AMADEUS ANALYSIS: PART II

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  • Опубликовано: 28 окт 2024

Комментарии • 65

  • @sully2932
    @sully2932 9 месяцев назад +7

    15:58 I can see how repeating the emperor’s comment could be further indicative of Salieri’s superiority complex, but I also think it’s interesting the way he genuinely seems to smile and chuckle at it along with Mozart. A laugh he normally hates. I think this is one moment where in the face of his idol, he can laugh with him about the emperor, a man he publicly speaks highly of but actually understands is a hack. They both understand this, and joining Mozart in a laugh about it, he can feel as though they are equals. For a brief moment, Salieri can feel close to godliness by laughing along with Mozart and looking down on someone else’s mediocrity.

  • @7and12inchvinyl
    @7and12inchvinyl 9 месяцев назад +6

    Sir you have created one of the fucking greatest RUclips interest features..... outstanding... oh yes can't wait to get to the rest of the parts

  • @milesmartin4958
    @milesmartin4958 6 месяцев назад +9

    Thank you for giving Elizabeth Berrige the praise due. Then and now she gets the short end of the stick but I LOVE her performance in this movie.

  • @beagle8boy
    @beagle8boy 11 месяцев назад +10

    Milos himself spoke of the importance of minor characters and why he took such effort to get them right.

  • @CorinnaReinhold
    @CorinnaReinhold 9 месяцев назад +4

    Yeah. The Showoff Scene. It never gets old, it’s a zinger every single time and I laugh every single time! The editing and zooms here in this video are sending me!
    Regarding 13:24 - I always wondered why Salieri looks so horrified for a split second before he agrees. It always bugged me that I couldn’t work that out. Thanks to you I have closure at last XD Also the Emperor’s 100% relatable ‘frustrated at being coached on musical garnish whilst I'm fighting for my life just sight reading here’ faces get me every time.
    13:58 they’re watching like proud parents at their kid’s first recital XD
    And here’s another reason why Salieri got so far on his mediocre talent whilst Mozart got nowhere: Salieri has people skills and room reading ability. Mozart... not so much.
    Von Swieten is for German - but Rosenberg is pro-Italian, and of course Bonno will agree with anything Rosenberg says - so by the time the chamberlain votes for German, Salieri already knows he’s going to be the deciding vote. You can see the momentary concerned look on his face as he realises. Instead of picking a side, and potentially stepping on the toes of those he votes against, he makes a witty comment that successfully steers the topic away. Contrast Mozart’s immediate “Let it be German!” and now he has Rosenberg & Co. against him for the rest of the movie. It’s not fair, but it’s clearly how this game is played and the poor guy simply had no clue.
    Also the chamberlain and Rosenberg do NOT like each other, and it’s hilarious! Note the little pointed look he gives Rosenberg just before he disagrees with him. lolololololol “Diiiiiid we?” Utter boss bitch move. Gosh I love that man and the bountiful shade he throws!
    This movie is genuinely funnier than some modern actual comedy films!

  • @GallantKnight98
    @GallantKnight98 Год назад +18

    Fantastic series! Amadeus is also one of my favorite films and you nail all the best points. So glad someone is analyzing a film that is this old and underappreciated.

  • @GregorySnipe
    @GregorySnipe Год назад +26

    Great art is never appreciated in it's time. Your videos deserve way more credit. Thank you for your work. ❤

    • @harvestcanada
      @harvestcanada Год назад

      Jeffery Jones, a great actor who tragically destroyed his own career.

    • @miskatoniclibrarian3
      @miskatoniclibrarian3 3 месяца назад +1

      Well..Amadeus did win 8 Oscar's that year.

  • @annettelouise6781
    @annettelouise6781 Год назад +8

    Oh it's supposed to be a movie about Salieri, but they called it Amadeus? Wow that would really annoy Salieri.

  • @donaldschmidt2990
    @donaldschmidt2990 4 месяца назад +1

    The greatest casting of a focal character in cinematic history!! A relative unknown in Hollywood delivered the most compelling performance ever seen on screen. If I were granted a vote for the greatest acting performance of all time, this would have to be it. The dynamic between the two is unmatched in film history. The stern envious Salieri and that "giggling little creature" Mozart. Hulce and Abraham. For one movie at least, a combination like no other.

  • @darklasters_
    @darklasters_ Год назад +6

    Man!, I am a really big fan of this movie and to be honest; you deserve more credit for this analysis. Wonderful work!.

  • @MadiBendy
    @MadiBendy 12 дней назад

    F. Murray Abraham’s description as Salieri of Mozart’s music is the most beautiful description I’ve ever heard ever

  • @leoavantmusic
    @leoavantmusic  Год назад +10

    Part 3 will be out on Sunday!

