History Buffs: Amadeus

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  • Опубликовано: 14 янв 2025

Комментарии • 7 тыс.

  • @ericjamieson
    @ericjamieson 6 лет назад +6515

    Ironically this movie actually sparked something of a revival of Salieri's music; he'd been largely forgotten but performances and recordings of his music increased dramatically after its release.

    • @Hollylivengood
      @Hollylivengood 5 лет назад +216

      Yes, NPR did a series of Saliery's pieces, and it was the first I had heard them. He was no Mozart, but they were beautiful.

    • @ChescoYT
      @ChescoYT 5 лет назад +10

      @@Hollylivengood got a link?

    • @Hollylivengood
      @Hollylivengood 5 лет назад +69

      @@ChescoYT No link, I heard it on the NPR radio station. The classical hour is managed mostly by music students, and one of them put together a compilation. I'm pretty ignorant of classical music, though I like it a lot. I really didn't know much about Saliery except from the movie. So it was a surprise.

    • @ChescoYT
      @ChescoYT 5 лет назад +12

      @@Hollylivengood tnx for your response! :)

    • @jgw5491
      @jgw5491 5 лет назад +32

      I can only remember seeing a live performance of a Salieri concerto once. I only hope that it was just a piss poor effort by the conductor because it was about the most boring piece of classical music I've ever heard.

  • @fruzsimih7214
    @fruzsimih7214 3 года назад +3370

    Salieri was married, had tons of children, was a faithful Catholic until his death, he didn't hate Mozart and he was a great teacher. He was almost the opposite of the character presented in the movie. (I still love the movie very much.)

    • @paulandreig.sahagun34
      @paulandreig.sahagun34 3 года назад +175

      He also teaches piano for children, for free.

    • @doboldast3608
      @doboldast3608 3 года назад +76

      You got it all wrong it’s supposed to show his mind what others can’t see

    • @ingevonschneider5100
      @ingevonschneider5100 3 года назад +170

      Most importantly: He didnt plot killing Mozart.

    • @gerdanagy
      @gerdanagy 3 года назад +91

      Salieri was Franz Liszt 's composition teacher. Free, because Liszt and his father was very poor. Liszt wasn' t go to the Conservatoire, because he was foreign. And Cherubini was the boss... Very bad composer

    • @gerdanagy
      @gerdanagy 3 года назад +17

      But Mozart really was a genius. Salieri is grey.

  • @willh3972
    @willh3972 4 года назад +1917

    The scene of Salieri beautifully internalizing Mozart's music from notes on paper alone is wonderful. The ability to do that in the age before recorded sound is incredible to me.

    • @EricToTheScionti
      @EricToTheScionti 4 года назад +57

      If youve ever tried to learn to read music too...ffs its hard.

    • @adm_ezri
      @adm_ezri 4 года назад +80

      it's one thing to hear a single part, but all together? to do so on that level is not as easy as reading music.

    • @caesarspeaks
      @caesarspeaks 4 года назад +21

      One of my friends was able to figure out when I showed him really well known pieces like from Star Wars and I was super impressed

    • @mcmarkmarkson7115
      @mcmarkmarkson7115 4 года назад +10

      Some have brain failures that allow them to memorize things much easier. I say failure because it's not healthy nor normal. But it does allow you to do some cool stuff without wasting time.

    • @floxy20
      @floxy20 4 года назад +41

      Beethoven composed music while deaf. It's not difficult for a genius. For them it's like reading a poem silently.

  • @lonjohnson5161
    @lonjohnson5161 2 года назад +3299

    I find it ironic that a video about a movie about a music composer should be plagued with sound problems.

    • @christrontherobot4100
      @christrontherobot4100 2 года назад +479

      They aren't sound problems, its probably censored for copyright

    • @pjrslater
      @pjrslater 2 года назад +84

      @@christrontherobot4100 That's good to know. I don't care if I'm missing music so long as it's not commentary (there have been a few instances of silence from some of these videos.
      Nope :( it does cut off commentary (I guess due to the music in the background). Either RUclips are just dicks about this or it's a clever ploy to convince people to sign up to Nebula (on that site the video plays the commentary audio with the musical background)!

    • @ACancino
      @ACancino 2 года назад +19

      Even the last part where he praises Salieri?!

    • @HiddenPrior
      @HiddenPrior 2 года назад +20

      I thought the silence was on purpose

    • @djangofett3266
      @djangofett3266 2 года назад +59

      @@pjrslater I watched this before and it did have sound for all those scenes.

  • @smitty3624
    @smitty3624 5 лет назад +3504

    I didn't find out until after I'd seen it that this movie was made in fucking 1984. It looks like it could have been made in the last decade, easily. An absolutely timeless masterpiece.

    • @livispuzzled
      @livispuzzled 4 года назад +123

      that’s what i thought! if i knew that some of these actors are in their 50’s/60’s now i’d swear this was like 2016

    • @Alexromero
      @Alexromero 4 года назад +114

      Smitty yeah , it Definitely look like a 90s film even early 2000s. Everything about Wolfgang is Times

    • @alirezamohsenpour5160
      @alirezamohsenpour5160 4 года назад +30

      Yea i was think this made in 2005 or year near

    • @k.stacey7389
      @k.stacey7389 4 года назад +49

      1984 was an EPIC year for movies. That Amadeus won best picture speaks more during that year than normal.

    • @Doctor_Straing_Strange
      @Doctor_Straing_Strange 4 года назад +14

      not really, the quality of the video and audio is clearly outdated, as well as the camera movements, which are typical of the 80’s. You know those slow and long shots that aren’t very common anymore. It’s clearly a movie from the 80's

  • @sarahhales1505
    @sarahhales1505 4 года назад +3347

    Tom Hulce (Mozart), has said in interviews when asked about the irritating giggle he used for the film, that he has never been able to produce that sound again. He doesn’t know why, he just can’t.

    • @depressispaghetti3535
      @depressispaghetti3535 3 года назад +586

      The spirit of Mozart possessed him maybe

    • @danialyousaf6456
      @danialyousaf6456 3 года назад +146

      Dunno why I find that hilarious.

    • @robertoblanko7196
      @robertoblanko7196 3 года назад +294

      I think if you get asked non stop to giggle like him you will get annoyed and start lying

    • @gperrin9050
      @gperrin9050 3 года назад +298

      More likely he can but tells people he can't to avoid getting asked to do it all the time, Imagine sitting at a table at a nice quiet restaurant and some nob at the table asking you to 'do the laugh'

    • @soulknight5330
      @soulknight5330 3 года назад +154

      @@gperrin9050 "Do the roar"

  • @InvernomutoUC79
    @InvernomutoUC79 5 лет назад +3479

    One small detail that you forgot to include in the video is that Mozart and Salieri where so amicable towards each other that Salieri was the music teacher of Franz Xavier Mozart, the son of Amadeus.

    • @trojanette8345
      @trojanette8345 5 лет назад +106

      Good one. I didn't know about this one myself.

    • @iowaclass5657
      @iowaclass5657 5 лет назад +381

      Imagine though, how sad it might have been for Salieri. Franz was only 5 months old when Mozart died. Imagine teaching the son of your brilliant friend, ow deceased, and seeing that while the son does have talent, he is nothing compared to his father, your old friend.

    • @pablobarrios7681
      @pablobarrios7681 5 лет назад +6

      @@badrm9175 why do you think that?

    • @gordondonaldson4752
      @gordondonaldson4752 5 лет назад +76

      It was later determined that Mozart’s son Franz finished his renown in finished Requiem Mass that he never finished when he died, and under the direction of Salieri 🤔

    • @jduff59
      @jduff59 5 лет назад +81

      Salieri and Mozart even composed together on at least one occasion, and Salieri also taught Lizt and Louie Van B. That movie got so much wrong, but it was amusing.

  • @tripsitter987
    @tripsitter987 3 года назад +462

    If a kid hears they are going to watch a movie about Mozart, they'd probably imagine it being boring af. Then they watch this amazing gem. Happens everytime

    • @CaptainDar
      @CaptainDar 2 года назад +13

      I had to watch it twice in grade school; the only thing that really stuck with me was the laugh. XD I really should watch it again.

    • @Justme77400
      @Justme77400 Год назад +2

      Both my boys watched it when they were young teenagers. They both loved it.

    • @ChristopherFodor
      @ChristopherFodor Год назад

      Plus titties

    • @BraneiacStringTheorist
      @BraneiacStringTheorist Год назад +1

      Ive been a mozart fan since childhood

    • @reginaldforthright805
      @reginaldforthright805 Год назад +1

      And they conclude it to be utterly boring and go back to watching Harold Lloyd shorts

  • @NoxAtlas
    @NoxAtlas 4 года назад +333

    "Amadeus" is quite a clever movie. It's not meant to be a biography of Mozart. It's a story told by Salieri who went crazy and now has to tell the story from his perspective. If you consider that, the story is naturally biased. On the surface it looks like Salieri never gets any recognition and Mozart is the all-loved genius that gets so much praise. That's because Salieri is the narrator of the story. What we actually see is something completely different: Salieri is highly respected by everyone and the emperor prefers his work over Mozart's. Mozart is the eccentric oddball nobody respects and even though people acknowledge his talent, they always look down on him because of his weird humor and crazy antics.

    • @alecromera6865
      @alecromera6865 4 года назад +6

      love your take on it!!

    • @jenniferschillig3768
      @jenniferschillig3768 4 года назад +35

      Good points re: Salieri's unreliability as a narrator. However, the point is made in the play (not quite so much in the movie) that it wasn't fame or renown that was the issue. In the play, Salieri points out that he was more famous, more acclaimed, certainly wealthier than Mozart...but it was no consolation to him, because he KNEW that all this acclaim was for work he knew to be inferior...and he was the only one who realized it.

    • @Contributron
      @Contributron 2 года назад +3

      I never really thought about that. Damn that makes me love this movie even more.

    • @IronicSonics
      @IronicSonics 2 года назад +4

      That also makes sense that in his dementia addled mind, perhaps the rumours of his hate for Mozart affected the recollections of events, when he clearly supported mozart and his son, he doesnt remember that element of his life. As if the made up story of a deadly rivalry overrode the true events driving him to suicide.

    • @NoxAtlas
      @NoxAtlas 2 года назад +1

      @@IronicSonics Well, it's confirmed that Salieri claimed to be responsible for Mozart's death although he wasn't the masked man. So I think it's possible that he indeed forgot that he used to be on very good terms with Mozart and supported him. Instead he came to believe they were enemies. Who knows how Salieri came to this conclusion. My guess is that he was envious of Mozart's talent but never gave into this feeling and instead was good friends with him. Mozart's death certainly had an impact on him. And when his dementia became worse, he mixed everything up and came to believe that he killed Mozart because he was controlled by envy and bitterness.

  • @419Films
    @419Films 8 лет назад +5619

    Steven Spielberg decides that he wants to make a movie about famous composers. He puts out a casting call.
    Tom Hulce walks in first and says, "I played Mozart in _Amadeus_, and would love to play him again."
    Next, Gary Oldman calls. "I was Beethoven in _Immortal Beloved_, so I already have experience playing the part."
    Arnold Schwarzenegger meets with him, and states, "I'll be Bach."

