Disclaimer: This is an unauthorized fan-made video. The words are Quentin Tarantino's, but the voice is AI-generated. The script is from Tarantino's chapter on "Taxi Driver" from his book Cinema Specualtion. Some pages were cut to encourage people to buy his book. Although the voice is AI-generated, apart from three images, everything else was created with sweat and passion (this video took about 200 hours to create). If you like the video, please subscribe and hit the like button. Reaching 100k subs could help me get sponsorships to do this full-time and make more videos (not just Tarantino ones). If you feel you still think I'm a hack for using an AI voice please comment so I can understand better. I think of it as another tool in the toolbox. (But maybe I have it wrong.) Thanks! -Alan 00:00 - Travis Bickle 01:21 - Joe (1972) 02:35 - Is Taxi Driver a racist movie? 03:47 - The Warriors (1979) analogy 05:43 - Harvey Keitel as a 08:02 - The Mack (1979) 10:27 - Revengeamatics 13:57 - Columbia Pictures plans for Taxi Driver 14:46 - Tarantino first sees Taxi Driver 16:08 - Death Wish rip-off 17:31 - Travis Bickle was a nutter 20:25 - The moment Taxi Driver got serious 22:07 - Bickle meets the white 22:55 - Jodi Foster’s Iris 24:24 - Let the blood flow 25:04 - Scorsese is shocked 29:35 - Tarantino poses a question to Martin Scorsese 30:10 - Taxi Driver ending compared to Joe ending 31:01 - Was Bickle a vetern? 32:26 - Bickle is not happy with what Tarantino is saying
@WadeStrine14 ай бұрын
keep using the AI voice 🙏 it works, and your other videos actually made me go get a copy of his book.
@donweatherwax93184 ай бұрын
Joe Queenan - never previously, so far as I know, compared to Quentin Tarantino - made some of these exact same points in "The Lonely Raging Bull"', his essay on Scorsese's movies, which I believe Queenan first published in _Movieline._ (This was back when _Movieline_ was the best cinema journal in America, and one of my favorite reads every month. I wish someone would put together a _Movieline_ retrospective, as has been done for _National Lampoon,_ several times, and even _Spy._ I really miss _Movieline._ It seems to have been completely forgotten.) The Scorsese essay (and others) are available in Queenan's vicious yet informed 1994 collection _If You're Talking to Me, Your Career Must Be In Trouble,_ a book I suspect Quentin may have on his shelf, and which I highly recommend. (Queenan later released a sort of Volume II of his Nineties film writings, _Confessions of a Cineplex Heckler,_ which is also pretty funny, but Volume I was better.) Really appreciate the effort on these videos. Seriously, thanks.
@parapoliticos524 ай бұрын
I wonder how shocked will Tarantino be when he eventually accidentally push play on one of these videos.
@TheTapesArchive4 ай бұрын
@@WadeStrine1 Love hearing this. Thank you!
@JohnMichael-h1r4 ай бұрын
@@parapoliticos52why are you typing like that are you ok?
@jackedkerouac44143 ай бұрын
Taxi Driver is a movie you have to watch for the first time by yourself. You can't have someone next to you complaining that it's too slow, or that it's offensive, or even hooping and hollering at how great the violent scenes are. It's a very introspective experience, not interactive.
@TwobitsMonster3 ай бұрын
I was 19 and knew of the movie's relevance and impact on popular culture before watching it by myself. Your statement is absolutely correct. Hearing Tarantino's account of his first time seeing it is fascinating. Despite his experience he got it. All of it. As did I and the movie shook me to my core. I still consider it a weirdly pivotal part of my cinephile adolescence.
@rohangondor62503 ай бұрын
I think if you have a person who says certain movies are slow or offensive you shouldn’t watch anything with them lol. But taxi driver especially, you have to be in that state of mind to connect with it
@jackedkerouac44143 ай бұрын
@@rohangondor6250 I happened to watch Taxi Driver alone but learned my lesson with other "quiet" films. Like Ghost World. I seriously lost respect for a friend who kept saying how hateful Enid is. Face palm extra
@aaronjohnson78123 ай бұрын
@@rohangondor6250 Sounds like my ex-wife.
@Seang-um8lk3 ай бұрын
I saw taxi driver on tv on a Friday night 1 week before Hinkley shot Reagan Went to school on Monday raving about this violent masterpiece. Ppl thought I was nuts. And maybe I am. lol
@TheinterfaceTvSeries4 ай бұрын
I saw Taxi Driver on the lower half of a double bill with The Killer Elite. I was mesmerized. Taxi Driver made me want to become a filmmaker. That movie gave me a career!
