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My Name Is Henry Krinkle: The 10 Best Films Of The Seventies

Join us in our decade-based film retrospective, as we delve backwards all the way from 2009 to 1910. Most decade-based best movie lists grant you a whooping 50-100 entries, which makes perfect sense given all the years you have to take into consideration. But what if you were defining a decade in just ten films? Which movies would you recommend to somebody who might only watch a handful from a given decade? This week, we look back at the Seventies.

2. Taxi Driver (1976) (Dir. Martin Scorsese)

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Taxi Driver is a true movie-lover’s movie: Martin Scorsese’s brilliant meditation on loneliness, insanity and alienation is one of the all-time great films, a motion picture that balances small tender dramatic moments and sudden explosions of rage and violence with an enviable precision. As Travis Bickle, DeNiro embodies one of cinema’s most iconic characters, a former Vietnam veteran who returns to New York, suffers from insomnia and keeps himself going through working a never-ending taxi shift. Everything from Scorsese’s skilled use of his camera, DeNiro’s nuanced performance, and Bernard Herrmann’s noir-inspired score, sit perfectly: truly, there’s not a moment of Taxi Driver that doesn’t match up. Though it aches to be studied and examined as a defining work of seventies cinematic endeavor, Taxi Driver is near unmatched from a basic entertainment perspective. Here’s a movie with all the cogs working in perfect synchronization, something that Scorsese would come to achieve several more times over the course of his great career.