The taxi scene.


Hi, in a scene where Jeff Bridges' character "The Dude" is in a taxi and he asks or rather rudely demands the taxi driver to turn off the music because "He hates the f*cking Eagles", and then driver throws him out...

Firstly, was the driver even under the circumstances allowed to do that? And secondly, could he have just said something politely like "Excuse me, sir, I have a headache, can you please turn the music off" and would the taxi driver have obliged then?

reply

The more unbelievable part is that a leftover hippie would hate the Eagles

reply

Well, maybe he thinks the Eagles are an overrated and not very talented band, maybe he thinks their songwriting, singing and instrument playing is boring and/or insufficient, maybe he's also in addition to it all have heard them too much and feels he's had enough, maybe in addition to all of that he also heard people say how lame they are and this has left an imprint in his mind, and since he probably was in a bad mood that very day in a taxi, and the taxi driver happened to be a devoted fan of the Eagles and was probably in some authoritarian mood, they had a personality clash and therefore a conflict situation involving what we saw - an angry taxi driver throwing "The Dude" out as a result.

reply

There are a lot of reason to like and not like the Eagles. I go back and forth myself. However, I am guessing that Lebowski started hating the Eagles when they left country-rock behind and became a pop group.

reply

A taxi driver can kick out a passenger if he/she feels threatened or harassed. It's no different that a restaurant or any other business.

Yes, asking nicely always works better than shouting a demand.

reply

2 kwestmo - so you think in this scene, the taxi driver was justified, and by saying "I hate the f... Eagles", Jeff Bridges' character harassed the driver?

reply

of course. Why would the driver have to endure that kind of treatment?

reply

Well, maybe the driver was a little short-tempered too, he could've reasoned with him, no? Or turned the music off even if he screamed at him to do so?

reply

I guess you're a doormat

reply

Or maybe the scene was played for comedic effect and was supposed to be exaggerated.

reply

For a while there, I honestly thought that the MAIN reason the taxi driver throws the Dude out is because taxi driver is such a huge fan of the Eagles that he was personally upset that someone would speak so ill about one of his all-time favourite bands, but was that 'really' the case here?

reply

Doormat? Why would you think that mate, kwestmo?

reply

I got the impression that the taxi driver was having a bad day and the Dudes request was the last straw.

That is why they showed the tumbleweed in the beginning of the film.

The Dude IS the tumbleweed, being blown by the winds of life.

reply

And overall, basically in a nutshell, the taxi driver didn't JUST throw that passenger, The Dude, out, because he was upset and unhappy that he doesn't like the music that he likes, right?

reply

So they WERE BOTH having an equally bad day and basically managed to duke it out together?

reply

So do you think that if he asked him politely to turn the music off, the driver could and would oblige?

reply

In a comedy like this, I don't worry much about how realistic it is.

reply

It wasn't as much about realism as it is about understanding a CONFLICTING ATTITUDE.

reply

"In a comedy like this, I don't worry much about how realistic it is."
And you don't worry about its "blunt emotional aspects" either, correct?

reply

The Dude was channeling the ghost of Gram Parsons.

reply