The Greatness of Amadeus | Envy vs Appreciation

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 1 окт 2024
  • Through stunning visuals, powerful performances, and a gripping storyline, "Amadeus" offers a fascinating look into the life of one of the greatest musical geniuses of all time. Milos Forman's film explores jealousy, ambition, and the price of success, making it one of the greatest films of the 1980s.
    Movies Referenced:
    0:03 - Whiplash (Damien Chazelle)
    0:14 - Black Swan (Darren Aronofsky)
    0:20 - The Red Shoes (Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger)
    0:42 - The Lady Eve ( Preston Sturges)
    7:14 - Nightcrawler (Dan Gilroy)
    Thanks for watching my video! This decision leads me to believe you’re a winner with unlimited potential for greatness. If you want to watch more great content, make sure to destroy the subscribe button and check out my many awesome playlists. My contact information is below if you have any questions about my content or wish to discuss advertisement possibilities. Thanks again for watching!
    Contact Info:
    Twitter: / lifeisastoryyt
    Disclaimer: I do not own rights to any of the source materials I used in this work, appealing to allowance made for "fair use" purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research, under Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976
    #movies #amadeus

Комментарии • 169

  • @jwnj9716
    @jwnj9716 Год назад +287

    Mozart's laugh alone should be in the Hall of Fame.

    • @mrinalkantinath1271
      @mrinalkantinath1271 Год назад +27

      When he said "it's Mozart time" and Amadeused all over the orchestra. Truly one of the moments

    • @LuisSierra42
      @LuisSierra42 Год назад +10

      @@mrinalkantinath1271 That was the moment i thought, this is definitely one of the Amadeus of all time

    • @naiman4535
      @naiman4535 Год назад +8

      Nobody really knows exactly what Mozart's famous giggle or laugh sounded like, because there were no electronic recording devices back in those days. But actor Tom Hulce sure came up with a great recreation of it, didn't he?

    • @nicolasbascunan4013
      @nicolasbascunan4013 9 месяцев назад +1

      That laugh is the cringiest thing ever in cinema history.

    • @valerietaylor9615
      @valerietaylor9615 9 месяцев назад +3

      He could out-cackle Kamala. 😊

  • @LuisSierra42
    @LuisSierra42 Год назад +341

    This movie was a revelation, could not have believed before i watched it that a 3hr musical film about two composers would become one of my all time favorites

    • @lawjef
      @lawjef Год назад +3

      The fact that it swept the Oscars didn’t give you a hint that it was worthy of consideration as a favorite film? Fair enough. It’s been a minute since the Oscars had any credibility

    • @LuisSierra42
      @LuisSierra42 Год назад +2

      @@lawjef I haven't had a consistent experience watching Oscar winning movies, for example, I couldn't even finish Coda since it seemed to me like a generic teen movie yet it won the award

    • @nicolasbascunan4013
      @nicolasbascunan4013 9 месяцев назад

      Worst movie I've seen.

    • @fairamir1
      @fairamir1 9 месяцев назад

      It was not a musical

    • @jamespader
      @jamespader 8 месяцев назад

      Not a musical.

  • @taurusstudios5497
    @taurusstudios5497 Год назад +160

    That's the thing about genius. The more talented you are, the more jealous everybody else becomes of you and the more isolated you'll feel in the end.

    • @LuisSierra42
      @LuisSierra42 Год назад +5

      Mozart was a genius and he had friends as well as Einstein and Edison

    • @Window4503
      @Window4503 Год назад +7

      It can be that way, but it doesn't have to be. Jacob Collier was interviewed once about that sort of jealousy and his answer was essentially the same as this video's: it isn't a zero-sum game. If someone is comfortable being big, room will be made for them and that ultimately benefits everyone. Genius done with mutual humility is a compounding effect that lifts everyone up.

    • @redefinedliving5974
      @redefinedliving5974 6 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@Window4503ultimately depends on the environment. Poor genius without support whatsoever will be a life of suffering

    • @Smartbeautifulawesome
      @Smartbeautifulawesome 29 дней назад

      @@taurusstudios5497 that’s crazy…

  • @philipksick6810
    @philipksick6810 Год назад +113

    The character of Salieri and F Murray Abrahams portrayal is so perfect, I have seen this movie so many times

    • @Psychol-Snooper
      @Psychol-Snooper Год назад +1

      I've never seen an actor carry a movie like Abraham carried Amadeus. I mean Burt Reynolds, and Mick Jagger were considered. That was what the movie was supposed to be.
      Still, I mean if they'd hired Jagger he would have made a promo song and video. We did lose that, and have to make due with Falco's "Rock Me Amadeus."