    • @419Films
      @419Films 8 лет назад +172

      Go right ahead. It's one of the few jokes of mine that even my wife finds funny. ;-)

    • @Alderite
      @Alderite 7 лет назад +10

      Lol!!!! :3

    • @johannsebastianbach7370
      @johannsebastianbach7370 7 лет назад +105

      This comment deserves way more likes.

    • @jessekaartinen
      @jessekaartinen 7 лет назад +5

      David Loewen Good one m8 :D

    • @MrOnlyzohaib
      @MrOnlyzohaib 7 лет назад +8

      nice

  • @zshakur
    @zshakur 5 лет назад +437

    I loved that silly ass giggle...my fav parts of the movie. Side bar: Abraham stole EVERY scene he was in. His scenes describing Mozart's compositions were breath taking.

    • @laurencelance586
      @laurencelance586 5 лет назад +1

      Me too!

    • @manco828
      @manco828 5 лет назад +3

      Omar Suarez, this garbage was identified to me as an informer for the police.

    • @brookebowers3529
      @brookebowers3529 5 лет назад +1

      mimine too excellence!

    • @malorie8557
      @malorie8557 5 лет назад +6

      Absolutely agree. I seriously watch this movie just for his story telling. He did a phenomenal job.

    • @GazoonTight1
      @GazoonTight1 4 года назад +2

      manco82 “All right! All right, big man? You wanna make some big bucks? Lets see how tough you are. Do you know something 'bout cocaine?”
      -Antonio Salieri

  • @emid5726
    @emid5726 3 года назад +70

    I could not move from my seat when I first saw this movie in the theater in 1984. I was drenched in tears but felt joy and also haunted. I’ve never experienced that kind of emotion from the movie before and never experienced again to this day. Timeless classic at its best.

    • @klaustoth6982
      @klaustoth6982 2 года назад +2

      yes, the music is so overwhelmingly beautiful and human and deep, full of deep understanding for the human nature... it frees your heart and takes it on a trip to heaven. mozart's music has the magic power to speak directly to the centre of the human soul. (when i was young i began my musical journey with beatles and janis and doors, delta blues, rock n roll. today i'm listening to music from all around the world, still love and listen rock music for many hours daily, but i've also become a regular and enthusiastic visitor of the opera. i need music in my life to feel good, it's a longing for beauty that becomes ever stronger as i grow older.) regards from austria.

    • @kallekas8551
      @kallekas8551 5 месяцев назад

      Me too…and I was 13.🥳

  • @cristianguzman9335
    @cristianguzman9335 6 лет назад +6054

    I feel like Squidward is loosely based off of Salieri

    • @lukasschneider5181
      @lukasschneider5181 6 лет назад +183

      Just what I thought just what I thought

    • @franceshelton5809
      @franceshelton5809 6 лет назад +193

      Holy shit

    • @AirRice
      @AirRice 6 лет назад +583

      and Mozart is like Spongebob.... Even an annoying giggle to boot..

    • @midnitesnac
      @midnitesnac 6 лет назад +332

      @@AirRice wasn't there also a scene when spongebob went on stage everyone cheered him? Then when Squidward went on they all were silent. lmao

    • @AxioProductions
      @AxioProductions 6 лет назад +60

      That makes so much sense

  • @johannesnoordermeer
    @johannesnoordermeer 4 года назад +2747

    I thought they portrayed him like a rock star, which made perfect sense to me.

    • @SirBrass
      @SirBrass 3 года назад +143

      That's exactly what they were in their time.

    • @pawelpap9
      @pawelpap9 3 года назад +48

      @@SirBrass You are absolutely wrong. To fully understand and appreciate Mozart’s music (and any serious composer of his time) takes musical education and some effort. His main target audience and supporters were aristocracy and upper middle classes. Some of his output had popular appeal, but most could be fully appreciated only by playing it.

    • @pawelpap9
      @pawelpap9 3 года назад +48

      Mozart was a rock star in the same sense as Philip Glass or Leonard Bernstein. The portrait in the movie was made to make him accessible and understandable to punk music aficionados.

    • @billvolk4236
      @billvolk4236 3 года назад +56

      Come and rock me, Amadeus

    • @wren_bean
      @wren_bean 3 года назад +22

      "Amadeus" was one of several films that inspired me to study opera, and Mozart's vocal pieces remain some of my very favorite. "Zauberflöte" was my first opera and what can I say? I was enchanted to say the least. I read about Pushkin's play and the rumour that plagued Salieri before his death, I'm glad someone took the time to make a video essay about it. This was lovely, thank you for sharing!

  • @eddyshepherd5885
    @eddyshepherd5885 5 лет назад +1838

    I love the scene where Mozart's mother in law is yelling at him and the scene transitions to the Night Queen Aria from "The Magic Flute". I had to pause the movie to laugh a good five minutes the first time I saw it.
    Edit: wow 1.7k likes, that's pretty crazy, thanks everyone.
    And to Tarsantino, learn to have a sense of humor, don't spoil other people's fun. I still think that Scene is hilarious!

    • @progress2913
      @progress2913 4 года назад +9

      Mr. Animation omg me too 😂😂😂😂😂😂

    • @nursebridgie
      @nursebridgie 4 года назад +2

      Mr. Animation 😂😂😂😂😂

    • @TonyTars
      @TonyTars 4 года назад +17

      If that scene gave you anything more than a chuckle you're dumb. If you actually had to pause and laugh your ass off for five minutes, you have some form of disability.

    • @Eirikr69
      @Eirikr69 4 года назад +114

      @@TonyTars it's a great transition and a funny scene, seems you're the dumb one who doesn't understand that humour is subjective - and that not everyone has to share your sense of it!

    • @thefreddman7771
      @thefreddman7771 4 года назад +16

      @@Eirikr69 He phrased pretty crudely, but he isn't wrong. Five full minutes of maniacal laughter is not an adequate response to a humourus transition between scenes.

  • @ChrisMhiclochlainn
    @ChrisMhiclochlainn 3 года назад +103

    I am one of those hardcore Mozart fans, I’ve been playing his music since I was 12, and I love the portrayal of Mozart in this film. I really think it’s close to accurate. He was a bonafide genius but with most geniuses they have serious character flaws. I can’t imagine having a childhood like his. It was written that when his father realized this God given miracle in his son he had a duty not only as a father but as a teacher to share it. Hence the years of touring Europe with short breaks home from age 5 to 17. But through all that he composed over 800 pieces of music in his short 35 years of life. Mozart’s music is still fun and challenging to play, and his Requiem always brings me to tears.

    • @ChrisMhiclochlainn
      @ChrisMhiclochlainn 3 года назад +6

      @@teresagardiner153 I don't see it as one sided, I think the writers and Tom Hulce really made a complex character for this film. Over the top at time yes, but in context they had to portray years of Mozart's life in a 2 hour movie. We know he like to spend money on elegant clothes and wigs, he liked to play practical jokes on his friends, his surviving letters show he had a vulgarity about him, he would spend hours isolated working on pieces and was extremely devoted to his work. I think it would be foolish to say that he didn't suffer from bouts of depression, some of his music is almost evidence enough of that. Only 2 of his 6 children survived infancy, basically no one in either family approved of his marriage to Constanze and we know from letters his father's death was a big blow to him. He was described as a devoted Catholic, wrote many religious pieces, and the movie only touches on that a little bit with his Requiem Mass. But personally I think they did a good job portraying his character in Amadeus.

    • @alexanderg1297
      @alexanderg1297 Год назад +1

      Who asked

    • @porchmanthree1339
      @porchmanthree1339 Год назад +4

      @@alexanderg1297 I did

    • @aracelymoran2504
      @aracelymoran2504 Год назад +2

      @@teresagardiner153 Agreed.

    • @aracelymoran2504
      @aracelymoran2504 Год назад +1

      @@teresagardiner153 Very good post.

  • @EdwardTCBlake
    @EdwardTCBlake 3 года назад +1504

    That choir of school children has greater constitution and self control than a lot of people I know.

    • @Ballin4Vengeance
      @Ballin4Vengeance 3 года назад +65

      Training the new generation of musical shitposters to join pirate metal, Mozart and Pepper Coyote

    • @PCgamer923
      @PCgamer923 3 года назад +50

      I learned about mozart's scat fetish around the time this video came out but to see a choir of school children sing about it...is disturbing to say the least, like what was that school thinking... Amadeus is a great film about a great man regardless none the less pushing music forward. There as never been a great artist who wasn't outside the norm of society.

    • @mr.pavone9719
      @mr.pavone9719 3 года назад +27

      I wonder if they were singing phonetically? I could learn the lyrics to a German song but have no idea what the words mean.

    • @nozecone
      @nozecone 3 года назад +33

      @@mr.pavone9719 Exactly - I'm assuming they're not-German-speakers. Maybe the choir director as well?

    • @beatrizcordero1412
      @beatrizcordero1412 3 года назад +12

      The Catalan text shown behind is not the translation. But I think they must understand something of what they are singing. Someone must speak german among all of them.

  • @77thNYSV
    @77thNYSV 4 года назад +634

    In other words, Mozart was a musical genius who would fit right into the typical college frat house.

    • @azcello
      @azcello 3 года назад +25

      Well the actor did star in Animal House.

    • @lucaswood9624
      @lucaswood9624 2 года назад +7

      I see what you did there.

    • @Wizzler2112
      @Wizzler2112 2 года назад +4

      Or 80s hair metal band...

  • @umie66
    @umie66 5 лет назад +681

    Amadeus was one of the best movies ever made, even if the story isn't really accurate. Tom Hulce deserved an Oscar too.

    • @piper888
      @piper888 5 лет назад +3

      Milos!!

    •  5 лет назад +1

      D Umie
      It swept
      8 awards

    • @NevxrBackDown
      @NevxrBackDown 5 лет назад +16

      Hulce was great however F. Murray Abraham definitely had the standout performance.

    • @brookebowers3529
      @brookebowers3529 5 лет назад +7

      YES MILOS FORMAN REALLY DID GOOD! DARE I SAY HIS BEST FILM ? and TOM HULCE !!! SO UNDRERATED !

    • @jackjohn4882
      @jackjohn4882 5 лет назад +9

      The story isn't accurate because it wasn't necessary for it to be. it's an artistic creation, not a documentary.

  • @PeterSmith-go9ef
    @PeterSmith-go9ef 26 дней назад +2

    This film is an absolute joy. Peter Shaffer`s decision to construct a struggle to the death between Appolonian and Dionysian spirits is brilliantly conceived. As one artist nears his apogee the other approaches his vanishing point, F Murray Abraham`s portrayal of a man consumed with jealously, yet slain by worship, is one of the finest portrayals in cinema history. Tom Hulce is a wonderful foil for him, and in a scintilating script bristling with tart dialogue Mozart has my favourite line "Who would you rather listen to, Hercules or your hairdresser?"

  • @cgross82
    @cgross82 8 лет назад +2043

    As a music historian, I say to you, well done! You got your facts right!

