In 1976, a grimy, unsettling film about a lonely cabdriver prowling the mean streets of New York changed American cinema forever. Directed by Martin Scorsese and written by Paul Schrader, Taxi Driver ...
In Breakfast at Tiffany’s, there’s a moment that still hits hard decades later: Holly Golightly tossing her orange cat out of a taxi into the rain. For Audrey Hepburn, it was the most unpleasant thing ...
The ending debate stays alive because Taxi Driver gives Travis a public redemption image right after the brothel massacre. He returns to work, Iris’ parents thank him, and Betsy reappears in his cab.
Berlin Perspectives title from Israeli filmmaker Assaf Machnes features strong performances from Ehab Salami and Ido Tako ...
Oscar-nominated helmer Ilker Çatak returns to the Berlinale with a family drama set in authoritarian Turkey but shot entirely in Germany.
Doug and Spock talking at a bar on Star Trek: Strange New Worlds - Paramount+ It should immediately be acknowledged that "Star Trek: Strange New Worlds" is, perhaps more than anything, a comedy series ...
No matter what genre you listen to, be it punk, prog, indie, folk, rap, or all things in between, the same rule applies: injecting humour into music is extremely difficult. That being said, it’s ...
Even if you haven’t seen Taxi Driver — the 1976 Martin Scorsese neo-noir film celebrating its 50th anniversary on February 8 — you surely know its most famous scene. Robert De Niro’s Travis Bickle, ...
Martin Scorsese's groundbreaking New York thriller turns 50 this week. It remains a remarkable piece of work – though its truly defining moment is probably not the one you think. Even after five ...