  • @Charlie-eh2wj
    @Charlie-eh2wj Год назад +36

    The end of the play is different - not necessarily better or worse, but different. That final scene between Salieri and Mozart plays very differently, confrontational rather than collaborative. Then, we learn that old Salieri, still very bitter and envious, has been intentionally crying out that he is Mozart's assassin not out of guilt, but to spark that rumor before killing himself in order to tie his name indelibly to Mozart's. His final revenge on God. But he fails. No one believes the rumor, AND he lives, now considered a senile joke. Then comes the famous line, also the last line of the movie: Mediocrities of the world, I absolve you.
    The movie highlights the tragedy of the situation by having Salieri truly wracked with guilt in his old age after realizing, in the last moments of Mozart's life, what could have come of true collaboration between the two, or at least what could have been if Salieri hadn't been undermining him at every turn. The play focuses in on his envy and keeps him pathetically bitter to the end. The movie I think has the better overall story (as far as having a more specific focused theme that comes full circle) , but the play is an excellent character study of a lifelong self righteous egotist. Peter Shaffer wrote both, so it makes sense that the movie would basically be a new edit of the play.

  • @squamish4244
    @squamish4244 5 месяцев назад +22

    The genius of the film is that it has TWO protagonists, Salieri and Mozart, and God is the antagonist. God. Salieri cannot triumph, but he tries anyway. We know he cannot win against divinity itself, but watching him try and fail is extraordinary. His laughing while the good-hearted priest - who represents not divinity, but the priest's own limited concept of it - is bent over with his arms on his knees is an incredible scene.
    I remember watching this film at 12 years old. Afterwards, I was stunned. I had never had anything like this reaction to a film before, even Star Wars. I was affected for hours. I lay in bed, staring at the ceiling, wondering wtf I had just seen. A 2.5 hour epic (this was the superior Theatrical Cut) set in the 18th Century about two composers, with no action, violence and little sexual content had fixated me the whole time. The film was about existence itself. The power of a truly great film, indeed.

  • @kataisa3
    @kataisa3 Год назад +44

    Salieri absolutely personifies Proverbs 16:18 - “Pride goeth before a fall.” He was a gifted musician in his own right but he couldn’t appreciate it because Mozart was a genius prodigy.

  • @kevinmcqueenie7420
    @kevinmcqueenie7420 Год назад +42

    The movie was fantastic, but it does Salieri dirty. "Don't become a Salieri" Good advice, just important to note that Salieri himself didn't become a Salieri and, while a bit jealous of a generational talent, generally had a lot of respect and admiration for him. Amadeus is not about Salieri and Mozart, they are cyphers to explore the human condition. Enjoyed the video, though!

    • @peterthegreat996
      @peterthegreat996 Год назад +2

      The movie is negligent in its portrayal of Salerie

    • @Dowlphin
      @Dowlphin Год назад +4

      Yes, I am not sure how well it was emphasized in 'marketing', but the movie is clearly a deliberate fictional spin on historical events, or at the very least pursues a speculative thesis that is considered not that solid, specifically about Salieri murdering Mozart.

    • @josiahanderson9328
      @josiahanderson9328 4 месяца назад +1

      Salieri and Mozart weren’t friends in real life (they hardly interacted with each other) but they did have immense respect for each other.
      And, the real Salieri was talented and infuential musician in own right. He created (or at least, popularised) several opera conventions that are still used to this day.

    • @thomaskilroy4573
      @thomaskilroy4573 Месяц назад

      Oh here we bloody go! THE MOVIE NEVER SAYS SALIERI WAS NOT A VERY RESPECTED COMPOSER!

    • @thomaskilroy4573
      @thomaskilroy4573 Месяц назад

      @@peterthegreat996No it isn’t. Salieri was a respected and brilliant composer. The movie shows him as a respected and brilliant composer.

  • @ShamusWoosley
    @ShamusWoosley 3 месяца назад +4

    Wonderful movie, but like the Doors movie, it exaggerates the reality.
    Salieri was the teacher of Beethoven, Schubert and Liszt. His opera was wildly popular at the time, he was a great conductor and the teacher at the royal music academy. He and Mozart were close friends. They wrote a short piece together, Mozart send his son to study under Salieri who accepted, and if I remember correctly when Mozart was dying and writing the requiem Salieri was busy in London conducting Mozart’s symphonies

  • @jacktoma21
    @jacktoma21 Год назад +29

    I found that final scene between the two of them so fascinating because it became hard to tell how much was Salieri carrying out his scheme and how much was him genuinely feeling sorry for the state he helped to put Mozart into.

  • @AbdelOveAllhan
    @AbdelOveAllhan Год назад +13

    Looking at the comments it's disappointing that so many think this movie is more documentary than fantasy. In reality Mozart was no more scatological than many in Viennese society. He was hard working and a serious minded composer that plumbed the depths of complex human emotions in his operas and over 600 compositions in his short but productive life. He was not a gibbering idiot savant as depicted in the film. Salieri was also an industrious and talented composer (listen to his concerto for flute and oboe) but not in Mozart's league...and who was? Salieri was friends with Beethoven and indeed gave him counterpoint lessons. Later in life he contracted a form of dementia and claimed he had poisoned Mozart. There is no proof of this but the myth was perpetuated by Pushkin in a play and later by Rimsky-Korsakov in an opera. But for all of its shortcomings Amadeus is miles better than the recent absurd and pretentious "Chevalier". One review even objected to calling him the 'black Mozart' and suggest Mozart was actually the 'white Chevalier'...laughably preposterous. The chevalier du St. George was by all accounts a worthy and accomplished composer but, as with Salieri, not in Mozart's league. Oh, if you see Chevalier (spoiler alert) there never was a violin 'battle' with Mozart...and St. George was not the first jazz musician. In the immortal words of Yogi Berra, "You could look it up."