  • @desrl9390
    @desrl9390 Год назад +9

    Fine analysis of movie personalities and behaviourism indeed. Much appreciated. Your narration-explanation is world class🙏🏾

    • @leoavantmusic
      @leoavantmusic  Год назад

      Thanks! Check out part 3 if you havent already!

  • @cheerios-9464
    @cheerios-9464 Год назад +11

    Just when I thought I was out. They pull me back in

  • @RebeccaETripp
    @RebeccaETripp Год назад +8

    Wow, I'm really enjoying this! I can't wait for the next one!

  • @pchabanowich
    @pchabanowich Год назад +3

    A beautiful homage to a most amazing film - thank you; you worked hard for us!💐

    • @r-leanmygirl-gj2kt
      @r-leanmygirl-gj2kt Год назад

      A film built on Hollywood fabrication with a sprinkling of truth - but only a sprinkling. That said, if anyone deserved the Oscar, it was Tom.

  • @georgiabundick
    @georgiabundick Год назад +1

    i knew i’d be back lurking in the comments :) the meme editing in the show off scene is making me lose my god damn mind

    • @georgiabundick
      @georgiabundick Год назад

      also: another arbitrary parallel but my favorite language to sing in is german, NO QUESTION. so if you can imagine i was over the moon about all the bickering they have over the language

  • @joshuasacco7779
    @joshuasacco7779 Год назад +1

    I love this. This is really fun to watch.

  • @Ekvitarius
    @Ekvitarius 8 месяцев назад +1

    I figured the reason we hear the march of welcome repeated so many times is to get in in the audiences head so that you can clearly hear that Mozart is making a decorated version of it later. Also interesting that the melody sounds like “na na na boo boo”, like, “I’m so much better than you, Salieri”

    • @justinnoble6506
      @justinnoble6506 7 месяцев назад

      Two interesting facts about that scene: it is a homage to when Mozart memorized the sacred Vatican piece (forbidden to be performed outside) and wrote it down, and the piece that Mozart improvises from the March is Non Piu Adrai from Figaro.

  • @pobbob335
    @pobbob335 Год назад +2

    Totally amazing, can't wait for part III. Superb analysis

  • @nekroy3385
    @nekroy3385 Год назад +3

    duuude your videos are very high quality. I expected you to have at least 500k subs. Funny too. Excuse my bad grammer, but English is not my first language, and also I am currently high as hell.

    • @nekroy3385
      @nekroy3385 Год назад +1

      or should I say, as a kite🎉?

    • @leoavantmusic
      @leoavantmusic  Год назад +1

      I been editing and making RUclips videos for years, just had the perfect idea this time round, my last channel is Leonardo J. Oliveira

  • @penguinboygamingtv1650
    @penguinboygamingtv1650 Год назад +4

    This is brilliant stuff! More!

  • @adler923
    @adler923 Год назад

    I watched this film when it first came out right before I went to Juilliard. I was so young, and so enamored, charmed, delighted and saddened by it that my love for Mozart took a different track. Hearing you analyze it and being just as delighted as I was the first time - was such a nostalgic pleasure for me. As if a whole new generation found the complete delight and profound sadness of Mozart's life - and has taken inspiration from it. (btw your comedic timing is perfect)

  • @Officemeds
    @Officemeds Год назад +2

    Thank you sir. You're smart and I know more about Mozart, movies, film analysis and how to really watch, enjoy and get more enjoyment and even enlightenment out of movies. And I also know more about how Spongebob actually inspired the movie Amadeus and how this award winning movie about Mozart is really just an elaborate allegory for everybody's favorite little underwater yellow guy with Vienna as Bikini Bottom, Squidward as Salulari ect. Now I know and knowing accounts for approximately half of all victories gained on the battlefield, or something like that I've heard. Great Job! (And I don't meM that in any tim anberic kind of way either.).

  • @loisjohnson7272
    @loisjohnson7272 Год назад +4

    My favorite movie of all ❤,

  • @fredboat
    @fredboat Год назад +1

    Thanks, Enjoyed, I know I am just a hick from Texas, But I could feel some of the movie. Wolfy was something special. Now doubt.

  • @irodama
    @irodama 8 месяцев назад +2

    i have been enjoying your analysis very much, but i am surprised that you omitted to mention the talent of mozart of hearing sounds or words in a special way ... a scene where mozart is shown playing with words spoken backwards .... i always thought that this "word game scene" is added to show that he must have had a special set of ears. didnt he compose something for 2 violins in which players play the same tune but one's score is turned upside down ?