    • @HistoryBuffs
      @HistoryBuffs  8 лет назад +236

      Thanks very much Ernest! I try my best during my research. It can be difficult with only having a few weeks to do it. But thank you for validating my work. :)

    • @lorenzolodge9535
      @lorenzolodge9535 8 лет назад +47

      History Buffs thank you for being on RUclips
      I love your stuff.

    • @electroshock5501
      @electroshock5501 8 лет назад +18

      History Buffs Wow that Salieri vs Mozart part was ironic. Salieri taught Beethoven but Beethoven's musical hero was Mozart, not only that, Beethoven was more skilled in music than Mozart (not my opinion, go look it up on the internet).

    • @cgross82
      @cgross82 8 лет назад +162

      Actually, one cannot really say that either Beethoven or W.A. Mozart was more skilled than the other. They were different, like any two individuals are. Beethoven had to struggle to produce his works; we have many of his surviving sketchbooks which show how he worked and reworked every theme, every movement. Mozart tended to be a natural, effortlessly composing, although we now have some of his sketchbooks that have been discovered more recently. Mozart's challenges seemed to have been in more mundane things, such as money management. Beethoven, on the other hand, left a sizable estate when he died. They were both great musical geniuses, and the world is better off for both of them having lived, but to say one was more skilled than the other is just not something that can be proven or casually posted on the internet. Please do not believe everything you read there.

    • @karlakor
      @karlakor 8 лет назад +27

      I am curious to know where on the Internet you learned that Beethoven was more skilled than Mozart. Unfortunately, people who do not know any better will read your post and take it as fact.

  • @Serai3
    @Serai3 7 лет назад +379

    One of the greatest details of this movie has to do with Mozart's giggle. It's fantastic, and fits what was written about him at the time, that he had an incredibly irritating laugh. But the amazing thing is that it wasn't _Hulce's_ giggle, but _Mozart's._ When Forman was editing the finished footage and got to the end, he realized he needed another laugh from Mozart. So he got Hulce to come in and record one, but they found he could no longer do the laugh. He'd lost it when he'd left the character, so Forman had to mine one of the laughs from earlier in the film. It was a mannerism that belonged only to the character. I find that fascinating.

    • @DoctorZisIN
      @DoctorZisIN 6 лет назад +36

      I find fascinating that Mark Hammill was playing Amadeus in theaters and wanted to audition for the movie, but Milos didn't want big celebrities distracting from the story. Imagine Amadeus with the Joker's laugh.

    • @thewilytroutesq5260
      @thewilytroutesq5260 5 лет назад +14

      ??? My friend Kelly worked with Tom Hulce when he was starring in Kramer's "The Normal Heart" in London, and although he was probably sick and tired of being asked to "laugh like Mozart," he was perfectly able to do so, and occasionally would, if asked.

    • @Atlas65
      @Atlas65 4 года назад +5

      Im pretty sure that I saw another film with Tom Hulce where he has the exact same laughter. I was surprised. I thought to my self. "Ok so Motzart's laughter in Amadeus is simply Tom Hulce's laughter".

    • @angelicart.6
      @angelicart.6 4 года назад

      @@thewilytroutesq5260 It had been an honour for your friend I guess 🥺

    • @angelicart.6
      @angelicart.6 4 года назад +2

      You mean that literally *WOLFY* had this “irritating” laugh? (I don’t find it irritating 😕)

  • @Zajin13
    @Zajin13 8 лет назад +396

    If you don't understand German you will never grasp the amazing feeling when you are visiting family abroad, they take you to a school perfomance and it's proudly proclaimed that the choir will now sing "Leck mir den Arsch fein recht schön sauber" by Mozart. I couldn't bear the whole session as i broke out in laughter and draw the attention of all the proud and angered parents. My uncle joined in though, once i had enough breath to explain the situation to him. :,D

    • @stormxlr
      @stormxlr 8 лет назад +4

      could you explain why its funny? Im not german and you got my curiosity picked

    • @Zajin13
      @Zajin13 8 лет назад +55

      Stormxlr "Leck mir den Arsch fein recht schön sauber" means "Lick my ass nice and clean" in German. ;)

    • @stormxlr
      @stormxlr 8 лет назад +2

      Zajin13
      cool thanks, should have googled it myself :D

    • @charlestonho6733
      @charlestonho6733 8 лет назад +36

      So how those angry family and choir react when they found out the title they sing?

    • @StephySon
      @StephySon 8 лет назад +28

      Oh my god if American parents realized that was being sung if they chose a Mozart song to be sung in an auditorium haha that is some funny shit XD

  • @ogenevieve
    @ogenevieve 3 года назад +49

    As an artist, I love how they showed both sides of creativity. The feeling of being a creative genius and the utter hatred of self when hearing someone else create an undeniably beautiful song or work of art.

  • @Rellik165
    @Rellik165 6 лет назад +544

    Historically, yes, the Salieri vs Mozart thing was complete fiction, but in the context of a standalone film, it makes a wonderfully compelling story of a man who tries to do good becoming possessed by his worse nature. For who WOULDN'T be mad if they poured their heart and soul into something just to have it be overshadowed by someone just coasting along?
    That bit about Salieri having dimentia is also interesting, as the entire film is told from his point of view as this ailing old man. Who knows how much of it is true, and whether or not he is subconsciously believing the rumors himself?

    • @zeemanshuai2652
      @zeemanshuai2652 5 лет назад +4

      Rellik165 the reason I think the movie portrayed Slieri vs Mozart is in the movie is because Salieri was jealous because Mozart just outclassed Salieri with his natural talent and gifts.

    • @yanair2091
      @yanair2091 5 лет назад +2

      Salieri had dementia in real life, not in the movie. In the movie he is confessing, so speaking the truth.

    • @ZeldaZonk-zt8fr
      @ZeldaZonk-zt8fr 5 лет назад +7

      @@zeemanshuai2652
      No, really ?
      And you came up to this conclusion by yourself, or did you think about it with friends ? 🤔

    • @AmbyJeans
      @AmbyJeans 5 лет назад +12

      Yan Air
      No they're not saying whether Salieri's dementia was fictional or not, they're saying that the movie may have been him mis-remembering things due to his dementia.

    • @dkupke
      @dkupke 5 лет назад

      Frank Grimes: You better watch your back Homer Simpson, from now on we’re enemies!

  • @Captain-Jinn
    @Captain-Jinn 7 лет назад +231

    Also, Mozart was only like 6 years younger than Salieri, so while the age gap works great for the film (experience vs natural skill, etc) it puts a lot more of a difference between the two than there actually was.

    • @stephencecil6809
      @stephencecil6809 6 лет назад +8

      Captain Jin in the beginning I thought they made it clear that they didn’t have that much of a gap in age. Maybe that was just me

    • @sirknight4981
      @sirknight4981 6 лет назад +19

      Yeah the quote(that I don't really remember but will now paraphrase), "while I was playing childish games, he was playing for kings and emperors, and even the pope in Rome!", shows that they were pretty much peers in age.

  • @CasaVipera
    @CasaVipera 5 лет назад +1096

    Holy shit.
    Once the choir started singing it took me 2 seconds before the lyrics sank in (I can speak German)
    I 've been laughing my head off for a good 15 minutes now.. No words for it, absolutely no words.. Tears down my face.. I just can't stop laughing..
    Thanks Mozart.

    • @fload46d
      @fload46d 5 лет назад +13

      Bona Nox is another Mozart canon that is very vulgar (and very entertaining).

    • @Einnor084
      @Einnor084 5 лет назад +3

      Joseph Kretschmer
      Y did he ntertain such vulgarity, within piecez of such BEAUTY?

    • @_Feanor_.
      @_Feanor_. 5 лет назад +3

      Holy shit. Only after reading your post about you being german did I go back to that part and watch it again. Totally didn't even pick up the first time that they're singing in german.

    • @What-go8ng
      @What-go8ng 5 лет назад +17

      can understand "mein arsch"
      "I speak German"

    • @nancyomalley9959
      @nancyomalley9959 5 лет назад +13

      Some of the kids' faces looked horrified-as if they KNEW what they were singing

  • @craig1479
    @craig1479 3 года назад +30

    I agree that the scene with Scalieri discussing Mozart's work is one of the best in cinematic history. I think the film was great. I also appreciate the thorough nature of this documentary. Very well put together. New subscriber.

  • @nickpastorino5370
    @nickpastorino5370 5 лет назад +32

    I can't believe the AFI took this film off the 100 greatest American films list. It's easily one of the best films I've ever seen and it never gets old.

  • @michaelinminn
    @michaelinminn 5 лет назад +731

    MAYBE, just maybe, someone will make a movie titled:
    "Salieri, friend of Mozart."

    • @demmybane
      @demmybane 5 лет назад +17

      I’d watch it

    • @reya0913
      @reya0913 5 лет назад +6

      Hold my beer

    • @Simp4Gwyn
      @Simp4Gwyn 5 лет назад

      Cool premise but change the title

    • @lokmanmerican6889
      @lokmanmerican6889 4 года назад +2

      Hear, hear. But it wouldn't have that giggle, though.

    • @eoinmurphy7998
      @eoinmurphy7998 4 года назад +12

      Or maybe a comedy about their friendship where they work together "Mozart and Salieri , Lads on Tour"

  • @GuyAtTheSix
    @GuyAtTheSix 4 года назад +195

    Watched this movie recently, what a masterpiece. Abraham 's acting was superb!

    • @elphaba4674
      @elphaba4674 3 года назад +1

      He won an Oscar for it! 🤘

    • @shimmeringreflection
      @shimmeringreflection 3 года назад +4

      No doubt, but it's incredibly important that Hulce played Mozart exactly the way he did too The movie wouldn't have worked if everyone was trying to win an Oscar. As a side note, funny how no matter how brilliantly you play a miscreant (Hulce) you won't get an Oscar.

    • @steveaustin2686
      @steveaustin2686 2 года назад +1

      Richard Frank as Father Vogler did a wonderful job with the reactions to Salieri's story. Watching his descent into misery over the course of the movie is just soo good.

  • @nbenefiel
    @nbenefiel Год назад +12

    The Magic Flute. I saw it first years ago when the Metropolitan Opera used the Chagall sets. I will never forget it

  • @fiveorsixgirls
    @fiveorsixgirls 5 лет назад +92

    Amadeus is one of my favorite films-i cry my eyes out starting with the part where Salieri is pushing Mozart to finish the Requium , till the end "mediocrities of the world, I absolve you."
    It is a brilliant and perfect masterpiece. Your review was outstanding! So so interesting. I've seen Amadeus a thousand times and always wanted to know. Thank you so much.

  • @ThePa1riot
    @ThePa1riot 8 лет назад +334

    You know that's really kind of sad. To not only be wrongly remembered for killing a friend, but wrongly remembered for having hated your friend enough to do it.

    • @captainkev10
      @captainkev10 6 лет назад +14

      Anthony Clay Imagine how King Macbeth feels. Lol

    • @tuberebel8706
      @tuberebel8706 6 лет назад +1

      Anthony Clay mate friend jeez you have not yet been acquainted with the night

    • @alexandresobreiramartins9461
      @alexandresobreiramartins9461 6 лет назад +16

      He is not. Only ignorant people today think this movie is historically accurate.