  • @oreo12ification
    @oreo12ification 14 часов назад

    I absolutely love this movie “Amadeus”. I had never heard of Salieri before watching this film, nor did I recognize any of Salieri’s music. As I watched the film in the darkness of the theatre, I was amazed at the storyline. Very glad that Mozart was NOT killed by Salieri, as the film would have u believe. The ending is truly tragic, and acted so well that it deserved the many accolades it received. Maybe a second tour of the film would be in order just to show the genius of the players, actors, and the director. I have yet to see another musical film evoke the power that this film does. So enjoy the experience and the wonder of the magical genius of
    Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart.
    “Wolfie” for short… ❤❤️❤️

  • @lyonellaverde3135
    @lyonellaverde3135 Год назад +16

    In truth Salieri was a perfectly good composer who was well regarded in his time. He just was not Mozart.

    • @peterthegreat996
      @peterthegreat996 Год назад +3

      He also respected and admired Mozart .

    • @Nuuk_Nuke_Nook
      @Nuuk_Nuke_Nook Месяц назад

      The movie does not deny nor doubt that, it makes a perfectly clear point that Salieri was respected and loved and appreciated in his time, you see the emperor fail to find anything good to say about Mozart's music and even finds Figaro boring, but he finds Salieri's "Axur, re d'Ormus" the best opera yet performed.

  • @baguettegott3409
    @baguettegott3409 4 месяца назад +4

    I once watched this movie together with a friend, who is no longer my friend because I of my own envy problems. It's such a hard thing to struggle with and this movie encapsulates it so well.
    She laughed at the movie and called it kinda stupid.
    I think the people who do have exceptional talent/luck/success truly don't understand it at all. Mozart (from the movie) would probably also have found it silly.

  • @jerryschramm4399
    @jerryschramm4399 Год назад +34

    Brilliant composer, great movie. Your description of how Salieri needs Mozart to give his life meaning reminded me of the scene in "The Dark Knight", where the Joker tells Batman that he (Joker) doesn't want Batman dead, because the two of them are necessary, and complete each other. Thanks for the thought provoking video.

  • @pepealasquid6005
    @pepealasquid6005 Год назад +36

    Being a simple man is always better then being the top man. Heavy is the crown

  • @1pierosangiorgio
    @1pierosangiorgio Год назад +18

    one of my best cinema experiences as I saw the movie as a teenager in a theater.

    • @LifeIsAStory
      @LifeIsAStory  Год назад +2

      Jealous you got to see it in theaters 😂

    • @1pierosangiorgio
      @1pierosangiorgio Год назад +1

      @@LifeIsAStory that's because I'm old!!! :)

  • @johnnykilonzo2103
    @johnnykilonzo2103 Год назад +42

    As a Christian I always look forward to seeing such films that teaches something about the human soul.
    I am grateful for suggesting Amadeus

    • @stale.baguette
      @stale.baguette Год назад +1

      what does being a christian have to do with that

    • @Dowlphin
      @Dowlphin Год назад

      I just saw an amazing movie about the nature of faith, among other things. Can be challenging especially for a christian and should be for the true seeker:
      *The Man From Earth*
      It is kind of the same format and of the same impressive depth as Twelve Angry Men.

    • @Window4503
      @Window4503 Год назад +12

      @@stale.baguette Nuance. If you know Christian theology and how God works, then you'll fully understand the priest's horror on hearing Salieri's "confession"; that is, most of Salieri's battle with God was based on a god of his own imagining with whom he believed he could bargain and whom he believed snubbed him. His internal turmoil and prayer and every other reason he drove himself crazy was based on a fundamental misunderstanding of God, which the priest never gets to correct.

    • @jdewitt77
      @jdewitt77 13 дней назад

      @@Window4503 And how does God work? Please explain yourself.

  • @ignaciomoreno9655
    @ignaciomoreno9655 Год назад +6

    In reality, Saliero and Mozart didn't seem to hate each other so much.

  • @alexm7627
    @alexm7627 Год назад +12

    One of the best movies i know for moral learning

  • @pianojl
    @pianojl 7 месяцев назад +5

    I love this movie so much. Thank you for keeping Mozarts life alive❤

  • @mikerichmond8246
    @mikerichmond8246 4 месяца назад +3

    Excellent analysis of this superb movie. The scenes highlighted here are some of my favorites of all time, across all time and all genres. Especially brilliant is the scene where the two composers are composing together... although, Mozart did all the composing, while Salieri merely did the notating, all the while urging Mozart beyond exhaustion in order to kill him, I believe.

