AMADEUS (1984) ☾ MOVIE REACTION - FIRST TIME WATCHING!

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  • čas přidán 5. 10. 2023
  • Thank you for watching my reaction as I watch "Amadeus" for the first time! ♡
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  • Krátké a kreslené filmy

Komentáře • 333

  • @shainewhite2781
    @shainewhite2781 Před 9 měsíci +90

    Winner of 8 Oscars including Best Picture.

  • @OrangePony75
    @OrangePony75 Před 9 měsíci +140

    As a Mozart biography it's awful, but as a story based on his life and work, is absolutely beautiful. He did end up in a common, unnamed grave, and his remains are yet to be found.

    • @vincentsaia6545
      @vincentsaia6545 Před 9 měsíci +21

      That's probably why the play and the movie depicts the story proper as a flashback told by a mad, elderly Salieri. These are the ravings of a mad (in both senses) old man, not a scholarly account

    • @rollomaughfling380
      @rollomaughfling380 Před 9 měsíci +3

      It was perfectly normal to be interred into a mass grave back then, even for gentry. Had nothing to do with class, but more with church affiliation. That was a cemetery, not a graveyard. Learn the difference.

    • @vincentsaia6545
      @vincentsaia6545 Před 9 měsíci +8

      @@rollomaughfling380 Actually, this was a misstranslation. Mozart was buried in commoner's burial plot and the person translating the story mistook that to mean a "common/mass" grave.

    • @EdwardGregoryNYC
      @EdwardGregoryNYC Před 9 měsíci +14

      So, once there were two gravediggers in Vienna's St. Marx Cemetery. They came across the grave marker for Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. So one says to the other, "Let's did up Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart's grave and see how he looks." So they start digging, and the come across a coffin. The carry the coffin out of the grave and set it down. On the cover it says "Here lies the great Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart." They lift the lid off the coffin and there, inside the coffin, they find Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart himself - erasing his music!! The first gravedigger says "Wolfie, what are you doing?" And Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart answers "I'm decomposing."

    • @dudermcdudeface3674
      @dudermcdudeface3674 Před 9 měsíci +4

      @@rollomaughfling380 I've never once seen or heard anyone use cemetery and graveyard as distinct concepts.

  • @firedoc5
    @firedoc5 Před 9 měsíci +44

    One of the best things about this movie is that it introduced newer generations to classical music, especially Mozart's. Several people had said that it gave them an appreciation for it, and they continue a musical education. When Salieri asked Stanzi to come back he really didn't expect her to show up hoping he had scared her off. There have been several theories to Wolfgang's death including liver disease, renal failure, intestinal problems from eating raw pork which was a tradition during Christmas time, or a combination of several factors due to his lifestyle. At the end, it is hard to believe that one of, if not the greatest composers of all-time was buried in a pauper's grave.

    • @norwegianblue2017
      @norwegianblue2017 Před 9 měsíci +4

      I actually bought some Mozart after seeing this movie in high school.

  • @SC-gp7kt
    @SC-gp7kt Před 9 měsíci +21

    Masterpiece of a movie, regardless of the fictional parts.

  • @louielouie22
    @louielouie22 Před 9 měsíci +28

    This masterpiece is in my top 5 movies of all time. Timeless Classic. I loved how they used his music throughout the movie.

    • @MrThumbs63
      @MrThumbs63 Před 9 měsíci +2

      I'm right there with you. This movie surprised the hell out of me.

    • @sirace6
      @sirace6 Před 7 měsíci +1

      My favorite movie of all time

  • @magicmike7198
    @magicmike7198 Před 9 měsíci +29

    The quality of the acting, particularly of F. Murray Abraham (who won the Oscar for this role) is breathtaking. Each of Abraham's gestures as well as the tone of his voice is impeccable and poetic. What a memorable piece of acting! For my part, I admit that the actor playing the King (or the Emperor, I'm not sure) is so funny that I remember it to this day. The way he says "Mmmmm-Mmmm..." when he's thinking while listening to someone's opinion or when he constantly says "Well. There it is' makes me chuckle every time. To this day, when the situation calls for it, I say, “Well. There it is'' the same way that actor does.