@CorduroyPaco3 ай бұрын
Same with me! It was the first time I saw a movie and wanted to make one myself!
@NikTreekle4 ай бұрын
That voice is AI Tarantino? Now i’m terrified.
@Billygrippo4 ай бұрын
That’s why it has no expression or humanity or any of his personality 💩
@michaelb.421124 ай бұрын
I wonder if that's even legal ? A.I. QT could say things that the real Quentin might disagree with and lead down a Joe Rogan rabbit hole.
@Smashingbonejuices4 ай бұрын
It dosent sound like I'm really
@GizmoMaltese4 ай бұрын
Tarantino will live forever now.
@pjuliano90004 ай бұрын
Wait until Adverstisements are generated exclusively for you using your preferences and predelictions ... maybe you're only into brunettes with blue eye and big breasts ... such an ad will be dynamically generated by AI to entice you into some activity. MARK MY WORDS
@rodneyleonard87144 ай бұрын
I saw this at a drive in. My buddy took a date and seen it and said "dude, you gotta see this movie!" we had a gallon of wine and an ounce of pot, and I think I drove, but we both lived close to each other and the drive-in, we coulda walked home in ten minutes, but dang, what a good movie.
@TheExcuseme21214 ай бұрын
Fantastic work. These videos are great!
@TheTapesArchive4 ай бұрын
Right on! Please hit the subscribe button if you haven't already. 🍻
@knurdyob4 ай бұрын
Therapist: Travintin Tarantickle isn't real, he can't hurt you. This video's thumbnail:
@Shlogger4 ай бұрын
people always refer to Sport as white. I guess that's the case but I always thought he came across as kind of puerto rican or mixed race. Maybe it was just the way Keitell played him but that was my impression. Great flick.
@Louis-qt5qb4 ай бұрын
Doesn't he imply he's native American in the movie? I seem to remember a brief line of him mentioning it but definitely could be wrong. What a movie! 👍🤝🎖️
@lookoutforchris3 ай бұрын
I laughed when Tarantino mentioned that the casting change was because of the “wyte folks” producing the movie 😂… he has to know they’re not right? ✡️
@tareklegrand77473 ай бұрын
White is a skin color and Puerto Rican is a nationality...
@tylerfreal64726 күн бұрын
@@tareklegrand7747 yes but in that era NY puertio rican was practically a race
@indycinema2 ай бұрын
this is really well done and edited. great work. subbed
@Njbear74534 ай бұрын
Just watched Taxi Driver for the first time last night, what a film.
@theindustrypod4 ай бұрын
As always, fantastic work. The editing job you do on these videos is always on point.
@TheTapesArchive4 ай бұрын
Thank you! But now I'm wondering if I set the bar too high. I want to grow the channel but to really do that, I need to put out more content. But this type of quality takes so long to do with a full-time job, etc. Please subscribe to my channel if you haven't already. If I get to 100k subs, I may be able to make more videos by getting sponsored.
@radamesocasio415227 күн бұрын
Amazing channel Will be binging all weekend You sir a legend
@reyrogers280613 күн бұрын
This is an exceptionally well done video. I am sure Quentin Tarantino would agree.
@ChaoteLab3 ай бұрын
A well-made and well-appreciated vid. Thank you!
@Roger52610 күн бұрын
I love these! Excellent !
@kirkplissken84543 ай бұрын
This is extraordinarily well done, AI or not. Thank you! An American classic noir, perhaps the best in the genre.
@onlygodcan303 ай бұрын
Top notch content, great work my man👏
@tekharthazenyatta23104 ай бұрын
This time, Tarantino's analysis is way off. The central theme in Taxi Driver isn't Travis's racism. That is complete bullshit. This sounds like Tarantino giving a half-assed apology for admiring a film in which the lead character may incidentally be a racist.
@xisigma4 ай бұрын
Good point, since the politician was Travis's original target, and the girl was a staffer for his campaign. If iris is betsy, then sport is palantine, so the theme is marginalized incel?
@known_unknown2844 ай бұрын
Agreed. It's ludicrous. If you were to make a list of 50 things Taxi Driver is "about," race wouldn't even be on there.
@mojomessiah4 ай бұрын
I don’t think that’s what Tarantino was saying - that the central theme was Travis’ racism. That was incidental. I believe Tarantino was saying that this was really just another 70’s revenge flick, but done so masterfully and with so much tension and buildup that it was a masterpiece.