  • @arturocostantino623
    @arturocostantino623 7 месяцев назад +3

    It's important to remember that Salieri did not commission the Requiem that was Count Waltezar whose wife had just died. Shaffear wrote a play not a history. And it was his wife who insisted that that he finish the Requiem for the money

  • @IRosamelia
    @IRosamelia Месяц назад +2

    At the end of the movie when Salieri says he is the patron saint of mediocres and at one point looks the camera and says, "I absolve you". I felt that 😅

  • @rlkinnard
    @rlkinnard 3 месяца назад +1

    This whole story was dreamt up by another prodigy who died at an equally young age, read Pushkin's Mozart and Salieri. And Pushkin was black, sort of. I think that Salieri actually liked Mozart an did what he could to help him in real life.

  • @jennilocke
    @jennilocke 8 месяцев назад +3

    This movie might not be historically factual, but i think it's a brilliant mythologizing of Mozart and an incredible view of how envy can destroy the creative process, and how humans view God as the great composer of all of our lives and use him as an excuse to do terrible things. As an ex-Christian i always found the idea of Salieri going from being devout to a fault to swearing to work against God to be highly fascinating.
    I also like that you mentioned Salieri loving sweets. I feel like a lot of discussions on this movie don't mention it, but i think it's important. Salieri has sworn to give up on sex and devotes his life to creating music for God. But he still indulges in sweets. There's a scene where he has a student and she's singing beautifully; he looks on with painful longing for a second as he plays the accompaniment on piano, then goes for the tray of sweets instead. The singer notices and looks a little concerned, and this makes me think that Salieri is so swayed by desserts because this vow he made to God makes him deny himself of so many human pleasures like sex and leisure. The fact that he has an addiction to sweets shows his weakness; he doesn't actually give God what he promised, as he substitutes sweets for sex and leisure and whatever else. In order to actually have given God his chastity, industry, and deepest humility, Salieri would have to actually feel the pain of denying himself those things. But he doesn't, because instead of indulging in sex he indulges in sweets.
    Interestingly, this also proves Salieri's conclusion on God's character. That he is unfair and unkind, not a god of mercy but a god of torture. God demands Salieri to suffer in order to have what he wants while Mozart gets exactly that with little effort.

    • @teresagardiner153
      @teresagardiner153 7 месяцев назад

      And even while not being historically accurate, its mythologizing of Mozart isn't divorced from reality either. He really was a musical genius with a love for fart-jokes.

  • @LCCWPresents
    @LCCWPresents Год назад +4

    To be fair the dessert at the court would be like staying away from a crack cocaine addiction

  • @vitorferreira6062
    @vitorferreira6062 4 месяца назад +1

    Tottaly unfair to the Salieri name. Thrown into the mud.

  • @jahovahjira
    @jahovahjira 3 месяца назад +1

    Mozart and Tucker Carlsen share the same laugh!

  • @JoshCBauer
    @JoshCBauer 4 месяца назад +2

    Maybe the best film ever made. I watch it about 1-2 times every month

  • @monty4336
    @monty4336 5 месяцев назад +1

    In real life, it was one of Mozart's students that helped him with the requiem. Salieri did not help (nor was he in their home when he passed away) according to his wife and sister in law whom were there tending to Mozart in his final days. But, this is a movie.

  • @Т1000-м1и
    @Т1000-м1и Год назад +3

    That's why I love videos about movies I don't know about

  • @P.G.1966
    @P.G.1966 10 месяцев назад +1

    When you play music at 4...and compose at 5...Let's talk. Until then..SMDLARNC.

    • @lindacowles756
      @lindacowles756 5 месяцев назад

      G'day! What does SMDLARNC stand for?

  • @EyeLean5280
    @EyeLean5280 Год назад +8

    Very nice commentary on a great film, truly great!
    Just for those who may not be aware, the story's not historically accurate. Salieri and Mozart got along pretty well, actually. It was only after Salieri fell victim to dementia that he became deluded into thinking he'd harmed his colleague. HOWEVER, I love this film and take it not as historical fact, but as based in the delusion Salieri suffered and a parable about artistic envy.

    • @lyricelizabeth9860
      @lyricelizabeth9860 11 месяцев назад +2

      I'm so glad someone else looks at this film in a 'salieri is delusion" kind of way, I feel like he was supposed to be an unreliable narrator

  • @mabell01
    @mabell01 День назад

    I really loved this review! You put it so simply and well stated. Not too many words and not too few. Did somebody teach that? Well done! I also share a love for Mozart and this movie of him.

  • @donaldkrone4717
    @donaldkrone4717 11 месяцев назад +2

    This was a great analysis. I appreciate the time you took. Mozart for me is the pinnacle of composers.