    • @damon6126
      @damon6126 Před 9 měsíci

      I agree wholeheartedly. F. Murray Abraham's performance in this is probably my favorite of all. His acting was sublime.

    • @Hiraghm
      @Hiraghm Před 9 měsíci

      In my mind, the Emperor will always be the principal in "Ferris Beuller's Day off".

    • @crimesforkibble6912
      @crimesforkibble6912 Před 9 měsíci

      ​@@Hiraghmand a disgusting pedo apparently

  • @MichaelJohnsonAzgard
    @MichaelJohnsonAzgard Před 9 měsíci +8

    The Requiem scene is one of my favourites of any film. You don't have to understand what they're talking about, just listen and one of the greatest pieces of music is opened up. His nemesis finally understands.

  • @pulsarstargrave256
    @pulsarstargrave256 Před 9 měsíci +7

    From what I've seen in the comments , no one has spoken too much about Mozart's wife, CONSTANZE and her importance! First, based on the portrait I saw, I think Elizabeth Berridge was well cast to play Constanze. Second, we have Constanze to thank not only for preserving Mozart's work; but for also setting up memorial concerts and seeing it published to keep the memory of his music alive! Furthermore, she, along with her second husband, produced a biography of the composer. Constanze Mozart did indeed know how to get things done.

  • @davidmeir9348
    @davidmeir9348 Před 9 měsíci +62

    The movie does take some liberties. Salieri and Mozart were not actually at odds with each other. It's actually the opposite but even in his lifetime, after Mozart's death, there were rumours that Salieri was jealous of him and had him poisoned, even though Mozart didn't die of poisoning and had no poisoning symptoms. These rumours affected Salieri and later brought him to make a nervous breakdown.
    After Salieri's death, his music was pretty much forgotten until this movie which renewed the interest in the composer.
    Mozart was though like depicted in the film, very child-like but incredibly talented.
    The scene were he plays a part Salieri had written after just hearing it once and even improves on it on the spot is genuine. He was incredibly gifted and it will be centuries, maybe more before someone with such an extraordinary talent is born in the world again.

    • @djyanno
      @djyanno Před 9 měsíci +11

      There is also the Requiem scene at the end wheer Mozart is reciting to Salieri. I saw a documentary where they said how challenging it was to make this interesting... well they achieved it, it's fabulous. Also Hulce said that he purposedly forgot to say some details in his dialogue so that F Murray Abraham would ask questions and look confused to show how much Mozart was so much more better than Salieri. But yeah, the movie took some liberties, Salieri's music is far from being mediocre.

    • @lindenmanmax
      @lindenmanmax Před 9 měsíci +3

      Salieri was remembered mostly as a great teacher, the Yoda of classical music. His students included Beethoven and Liszt.

    • @rollomaughfling380
      @rollomaughfling380 Před 9 měsíci +1

      It took *_all_* the liberties. Mozart had a healthy sense of humour, not "childlike," if you ever read his letters. That's the extent of it. Miloš Forman was a good overall filmmaker, but . . . This was a riff on a Pushkin Fantasia, nothing more. FFS, Forman had done the super-cringey musical "Hair" just five years prior.

    • @djyanno
      @djyanno Před 9 měsíci +2

      @@rollomaughfling380 is it Forman's fault? I mean the film is based on a play I think

    • @djyanno
      @djyanno Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@lindenmanmax I think Salieri's Wikipedia page has high traffic today

  • @williambranch4283
    @williambranch4283 Před 9 měsíci +18

    A great movie. There is a "in score" version of the final Requiem scene, where the notes magically appear while Salieri is transcribing Mozart's genius. OP.

  • @paulklenknyc
    @paulklenknyc Před 9 měsíci +14

    I give you a ton of credit for sitting through 3 hours. Your enjoyment was very easy to see. Once again - A pleasure watching your reaction!