    • @olivtrees8749
      @olivtrees8749 6 лет назад +5

      No way. This script is a masterpiece! I'd find it hard to believe that Salieri who was an artist himself wouldn't have absolutely loved it. He likely would've been honored. Besides the majority know that this story is fictional.

    • @brettd2308
      @brettd2308 6 лет назад +11

      Evian Things I would definitely cast doubt on the "majority know that this story is fictional" thing. Most people tend to accept dramatized history as "that's how it actually was" even though experts know better. You see this kind of thing with military history *all the time*, but a perfect music history example is Bach's popular Minuet in G Major, BWV Anh. 114.
      It wasn't actually composed by Bach. It was composed by Christian Petzhold. Any serious pianist or music historian knows this, but practically any sheet music book or casual performance of the piece will credit it to Bach instead because most people think he wrote it. Decades of misattribution and the fact that no one knows who Christian Petzhold is while everyone knows Bach means that publishers and performers tend to stick the well-known name on there to appeal to people.

  • @sunlightpictures8367
    @sunlightpictures8367 5 лет назад +304

    I love "Amadeus". Tom Hulce is a very underrated actor. F. Murray Abraham was fantastic as Salieri.

    • @douglasvilledarling2935
      @douglasvilledarling2935 4 года назад

      I agree he was amazing in that film. One of my favorite movies

    • @LucyLioness100
      @LucyLioness100 4 года назад +6

      You’ve got to wonder how the Academy had to choose between those two since Hulce and Abraham were in contention for Best Actor of 1985. Course the Academy did great in honoring F. Murray

    • @lilliedoubleyou3865
      @lilliedoubleyou3865 4 года назад +3

      Agreed. I saw David Suchet (Poirot) as Salieri in the B'way revival several years ago. He was amazing as well.

    • @crocheting1
      @crocheting1 4 года назад

      @@lilliedoubleyou3865 I flew out and went to the Broadway revival as well. Suchet and Sheen were brilliant!

    • @radgaltunes399
      @radgaltunes399 4 года назад

      @@lilliedoubleyou3865 I saw that, too. I was blown away by how Suchet transitioned from old Salieri to young Salieri by changing his stance and removing his cap and robe. The set was amazing as well, and could there be a better theater for it than The Music Box? It's such a perfect jewel box. Plus we got to meet Mike McShane before the show.

  • @Schoolgirl325
    @Schoolgirl325 3 года назад +519

    I love this movie because it’s very entertaining, and while most of the stuff about Salieri is is made up historical fiction, particularly the fact that he killed Mozart, he DID actually claim that he did it in real life when he was a senile old man in his late 60s-70s in a mental institution. Since this entire story is being told as a confession to a priest by an elderly and senile Salieri in a mental institution, it’s very plausible to interpret Salieri as a very unreliable narrator in the movie. You could just assume that these are just mad ravings of a broken, demented, and senile old man. That’s why the movie works. It also helps that the music is lovely and the two leading actors do a great job with their roles.
    Still, there is SOME truth to the story, particularly in regards to Mozart’s characterization, family, and backstory in the movie.
    Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart WAS a musical child prodigy who wrote his first composition at five, his first symphony at 8, and his first full scale opera at just 12 years old. They weren’t just simple little little melodies that you would expect from a five-to twelve year child. They were beautiful and complex melodies. His father Leopold was a composer who DID take his son under his wing to teach him everything he knew about music, and toured Europe with him to show him off when he was just a little boy.
    Leopold Mozart really WAS a rather controlling, disapproving, overbearing, and overprotective parent in regards to the personal lives of his children, even when they reached their adulthoods. Not only did he disapprove of Wolfgang marrying Constanze Weber and moving in with her without his consent first, but he also tried to sabotage his daughter Maria Anna’s marriage too.
    While probably not as boastful and impolite in public as portrayed in Amadeus, in real life, Mozart really WASN’T always this modest and humble prodigy either. He knew his music was amazing, but a lot of his contemporaries really DID think that there were “too many notes” in his music and thought he was trying too hard to sound impressive. In his letters to and from his father in Vienna from the 1780s, Wolfgang DOES come across as being a conceited and delusional brat towards the Italians in Vienna by unfairly accusing them of forming “cabals” led by Salieri to actively sabotage his attempts to establish himself as a composer there. The letters suggest that Wolfgang, Leopold, and Nanneral resented the Italians for their special place in Austrian courts, considering the fact that they were Austrian themselves. This resentment that Mozart had towards Salieri probably originated from an incident in 1781 when Salieri got the job to be the music teacher of Princess Elisabeth of Würtemmberg instead of Mozart because he had a better reputation as singing and piano instructor. While I do think Mozart WAS a better composer than Salieri, though Salieri was pretty good at composing, too, Salieri was a better music TEACHER than Mozart was in Vienna at the time, so he got the post instead. If there was any evidence of ridiculous jealousy and resentment between Mozart and Saleri, it was actually on Mozart’s side in real life, not Saleri’s. Even then, Mozart still got along with Saleri in public, and never tried to sabotage him, or put him down as a musician. He and his family were just venting their frustrations in private letters about Wolfgang struggling to establish hims as a successful composer, musician, and music teacher in Vienna.
    However, like his attitude in public in the movie, there definitely IS this sense of arrogance, boastfulness, and pettiness in his and his family’s ridiculous accusations of the Italians secretly plotting to sabotage his success in Vienna.
    So, while not nearly as overt about it in public as he was portrayed as being in the movie Amadeus, Wolfgang really DID low-key have somewhat of an arrogant and narcissistic side to his personality at times.
    While Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart DID make a pretty good living as a composer in Vienna for his family and himself, he really WAS a spendthrift, who found himself in debt a lot quickly afterwards because he spent too much money on himself, his wife, and their son, so he went around begging his friends and contemporaries for money when he ran out.
    Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart really DID have a dirty low brow sense of humor. He loved potty humor and sex jokes so much that he even wrote a three part choral piece called “Leck mich im Arcshe” (“Kiss My Ass”) as a joke for a party to sing with his friends.
    However, in real life Mozart wasn’t THAT much of an alcoholic, overtly obnoxious and arrogant, or a party/frat boy. He was much more introverted, he was capable of being mature and polite when he needed to be in public in comparison to how he was portrayed as being arrogant and rude in public with the Emperor and the rest of the court in Amadeus.
    While an extremely gifted composer with superior technical skill as a musician in real life, even child prodigy Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart’s music compositions went through several corrections and revisions in real life. It is NOT like in Amadeus in which Saleri claims Mozart just wrote down whatever he heard in his head on blank sheet music perfectly in tune every time with “no corrections,” “like he was just taking dictations.” That’s a superhuman ability that even most geniuses aren’t capable of.
    Considering the fact that the story in this movie is primarily being told from the POV of an elderly and demented Saleri, who believes that Mozart had this superhuman superiority as a composer in comparison to him and other composers when he is in a mental institution, it is completely probable that he is exaggerating the strength of Mozart’s skills as musician and composer as better than they actually were. I’m not saying that means Mozart’s music isn’t amazing or that he wasn’t a genius.
    Mozart *was* a prodigy, who showed his genius in music from the time he was a preschool-aged toddler of 3 years old. Along with Beethoven, Mozart is still considered the greatest and most popular of classical composers in history over two centuries after his death for a good reason, but he still was a human being. He made corrections/revisions to his scores when composing his music, just like any other composer.
    There also isn’t any evidence that Salieri killed him out of envy and resentment. There’s more evidence that they actually were supportive of each other in real life, who openly admired each other’s work. Salieri also wasn’t this extremely devout Catholic in real life, who vowed to remain abstinent throughout his life to God in exchange for the ability to become a great composer and musician. In fact, he had a wife and several children.
    There is little to no evidence that the young opera singer Caterina Cavileri, who was singing the lead role of Konstanze in Mozart’s German opera The Abduction from the Seraglio, actually ever had an affair with Mozart, as Salieri believed he had in Amadeus. Even in the movie that assumption that Saleri made is iffy at best because there’s really no reason to not believe that Caterina could have just had unrequited feelings for Mozart. He genuinely seems shocked when she made that “I bet she’s great in bed” comment about Constanze, even when she’s not there to hear them, and throughout the rest of the movie, Wolfgang’s completely devoted to Stanzi, so it would be pretty out of character for him to have an affair with a singer in an opera he just met. I think Saleri was probably just misinterpreting the whole conversation out of jealousy.
    In real life, there’s actually more evidence that Salieri had an affair with Caterina Caverleri than Mozart.
    While there are truths to real life here and there, particularly with Mozart’s character, the writers of Amadeus also definitely made Salieri much more austere and conservative than he actually was in real life. There’s no legitimate evidence to prove that Salieri actually killed Mozart. There’s no evidence that Salieri ever sexually harassed Constanze Mozart to deliberately humiliate her when she asked him to commission his music, so he could get revenge against her husband for presumably having an affair with Caterina Cavileri.
    Peter Shaffer definitely exaggerated Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart’s arrogance, alcoholism, childishness, obnoxiousness, and vulgarity by making him be much more overt and over-the-top about it in his adulthood, so that they could give this version Salieri a reason to despise him so much that he would want to kill him in the play. The real Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart truly did seem to possess arrogant, immature, and silly personality traits that carried into his adulthood from his letters. He really did enjoy making low-brow sex innuendos/jokes and toilet humor well into his adulthood. According to descriptions of his laugh in the writings of his friends, it really did sound like “the braying of a jackass” and as “grating a cobblestone down a piano’s strings.” Tom Hulce likely played up Mozart’s laugh as even more hilariously obnoxious in the film than it was in real life for the sake of making the character his own and fueling Salieri’s annoyance. I think the real Wolfgang Amadeus was likely a lot more low-key about his arrogant and buffoonish manchild side in real life than he was portrayed as being in the movie. If he were really as openly arrogant, childish, obnoxious, and rude of an adult in real life as he was portrayed in Amadeus, I very highly doubt Mozart could have been able to get commissioned to write operas in Vienna by Emperor Joseph II at all, no matter how amazing his music was.

    • @theoutlook55
      @theoutlook55 3 года назад +52

      Kudos on your amazingly detailed, substantive post.

    • @afuea-qg5yo
      @afuea-qg5yo 3 года назад +19

      my god

    • @Ava-cy6qw
      @Ava-cy6qw 3 года назад +2

      your writing is boring,,you just proved why Milos Forman created his masterpiece on the genius of Mozart.

    • @theoutlook55
      @theoutlook55 3 года назад +12

      @@Ava-cy6qw I don't get it. Are you dissing the accuracy of what he wrote in this post or saying that too much info/facts gets in the way of creating a concise, approachable narrative like the one in the movie?

    • @Ava-cy6qw
      @Ava-cy6qw 3 года назад

      @@theoutlook55 follow the thread and let us see if there would be a further than three or four of us in it and the discussion will bring clarity

  • @NilezII
    @NilezII 5 лет назад +260

    Another misconception in the movie is that Mozart's wife, Constanza was just his landlady's daughter. She was, but her maiden name was Von Weber-she was the composer Carl Maria Von Weber's cousin, and a classical vocalist. It was a Music Business Marriage.