@tekharthazenyatta23104 ай бұрын
@@mojomessiah See 2:40. Tarantino clearly asserts that the viewer is forced to ask "is this a movie about a racist or a racist movie?" I never felt compelled to ask that about Taxi Driver any more than I did for Pulp Fiction (for which racial stereotyping and racial epithets abound). The most charitable interpretation I have of Tarantino here is that he's elevating 1970's NYC reality into an issue that does not merit the emphasis. It's not even a particularly interesting matter for this film. Travis gives the same look of suspicion to practically everyone he encounters, black or white. No doubt he considered black people more of a threat while he was driving, but did he really display more animosity toward the diner pimps than Keitel's "sport" or Albert Brooks? I don't think so. While Tarantino always gives something to think about, I think he's way off target here, possibly motivated primarily by the criticisms he's received for his own films.
@kenE23894 ай бұрын
Tarantino isn’t analyzing anything. OP is using an AI version of Tarantino’s voice for his own script. Tarantino has nothing to do with this video
@AF-Twice4 ай бұрын
I always find Quentin Tarantino's perspective on film informative and interesting. Great analysis.
@drweetabix2 ай бұрын
That's one well made video. Outstanding
@WestSideGorilla19803 ай бұрын
The way you say "fuck hotel" sounds so good I think it replaces "cellar door" as the most elegant English words together.
@alecrichards85743 ай бұрын
Why don't you suck a fuck? (jk just goin off the donnie darko reference 🐰)
@rustybearden18004 ай бұрын
I first watched TAXI DRIVER by my self, late at night on HBO in the late 70s. It was terrifying and brutally graphic both in it's depiction of Travis Bickle slowly descending into a nightmarish psychosis and in it's sunny day/wet rainy night NYC everyday sense of urban decay. It remains a visceral and disturbing portrayal of one individual's reaction to a world spinning into controlled chaos. It will always mean different things to different people. It is a textbook example of the power of film and it's effect on the viewer. Scorsese is a genius!
@brondonbond53303 ай бұрын
This is amazing. Thank you!
@judge26014 ай бұрын
Yeah, “being around blacks” is sure to make someone not racist . Shit. Also: Travis shaves his head into a Mohawk well after he meets Iris. So the whole “we stopped laughing” comment is idiotic.
@WillyTooBigHall3 ай бұрын
This was actually really interesting thanks
@sweetman25364 ай бұрын
very well done! In the first half I did not realise it was AI
@ArtLike4 ай бұрын
Of course not, he tricked everyone here by not making any indication of it in the title or the thumbnail. But he got his clicks and ad revenue. Shameful.
@ShreveportJoe4 ай бұрын
Interesting observations… but, to me, it sounds like “Taxi Driver” would’ve been a far less interesting collection of cultural clichés with all of QT’s suggestions. I like the film just the way it is.
@known_unknown2844 ай бұрын
It's incredible that Tarantino felt it was necessary to focus so much on the aspect of race in the movie when that probably takes up about 30 seconds of screen time (if that) and doesn't even warrant being considered a subtext to the plot.
@billyarsenault19704 ай бұрын
Your joking right. The Racism had to be toned way down because it was almost all about overt racism just like so many other 70’s movies
@tekharthazenyatta23104 ай бұрын
@@billyarsenault1970 It's remarkable how wrong you are. And even if Schrader originally intended racism to be a more central theme, it wasn't in the final product.
@goodyeoman45344 ай бұрын
The black pimps abusing underage white runaway girls were far more racist than innocent little Travis.
@oldplanetmedia16294 ай бұрын
He makes some good points but I think he has a strange fixation on race himself so he may be looking too deep into things
@HoorayTV214 ай бұрын
Some of the best of youtube. This is a great companion to the book. Been loving these. Keep it up.
@christopheralexander10814 ай бұрын
Press X to doubt that people laughed at Travis Bickle. This seems like cope from someone who has long been trying to escape the (false) racism allegations for saying the n-word when acting as a character in his films.
@stefanhamilton87134 ай бұрын
The subtitles are hilarious 😅
@Skol9994 ай бұрын
Came here for this. Totally had me rolling.
@schizophrenic_AI3 ай бұрын
Nice catch. The second viewing was better than the first, thanks!
@rsteel11382 ай бұрын
Just noticed this. I'm guessing the creator adds the subs? Not auto-generated?
@Cursed_Mark2 ай бұрын
Joe: "42% of all liberals like to decorate."
@spike-rf2dc2 ай бұрын
was about to roast you for the AI voice but it's cool cuz its from his book, with clips from the movie and topic timestamps. Good job I liked it.
