Development Martin Scorsese has stated that it was
Brian De Palma who introduced him to
Paul Schrader, and
Taxi Driver arose from Scorsese's feeling that movies are like dreams or drug-induced reveries. He attempted to evoke within the viewer the feeling of being in a limbo state between sleeping and waking. Scorsese cites
Alfred Hitchcock's
The Wrong Man (1956) and Jack Hazan's
A Bigger Splash (1973) as inspirations for his camerawork in the movie. Scorsese also noted that Jef Costello (a solitary hitman), portrayed by
Alain Delon in
Le Samouraï, inspired the creation of Travis Bickle. The role was, in fact, offered to Alain Delon, among many others. Before Scorsese was hired,
John Milius and
Irvin Kershner were considered to helm the project. When writing the script, Schrader drew inspiration from the diaries of
Arthur Bremer (who shot presidential candidate
George Wallace in 1972 For the ending of the story, in which Bickle becomes a media hero, Schrader was inspired by
Sara Jane Moore's
attempted assassination of President
Gerald Ford, which resulted in her being on the cover of
Newsweek. Schrader also used himself as inspiration. In a 1981 interview with
Tom Snyder on
The Tomorrow Show, he related his experience of living in New York City while battling chronic insomnia, which led him to frequent pornographic bookstores and theaters because they remained open all night. Following a divorce and a breakup with a live-in girlfriend, he spent a few weeks living in his car. After visiting a hospital for a
stomach ulcer, Schrader wrote the screenplay for
Taxi Driver in "under a fortnight". He stated, "The first draft was maybe 60 pages, and I started the next draft immediately, and it took less than two weeks." Schrader recalled, "I realized I hadn't spoken to anyone in weeks [...] that was when the metaphor of the taxi occurred to me. That is what I was: this person in an iron box, a coffin, floating around the city, but seemingly alone." Schrader decided to make Bickle a Vietnam vet because the
national trauma of the war seemed to blend perfectly with Bickle's paranoid
psychosis, making his experiences after the war more intense and threatening. Two drafts were written in ten days.
Pickpocket, a film by the French director
Robert Bresson, was also cited as an influence. In
Scorsese on Scorsese, Scorsese mentions the religious
symbolism in the story, comparing Bickle to a saint who wants to cleanse or purge both his mind and his body of weakness. Bickle attempts to kill himself near the end of the movie as a tribute to the
samurai's "
death with honor" principle.
Al Pacino,
Jason Miller,
Jeff Bridges were also considered for Travis Bickle. De Niro apparently lost 35 pounds (16 kilograms) and was repeatedly listening to a taped reading of the diaries of criminal
Arthur Bremer. When he had free time while shooting
1900, De Niro visited an army base in
Northern Italy and tape-recorded soldiers from the
Midwestern United States, whose accents he thought might be appropriate for Travis's character. Scorsese brought in the
film title designer
Dan Perri to design the
title sequence for
Taxi Driver. Perri had been Scorsese's original choice to design the titles for ''
Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore in 1974, but Warner Bros. would not allow him to hire an unknown designer. By the time when Taxi Driver
was going into production, Perri had established his reputation with his work on The Exorcist'', and Scorsese was now able to hire him. Perri created the opening titles for
Taxi Driver using
second unit footage that he color-treated through a process of film copying and
slit-scan, resulting in a highly stylized graphic sequence that evoked the "underbelly" of New York City through lurid colors, glowing
neon signs, distorted nocturnal images, and deep
black levels. Perri went on to design the opening titles for a number of major films, including
Star Wars (1977) and
Raging Bull (1980).
Filming Columbia Pictures gave Scorsese a budget of $1.3 million in April 1974. On a budget of only $1.9 million, various actors took pay cuts to bring the project to life. De Niro and
Cybill Shepherd received $35,000 to make the film, while Scorsese was given $65,000. Overall, $200,000 of the budget was allocated to performers in the movie.
Taxi Driver was shot during a New York City summer heat wave and sanitation strike in 1975. The film ran into conflict with the
Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) due to its violence. Scorsese de-saturated the colors in the final shootout, which allowed the film to get an R rating. To capture the atmospheric scenes in Bickle's taxi, the sound technicians would get in the trunk while Scorsese and his cinematographer
Michael Chapman would ensconce themselves on the back seat floor and use available light to shoot. Chapman admitted that the filming style was heavily influenced by
New Wave filmmaker
Jean-Luc Godard and his cinematographer
Raoul Coutard, as the crew did not have the time nor money to do "traditional things". When Bickle decides to assassinate Senator Palantine, he cuts his hair to a
mohawk style. This detail was suggested by actor Victor Magnotta, a friend of Scorsese's who had a small role as a
Secret Service agent and had served in Vietnam. Scorsese noted that Magnotta told them that, "in Saigon, if you saw a guy with his head shaved—like a little Mohawk—that usually meant that those people were ready to go into a certain Special Forces situation. You didn't even go near them. They were ready to kill." Filming took place on New York City's
West Side, at a time when the city was on the brink of
bankruptcy. According to producer
Michael Phillips, "The whole West Side was bombed out. There really were row after row of condemned buildings and that's what we used to build our sets [...] we didn't know we were documenting what looked like the dying gasp of New York." The tracking was shot over the shootout scene, filmed in an actual apartment, and took three months of preparation. The production team had to cut through the ceiling to shoot it. ==Music==