This
is a masterpiece by the legendary Martin Scorsese, one of the most
unforgettable movies of modern cinema. A psychodrama that shows us
the dark side of the 70’s, the social problems of a country, the
Unites States, after the failure of Vietnam’s war. New York: Travis
Bickle, a Vietnam veteran on leave, suffers from insomnia and decides
to make sense of his long, endless nights. So he decides to look for
employment as taxi driver. This could be a way to find his temporary,
interior equilibrium…he also falls in love with an unknown,
beautiful woman who is working for the democratic candidate’s
campaign as next US president in New York City. The hallucinated
Travis tries to conquer her cold, unconquerable heart, but without
success he’s going to abandon himself to the complete shutdown and
bewilderment. Something unexpected is coming to lead his empty,
lonely existence out of the edge of perdition…
The
protagonist Travis performs his heroic path among other low,
picturesque
characters such as his colleague “Wizard”, a particular type of
taxi driver-philosopher, or “Dollar” a very greedy man engaged
in any sort of deal. Nightlife
experience in
the streets of
New York
upsets
Travis
deeply:
prostitution,
beggars, drug addicts
and drug
dealers
become
in his
eyes the
cancer
of
American society. Life flows like a taximeter, this could be the
slogan of Travis’ personality.
I
strongly suggest this film, you can’t miss it. I suppose that
you’ll surely fall in love with it, if even it could seem bitter or
rude. The wonderful soundtrack, with its warm, fascinating jazz
sound, the immense charisma of the interpreter, Robert De Niro,
will totally involve you in this mythical walk under the colorful
lights of the Big Apple, the mysterious chaos of urban wildlife, the
smell of common people with their strengths and weaknesses…The
shocking
experience
of
Travis
becomes
a witness to the conflict
among justice and citizens who take it on their own, law and crime
that can become allied, hate and opposition towards the political
system and the power which always commands and never rewards.
Here you are a passage from alone Travis’ (Robert De Niro) dialogue
lying on the bed: “I
have always felt the need to have a purpose in life, I do not think
that one can devote himself only to his well-being. In my opinion you
should try to get closer to other people…”
Anna
Silvia Panico
Hi Anna Silvia,
ReplyDeleteI just wrote a detailed commentary on your first paragraph and managed to delete it without posting it!!! I will do it again tonight but until then just want to say that this is an excellent review with a very high standard of English. It reads very well and has the style of a formal newspaper review. There are a few little awkwardnesses where you have used a word or a tense that doesn't quite work (which is what I will list again tonight) but that is only fine-tuning and you obviously have the language to warrant that.
An excellent piece of work. Very well done.
Hello again Anna Silvia,
ReplyDeleteHere are the more detailed notes I promised:
Paragraph 1
- You need a verb, "It's a psycho-drama..."
- after the failure of the Vietnam war
- make use of (rather than make sense of)
- You need an article "employment (or work) as a taxi-driver"
- I wouldn't use "his", i.e. find temporary inner equilibrium
- an "unknown woman" is awkward. Maybe "falls in love with a stranger - a beautiful woman who..."
- as the next US president (article)
- The hallucinating (rather than hallucinated) Travis tries to win her cold, unconquerable heart but when he doesn't succeed he abandons himself to complete ....
- However, something unexpected comes to lead ... existence away (rather than "out of" as it's not inside something) from the edge of...
Para 2
- We don't usually use the word protagonist. You could say "hero" or "main character"
- You can't perform a path. Maybe "follow".
- "in the midst of" probably works better than "among"
- "any sort of deal" is a bit weak. Maybe "any deal he can manage" or "any deal available"
- Experiencing the nightlife...
- Maybe "represent" rather than "become"
- Can a taxi-meter "flow"? Maybe something like "moves forward like the tick(ing) of a taxi-meter".
- Full stop before "This could be..."
Paragraph 3
- recommend this film or suggest you see this film (then full stop!!)
- "suppose" doesn't work here. Maybe "I'm sure" and then leave out the "surely"
- Word order "even if it..."
- What do you mean by "rude", e.g. coarse/vulgar or brutal??
- Possibly "captivating" rather than "fascinating"
- Travis' shocking experience
- Do you mean citizens who take it into their own hands?
- Here is a passage from the solitary Travis' (Robert de Niro's) dialogue as he lies on his bed, "I...."
This may seem like quite a long list but, as I said earlier, this is just fine-tuning and on the whole the meaning is clear throughout. As I also said, it is an excellent review with language of a very high standard. Well done.
First of all nice to meet you and thank you for all your precious advices! :)
ReplyDeleteNice to meet you too. You're very welcome!
Delete