    • @laurencewesson4236
      @laurencewesson4236 5 лет назад +26

      Her family was not "von" but just plain Weber. Wolfgang originally fell in love with Constanza's elder sister, Aloysia, but when she declined his proposal he moved on to Constanza. It is also worth noting that Constanza's sister Josepha was the original Queen of the Night. He wrote two of the most difficult arias ever composed for her because she could hit high F.

    • @laurencewesson4236
      @laurencewesson4236 5 лет назад +9

      I might also note that while Wolfgang lay dying he was aware that Die Zauberflote was then being performed, and he remarked something like, "Now Josepha is singing her F in alto."

  • @charlessaint7926
    @charlessaint7926 5 лет назад +1043

    When Mozart does his shenanigans, he's a genius. When I do this-I get sent to the Principal.

    • @tbone2471
      @tbone2471 5 лет назад +11

      Too true

    • @MorrigansRaven3944
      @MorrigansRaven3944 5 лет назад +4

      😂😂😂

    • @pqsnet
      @pqsnet 4 года назад +8

      Mozart is not seen as a genius for his childishness...
      He is seen as a genius for his composing...
      No wonder you are sent to the Principal when you totally didnt get it.

    • @johncronin9540
      @johncronin9540 4 года назад +19

      pqsnet Lighten up. I think he got the point. He’s not claiming to have the talent that Mozart. I think a larger case would be that if someone is rich and famous, they are able to get away with things that ordinary people cannot. I’m not so much speaking of getting sent to the principal’s office, but in criminal cases, and how if you are famous and/or wealthy, and can get a very good defense lawyer, you have a MUCH stronger chance of getting away with a serious crime, or avoiding prison time.
      And in that sense, in the modern time, he’s got a point.

    • @fjames208
      @fjames208 4 года назад

      Funny the privilege to be a genius

  • @thespacebat
    @thespacebat 5 лет назад +347

    As a fan of Mozart I love his portrayal in the movie, dude was the closest thing a rockstar that era had and it's both rad and hilarious.

    • @LucyLioness100
      @LucyLioness100 4 года назад +2

      And when you get to parodied by Bart Simpson, you’ve moved into even more pop culture lexicons

  • @Average_CoD_Clips
    @Average_CoD_Clips 3 года назад +18

    This is my favorite movie. :D
    Our 6th grade Music teacher had us watch it and most of the other kids thought it was boring.
    I fell in love with Mozart’s music that day. The OG rockstar.

  • @ezekielsprophecy3203
    @ezekielsprophecy3203 4 года назад +1046

    The best part is that they got a children’s choir to sing the ‘lick my ass’ song 😹😹😹

    • @LP-bi4vc
      @LP-bi4vc 4 года назад +83

      You can tell some of them are trying really hard not to laugh!

    • @lkj974
      @lkj974 3 года назад +41

      Speak for yourself. What were they thinking?

    • @tristancreed
      @tristancreed 3 года назад +27

      That's the easy part. Having them keep a straight face while they were at it is another story.

    • @xmikerx666
      @xmikerx666 3 года назад +23

      How, in this day and age, did they find an entire children's choir who's parents didn't kick the actual eff off about it?

    • @stevenxia2944
      @stevenxia2944 3 года назад +5

      and it is German!!!!!!!!!

  • @christophjoachimbauer3715
    @christophjoachimbauer3715 5 лет назад +823

    "Amadeus" is not a biography about Mozart. It is the story of a well gifted musician beside a genius in whose presence anyone else feels mediocre.

    • @JohnWilliams-wl9px
      @JohnWilliams-wl9px 5 лет назад +33

      Christoph Joachimbauer There also the fact you can very easy say the movie is about a man who for years hated Mozart reflecting how he saw the man. Making the film unreliable

    • @jackxiao9702
      @jackxiao9702 5 лет назад +9

      It's a retelling of Cain and Abel

    • @dorkandproudofit
      @dorkandproudofit 4 года назад +33

      Of course, all the inaccuracies can easily be explained due to the format of the movie's storytelling: It's Salieri, old and withered, living in an asylum and potentially suffering from dementia (assuming he isn't just misremembering things). It's entirely possible that IRL Salieri adored Mozart as a friend but harbored some envy that, in his elderly dementia, caused him to believe he'd actually hated him all along (and IRL Salieri did, in fact, make the claim, though it's obvious to anyone familiar with reality that he was suffering from dementia rather than being actually guilty of anything).

    • @gregghanson6095
      @gregghanson6095 4 года назад +6

      it's just a captivating story,

    • @googelle7555
      @googelle7555 4 года назад

      "in who is presence" 🤣

  • @stevemartin1320
    @stevemartin1320 4 года назад +126

    That, sir, IS my favorite scene too. "And then, suddenly, high above it, an oboe..." aw man! goosebumps everytime.

    • @jofvenom
      @jofvenom 3 года назад

      What composition is that right there?

    • @alenac.3934
      @alenac.3934 7 дней назад +1

      Until a clarinet takes over :-)

  • @joegarza4869
    @joegarza4869 3 года назад +81

    One small fact that was overlooked was that Mozart rarely conducted his own operas while living in Vienna

  • @mitchellgeorge6031
    @mitchellgeorge6031 4 года назад +71

    Thank you for actually saying the things the film gets right. It’s much more accurate than people give it credit for, particularly Salieri’s love for Mozart’s music, the attention to detail with Mozart’s pieces and the dates which they were composed, and their public friendship. In fact, the entire film is told by Salieri after he loses his mind and the rumours that he killed Mozart actually made him believe he killed him. So in actually, Salieri is confessing what he believes he did to Mozart after he went insane. This interpretation not only adds historical accuracy but adds another layer of genius to this film.

  • @flagcoco69
    @flagcoco69 5 лет назад +185

    The casting of F. Murray Abraham was PERFECT. Not so much for his exquisite acting--which it certainly was, and he definitely deserved the Oscar for it--but because, up until that movie, he had been typecast as a criminal, a drug kingpin, a thug. His role in Scarface cemented him as that type. So when you watch Amadeus, you're not only watching a gifted actor play Mozart's rival, you also see that evil streak, the sinister underpinnings, and you believe that he actually could have murdered Mozart.

    • @spanglelime
      @spanglelime 4 года назад +1

      Don’t forget Dar Adal in Homeland. He’s just 💋👌🏻 perfetto! The guy who runs black ops and WILL bite the hand that feeds him if it suits HIM, while always claiming a higher, deeper purpose for all his actions to justify everything he does. He’s complex, and you can forget you dislike Dar as quickly as you can forget you like him. It’s a role I’m not sure would be as good with any other actor.

    • @frankdonato5724
      @frankdonato5724 4 года назад

      I had the wonderful honor of meeting Mr.Abraham and I got to hold the Oscar , it was awesome

    • @PYITE314
      @PYITE314 4 года назад +2

      Loved him in The Grand Budapest Hotel as well.

    • @jimslancio
      @jimslancio 4 года назад +1

      Perfect except for one thing: Abraham looks about a generation older than Hulce. Mozart's and Salieri's age difference was only about 5 years.
      Some of the dialog in the early part of the movie suggests Salieri always knew about Mozart, but because of their apparent age difference I wanted Salieri to hear about this budding prodigy, the kid Mozart, after he was already an accomplished composer.

    • @BuzzLightyear9999
      @BuzzLightyear9999 4 года назад

      I actually think the whole casting was interesting... the “safe” play would be to cast English actors for aristocratic European court life, but they deliberately chose American actors and it shows that an American need not be an impediment to a period drama such as this.
      The great tragedy was that both F Murray Abraham and Tom Hulce were nominated in the same category for Oscars and only one could win...

  • @HigherMammal
    @HigherMammal 5 лет назад +666

    Salieri:
    Mozart: My neck..my back...

    • @justtam321
      @justtam321 4 года назад +13

      I HATE that song but it's so relevant here 😂

    • @kiraissecretlyapillarman3505
      @kiraissecretlyapillarman3505 4 года назад +1

      Jessey Hunt good one

    • @jongon0848
      @jongon0848 4 года назад +5

      For a sec I thought u were quoting the movie Friday
      "Oh I'm hurt! Oh my neck! My back! My neck and my back! I want $150,000! But we can settle out of court right now for $20."

    • @kiraissecretlyapillarman3505
      @kiraissecretlyapillarman3505 4 года назад +5

      Gio Corvino oh, my 😳😳

    • @scottmccollum9979
      @scottmccollum9979 4 года назад +2

      I can't believe you went there! Okay, it was funny!

  • @ytucharliesierra
    @ytucharliesierra 2 года назад +23

    I cannot ever get enough of this utterly brilliant movie.

  • @sophitsa79
    @sophitsa79 4 года назад +273

    "Mediocrity everywhere, I absolve you! I absolve you! I absolve you!" Amazing final words in a film about genius, jealousy and vengeance.

    • @miguelpereira9859
      @miguelpereira9859 4 года назад +12

      Maybe he was talking to us watching the movie aswell as the crazy people in the asylum

    • @hotgirlsarehot
      @hotgirlsarehot 3 года назад +6

      You either die a hero, or live long enough to see yourself become the villain in an asylum.

    • @Angry-Books
      @Angry-Books 3 года назад +11

      “Let me speak for you Father. I speak for all mediocracies. I am their champion. I am their patron saint.”

  • @lincolny2220
    @lincolny2220 7 лет назад +342

    Things Antonio Salieri deserved: NOT THAT

    • @Cejafer
      @Cejafer 6 лет назад +2

      Mozart the Thomas Alba Edison of music?

    • @brkr78
      @brkr78 5 лет назад +14

      @@Cejafer If you have to utilize this somewhat unfitting comparison, then the best would probably be Tesla. A genius, but his actual fame only blew up long after he was dead.

    • @Danterobo
      @Danterobo 5 лет назад +5

      Mozart is Tesla of music

    • @titanicthegreatesticebucke430
      @titanicthegreatesticebucke430 5 лет назад +1

      Feeling bad for Salieri is like feeling bad for incels.

    • @iowaclass5657
      @iowaclass5657 5 лет назад +6

      Titanic The Greatest Ice Bucket Challenge Could you please explain?

  • @michaelscott4521
    @michaelscott4521 3 года назад +521

    Why does everyone always forget this, this is a story being told by a man who just tried to kill him self this is all built up in his head this is his version of the story from his view at his lowest.

    • @RandomAccessDreams
      @RandomAccessDreams 3 года назад +80

      This is exactly the point I made recently in a review I wrote after re-watching it. Salieri is an unreliable narrator, the story (as shown in the film) is only as true as Salieri thinks it is.

    • @robertfitzsimmons9428
      @robertfitzsimmons9428 3 года назад +33

      In real like they were great friends,,, Salieri was the tutor for Mozart’s children.

    • @AlbinovSK
      @AlbinovSK 3 года назад +10

      It is also a modern retelling of the story of Kain and Able.

    • @ugolomb
      @ugolomb 2 года назад +4

      This is even clearer in the play on which the movie is based. Salieri begins the play by summoning "the ghosts of the future" (i.e., us -- the audience) and inviting us to observe his play "The Death of Mozart, or: Did I do it?". Everything that happens onstage, therefore, springs straight out of this (fictional) Salieri's mind; the Mozart character we see is the one which Salieri had written into his play-within-a-play. Of course, this is also true of the movie (where everything we see is actually a story that Salieri tells the Priest); but it's even more palpable in the play.