    • @Ekvitarius
      @Ekvitarius 8 месяцев назад +1

      You might be thinking of Bach’s crab canon on a möbius strip

  • @KeithTingle
    @KeithTingle Год назад +1

    your videos are insightful & quite funny

  • @hawkbirdtree3660
    @hawkbirdtree3660 Год назад

    This analysis is outstanding.

  • @robertbrown380
    @robertbrown380 Год назад +3

    Great stuff. Surprised you didn’t note that the Emperor called Salieri “cattivo” (bad/evil/wicked) when he advocated for Mozart’s patronage.

    • @leoavantmusic
      @leoavantmusic  Год назад

      Is that what it means? I assumed it meant correct hahaha

    • @leoavantmusic
      @leoavantmusic  Год назад

      Thanks I’ll try and work it in as a joke later on

  • @redbloy302
    @redbloy302 7 месяцев назад +1

    That too many notes guy looks like Chandler Bing

  • @pierrebach6161
    @pierrebach6161 Год назад

    The arguing scene about Mozart in Vienna, is a bit more complex Salieri show there intelligence and limits, the emperor can’t really made his mind about music, but he has a political agenda, weakened the bishop-prince and Salieri understand it and respond cleverly but he puts himself in the politicians side of the arguing. He is a Court composer more at ease with intrigue finesse than a Artist driven by an inner need. THX love your work

  • @elias_toivanen
    @elias_toivanen Год назад

    Goddamn. What an analytical eye!

  • @ThomasHaberkorn
    @ThomasHaberkorn Год назад

    Well, there it is.

  • @davedouglass438
    @davedouglass438 Год назад +1

    "I, proud Salieri - I ENVIED!" --A. Pushkin, "Salieri and Mozart."
    Why do folks know who Boswell was, or Schenker?
    Because of their roles as amanuenis to Jonson and Brahms.
    If Salieri - a brilliant ANALYST of music, as surely as he was a mediocre composer - had assigned himself as scribe and analyst of Mozart (a role that Wolfie may have been incapable of, even if he had been less busy DOing it), every music school would be teaching Salieri Analysis.

  • @CongaLineMonkey
    @CongaLineMonkey Год назад +1

    Now I wish that Miloš Forman had directed an episode of Spongebob.

    • @leoavantmusic
      @leoavantmusic  Год назад +1

      Oh for sure, the episode Choir Boys is pretty close

  • @baguettegott3409
    @baguettegott3409 4 месяца назад

    Elizabeth Berrige really is perfect for the role. But I will say, seeing this movie for the first time as a teenager, I found her very distracting! She's just so cute, in part due to how she's styled and acts in this role.

  • @marconea9715
    @marconea9715 Год назад +4

    very clever analysis!

  • @NR-rv8rz
    @NR-rv8rz Год назад +1

    Salieri didn't want to speak to God. He wanted God to speak to him.
    He did love music and was a greater composer than 99.9% of all people, but he didn't have the true divine touch that the likes of Mozart, Bach and Beethoven had.
    Salieri (the movie version) didn't serve his art, he didn't sacrifice himself for his art as a true artist does. instead he used his art to glorify himself.
    He didn't even want to be a channel for God from a love for God either. He wanted to feel superior to others and special.
    If he loved art more than himself, then he would have swallowed his pride and helped God use Mozart.
    Interestingly, even after Mozart died, the real Salieri was still a very respected figure and Beethoven use to go to him for music lessons even when Beethoven was already a celebrated composer.

  • @jayssonglist9466
    @jayssonglist9466 7 месяцев назад

    Funny. I always felt Saleri was being passive aggressive or manipulative when first asked about Mozart by the emperor. By mentioning infuriating the Salzburg king I thought he was being slick to keep the emperor from employing Mozart.

  • @mrav8r
    @mrav8r Год назад +1

    Salieri’s welcome music for the emperor turns into a corrupted welcome music for Mozart, Salieri’s skill ruined by both the emperor and by Mozart.

  • @vegetasayajin967
    @vegetasayajin967 Год назад

    زۆربە داخەوە ئەو فیلمە هەڵەیە بیر لەشتێکی تر بکەنەوە و دروستی کەن باشترە

    • @sassyboy99
      @sassyboy99 4 месяца назад

      what do you mean

  • @IcarusLhooq-bc7uq
    @IcarusLhooq-bc7uq 7 месяцев назад +1

    You mey ahe odne Aai here . Consatanza . Wa stagta joke or did AI find that pic ?

  • @sassyboy99
    @sassyboy99 4 месяца назад

    DUDE 15:53 I died laughing