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Martin Scorsese’s TAXI DRIVER (1976)
November 17, 2023 : 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm
“The blend of Schrader’s script, Scorsese’s direction and De Niro’s performance is both riveting and unnerving. A film that will stay with you forever.” –Empire
“All the animals come out at night” — and one of them is a cabby about to snap.
In Martin Scorsese’s classic 1970s drama, insomniac ex-Marine Travis Bickle (Robert De Niro) works the nightshift, driving his cab throughout decaying mid-’70s New York City, wishing for a “real rain” to wash the “scum” off the neon-lit streets. Written by Paul Schrader, Taxi Driver is an homage to and reworking of cinematic influences, a study of individual psychosis, and an acute diagnosis of the latently violent, media-fixated Vietnam era. Scorsese and Schrader structure Travis’ mission to save preteen sex worker Iris (Jodie Foster) as a film noir version of John Ford’s late Western The Searchers (1956), aligning Travis with a mythology of American heroism while exposing that myth’s obsessively violent underpinnings. But the film is also rooted in its historical moment of American in the 1970s. Employing such techniques as Godardian jump cuts and ellipses, expressive camera moves and angles, and garish colors, all punctuated by Bernard Herrmann’s eerie final score (finished the day he died), Scorsese presents a Manhattan skewed through Travis’ point of view, where De Niro’s now-famous “You talkin’ to me” improv becomes one more sign of Travis’ madness.
Shot during a New York summer heat wave and garbage strike, Taxi Driver got into trouble with the MPAA for its violence. Scorsese desaturated the color in the final shoot-out and got an R, and Taxi Driver surprised its unenthusiastic studio by becoming a box-office hit. Released in the Bicentennial year, after Vietnam, Watergate, and attention-getting attempts on President Ford’s life, Taxi Driver‘s intense portrait of a man and a society unhinged spoke resonantly to the mid-’70s audience — too resonantly in the case of attempted Reagan assassin and Foster fan John W. Hinckley. Scorsese’s film went on to win the Palme d’Or at the Cannes Film Festival, but it lost the Best Picture Oscar to the more comforting Rocky. Anchored by De Niro’s disturbing embodiment of “God’s lonely man,” Taxi Driver remains a striking milestone of both Scorsese’s career and 1970s Hollywood.
THEATER POLICIES
All seats are first-come, first-served.
The theater opens 30 minutes prior to showtime, except for “Happy Hour” events and pre-shows when the theater opens at the listed start time.
All ages are welcome at Arkadin except for Drinkolas Cage events, which are restricted to 21+. We follow the MPAA rating guidelines for all other films.
Tickets can be purchased using the BUY TICKETS link above. Upon ordering, you will receive a confirmation email from Square. Tickets may also be purchased on the day of the show at the concession counter.
If you’ve purchased advance tickets, when you arrive, please give your name at the concession counter to check in.
Tickets are returnable by sending a request through the contact form located on our About Us page prior to showtime.
When an event is sold out, we reserve the right to release open seats to customers on the waitlist. If you have a pre-purchased ticket and arrive late and there is no seat for you, your ticket will be refunded.
All screenings are held in our indoor theater unless indicated otherwise in the event description above.
Please respect your fellow movie-goers by remaining quiet and refraining from using your cell phone throughout the screening.