    • @ugolomb
      @ugolomb 2 года назад +2

      @@AlbinovSK I read somewhere that Shaffer was also inspired by the Faust myth, except here it's a bargain with God, rather than Satan. This is in addition to, not instead of, the Cain-and-Abel aspect.

  • @JHD6045
    @JHD6045 3 года назад +32

    I actually knew a guy in high school that lapped very similarly to how Tom Holce laughed in the movie. He was a very nice guy and actually quite big for someone his age. At 17 he stood 61, and wait about 280lbs. So to imagine a guy that big and to have a laugh that sounds so much like that always blew my mind. Then I watched this movie a few years ago and instantly thought about him. There laughs are so similar it's spooky. And he didn't do that for shits and giggles, that's really how he laughed.

  • @cultureshock72
    @cultureshock72 5 лет назад +79

    IDK why RUclips recommended this 3.5 years later but boy am I glad I watched it. Now I have a new composer to start playing on my piano!

    • @douglasvilledarling2935
      @douglasvilledarling2935 4 года назад +1

      Because RUclips is all knowing. We were just speaking of this movie yesterday at work and it showed up in my recommendations. Lol

  • @lipingrahman6648
    @lipingrahman6648 6 лет назад +204

    Consider that until Amadeus both the play and the movie Salieri was mostly forgotten so in a strange way due to this slander he and his music lives again.

    • @michaelbaughman8910
      @michaelbaughman8910 5 лет назад +4

      "Nothing is neither good nor bad. But thinking makes it so." Shakespeare.

    • @Dan6erous
      @Dan6erous 5 лет назад +1

      the play ran on Broadway for over 1,000 performances.

  • @samueljackson315
    @samueljackson315 5 лет назад +1599

    Mozart's childish vulgarity only makes me love him more.

    • @reya0913
      @reya0913 5 лет назад +24

      I agree

    • @dkupke
      @dkupke 5 лет назад +77

      I work in a food importing warehouse, every holiday season we sell tons of those Rebel Mozart chocolates. And every time I look at that picture of him on the wrappers and wonder “What the hell is he smirking about?”

    • @gostavoadolfos2023
      @gostavoadolfos2023 5 лет назад +16

      I wished that the movie includes Casanova finishing Don Juan piece which is a historical fact.

    • @catdogabuab1928
      @catdogabuab1928 5 лет назад +8

      It would be if it wasn't so overdone by everyone these days

    • @lzad3764
      @lzad3764 4 года назад +8

      Sounds like most rock stars now🤷‍♀️

  • @truescotsman4103
    @truescotsman4103 3 года назад +15

    if i get too deep into mozart it brings me to tears. its always been like this. his music connects perfectly with my heart. its sublime and surreal at the same time. rarely does an artist touch anyone so deeply. his understanding of harmonic balance and the use of passing tones and chromatics is unreal. he switches modes and tonic and key anytime he wishes for any reason he does it perfectly. i can't listen it disables me emotionally.

  • @tiphara5325
    @tiphara5325 4 года назад +158

    Oh, how sweet you talk about Salieri, and the final scenes you put with Salieri's composition almost made me cry :) you made him justice with this video!

  • @millicentdogrago6072
    @millicentdogrago6072 8 лет назад +24

    I saw this movie when it came out in a huge, grand old style theatre in toronto. I was blown away by the acting, direction, photography, and art direction. I was blown away by F. Murray Abrahams performance. Sheer genius. He could convey a thought , in a simple lifting of an eyebrow or twist of the mouth. Absolute acting genius.!!

  • @willrobinson1229
    @willrobinson1229 8 лет назад +29

    Well done! I loved how Salieri gets due credit at the end with a very beautiful excerpt from his piano concerto.

  • @annelousteau9799
    @annelousteau9799 Месяц назад +3

    I had never been anywhere to hear music spoken about with such words of love. I was stunned and I still am in awe of this movie! 😊❤❤❤

  • @Werbespanner
    @Werbespanner 4 года назад +98

    6:20
    I'm German. I can understand EVERYTHING they sang! It was HILLARIOUS but also GLORIOUS!!!!

    • @shimmeringreflection
      @shimmeringreflection 3 года назад +3

      That wouldn't be allowed in New Zealand, as the government is too left and the parents would be outraged

    • @doboldast3608
      @doboldast3608 3 года назад

      Das ist alt Deutsche

    • @spoookyspencer
      @spoookyspencer 3 года назад +11

      @@shimmeringreflection lol kind of irrelevant and also untrue.

  • @timjim5344
    @timjim5344 3 года назад +934

    Salieri was only 6 years older than Mozart so unless he got unlucky with his genetics the actor should look much younger

    • @Schoolgirl325
      @Schoolgirl325 3 года назад +91

      That is true, but I also think the writers of the movie were trying to emphasize just how much of a brilliant young composer ahead of his time Mozart was with his very boppy, complex, improvisational, experimental, and flowery music to contrast it with the more easy, predictable, and safe classical music Salieri composed that Emperor Joseph II, the kapellmeister, and the others in the court of Vienna appreciated more. The only reason why Salieri appreciated Mozart’s talent in this movie is because he was a composer who knew amazing music when he saw it and heard it.
      They presented Mozart’s music in Vienna like a generational clash between Millenials and Boomers. Here comes this brilliant, self-confident, and young composer with this fresh bright, colorful, and complex take on classical music compositions that most of his middle-aged and elderly colleagues and employers have never heard of before. Additionally, most of them aren’t professionally trained classical composers, just very wealthy men in powdered wigs with high positions in aristocracy, who like music that’s pretty and soothing to listen to, so a handful of them criticize it for having “too many notes” and trying too hard to impress beyond his abilities.” While most of them admit that they LIKE Mozart’s music because they can obviously recognize that it’s lovely music composed by a bright young man with fresh ideas, most of them don’t really APPRECIATE it since it’s too experimental to their ears…Well, ALMOST every one of his elder colleagues and employers in Vienna can’t appreciate the music of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart in the movie with the exception of Antonio Salieri, who’s also a classical composer by profession just like him who has lived, breathed, and studied classical music long and hard enough to clearly admire and recognize the superior ability and talent of another composer.
      Of course, Salieri’s whole conflict in the movie Amadeus is that he’s bitterly jealous over the fact that he can’t achieve Mozart’s level of genius since he grew up misguidedly believing that he had to repress his desires, impulses, and passions in exchange for God to grant him the ability to be an amazing composer of classical music. Most of his contemporaries enabled and encouraged that more easy, people-pleasing, and repressive straightforward attitude and style in this fictional version of Saleri’s music from his own POV by praising and honoring it as amazing work… That is until he met Mozart and heard his complex and experimental fresh take on classic music that made it sound even better than it had before.
      Rather than taking a page from Mozart’s technique by trying to be more experimental, honest, and free in his approach to his compositions in classical music, the Saleri from Amadeus directs his blame and rage at God and Mozart, becomes bitterly and murderously jealous of Mozart’s talent, and secretly plots to steal work from Mozart to make it his after indirectly encouraging him to work himself to death on a requiem. Yet, throughout the movie, he continues to play things safe, do things by the book, repress his desires in public, and gives the general public what they want to hear when it comes to composing music for them because it’s been so ingrained in this fictional version of Saleri for so long. At least until the end when he writes music with Mozart.

    • @Tripledashhh_
      @Tripledashhh_ 3 года назад +7

      Schoolgirl325 wow I was gonna say the same thing but you beat me to it! Beautiful! Haha

    • @KenDanieli
      @KenDanieli 3 года назад +10

      Murray is 14 years older than Tom

    • @DoubleMonoLR
      @DoubleMonoLR 2 года назад +6

      @@deanjustdean7818 He lived to 75(seemingly well above average at the time, presumably partly due to his wealth), so probably not for Salieri. He didn't look especially old in the role though(the actor himself wasn't much older than the character), it was just that the Mozart character was portrayed as much younger than he was.

    • @DoubleMonoLR
      @DoubleMonoLR 2 года назад +4

      @@KenDanieli F. Murray Abraham is 14 years older than Tom Hulce.

  • @ludwigvanbeethoven5176
    @ludwigvanbeethoven5176 6 лет назад +456

    I freaking love mozart!

    • @RustinChole
      @RustinChole 5 лет назад +55

      I love YOU Beethoven. Hope technology has somehow given your hearing back bud.

    • @fancycuber3154
      @fancycuber3154 5 лет назад +15

      Beethoven, is it true that you met Mozart once?

    • @klematiszszimonettarose1797
      @klematiszszimonettarose1797 5 лет назад +4

      Me too :) but I love your music too

    • @S0FIAV
      @S0FIAV 5 лет назад +1

      Lol bethoven

    • @Zaidemeit
      @Zaidemeit 5 лет назад +4

      You should. Salieri was your most influential music teacher!!!

  • @JoeMama-tl4tr
    @JoeMama-tl4tr 3 года назад +18

    I watched this film because of your video and I can honestly say it’s definitely one of the greatest films I’ve ever watched

  • @Hopeofmen
    @Hopeofmen 9 лет назад +2707

    The boys in that choir of kids would definitely be cracking up (no pun intended) if they understood what they were singing.
    Also, WHY ARE SCHOOLCHILDREN SINGING THIS?

    • @Thraim.
      @Thraim. 9 лет назад +252

      +Hopeofmen
      Why wouldn't they understand what they are singing? We have choirs in Germany too, you know?

    • @Thraim.
      @Thraim. 9 лет назад +369

      +AdalRoderick
      Disregard everything I just said because this is an Italian choir.

    • @JasonGriffin
      @JasonGriffin 9 лет назад +86

      +AdalRoderick I'm pretty sure it's a Catalonian choir.

    • @EnergyKnife
      @EnergyKnife 9 лет назад +43

      +AdalRoderick There are no choirs in Italy

    • @gaiusbaltar4850
      @gaiusbaltar4850 9 лет назад +39

      +Hopeofmen Because adults don't have the voice for it.

  • @MEMORIA1316
    @MEMORIA1316 4 года назад +42

    A masterpiece on all levels. One of my favorites of all time. Outstanding acting, screenplay, cinematography, costumes, location... RIP Milos Forman!

  • @Azdaja13
    @Azdaja13 4 года назад +141

    That one girl in the choir that's cracking up singing the "Lick my Arse" song is the most relatable of them.

  • @aag8584
    @aag8584 Месяц назад +1

    You should do a part 2! This was so interesting, I wish it were longer!!

  • @Skerdy
    @Skerdy 9 лет назад +29

    That bit of Salieri's music in the end was really elegant and beautiful... I'll check YT for some of his pieces right now. Thanks, man.

  • @holidaysinsweden
    @holidaysinsweden 8 лет назад +35

    F. Murray Abraham's performance in this movie is immense, one of the best i've seen.

  • @Tina06019
    @Tina06019 6 лет назад +419

    It's pretty grim that so many people think Salieri was a murderer. Makes me angry.