  • @SwabianClancy
    @SwabianClancy Месяц назад

    What I think is often overlooked: Salieri was rewarded by God. He was musically blessed to be the only one in Mozart's circle who recognized his full talent (envy at performances, reading the notes that were brought to him). He is also the only one who was able to understand how the Requiem works, even by Mozart himself. He misinterpreted these signs out of envy and resentment, instead of two musicians gifted by God recognizing each other, Salieri fought the other.

  • @gruby970
    @gruby970 Месяц назад

    The entire story was made up by Russia's greatest Romantic poet Alexander Pushkin who wanted a story about an all-consuming envy leading to evil.
    The real Salieri and Mozart liked and respected one another.
    The movie is great, just remember it isnt true.

  • @ollieox9181
    @ollieox9181 2 месяца назад

    Let's be clear: this was a brilliant movie.
    However, it was very unfair to the legacy of Salieri. There absolutely no evidence that he was insanely envious of Mozart. In truth, they had a professional respect for each other. And Salieri often helped Mozart get work. He certainly did not murder Mozart.

  • @BrokamaGay
    @BrokamaGay 4 дня назад

    Reminds me of Death Note and the relationship L and Light had. An Amadeus anime would be incredible lol

  • @PaddyMcMe
    @PaddyMcMe 2 месяца назад

    Just to be clear, the real Saliere wasn't the monster he's made out to be in the film nor did he poison/kill Mozart, unfortunately the rumours that he did badly affected him and it's argued contributed to the Nervous Breakdown he suffered later in life. Saliere taught Schubert, Beethoven, Listz, Hummel as well as Mozart. Arguably all of them were greater talents than he was, and came to greater fame and reverence, some later than others. He was a fine person much maligned by those who didn't know him.

  • @vbacs22
    @vbacs22 5 месяцев назад +2

    Every moment of this movie is to be praised.

  • @DWHarper62
    @DWHarper62 5 месяцев назад

    This movie is virtually all fiction... To make a documentary about a movie of fiction is ridiculous... Amadeus was a stage play that was based on a very bad rumor and fleshed out to be about human creativity, not the actual life of either Salieri or Mozart... The movie is a crime because we are now 40 years since it's premier, and the general population thinks that Mozart was a laughing gifted hyena...

  • @MonsieurFeshe
    @MonsieurFeshe 4 месяца назад

    "A world without Mozart is one where Salieri's work is never overshadowed" Beethoven was already composing before the end of this movie 😭And Salieri taught Beethoven! It was rigged against him from the start ngl.

  • @FRESHFROMTHEFLEA
    @FRESHFROMTHEFLEA 10 дней назад

    Comparison is the thief of joy...

  • @MonsieurFeshe
    @MonsieurFeshe 4 месяца назад

    Amadeus is Mozart's middle name. Interesting that the name meaning "loved by God" is given to Mozart, it's ironic for all the reasons Salieri presents.

  • @darastarscream
    @darastarscream 5 месяцев назад

    Salieri is so preoccupied with the performance of virtue he can't see he's committing the most basic sin there is-- pride. Even his piety and love of God is selfish; do *this* for me, o Lord, and I will praise and glorify Thee.

  • @Skimmerlit
    @Skimmerlit Год назад +2

    I love your work. I’m glad to have found you.

  • @USAads2023
    @USAads2023 7 месяцев назад +1

    I was a Salieri when this videos started and I didn’t even knew it.
    Thank you very much video creator, you just made my day and perhaps my life!
    God bless you!

  • @duncanmacpherson2013
    @duncanmacpherson2013 4 месяца назад

    This is one of the best movies ever but it is very unfair to the real Salieri. There is no evidence that relations between Salieri and Mozart were anything but amicable. Salieri was certainly not celibate. He had two wives and a series of mistresses. On the other hand the picture the movie paints of Mozart the man and musician is fairly accurate

  • @freebee8221
    @freebee8221 5 месяцев назад

    Its not really salieris pride thats the problem. He hates Mozart, not because he is a genius, but because the genius happends to also be a fool. An arrogant brat, who is not worthy of the talent. If the genius wouldve been someone else, someone older and someone a bit more like salieri himself as a person, he couldve delt with it better.

  • @neverbrokeagain3435
    @neverbrokeagain3435 Год назад +6

    I must say I love your perspective and interpretation. When you highlighted the mention of the word “deserve” it reminded me of when I came to Christ and realized that I deserved death according to Gods standard. You are not far from unlocking the mysteries of the universe as God draws you closer to himself. That is, If you haven’t found Christ already.

  • @stillcantbesilencedevennow
    @stillcantbesilencedevennow Год назад +1

    Mozart would have laughed at that line.
    "There goes that theory"
    Indeed. Silly man.