@judsongaiden98783 ай бұрын
All Pimps Are Bad. Race shouldn't be the issue. The issue should be liberation from exploitation. 12:50 Was he fash, though? His ideals weren't much different from Teddy Roosevelt's and no one thinks of Teddy as anything resembling a fash. Edit/note: Even the "anarchist" who shot him didn't think of him that way. Teddy was pro-worker, so that "anarchist" shouldn't have made that particular "statement" in that particular way. 13:15 Right-shoulder flag patch is facing the wrong way. Should be union-forward. 19:37 An homage to The Filthy Thirteen (who were the inspiration for 'The Dirty Dozen'). Fun fact: That was actually a bald cap because DeNiro was working on another film at the same time. 22:29 / 23:20 If he's left-eye dominant, he should shoot left-handed. 22:32 .44 Magnum is definitely not adequate for stopping elephants. .45-70 might be the bare minimum for that task. 26:56 Bad technique. Notice the position of her right thumb. That sawed-off gonna jump right out of her hands! 28:23 How did Travis start it? He's not the one guilty of predatory parasitism. If anything, he's a super-predator who hunts predatory parasites. Pimps are a representation of the greater parasite class that oppresses us all. The People's enemies have already "started it." We have the right and the duty to respond however we choose. The Constitution even sanctifies that concept (call it "Natural Law," the most Revolutionary ideal) in the Second Amendment. 29:02 That's not how you hold a Sterling. Why do movie people always hold them like that?! 29:10 Fun fact: When he was getting shape to play Kyle Reese in 'The Terminator', Michael Biehn used Robert DeNiro's "lean and mean" Travis Bickle body type as a template. Never mind that Mike's about half a foot taller than Rob. 29:37 It's impressive that A.I. knows how to make a right-shoulder US flag patch face union-forward like it's 'sposed ta! Most humans get that detail wrong! All it takes is five seconds of research.
@FightinWinchukian-i1xКүн бұрын
Larry Kelly of MagNaPort fame killed elephants with a .44 mag.
@No-One-of-Consequence4 ай бұрын
Tarantino is dead wrong about Bickle pretending to be a vet. The gear he's wearing is USMC-issue gear with his name stenciled on the back, and there's no way someone like Bickle would go to those lengths to festoon himself in perfect recreations of garb he had never used in the service. Now that we have the Internet, fakers are always using eBay to acquire the props they need for their stolen valor, but in the 70's he would have had no way of knowing that they stenciled their names (last name, first initial) on their jackets at boot camp. And the patch he's wearing on the sleeve was a in-country-made insignia for a particular battalion's Force Recon Marines, which jibes with the Naval parachutist wings he's got sewn to his jacket. That's representing a genuine personal artifact. And it is part of why Bickle is so lost. He also has a Viet Cong flag in his apartment, which would have been very hard to come by in the summer of 1976 when this story is taking place. There was no eBay, no internet back then. The only place to get a Viet Cong flag would have been Vietnam, and he was no tourist. Travis is not only a genuine vet but a special operations vet, and he is an archetype for a lot of the generation of men who went to Vietnam and came home broken, disillusioned, and lost. Tarantino has a proven track record for misunderstanding the soldier. All you have to do is watch Inglourious Basterds to see that. No American General gives a notoriously vicious Nazi the Medal of Honor and a free ride to American citizenship. Tarantino's a filthy fantasist.
@IndyShade3 ай бұрын
I thought this was a terrible review all around. I'm not gonna buy his book now.
@No-One-of-Consequence3 ай бұрын
@@IndyShade Good choice. It's a bunch of masturbatory nonsense. He used to be a geat filmmaker, but he's lost his grip, and you shouldn't waste your time worshiping the shadow of the artist he used to be.
@aaronjohnson78123 ай бұрын
I somewhat agree!
@No-One-of-Consequence3 ай бұрын
@@aaronjohnson7812 I kind of thank you?
@rossz48982 ай бұрын
Yer definitely right, I like Tarantino, but he showed his ass a few times in these excerpts with adamant baby opinions. Also silly was his idea that serving in nam would have crushed any racial preconceptions in a vet, claiming that Travis could’nt have served since he killed child-pimping black guys in the original script.
@MotoGold-magazine4 ай бұрын
This essay is too fixated on race. Taxi Driver is Metropolis, a relentless city crushing the individual, until there's nothing left except the will to destroy something.
@IrnBruNYC3 ай бұрын
Yeah, well that essay has already been written ad nauseam. I appreciate someone discussing the movie through the lens of race. And I honestly didn’t know that the racial component of the original screenplay had been watered down at the insistence of the studio.
