the catalyst for his physical and mental preparation, famously depicted in his monologues to the mirror and his rigorous exercise routine: "From now on, it will be 50 push-ups each morning... there'll be no more destroyers of my body".
Travis’s transformation from a passive observer to an active, violent participant is driven by his desperate need for purpose. After a failed attempt to connect with Betsy, a campaign worker who represents the "pure" side of society he cannot reach, Travis turns his attention to "cleaning up" the city.
Scorsese uses the taxi’s movement through the rain-slicked, neon-lit streets of 1970s New York to reflect Travis’s internal state. Every drop of rain on the windshield and every blurred light serves to emphasize his detachment from the society he grows to despise.