    • @HerveBoisde
      @HerveBoisde 6 лет назад +5

      Its also super common to make Hollywood biopics that are completely different from reality. I actually read a book by someone who claims to have done past life regressions and found out that Mozart was actually poisoned by his wife so that she could be with another man. Hmmm. They should make a movie about that!

    • @whome5933
      @whome5933 6 лет назад +3

      Tina, you could write an opera about how he was innocent.

    • @jeromedragon5287
      @jeromedragon5287 6 лет назад +2

      it's a move, chill.

    • @prac2
      @prac2 6 лет назад +6

      ruining a mans reputation using baseless accusations is commonplace nowdays

    • @victorconway444
      @victorconway444 6 лет назад +1

      True. But who knows just how much of our history is skewed, exaggerated, or outright lies from rumors, propaganda, or even just piece of fiction or a joke being taken too seriously. How much of the truth is forever lost in the memory hole. Makes it a little terrifying to imagine how we'll be remembered 200 years from now in the public eye.

  • @belugasmith
    @belugasmith Год назад +16

    Thank you so very much for pointing out the similarities of personality in Mozart and MJ. So few seem to recognize the devastating effects of being denied a childhood, especially on a genius!

  • @riyoal6189
    @riyoal6189 4 года назад +235

    "Go ahead, mock me! Laugh! But that wasn't Mozart who was laughing at me, it was God."

  • @LetsGoGetThem
    @LetsGoGetThem 4 года назад +602

    When your shit posts (literally) intended for like 1 person as a giggle is read hundreds of years later by millions.

    • @nextlifeonearth
      @nextlifeonearth 3 года назад +5

      And your character is based on it.
      I strongly disagree with that being evidence for his day to day personality.

    • @IronicHavoc
      @IronicHavoc 3 года назад +14

      @@nextlifeonearth Chill man. The most this video claims is that Mozart was kinda silly/dirty minded; not that it was his day to day personality. There's even an explicit disclaimer saying as much before that segment of the video. 4:25
      The letters are just meant to show that silliness was at least some small part of his personality, and it likely would have shone out to others around him at some point (even if only occasionally).

    • @IronicHavoc
      @IronicHavoc 3 года назад +5

      @@nextlifeonearth As far as the movie's presentation of him goes, we already know these are heavily reinterpreted renditions of all of the historical figures involved. And also keep in mind, Salieri in the movie is an unreliable narrator. He could very likely just be hyper fixated on a few perceived instances of carefree silliness in Mozart and projecting that personality onto all his memories.
      In fact there's an interpretation of this movie where all the narrator's memories have been significantly skewed through the combined influence of hindsight, old age, mental illness, and subconscious biases from few isolated incidents. Consider the scenes establishing their first meeting: Salieri building up this image of Mozart in his mind only to stumble onto his private conversation with a woman (and the letters at the least establish IRL Mozart could be dirty in private). That initial juxtaposition can leave an impression in the back of Salieri's mind and color his memories and perceptions in the future. Again, especially when considering "present" Salieri is now old, irrelevant, an mentally ill.
      This would possibly even affect Salieri's memory and perception of himself. Perhaps the bitterness, victimization, and sense of mediocrity he describes as he recalls these events was non-existent at the time they occurred (or at least subconscious). And as many of his caretakers suspect all along, Salieri's claims to have attempted to murder Mozart may have been retroactive fabrications of his mind.
      Basically this interpretation posits the story of this movie is an old senile man having embellished memories that match his perceived narrative in the present - God laughing at his life's efforts through Mozart. I think it elegantly handles a lot of problems some people have with his movie.

    • @nextlifeonearth
      @nextlifeonearth 3 года назад +4

      @@IronicHavoc I don't have issues with the movie, except that some people actually think the portrayal is legit.
      This video implying he was somewhat like that, but was exaggerated, is an understatement. The man had humour, an indication of a smart man. Those letters don't rule out his actual behaviour was the exact opposite of the portrayal.

    • @alexblake5369
      @alexblake5369 3 года назад +2

      Imagine how your facebook posts are going to be remember a hundred years from now :D

  • @JesbaamSanchez
    @JesbaamSanchez 3 года назад +340

    "Oh my ass burn like fire" I completely lost it 😂 Mozart making some dank memes before it was cool

    • @Jalapablo
      @Jalapablo 3 года назад +23

      Little known fact: the Taco Bell franchise was established in late 18th century Vienna

    • @DinoMaRenAlva
      @DinoMaRenAlva 3 года назад +2

      @@Jalapablo lol

    • @itwontcomeout5678
      @itwontcomeout5678 2 года назад +1

      Rocket maaaaaaan

    • @Peter_Siri
      @Peter_Siri 2 года назад +1

      @@Jalapablo wait, really?!

  • @harmless3449
    @harmless3449 Год назад +298

    Something often overlooked: Mozart's wife Constanze was a trained, talented musician in her own right and many people believe she played an important role in her husband's career.

    • @crazycat482
      @crazycat482 Год назад +26

      She was the one to popularize Mozart's work after his death. Who knows what wpuld have been of Mozart if she hadnt married him

    • @jandoernte3312
      @jandoernte3312 9 месяцев назад +1

      ​​@@crazycat482mozart's reputation no doubt was helped- but Mozart is such a genius it would have been remembered as one of history's best composers no matter what

    • @Serai3
      @Serai3 2 месяца назад +3

      Everyone forgets his sister, too. She was also a major player in his success.

    • @DrDeuteron
      @DrDeuteron Месяц назад +1

      Yeah. No.

    • @Serai3
      @Serai3 Месяц назад +1

      @@DrDeuteron Ah, gotta love the musically uneducated. Yeah, yeah, dude. It's well known she was a big part of his very earliest years. Maybe go read a book.

  • @alexmansell8385
    @alexmansell8385 3 года назад +185

    Feel like Part 1 could've mentioned that his Sister was a vital part of the family 'prodigy' rounds during their childhood. Nannerl was a prodigy in her own right and would frequently confer with Wolfgang Amadeus about his music after reaching adulthood. Once she reached adulthood sadly she was subjected to the familiar trappings of a woman in the Baroque period. She became a music teacher but even that was only because of her family name. Tragic really.

    • @hesavedawretchlikeme6902
      @hesavedawretchlikeme6902 2 года назад +4

      Perhaps, but the movie was mainly about Wolfgang. I know what you mean about Nannerl, his mother, father and other relationships. I own an extensive biography of Mozart in my own library. A book can explore much more than a movie of course.

    • @ischeele7203
      @ischeele7203 2 года назад +1

      Someone should make a movie about her

    • @emmabennett7699
      @emmabennett7699 2 года назад +4

      @@ischeele7203 i think there is one... ithere's a movie titled "mozarts sister"

    • @sitcomchristian6886
      @sitcomchristian6886 2 года назад +5

      Almost always, a child prodigy is just someone who is remarkably good as something....for a child. As they age, they don't continue to be remarkable, and their peers catch up to them. Many get depressed and leave their fields. Wolfgang was quite the anomaly. His sister's life is not an unusual one for someone in her position. I wouldn't consider it tragic, but just a fact of life. Nobody is entitled to their dreams, unfortunately.

    • @DwightStJohn-t7y
      @DwightStJohn-t7y 10 месяцев назад

      @@sitcomchristian6886 prodigies also seem to just burn out quickly. my chinese wife often commented they'd see some up and coming virtuoso on some kind of instrument, and a decade later where are they??? athletics is like that, even speech and debate competition. as you age, others physically mature, or simply want it more. it was easy in high school: now have a few athletes do their military duty and come back in age 22 and give you a basketball @tonsilectamy. and you're surprised. it was such an easy ride in HS. you even smoked just before the track meet race got underway. Now go to college and do something stupid like that, you get the field pounding you.

  • @2HRTS1LOVE
    @2HRTS1LOVE 9 лет назад +27

    LOVED this movie, so much. I always wondered why Tom Hulce, who played Mozart, didn't have a bigger career, because I think his performance is absolutely phenomenal. I can't imagine anyone else in the role, the giggle is iconic. Great job, Nick, keep em coming, chop chop!! ;)

    • @HistoryBuffs
      @HistoryBuffs  9 лет назад +20

      That giggle was worthy of an oscar alone lol

    • @klyanadkmorr
      @klyanadkmorr 9 лет назад +3

      +OGSpaceCadet It SHOULD HAVE WENT TO MARK HAMILL WHO BROUGHT IT TO LIFE ON BROADWAY FIRST yet they thought he was too goody image from Star Wars. The fuckers, ruined Mark's career to branch out than get stuck as voice actor and be The Joker instead.

  • @tomc8888
    @tomc8888 6 лет назад +592

    One thing to remember about "Amadeus": the story is told by an old man who has psychological problems, he is a textbook example of an unreliable narrator. Those looking for total historical accuracy from Amadeus will be disappointed, but I think the inaccuracies are excusable.

    • @DavideMazzetti
      @DavideMazzetti 6 лет назад +68

      Let's face it, it would have been a very dull film had they depicted Mozart and Salieri as the best of chums.

    • @joelwagner3982
      @joelwagner3982 6 лет назад +33

      'Amadeus' was never intended to be an historical documentary. Peter Schafer made it clear that he had written a 'what if?' story. I don't know why this video is necessary.

    • @chaoticdreamer137
      @chaoticdreamer137 6 лет назад +24

      It's necessary because, in spite of what you said and what most who bothered to do their research know, a majority of people who either saw one/both of the Amadeus films or only received a weak lesson of Mozart's life still have an inaccurate ideal of Salieri to this day (and Mozart himself, to a degree). The video's aim isn't to condemn Amadeus for taking creative liberties with history, because they obviously still had to tell an engaging story. But they wanted to use it as a springboard to highlight a man who was likely Mozart's friend and supporter, not his murderer.

    • @munch15a
      @munch15a 6 лет назад +3

      would be interesting to a more true to live movie and the main angel is this guy is a self destructive rock star with a net work of enables and those trying to help him
      Salieri would be a minor character but one of those trying to help him.

    • @All2Meme
      @All2Meme 6 лет назад +7

      tomc8888 I am glad I am not the only one who sees the movie that way. Old Salieri was telling this to a priest while in an asylum for the insane, after attempting to commit suicide at the beginning of the movie. The unreliability of the narrator is totally understandable in a case like that, and it's how I enjoy the movie despite the factual errors.

  • @Wastelander1972
    @Wastelander1972 3 года назад +33

    Man. Guy has been dead for hundreds of years, but you still pay Salieri respect.
    Respect.

    • @ebriggs3498
      @ebriggs3498 5 месяцев назад

      Salieri’s music is actually very good and still played in concert halls.

  • @mutt9418
    @mutt9418 6 лет назад +347

    Fun fact, it's actually been debated whether humor like Mozart's was just the standard for that time in history, as other letters from his family and completely understand related persons contain similar foul humor

    • @TheChugg11
      @TheChugg11 6 лет назад +27

      I was wondering that as well: I think scatological humour was more prevalent (and...detailed) at that time.

    • @JayM409
      @JayM409 5 лет назад +50

      Benjamin Franklin wrote an essay called 'Fart Proudly,' so you are probably correct.

