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    Taxi Driver (Collector's Edition)
    Taxi Driver (Collector's Edition)

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    Actors: Diahnne Abbott, Frank Adu, Gino Ardito, Victor Argo, Garth Avery
    Studio: Sony Pictures
    Category: DVD

    List Price: $19.94
    Buy Used: $4.77
    You Save: $15.17 (76%)



    New (17) Used (48) Collectible (4) from $4.77

    Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 375 reviews
    Sales Rank: 18888

    Format: Anamorphic, Closed-captioned, Collector's Edition, Color, Dolby, Dvd-video, Widescreen, Ntsc
    Languages: English (Original Language), English (Subtitled), Spanish (Subtitled), Portuguese (Subtitled), Georgian (Subtitled), Chinese (Subtitled), Thai (Subtitled)
    Rating: R (Restricted)
    Number Of Items: 1
    Running Time: 113
    Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1
    DVD Layers: 2
    DVD Sides: 1
    Picture Format: Anamorphic Widescreen
    Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
    Dimensions (in): 7.5 x 5.3 x 0.6

    MPN: COLD03481D
    ISBN: 0767830555
    UPC: 043396034815
    EAN: 9780767830553
    ASIN: 0767830555

    Theatrical Release Date: February 8, 1976
    Release Date: June 15, 1999
    Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

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      • Chinatown (Special Collector's Edition)
      • Apocalypse Now - The Complete Dossier (Two-Disc Special Collector's Edition)

    Editorial Reviews:

    Amazon.com essential video
    Taxi Driver 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. --Jeff Shannon

    Product Description
    A psychotic new york city taxi driver tries to save a child prostitute and becomes infatuated with an educated political campaigner. He goes on a violent rampage when his dreams dont work out. Repellant frightening vision of alienation and urban catharsis. Studio: Sony Pictures Home Ent Release Date: 12/21/2004 Starring: Robert De Niro Harvey Keitel Run time: 128 minutes Rating: R Director: Martin Scorsese


    Customer Reviews:   Read 370 more reviews...

    5 out of 5 stars God's lonely man...   November 29, 2008
    This is a very powerful film. It's very personal to me, because many of the problems Travis has can be related to me in ways. They can be related to everyone in ways. The problems of loneliness. The film expresses it through Travis in a deep, dark, and disturbing way. We connect to the character in his downfall.


    5 out of 5 stars "You're Only As Healthy As You Feel."...   October 31, 2008
    Travis Bickle (Robert DeNiro) is a mess. He can't sleep. His diet consists of pills and junk-food. Mostly though, Travis is lonely. He's utterly alone in the milling crowds of NYC. Travis doesn't understand how the city got this bad, this full of filth and human debris. Why has it been allowed to degenerate into such a cesspool? Why is he the only one who seems to notice or care? Why are all women the same? Why are all men such low-life trash? Why can't someone do something about it? It's up to Travis Bickle to make things right. To clean out this festering wound. Travis has a plan. He'll get the job done. Now, all he needs is a bunch of guns. TAXI DRIVER is the 1976 shocker from Martin Scorsese that scared a generation! So real is it's presentation of mental disintegration and mass murder that it has been blamed for many of society's ills. DeNiro is absolutely in the skin of Travis Bickle, bringing out subtle mannerisms and quirks that make him as complex as he is terrifying. Jodie Foster (12yo at the time) is so convincing as Iris / Easy the prostitute that she steals every scene she's in, especially in the diner. Iris is the only one Travis considers to be worth saving. She is the one pure person in an otherwise hopelessly diseased city. She is also just as lonely and in need of love as Travis himself. If he can save Iris, he can salvage some piece of himself. The other characters, such as Betsy (Cybill Shepherd), Wizard (Peter Boyle), and Sport (Harvey Keitel) are important in helping Travis to reach his breaking point. These are the people who either cause the problems or have no good answers to solve them. Betsy's rejection is a stab through his soul. Wizard's advice is useless drivel. Sport's domination of Iris is intolerable. Travis finally cracks wide open, becoming outwardly what he'd been fantasizing internally for quite a while. He'll fix it all. He'll make it right. Nothing else matters. This movie is cinematic perfection! Highest recommendation...