  • @AnonYmous-ry2jn
    @AnonYmous-ry2jn Год назад +1

    I've always interpreted the Requiem composition scene as Salieri executing Mozart, even as he gets caught up in their genuinely shared exhilaration (consistent with Salieri's complex straddling of hate, admiration, love , and even more hate) . Mozart says that Salierir is poisoning him. And i think he shows up wearing a death mask to put death into Mozart's mind. So the way I always assumed it works is that Mozart would interpret the requiem as being his own funeral mass,, and through extreme emotional/spiritual/psychological connection to the music, Mozart would die upon completing it, as if Mozart would sense the Requiem as his life's natural closing curtain.

  • @vladimirkraus1438
    @vladimirkraus1438 3 месяца назад +1

    One of the best movies ever!

  • @D800Lover
    @D800Lover 2 дня назад

    I have a theory: Mozart would have loved The Beatles.

  • @TheGritherr
    @TheGritherr 8 месяцев назад +1

    Love your thought process throughout, you've a gifted eye.

  • @Smartbeautifulawesome
    @Smartbeautifulawesome Месяц назад +1

    That’s cool I gotta watch this

    • @teresagardiner153
      @teresagardiner153 29 дней назад +1

      Fun film. Not historically accurate at all, though they did get Mozart's sense of humor right.
      "There's a lot of farting during the night,
      And the farts resound with thunderous might."
      -- W.A. Mozart

  • @lt.reubenrozeyt5716
    @lt.reubenrozeyt5716 2 месяца назад

    "Why does someone like that gets it and not me? Why not me?"

  • @DocM.
    @DocM. 9 месяцев назад +2

    Awesome video! ❤

  • @donna25871
    @donna25871 Год назад +3

    The big problem with this film is that most of it is a work of fiction. I love it but people who imagine this as a biography is doing a disservice to Salieri and Mozart. Salieri had a long and distinguished career as a court composer and director of music while also teaching (for free) other famous co posers including Beethoven, Schubert, Liszt and even Mozart’s son. Mozart, although not rich, didn’t die in poverty, and his music was out of favour with Viennese audiences when he died. Salieri hasn’t gone into obscurity with his music still being performed and recorded. You could say that Salieri had the more fulfilling life because he wasn’t encumbered with the genius that Mozart had.

    • @peterthegreat996
      @peterthegreat996 Год назад

      And he certainly did not try to undermine Mozart .

    • @joeodonnell921
      @joeodonnell921 Год назад

      Cinematic language usually has to take liberties with non fiction, so much problems today's cinema and maybe tv is this obsession with realism. The writers or director of this film seem to have told the story almost like it was told through Lucifer's eyes and his fall from grace.

  • @aborix
    @aborix 11 месяцев назад

    i command you for this video but you got the facts all wrong. not only salieri WAS NOT mozarts enemy but on the contrary..... this movie is based on a play that the great russian poet, pyshkin, wrote based on a rumor that spread about mozart being poisoned by the italians who envied him.
    Of course there was envy from other composers but than again that happens always even nowadays.
    with that said, this is one of my favorite movies ever...
    cheers

  • @ExAnimoPortugal
    @ExAnimoPortugal 5 месяцев назад

    As great as this movie is, one has to remember it is NOT a documentary.
    Salieri became demented and so he is the definition of the unreliable narrator.

    • @marigi2401
      @marigi2401 5 месяцев назад

      It is so weird....scientists insist on us reading books, playing music, making puzzles etc so as to keep our brain healthy and avoid dementia or Alzheimer or whatever and we see people like Salieri who was a composer (all of them practicing math) and he died of dementia! Ok !!!!

  • @Vid1917
    @Vid1917 Год назад +1

    It's clear Salieri didn't kill mozart

  • @12235117657598502586
    @12235117657598502586 Год назад +1

    DON’T BECOME A SALIARI !

  • @samanthafox3124
    @samanthafox3124 4 месяца назад

    Amadeus was the rock star of his age.

  • @nicoletjeng9793
    @nicoletjeng9793 Год назад +2

    Great update !

  • @johnmcgoldrick7085
    @johnmcgoldrick7085 Месяц назад

    FABULOUS job on this.

  • @67Mannheim
    @67Mannheim 17 дней назад

    Watched this several times...

  • @rebelpunx88
    @rebelpunx88 4 месяца назад

    People really miss the point of this movie and it's brilliance, it's not supposed to be a biopic, it's a play that uses a rumor to speak about the nature of providence and the tragedy of being distracted by envy

  • @dcar6530
    @dcar6530 Месяц назад

    bibles story the prodigol son

  • @pianojl
    @pianojl 7 месяцев назад

    God did not answer Salieris prays because his heart had hate for Mozart. That’s my interpretation.

  • @ScarletSnake
    @ScarletSnake 5 месяцев назад

    Fantastic analysis of a legendary movie! Great work! 👏👏👏 Subscribing now

  • @kateandrova
    @kateandrova 5 месяцев назад

    You have interpreted that final scene in a way that is totally novel to me. I always thought Salieri was intentionally trying to torture Mozart by driving him to frenzied work to the death. I still think that, but I really appreciate this alternate interpretation. You can tell a movie is great if others can read something different from it!