@rossz48982 ай бұрын
Think Tarantino often times can’t avoid applying extra (erroneous) racial context to films
@whahappend82222 ай бұрын
I'm assuming you're American....you guys will ask why things need to be about race like it has no value or power, but then clutch your pearls if it's even mentioned. If you want someone to just rehash an opinion you already agree with then avoid any and all commentary. Race was literally integral to the casting of a major character in the film.
@rossz48982 ай бұрын
@whahappend8222 The film’s set in America, Scorsese and Tarantino are both American-a non-American is gonna have a tougher time parsing the complex sociopolitical contexts of films based in America. And btw it’s usually a good idea to avoid applying insulting blanket statements to groups of people, like calling Americans hypocrites. To avoid being more of a hypocrite yourself, take your own advice and avoid comments that might challenge your views if they’re gonna send u into a weird hissy fit
@TjMulyadiАй бұрын
I Love Tarantino, but he seemed bothered that Harvey Keitel's character was portrayed by a white guy. I suppose Tarantino can think of it as a revisionist history, you know, like Inglorious Basterds, where he rewrites History
@andrewmiller45734 ай бұрын
Great video Tarantino!! You're a master of movie making and I hope, someday, that YOU can find the time to make a violent movie also! It's 2024 and we're all waiting for that day!
@majorfeelgoodrecords27404 ай бұрын
Well done. I really enjoyed it.🎼🤘🏻
@adamgallacher50394 ай бұрын
I suspected it was AI before looking at the comments Mainly because I thought it was strange I had not heard of Tarantino doing such things like making a video on Taxi Driver and also because I’m always fairly weary of watching Ai videos on KZbin. This piece you made though is excellent and would like to to Tarantino would to an extent appreciate it for what it is and the fact it is his word sits well with me. It’s almost convincing but I really like the fact I know and that I think is what makes it tolerable Well done mate on this , the visual story you made was excellent keep at it 👊🏼
@jimreily75383 ай бұрын
How do you know its Tarantino's words? Have you read the book?
@Glassandcandy3 ай бұрын
“They never say movie violence is fun” Tarantino responding to a critic of his violence film: “[i show it] because it’s so damn FUN, Janet!”
@Maddolis3 ай бұрын
Thought of that after that line too!
@No-One-of-Consequence3 ай бұрын
Tarantino loves to rationalize his fetishes.
@nockee4 ай бұрын
Well done. This is a good use of AI!
@magzire2 ай бұрын
5:12 whats the movie with eddie murphy?
@FightinWinchukian-i1xКүн бұрын
My Name Is Dolemite
@gawaniwhitecrow27314 ай бұрын
13:54 that stuntman is an absolute legend Dayum🔥
@obelix7034 ай бұрын
I don’t completely disagree with QT, though I do have some brief thoughts. Taxi Driver is about a man slaying a dragon, and that dragon was living inside of him. In order to kill it, he had to unleash it. What made Travis a hero is that he chose the best place to let it loose, somewhere it may end up helping someone. Yes, the sex traffickers were villains, but they weren’t THE villain. The dragon inside Travis was, they were just the bait.
@Mr.GuGuGaCucaSnooch21 күн бұрын
This isn't actually QT, it's AI.
@Phill87Cro4 ай бұрын
13:52 Holy shit, that stuntman almost got hit by the exploding car! 😲
@RandomDudeOneАй бұрын
He ended up in the fireball though. Hope he was okay.
@MarkMcArthur-ze3vy4 ай бұрын
Great job Alan, i found it quite interesting also i wanna go buy his book now, for real!
@TheTapesArchive4 ай бұрын
Love hearing this. Thanks for checking it out and commenting. Please subscribe to my channel if you haven't already. If I get to 100k subs I may be able to make more videos.
@masterprattu11 күн бұрын
21:50 that shot of scorcese with the music - fucking awesome
@TheVinnyt632 ай бұрын
Taxi Driver is a movie QT speculates about. Watch it for yourself and draw your own conclusions.
@DogecoinBros3 ай бұрын
Did you add the fart sound fx at 11:59? Or did Peckinpah 😂
@danielsailors77823 ай бұрын
Thank for making these. Absolutely amazing
@QEsposito5104 ай бұрын
I love Tarantino’s films and they have long been in my top 20 but damn, my guy stinks with his performative “it’s ok blacks, I’m one of the good and cool whites. Us! US!” stories. Like cmon man, nobody believes this stuff anymore. You don’t have to justify your work.