    5 out of 5 stars Taxi Driver: Scorsese's meditation on urban loneliness and alienation.   October 30, 2008
     1 out of 1 found this review helpful

    Martin Scorsese collaborated with writer Paul Schrader to shock the world in 1976 with Taxi Driver. While Taxi Driver is now a film icon, it is worth experiencing again. Set in post-Vietnam New York City, it tells the story of Marine vet Travis Bickle (Robert De Niro), a 26-year-old loner adrift in the mean streets of Manhattan. Because he is a chronic insomniac, he works nights as a taxi driver. He spends his days in porn theaters. After he is rejected by Betsy (Cybill Shepherd), a presidential campaign supporter for New York Senator, Charles Palantine, Bickle becomes unhinged by the seedy state of affairs in NYC. "Someday a real rain will come and wash all the scum off the streets," he observes. He embarks on an intense physical conditioning program, buys four handguns, cultivates a menacing persona ("You talkin' to me?"), and becomes obsessed with the Palantine campaign. After meeting a 12-year-old child prostitute named "Iris" (Jodie Foster) in his cab, Bickle becomes obsessed with saving her from the moral decay of the corrupt City. Just as his descent into madness manifests itself in the form of a Mohawk haircut, Bickle's ascent as a hero begins in the media. Much has been written about the film's final scenes. In his fil review, critic Roger Ebert writes, "the end sequence plays like music, not drama: It completes the story on an emotional, not a literal, level. We end not on carnage but on redemption, which is the goal of so many of Scorsese's characters."

    Taxi Driver won the Palme d'Or at the 1976 Cannes film festival. There are many things that make Taxi Driver such a powerfully prophetic experience in film: Robert Deniro's intense performance as Travis Bickle; Scorsese's gifted direction; Jodie Foster's highly-controversial performance as a child prostitute and Harvey Keitel's performance as her pimp, "Sport;" Paul Schrader's talent as a writer. The "Two-Disc Collector's Edition" of Taxi Driver includes many informative extras. Taxi Driver is a compelling meditation on urban loneliness and alienation.

    G. Merritt




    5 out of 5 stars The original American Psycho   October 6, 2008
    Being a cab driver for almost 18 years, Taxi Driver is a personal favorite of mine. Driving a cab is like a drug: you get to meet new people everyday; you don't have to wait a week or two to get paid---everything's cash money; you get to know the whole city; you learn where the hot spots are--the restaurants, the bars, the clubs, etc. You set your own hours and you choose where you want to work and whom you want to serve. You have no one breathing down your neck--you are your own boss. There's a saying among cabbies: only two kinds of people get more p**** than cabbies: movie stars and rock stars.

    Being a cab driver is like being a sponge. You become a therapist, a conscience, a drinking buddy, a strip club buddy, a shoulder to cry on, or a one-night stand. People show themselves to you, but you're a cabbie and you've seen it all anyway. For an extra-nice tip, a cab can be a rolling motel, a getaway car, or a safe haven to indulge strange pleasures. A cabbie is faceless from the back seat: he or she won't judge you.

    After a while, every cabbie develops a callus: every passenger becomes a blur. Robert De Niro's character, Travis Bickle, sees society as converging dots flowing together like the scum on his windshield. Prostitutes, pimps, addicts, and winos gum the sidewalks. Urine stings every breath. Neon melts over his cab. This is the world that Travis lives in, and he hates it more and more everyday.

    The world has become a toilet to Travis Bickle. Out of this filth appears a flower of virtue that nothing can touch--a young gorgeous campaign-volunteer named Betsy played by Cybill Shepherd. She's the most beautiful woman he's ever seen. Driving a cab at night, all Travis sees are whores; however, Betsy's incorruptible, and she alone can redeem mankind. She allows him to take her on a date. Though awkward, he says all the right things. He takes her to the theater to see a movie--a porno flick. Horrified and offended, she hails a cab and leaves him on the sidewalk. Travis is stunned. At that moment, a whore saunters by. They pause to gaze at each other--she is his mirror; they are one and the same.

    Betsy destroys Travis; she's just like all the others. Now, there's nothing in the world worth saving--now, he knows what he must do. He hones his body and his mind: no more smoking; no more drinking; no more bad food--he must be fit. He'll annihilate Betsy and the whole world. By chance, he stumbles into the middle of a pimp/whore squabble; the whore is a thirteen-year-old girl. Something rises up in Travis's heart, something he never felt before. He discovers something worth saving-- a lost thirteen-year-old whore named Iris (Jodie Foster).

    Taxi Driver was the second collaboration between Robert De Niro and Martin Scorsese. Bernard Herman's magical score wafts over every scene. Taxi Driver was an omen, forecasting the senseless tragedies of both Columbine and Virginia Tech. No movie collection is adequate without this great film. See it. Buy it. Enjoy it.

    author of Gotta Be Down!



    5 out of 5 stars "Mr. Cab Driver. . ."   September 17, 2008
    The haunting musical soundtrack to this movie contains some of the most beautiful jazzy pieces I have ever heard. I had a custom tape made from it at one time. The story is a great psycho-drama with all of the players perfectly cast. Jodie Foster is believable as the "baby prostitute," Harvey Kietel, chilling as her pimp and Robert DeNiro is so fascinating to study as Travis Bickle, wierd product of NY subculture of the streets and psychological textbook example. It is, in retrospect, a brilliant example of post-Vietnam War 1970's atmosphere in the large cities of our country. Maybe too wierd of a movie for some to watch, but a mainstay of the viewing repretoire of a true artist.


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