0
7 min
This revolves around Tim West, an advertising executive who is developing a Channel 4 programme on cooking for terrorists. Disillusioned by the hyper-reality of the media world, he joins Robert de Niro evening classes, but also falls under the pastoral influence of Johnny Morris. From the opening images of night-time, car-ridden streets accompanied by languorous sax on the soundtrack, through to the sub-Chandleresque voice-over narration, Taxi Driver II strikes you with its clever knowingness. But it's more than just a clever nod in the direction of contemporary film noir, just as it's more than an incestuous joke at the expense of the London based media world: it's a telling comment on the contemporary media culture of postmodernism.
| Name | Character | Team | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nathan Aris | Unowned | ||
| Roderick Coyne | Unowned | ||
| Richard Edwards | Unowned | ||
| Dominic Hawksley | Unowned | ||
| Johnny Morris | Self | Unowned | |
| Steve O'Dowell | Unowned | ||
| Neil Packham | Unowned | ||
| Nick Teare | Unowned | ||
| Baz Van Dam | Unowned |