@mandymushroom81523 ай бұрын
This is actually amazing what a brilliant job you’ve done!! Thank you so much!! I think the editing you’ve done has really thought the narration alive, brilliant work 👏🎬
@mikedoux25218 күн бұрын
What a thumbnail 👏
@swapblue4 ай бұрын
that voice is AI Tarantino? i thought maybe he had recorded for the audiobook- maybe you can check if he has
@jamesdavies52664 ай бұрын
He can talk! Love this
@jimreily75383 ай бұрын
It's an AI generated voice. Not Tarantino speaking.
@420haxx4 ай бұрын
Very impressive work, the masterful editing combined with the AI Tarantino voice just work so damn well together,
@tewksbury58174 ай бұрын
I always speculated Travis Bickle was a veteran, but he had some kind of clerk or office job and never left the U.S. Some part of him, maybe hearing about other soldiers, wanted to do violence, but his enlistment never offered him that opportunity.
@MrFac1833 ай бұрын
Good take
@Glassandcandy4 ай бұрын
The AI pick of Q as Travis is pure nightmare fuel
@John-zn4lp4 ай бұрын
70's violence was so much more real than today, even with all the great CGI special effects they use today.
@drewstar86114 ай бұрын
I didn’t know this was a.i, I thought it was just Quentin doing the audiobook.
@romasteve72924 ай бұрын
Me too. Absolutely gave me the creeps when I read the description afterwards.
@jonlittle22924 ай бұрын
Well, getting the audio from the audiobook that would likely cost $$$. Instead of manufacturing someone's likeness and intellectual property for their own gains. Do be sure and smash that like button, though.
@ArtLike4 ай бұрын
@@jonlittle2292 Well said. Sadly, we will see more of videos like these as people try to get ahead.
@rohangondor62503 ай бұрын
What? It’s clearly ai you dolt. People like you are the reason skynet is possible
@mikebordeaux82183 ай бұрын
Now thats a revuew with balls, loved it.
@sebastianalegria34014 ай бұрын
Scorsese's Taxi Driver has influenced over other filmmakers like Todd Phillips, "the guy who made the movie Joker" starring Joaquin Phoenix. As a matter of fact, a friend of mine told me that found it an absurd film, meanwhile I found it a masterpiece where Joaquin Phoenix's performance really blew my mind.
@randomcharacter65014 ай бұрын
We know. And it's the main reason I think Joker sucks. It's a pale imitation of Taxi Driver and King of Comedy.
@sebastianalegria34014 ай бұрын
@@randomcharacter6501 What are your expectations for Joker part 2?
@swapblue4 ай бұрын
Joker was so good. i'm afraid to watch it again
@doobeone4 ай бұрын
Wow, it’s AI Quintin? Cool. I love how you got RDJ doing black face.
@christopherfuss234829 күн бұрын
Interesting how some in the comments complain about Tarantino's emphasis on race, when in fact he is talking about a compromised artistic vision
@MrEyesof93 ай бұрын
Racist, racism?? Born in 1975, raised with one black kid in high school only, that shit NEVER occurred to me, in any way.
@fabiomccaree92183 ай бұрын
got similar theater experience for the movie “falling down”, audience felt it as a slapstick comic until the real motives become clear and the dramatic end.
@writeralbertlanier34344 ай бұрын
As someone who writes a Substack about movies and features a film review section about little known or forgotten movies, I appreciate Tarantino constantly referencing barely known and unknown films. At least someone else out there is also promoting such films. Good to know.
@SeamusJRM4 ай бұрын
I'm just about to watch Joe because of this.
@writeralbertlanier34344 ай бұрын
@@SeamusJRM Interesting film of its period. Great Peter Boyle performance
@TheTapesArchive4 ай бұрын
I love it too. Every video I make of his I find a new gem to watch. Link to your substack.
@writeralbertlanier34344 ай бұрын
@@TheTapesArchive BTW Good videos here. Clips look nice, quality images
@TheTapesArchive4 ай бұрын
@@writeralbertlanier3434 Thank you! a lot of time goes into just finding the best sources of images and videos, so thank you for noticing. May I get a link to your substack?
@ajbianchi854 ай бұрын
I enjoyed this quite a bit.
@amanpreetsingh27254 ай бұрын
Should easily have 100k+ views, keep up the great work as always.
@TheTapesArchive4 ай бұрын
Wow, thanks! Starting off slow, but maybe we will get there. 🍻
@medusaspupil4 ай бұрын
This video is amazingly well put together 👍👍 My only complaint is that this could have been better if this was made in 70mm Panavision.