  • @animationfanatic2133
    @animationfanatic2133 Год назад +1

    Play Peter Griffin

  • @Churchmilitant67
    @Churchmilitant67 3 месяца назад

    I've heard some RUclips channels commentaries on this movie. Yours is the best.

  • @Churchmilitant67
    @Churchmilitant67 3 месяца назад

    Your epilogue to this video was sublime. Thank you and God bless you.

  • @sahilhossain8204
    @sahilhossain8204 Год назад

    Lore of The Greatness of Amadeus | Envy vs Appreciation momentum 100

  • @kathrynmolesa1641
    @kathrynmolesa1641 5 месяцев назад

    Tom was brilliant, funny, passionate and had great wigs.

  • @goodbar26
    @goodbar26 Год назад +3

    It's extremely likely that Mozart was exactly the character portrayed in this film, arrogant, obnoxious and full of himself, his genius was known only to him until we caught up to what he was offering us with his perfect musical presentation of a Classical Era Opus. As we keep listening, he's still with us!🙂

    • @alexbuchholz7072
      @alexbuchholz7072 7 месяцев назад +1

      That's not accurate. Mozart was discribed as an extremely kind and friendly man. Very small, and yes, liking a good glass of wine and playing games. But always friendly and helpfull.

    • @DWHarper62
      @DWHarper62 5 месяцев назад

      False... Every biography and history of his life does not portray him thusly...

  • @KenMac-ui2vb
    @KenMac-ui2vb 11 месяцев назад +1

    Well done. Thanks.

  • @steveclapper5424
    @steveclapper5424 4 месяца назад

    Imagine the ego on this !

  • @NichtWunderkind
    @NichtWunderkind 4 месяца назад

    Salieri and Mozart composed a cantata together...
    Per la ricuperata salute di Ofelia

  • @always4eternity1
    @always4eternity1 11 месяцев назад

    actually, it was said that Mozart spent all his days and nightts writing music, in a way, he sacrificed his social life for the talent he had.

  • @trekgreenwood6743
    @trekgreenwood6743 4 месяца назад

    It’s still crazy to think this was a three hour film. It flew by so fast.

  • @sirace6
    @sirace6 10 месяцев назад

    I thoght long and hard but can't think of a movie that is superior to Amadeus
    This movie is the greatest at least to me

  • @speedracer2008
    @speedracer2008 11 месяцев назад

    1:16 I think Salieri missed the part where those people destroyed themselves to achieve their greatness.

  • @box0choco593
    @box0choco593 2 месяца назад

    I LOVE THIS MOVIEEEE

  • @Liam-iv7wk
    @Liam-iv7wk Год назад

    Salieri is Doctor Doofensmertz is to Mozart is to agent P.

  • @dylansaus
    @dylansaus Год назад

    Hi could you take a look at 'as it is in heaven'? :)

  • @stackedpennies4377
    @stackedpennies4377 Год назад

    Watched this as a kid. I admired his self destruction.

  • @p.davidespinosa8688
    @p.davidespinosa8688 5 месяцев назад

    This analysis was indeed genuine... thank you

  • @CordeliaWagner
    @CordeliaWagner Год назад

    Staanzee...
    Mozart's wife was Constanze Mozart.
    Spelled german.
    "Stanzerl" was her nickname by her husband.
    But I appriciate that you includet her.

    • @DWHarper62
      @DWHarper62 5 месяцев назад

      Thankfully, the producers decided not to put in the notion that Constanze would whore herself out in the scene between Constanze and Salieri...

  • @peterthegreat996
    @peterthegreat996 Год назад

    The movie is grossly historically wrong about Mozart and Salerie. They were 2 guys who competed much like Lennon and McCarthy . Salerie never tried to undermine Mozart .

    • @saranemcova5448
      @saranemcova5448 Год назад +3

      It is a movie told through the perspective of aging, senile Salieri.

    • @Window4503
      @Window4503 Год назад

      It was never trying to be historically accurate in the first place. Many people are now generally aware that movie portrayals of historical events take significant creative liberties. No need to get upset.

    • @DWHarper62
      @DWHarper62 5 месяцев назад

      @@Window4503 It was a stage play based on fiction... The movie dresses everyone up in perfect period costumes and sets and the audience is tricked into thinking it is fact... The fact that the movie reduces Mozart to be a laughing hyena is a crime...

  • @mavisward5262
    @mavisward5262 8 месяцев назад

    Can someone please tell me the name of the music played at the end of the movie when the credits were shown. Played on the piano.

    • @marigi2401
      @marigi2401 5 месяцев назад

      Mozart Requiem Mass

    • @lindacowles756
      @lindacowles756 5 месяцев назад +1

      Mozart Piano Concerto #20 in D minor, 2nd movement ( Romanza)

  • @naiman4535
    @naiman4535 Год назад

    God is NOT cruel, arbitrary or malicious in the bestowal of His gifts! How could Mozart be such an unvirtuous and undeserving individual in his personal life, and yet be gifted with such phenomenal musical talent? Reincarnation solves this divine riddle or enigma: Over the course of many previous lifetimes, Mozart developed both his phenomenal musical gifts as well as his glaring defects of personality and character, through constant cultivation, repetition and reinforcement of both. Reincarnation takes the blame off of God and places it squarely on the shoulders of the reincarnating Soul, where it truly belongs.

