4
Summary
Taxi Driver gets off to a stylish and compelling start in a dark, intriguing opening chapter.
This recap of Taxi Driver season 1, episode 1 contains spoilers.
Taxi Driver, a new k-drama taking over the SBS Fridays and Saturdays slot between the second and third seasons of The Penthouse, has a compelling premise that is established with great style in the opening episode. Following the release of notorious sex offender Jo Do-Chul (Jo Hyun-Woo) from prison, he’s spirited away from a baying crowd in a premium taxi that is supposed to be heading to Busan. But the driver, Do-Ki (Lee Je-Hoon), with help from some hidden collaborators, speeds off in entirely the wrong direction, and after a bit of a fight and a neat hand-off in a tunnel, takes him away to parts unknown.
Do-Ki, see, works for the Rainbow Taxi Service, a secretive outfit that exists entirely to take revenge on those who have wronged others. They operate out of a hidden lair under the cover of a legitimate taxi firm, and there’s a whiff of James Bond about the whole operation, with Choi Kyung-Koo (Jang Hyuk-Jin) and Park Jin-Eon (Bae Yoo-Ram), a pair of dopey engineers, providing modifications to the vehicles and mission support (audiences got a glimpse of them in the opening scene, holding up Do-Chul’s pursuers). No-nonsense Go Eun (Pyo Ye-Jin) attempts to keep them all in check, while Jang Sung-Cheol (Kim Eui-Sung), who made the handoff with Do-Ki in the tunnel, heads the whole service while doubling as the CEO of Bluebird, an advocacy group for victims of violent crimes.
Sung-Cheol’s work with Bluebird puts him in close proximity to Ha-Na (Esom), an investigator out of the prosecutor’s office assigned to him by Jo Jin-Woo (Yoo Seung-Mok), and Taxi Driver episode 1 makes clear that there’s a cat-and-mouse element developing here as Ha-Na investigates Do-Chul’s disappearance. But as well as being an introduction to the Rainbow service and Do-Ki’s facility for beating up goons, this opener also develops the story of Kang Maria (Jo In), a young woman with learning disabilities who is led to Rainbow by a sign on the bridge she is about to commit suicide by jumping off of: “Don’t kill yourself. Get revenge. We’ll do it for you.”
Maria’s backstory makes clear that Taxi Driver isn’t afraid to get grim. After leaving an orphanage (Lee Chae-Bin, Lee Chun-Moo, and Choi Hyun-Jin play the children she tearfully parts ways with), Maria is taken by Choi Jong-Sok (Kim Do-Yeon) to what she believes is a legitimate employment opportunity working with computers. But she’s really to descale fish as essentially a slave of Park Joo-Chan (Tae Hang-Ho) and Jo Jong-Geun (Song Duk-Ho), a despicable pair who torture her when she says she’s scared of the fish. An escape attempt is foiled by Chief Kim Hyung-Wook (Jo Dae-Hee), a corrupt cop, and she’s taken for further torture.
Of course, in the present day, after being picked up and dropped off by Do-Ki, she’s presented with a special coin that operates the Rainbow Taxi arcade machine, which is presumably how jobs are booked. It lays out a few ground rules and then gives Maria the option to choose revenge or forgiveness. Naturally, and rightly, she chooses revenge.
From here Taxi Driver episode 1 delights in the planning and execution of the revenge operation, mixing in some humor to counterbalance all the heavy drama of Maria’s abuse. A plan is quickly hatched involving chicken laced with sedatives, and knocking the men out allows Do-Ki to slip inside their place, open their safe and hack their phones. But when he sees the evidence of what Maria went through on the devices, we see him menacingly raise a vase over the heads of the sleeping men.
What we’re seeing here suggests that Do-Ki has a particular hatred for men who harm women, and has a temper he finds difficult to control, which is only confirmed by a flashback to 2017 which details how he and Sung-Cheol met. The latter was in a crowd of onlookers gathered outside a home where a maniac named Nam Kyu-Jung (Kim Kang-Il) had evidently murdered the people inside. Do-Ki himself was also in that crowd, his eyes filled with tears, obviously having some connections to the victims. During a macabre demonstration of the killer’s attacks, which I have no idea why the police would have him perform right outside the scene, Do-Ki flips out and assaults a bunch of police officers trying to get to Kyu-Jung. He’s eventually tased and restrained, but he captures Sung-Cheol’s attention nonetheless. On the same bridge where Maria also contemplated suicide, Do-Ki considers ending his life, but he instead becomes a driver for Sung-Cheol, ready to take revenge on behalf of people just like him.
Article by Jonathon Wilson
Jonathon is one of the co-founders of Ready Steady Cut and has been an instrumental part of the team since its inception in 2017. Jonathon has remained involved in all aspects of the site’s operation, mainly dedicated to its content output, remaining one of its primary Entertainment writers while also functioning as our dedicated Commissioning Editor, publishing over 6,500 articles.
View All Articles from Jonathon Wilson