@TheTapesArchive4 ай бұрын
Haha! Thanks!
@meiketorkelson44372 ай бұрын
The surreal moment when talking about black soldiers in Vietnam and the use footage of Robert Downey Jr in Tropic Thunder. 😅
@ryeis14 ай бұрын
Pure quality. Looking forward to more.
@TheTapesArchive4 ай бұрын
I apprecitate the comment and checking it out. 🍻
@joeb57654 ай бұрын
He's reaching big time with the idea that Bickle never went to Vietnam. What, cause he acts a bit nerdy and needy? That's where he belongs. He's a violent sociopath. If he wasn't in the war, what exactly was he doing all these years? Good stuff otherwise
@phrozacАй бұрын
Travis Bickle: 70s era incel. Without the internet to rant on and become indoctrinated into extremist thought, he rages in his diary and radicalizes himself through his own solo echo chamber. Great movie. Even though I've been around since the early days of Blockbuster, I only just watched this movie a few months ago. It's a classic for good reason.
@jedgarren29014 ай бұрын
I see Falling Down as a modern remake of Taxi Driver. The transformation of the main characters in each film is nearly identical.
@Scrambleton4 ай бұрын
I disagree about the transformation. But I love that comparison. I think that would be a fun film study comparison to do.
@jimnewcombe75844 ай бұрын
Falling Down isn't nearly as compelling though, entertaining though it is.
@schizophrenic_AI3 ай бұрын
If you are correct, then I have either severely overvalued Taxi Driver or undervalued Falling Down. However, the way Tarantino talks about the former is scarily similar to my lasting impression of the latter. I never saw TD in a theater, but no one ever laughed at the movie when I watched it. However, FD clearly had many scenes that were played as comical and I remember everyone feeling encouraged to laugh. But, you might be right. They do share similarities, not the least of which is the comical absurdism about the dangers of white outcasts who just cant take it anymore. Interesting comment. I don’t think I will have a higher opinion of FD but I may have to reassess TD.
@bobz17364 ай бұрын
Absolutely awesome work, sir. I hope you get the credit you deserve and produce more of these Tarantino videos. 👏
@TheTapesArchive4 ай бұрын
Thank you kindly!
@TjMulyadiАй бұрын
I Love Tarantino, but he seemed bothered that Harvey Keitel's character was portrayed by a white guy. I suppose Tarantino can think of it as a revisionist history, you know, like Inglorious Basterds
@Drjeferylevy3 ай бұрын
Fantastic book on film by QT -- up there in the top ten with "I lost it at the movies" and "Who The Devil Made It"--
@johnhanaly29434 ай бұрын
The funniest parts were the portraits of Quentin. LOL.
@benhoadley43944 ай бұрын
Which AI voice site are you using?
@TheTapesArchive4 ай бұрын
Eleven Labs
@fiveways4 ай бұрын
It's also interesting hearing this much about the Farmer, a mostly forgotten movie that was loat for years had apparent rights issues holding it back till magically a vhs copy made ita way from ebay to youtube promting them to sort out said issues in a matter of months and releasing it finally on blu ray.
@TheTapesArchive4 ай бұрын
Did you like the Farmer? Thanks for being a subscriber!
@tonyzeno27153 ай бұрын
Question for Quentin.. you reference seeing "No Way Out" at the Old Town Mall with your Mom. Do you mean the OTM in Torrance? "South Bay" a couple of miles from Del Amo Mall?
@karlwebster54382 ай бұрын
Yes. Quentin just told me to tell you: yes. That's exactly what he meant.
@tonyzeno27152 ай бұрын
@@karlwebster5438 Great Thank you .. That was my area growing up Del Amo Mall and Old Town Torrance... circa 87 to 93 It was a Great Time and Great Area to Grow up at the Time. Please tell Quentin thak you for the Response.. and "Pulp Fiction" made me join the Army as a Camera Man for 6 years.. while I didnt make it to the Film Sector which was the ultimate Goal, I did work in the TV/Radio biz for 25 years... His Films gave me that inspiration and Drive.. Anxiously awaiting his 10th and Final Film.... always wanted him to do a "Vega Bros" movie or even his interpretation of "Natural Born Killers" Thank you again
@constantinvasiliev20654 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@thedarkwolf94233 ай бұрын
Anyone else laughing like a hyena at the closed captions that totally change the voice-over?
@tomripsin7304 ай бұрын
30:11 And yet, Peter Boyle mentioned in an interview that people would cry out to him approvingly on the street, after that movie came out, saying things like, "Way to go Joe!" Boyle found it pretty unnerving.