    • @Window4503
      @Window4503 Год назад

      Or....you could just read Psalm 73 and realize that God isn't contradictory in giving the "undeserving" such talents. Then again, the whole idea of anyone being righteous enough to deserve anything from God (rather than it being a gift freely given) isn't a Christian idea. Reincarnation makes little sense and only adds confusion; if Mozart has glaring defects, he should be diminished in talent and Saliari should have been just as talented because he's more self-disciplined. Death comes only once and then the judgment. The blame goes neither to God nor reincarnation but to bad human philosophies about what is and isn't just, about how God should or shouldn't act.

    • @naiman4535
      @naiman4535 Год назад

      @@Window4503 Ahhh, yes, Hebrews 9:27 - the so-called "proof text" against reincarnation cited by most Christians today, as if by rote, but in this regard, it is very vague and indirect. By contrast, Jesus teaches his disciples very explicitly and directly that Elijah came back as John the Baptist in the Gospel of Matthew - not just once, but twice; just read Matthew 17:10 - 13 and Matthew 11: 13 - 15. This is also echoed in the Gospel of Mark as well. In addition, the scene from Luke's gospel in which Mary pays a prenatal visit to her cousin Elizabeth's house, with Mary newly pregnant with Jesus and Elizabeth about six months pregnant with John the Baptist; the fetus of John the Baptist jumps for joy inside Elizabeth's womb at the arrival of Mary, then pregnant with Jesus. This is Luke giving us a hint that the souls of Jesus and John the Baptist had been close to each other from previous lifetimes; there is other scriptural evidence indicating that, while John had been Elijah, Jesus was Elijah's disciple Elisha who had spiritually perfected himself in that lifetime, so that all that was needed to fully awaken the divine consciousness within Jesus was his baptism by John in the river Jordan. Furthermore, Malachi, the last book of the Old Testament, gives the famous prophecy that God will send Elijah in the great and dreadful day of the Lord. The truth is that for the first five hundred years of Christianity's existence, Christians, like Luke and Matthew, were free to believe in reincarnation if they so chose. Reincarnation, and the doctrine of the pre-existence of Souls upon which it is based, was banned and declared anathema by the Byzantine Emperor Justinian at the Second Council of Constantinople in 553 AD. Justinian's motive? He wanted to strengthen the power and control of the Christian clergy over the souls of their flock, and telling them that this life was their only shot to avoid eternal hell fire and damnation was just the way to do that. Also, at the time, Christianity was systematically persecuting the old Greco-Roman mystery religions out of existence, and guess what - these old religions taught reincarnation; it was all about religious power and control. Origen of Alexandria, who lived in the third century AD, before the ban, was one of the greatest theologians Christianity ever produced, and wrote De Principis, or On First Principles, which was the first comprehensive treatise on Christian theology ever written by a Christian theologian. Origen taught reincarnation and the pre-existence of souls. When it comes to Amadeus, I believe that he has reincarnated as the amazing girl / woman musical prodigy and composer Alma Deutscher - get the similarity of the names? - who is a virtuoso on the piano and the violin, and has composed a lot of music in the classical style. You can google her up on RUclips.

    • @Window4503
      @Window4503 Год назад +1

      @@naiman4535 This whole little essay unfortunately lacks any real historical evidence or arguement. "The truth is that for the first five hundred years of Christianity's existence, Christians, like Luke and Matthew, were free to believe in reincarnation if they so chose."

  • @Joshua-uw7wm
    @Joshua-uw7wm Год назад

    One of my favorite movies that I own

  • @celestekent1236
    @celestekent1236 8 месяцев назад

    Salieri discovers Mozart lives through his music so he schemes to have him create a funeral piece and as it is written Mozart begins to die and by dying creates a great piece of music for death.

    • @DWHarper62
      @DWHarper62 5 месяцев назад

      Requiem was commissioned by someone else who wanted to take credit for the piece...Not Salieri...

    • @celestekent1236
      @celestekent1236 5 месяцев назад

      @@DWHarper62 OK, so there were many other complaints against the film which took liberties with history. This is just one more.

    • @DWHarper62
      @DWHarper62 5 месяцев назад

      @@celestekent1236 Because the film is complete fiction...

  • @magimon91834
    @magimon91834 Год назад

    Great video

  • @zdl1965
    @zdl1965 8 месяцев назад +1

    Genius vs Mediocrity was the moral of the story. Those who were gifted genius were not necessarily the most deserving.

    • @DWHarper62
      @DWHarper62 5 месяцев назад

      In the minds of the average... Who is deserving? And Mozart's character was fiction...