    • @laurahubbard6906
      @laurahubbard6906 5 лет назад +5

      @@JayM409Jonathan Swift was an expert purveyor of scatological humor.

    • @murphym3755
      @murphym3755 5 лет назад +4

      WANTED Fun fact, furries are gay

    • @azadalamiq
      @azadalamiq 5 лет назад

      @@JayM409 ben frankline was a pimp womenizer. xD dude was the og man whore, died of std.

  • @rong7496
    @rong7496 3 года назад +26

    His giggle was hilarious. This is one of my all-time favorite films. I was aware of the inconsistencies with actual history, but not to this degree. Thank you for your video.

  • @ariochiv
    @ariochiv 8 лет назад +40

    Amadeus is one of the most perfect movies I have ever seen. Aside from some ahistorical elements (which are necessary to the excellent story), it's literally without flaw.

  • @mxslick50
    @mxslick50 Год назад +9

    The scene at 7:45 reminded me of this:
    I was at a 70mm film screening back when "Amadeus" first came out, and exactly right after Salieri says ".... a single note, hanging there unwavering..." a splice in the film made the sound drop out for a split second. That totally destroyed the dramatic tension of the scene, and the whole audience burst into laughter.
    When I told the manager about the unfortunate placement of that film break repair, he said "I wondered why people were laughing at that point as I'd never heard them laugh before." I suggested he contact the studio and get a replacement film reel to stop the problem. A week later at another showing, thankfully I saw (and heard) that the reel was replaced.

  • @cesarluciovivaldi8508
    @cesarluciovivaldi8508 8 лет назад +100

    I would have liked a comment of my favorite scene, when Salieri helps Mozart in the composition of ¨Confutatis maleditis¨, from his ¨Requiem¨.

    • @CosmicTeapot
      @CosmicTeapot 8 лет назад +32

      I know right? It felt like stepping inside Mozart's head. As a young composer, that scene gave me goosebumps.

    • @Serai3
      @Serai3 7 лет назад +3

      That is, hands down, the best scene about music ever written or filmed. Mind-bogglingly perfect. And the really mind-blowing thing for me is contemplating the fact that in that actual room _there would have been no music._ We hear their progress because the soundtrack (and St. Martin in the Fields) supplies it, but they were working in a quiet room. (As were the actors themselves, come to think of it!) Puts a whole new spin on that scene.

    • @alenac.3934
      @alenac.3934 7 дней назад

      It's actually "Confutatis maledictis..."

  • @trombogon200
    @trombogon200 8 лет назад +111

    Do Beethoven. I want to know if the decision to cast a Dog was "Grossly Inaccurate" or a "Creative Liberty"

    • @realtedbear
      @realtedbear 7 лет назад +5

      **heavy smoker laugh**

    • @realtedbear
      @realtedbear 7 лет назад +2

      **loud heavy smoker laugh**

    • @realtedbear
      @realtedbear 7 лет назад +2

      [In a smoker voice] I need *MOAR* smokes

    • @THEMAN-xu8qm
      @THEMAN-xu8qm 7 лет назад +2

      Ted Bear lol

    • @MNKY80808
      @MNKY80808 7 лет назад +1

      Massively underrated comment

  • @thisplacedoesntevensellcheese
    @thisplacedoesntevensellcheese 4 года назад +453

    Nobody:
    Leopold Mozart: “Aye bruh check my boys soundcloud”

  • @BelleRose11000
    @BelleRose11000 Год назад +9

    Amadeus is my all time favorite film. It helped me get into classical music when I was in high school. I was an oddball in my generation.

  • @thesamuraihobbit
    @thesamuraihobbit 8 лет назад +716

    Downfall. Do Downfall next.

  • @crowsclub9606
    @crowsclub9606 3 года назад +178

    He just seems like the first rock star. Tons of fame, alcohol, & women.

    • @whistlerwind7422
      @whistlerwind7422 3 года назад +37

      He was a flirt, but he was extremely faithful to his wife. He also did not have a rivalry with Salieri. Salieri did not assist him with the Requiem. Much of the movie is based on the myths.

    • @host_theghost507
      @host_theghost507 Год назад +6

      @@whistlerwind7422 Thank you. Both the play and the movie really push the "rebel" image. They also work overtime to make Salieri seem as stuffy as possible. Never mind that Salieri *did* have a mistress, while Mozart did not. Mozart also refers to Salieri as a friend many times in his letters, mentioning how much he appreciated it whenever Salieri attended one of his concerts. There was some professional rivalry-court appointments don't grow on trees-but they also liked and respected each other as colleagues.

    • @Dannymart_88445
      @Dannymart_88445 9 месяцев назад +1

      Pretty sure that wasn't accepted in 1700

    • @thetop100films
      @thetop100films 5 месяцев назад +1

      Just without the leather pants!

    • @mnxs
      @mnxs 4 месяца назад

      ​@@Dannymart_88445Let me tell you a story about the French Monarchy.

  • @w1o2l3f4i5e
    @w1o2l3f4i5e 9 лет назад +192

    I do enjoy your historical breakdown of movies, as I also hope that a good movie about a genuine character is based on fact. I LOVED Amadeus and enjoyed your synopsis of the movie. THANKS for the effect you put into making your videos.

    • @HistoryBuffs
      @HistoryBuffs  9 лет назад +19

      No worries mate, thanks for watching :)

    • @Thebarnardfactor
      @Thebarnardfactor 9 лет назад +3

      +History Buffs have you ever considered doing the 2006 movie Marie Antionette? It's a bit inaccurate but it is still a good movie with great production value

    • @mverna3628
      @mverna3628 8 лет назад

      +History Buffs I LOVE this, but... do you have a 'bleeped'/censored version of your episodes that I can let my children watch? Especially your review of the 'Kingdom of Heaven' which was spot on.

    • @leemorgan2881
      @leemorgan2881 8 лет назад +2

      +Isambard Brunell its the modern age dude. internet. the kids are gonna be exposed to all kinds of stuff at a young age. they are better off hearing the swears around you so you can put them into context for them. so they know when it is/isnt ok to say. just an opinion.

    • @tammysigmon853
      @tammysigmon853 8 лет назад

      +Lee Morgan that's exactly how I raised my children, who now have children. My daughter has chosen censorship. My son raises his son without censorship because he knows he can tell his son the truth. After all, I first heard about sex at school. I asked my mother and her face turned "50 shades of red". Kids past, present, and future are going to hear everything parents want conceal, so I agree, it truly IS better to hear about a subject through their parents than from the booger eating kid up the street.

  • @musicalimarc
    @musicalimarc 2 года назад +9

    Loved the video. Mozart was practically my best friend with I was very young. I knew who Mozart, Beethoven, etc. were before I knew anything about rock music. The first time I saw “Amadeus”, I got so angry to see my childhood “friend” treated that way. However, I rewatched it several years later after having read the play at which point, it became one of my favorite movies with my absolute favorite soundtrack of all time. I even went so far as to record the audio of the entire movie to use as a full cast audio book years before that became a “thing”.
    I would love to see a video about how similar or different Beethoven’s life was from “Immortal Beloved”.

  • @emmasol3058
    @emmasol3058 7 лет назад +192

    Aw poor Salieri, he was actually a cool guy

  • @kirsteni.russell5903
    @kirsteni.russell5903 8 лет назад +58

    I love AMADEUS--it's a profoundly moving experience. It has also made Salieri famous again, and some of Salieri's music is on the AMADEUS soundtrack. He's also a vital character in the movie, the center of dramatic conflict, and it's not only Mozart's music but the dramatic conflict that makes this movie such an emotional experience. I'm glad that the real Salieri didn't live in such agony, though!

  • @JH-ji6cj
    @JH-ji6cj 4 года назад +10

    Thank you! THANK YOU! _THANK YOU!!_ Salieri is incredible...how had I gone this long and not heard his compositions. So many Classical playlists and he is criminally (oh, the irony) underrated and forgotten. Wow.

  • @BALRAMYADAV-pe9uk
    @BALRAMYADAV-pe9uk 2 года назад

    Thanks

  • @itsjustme0123
    @itsjustme0123 5 лет назад +15

    This was so good! I saw Amadeus in the theatre, 1984. To this day it's one of my favorite movies of all time. Thank you for sharing this, even though I am five years late.

  • @laughingoutloud5742
    @laughingoutloud5742 5 лет назад +14

    My all-time favorite movie. I remember watching it when I was 16 at the theater, and it changed my view of Music completely.

  • @Serai3
    @Serai3 4 года назад +19

    The Confutatis scene is the best piece of film about music ever created. It's a master class on how orchestral music is put together, and the acting is brilliant. What most people don't know is that Abraham actually lost the thread of the scene at one point and had to get it back. (The bit where he gets confused about the identical notes.) But he's such a great actor that he managed to keep it together and USE his confusion to make the scene even better. And here's another thing hardly anyone ever thinks about: there IS NO MUSIC PLAYING in that room. The music is all in their _heads_ as they're talking - that room is completely silent. Imagine how the scene would have played out if there'd been no score there, just the two of them arguing tiny little technical details. It would have been incomprehensible to anyone not a musician. But add the music and suddenly it all makes sense, and that moment when Mozart pauses with his hand in the air and then brings it DOWN to start that incredible, glorious flood of sound is flabbergasting. Hell, I get goosebumps every time I hear it!

    • @ugolomb
      @ugolomb 2 года назад +3

      Of course, this scene is also one of the least accurate in the film: in reality, Salieri had nothing whatsoever to do with the Requiem. But that in no way detracts from its brilliance as a piece of historical fiction. Most historical plays, novels and films are a mixture of fact, speculation and outright fiction; while it is interesting to compare them with the historical facts, insofar as we know them, what ultimately matters, I think, is how well they work *as fictional narratives*.

    • @Serai3
      @Serai3 2 месяца назад +1

      @@ugolomb For gods' sakes, talk about missing the point of my comment. But hey, you get to feel good about pissing on the scene, so that's all that matters, right?

    • @ugolomb
      @ugolomb 2 месяца назад

      @@Serai3
      You didn't read my comment, did you? I didn't piss on the scene at all. I just said it's historically inaccurate, and then said that fictional narratives shouldn't be judged for historical accuracy. That doesn't mean that it's wrong to point out where they depart from reality; these are two separate issues

  • @lowbridge7070
    @lowbridge7070 2 года назад +8

    There's a part at the end of the film where Salieri tells the priest that his music "grows fainter" as the years pass while mozarts music remains well known and lives on. That much is true. I never heard of Salieri until I saw this movie.
    Now, I'm not and never have been a player, composer, or even a fan of classical music. But when I was a kid, I was best friends with another kid who lived about 5 or 6 houses up the block from my place. He was a child prodigy classical pianist. He could play it all and very well. Mozart, Beethoven, Brahms, Bach, Liszt, Chopin, etc, you name it. Many was the time I'd be hanging out with him at his house when he'd call a time out and go to the grand piano he had in his living room to do his daily practice for an hour or so.
    As a result, I have heard of great composers such as Mozart, but still, I never heard of Salieri because as to the best of my knowledge, my friend never played Salieri. Not even once. I'm not even sure if my friend himself even knew who Salieri was.