@michaelbonade46672 ай бұрын
Travis is also a Veteran…. Shmuck
@quietreason86792 ай бұрын
In a way this little rant by Quentin Tarrantino sort of puts on display why he's not quite the director Scorcese is. He calls out Scorcese for a "BS" answer on the violent ending to Taxi Driver, but I think the answer Scorcese gives at the end is quite real. Taxi driver is meant to suggest catharsis through violence, but then make us disturbed by it and reflect on why we wanted it in the first place. It's a critique of the human ability to rationalize violence against people we don't like, it's suggests that our callousness is in a round-about way one of the causes of the violence we see in our own lives. Tarrantino can't even begin to accept that, for him it's a movie-technical thing about eliciting emotions from the audience, whereas for Scorcese it was about making the audience think.
@bacarandiiАй бұрын
Tarantino here sounds like the Oliver Stone who did a number on QT's "Natural Born Killers" script, saying that movie violence is "fun" while also insisting that the killers have some kind of higher moral motivation for the bloodshed. Total bull.
@Zwia.Ай бұрын
99% of moviegoers don't want to be given the tools to or be made to think. We want to be entertained and we want the director to tell us a story, we don't want to have to come up with our own ideas on what something means. Film school grads like Scorsese tend to be very pretentious and disguise faults and ambiguity as lessons and deepness.
@MadroxKnoxАй бұрын
It's clearly AI reading someone's garbage take
@goodgamesir175020 күн бұрын
@@MadroxKnoxif you were a bookworm and not a idiot, you would know that this is from QT’s book “Cinema Speculation” and that the voice is just AI, this is clearly what QT thinks because he wrote it down
@TK-ky5kh3 ай бұрын
13:52 is the craziest stunt I've ever seen.
@RanDyLan4 ай бұрын
Simply brilliant! And so perfectly put together with such incredibly deep intelligence, knowledge, and understanding to support Tarantino’s thoughts on “Taxi Driver.”
@maxplascencia4 ай бұрын
15:00 I love how if you read the book we all just know who Reggie is😂😂
@VladiArd19 күн бұрын
WHAAAT THE VOICE IS AI? saw all the videos and I just realized lmao, it´s dope anyways
@TheBishopCorp.3 ай бұрын
I remember watching Mr. Quentin Tarantino's films as a child, right next to Mel Brooks. I even laugh when my family drinks warm beer while fishing at last lake next to Table Mountain and Mono Winds in California ! tmi!? 🌮😹🍻 #desperado #mariachi #powwow #brewing #cerveza #chango
@patrickmartineau10083 ай бұрын
An AI aged Iris is the last thing I thought I would see today. But here it is.
@TheTapesArchive3 ай бұрын
That's not AI. That was her stuntwoman.
@alainreid36034 ай бұрын
OMG these subtitles.
@KingsOwn193 ай бұрын
He said the movie got serious when Iris is introduced but said it was still a joke by the time he tried to assassinate Palantine..which was right at the end of the movie
@aaronjohnson78123 ай бұрын
Yeah! That's exactly what I was thinking! Thanks for commenting so I didn't have to.
@Good_at_clips4 ай бұрын
I hate when people lie on their KZbin titles to get clicks. I don’t care if it’s his voice, it isn’t HIM, it’s A.I. so I’m not interested even if it’s good.
@TheTapesArchive4 ай бұрын
Dude, it literally says what it is in the description and pinned comment.
@ArtLike4 ай бұрын
Dude, people click on videos based on thumbnails and title description. Why didn't you add the word AI-GENERATED in big bold letters on the thumbnail and title? I can appreciate the work, but why can't you be more transparent? Scared you may not get the clicks? This is shallow and you know EXACTLY what you're doing. And don't get me started on the length of the video. 30 minutes? Authors write books so people will BUY them, not so they can be read aloud in a KZbin video for free. Shame on you. But yes, of course...it took 200+ hours to make the video so let's all be compassionate with the content creator. You leech.
@SuperShhitTalk4 ай бұрын
the captions are crazy
@bewley73 ай бұрын
that was great.
@davidstein91294 ай бұрын
Thanks for doing this video
@blackbird56344 ай бұрын
As kids we watched this on tv and even heavily edited we knew from the opening scenes that Travis was another psycho. We'd been spoon fed the Nam-vet with PTSD trope. The doped up veteran with a grudge was everywhere. And if Travis hadn't served in the army, so what? He was wearing the clothing, he had the edge, and the hardware. He was the embodiment of social unrest, of bitterness, of seething anger.