    • @Phethario
      @Phethario Před 8 měsíci +4

      She tought the directors cut had "to many notes"😂

    • @paulklenknyc
      @paulklenknyc Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@Phethario lol

  • @emmanuelarthur5471
    @emmanuelarthur5471 Před 9 měsíci +8

    Finally Amadeus. My top 1 movie of all time. I remember being so happy when this movie was requested on your charity stream.

  • @CCDzine
    @CCDzine Před 9 měsíci +6

    A few years ago I saw this movie in a concert hall with a live orchestra playing the soundtrack.

  • @BigSleepyOx
    @BigSleepyOx Před 9 měsíci +23

    I always loved this movie, but I like the theatrical release a lot more than the "director's cut". Indeed, this is one of the movies that made me realize that the director's cuts are normally worse than the theatrical cuts. I used to be one of those that said, "The director's cuts are the best, because they embody the artist's vision", but now I say that the producers and studios are right to reign in the director's indulgences. lol

    • @baguettegott3409
      @baguettegott3409 Před 6 měsíci +3

      It does flow much better in the theatrical cut. The only issue is that it comes so completely out of nowhere in the end when Mozart's wife hates Salieri so much. It just seems like she's being weird for no reason when you haven't seen the scene where he humilates her (and makes her think he's going to use her).

    • @saranemcova5448
      @saranemcova5448 Před 6 měsíci

      ​@@baguettegott3409I supposed someone else has seen One Fatal Flaw series 😏

  • @ChrisTian-rm7zm
    @ChrisTian-rm7zm Před 8 měsíci +2

    Amadeus is the movie with the best soundtrack ever.

  • @jd-zr3vk
    @jd-zr3vk Před 9 měsíci +6

    We saw this in a theatre in 1980s. The movie did not feel like 2 1/3 hours, it is captivating.

  • @keith6485
    @keith6485 Před 9 měsíci +2

    The Requiem Mass is an amazingly powerful composition. One of the greatest ever. I used to put my headphones on and fall asleep to it. A friend of mine, who is also a fan of Mozart's music asked me how I could possibly fall asleep listening to that. I told him that I found the power of the music to be so very calming and reassuring.

  • @MrGadfly772
    @MrGadfly772 Před 9 měsíci +12

    Theatrical cuts exist for a reason. Director's cuts are for dvd sales to true fans. But they are not nessesarily the best way to see a movie. Often they lose the pace and rhythm of the original theatrical version.

    • @rgallitan
      @rgallitan Před 9 měsíci +3

      Indeed, but sadly in this case the Director's Cut is the only version available. The original has not been released on any format in over 20 years.

    • @nellgwenn
      @nellgwenn Před 2 měsíci

      The director's cut doesn't add very much in length to the original version.

  • @deanroddey2881
    @deanroddey2881 Před 9 měsíci +7

    If you want to continue exploring this area, try "Immortal Beloved", which is a bio-pic about Beethoven. Probably also not totally accurate, but more so than this one by far I think. And he was a very tragic character as well.

  • @questionablehumor2800
    @questionablehumor2800 Před 9 měsíci +4

    I saw Amadeus in the theater when it was first released. I had been studying music only 7 years (classically and scholastically) and had only just started composing, but this film easily grabbed me by the heart and has yet to let go. And his Requiem mass wrecks me every time (especially the '94 Weiner Philharmoniker w/ Von Karajan ❤️).

  • @room2180
    @room2180 Před 7 měsíci +1

    Mozart Requiem.k.626 is my absolute favorite! It inspired me to properly mourn my grandfather Paolo. What a master artist, Mozart was.

  • @o0pinkdino0o
    @o0pinkdino0o Před 9 měsíci +9

    One of my all time favourite films. If you love period movies go for Dangerous Liasons with John Malkovich, Glenn Close, Keanu (very young) and Uma Thurman (even younger !)
    The maid is actually Cynthia Nixon (Miranda from Sex in the City).

    • @oliverbrownlow5615
      @oliverbrownlow5615 Před 8 měsíci

      Miloš Foreman, the director of *Amadeus,* also made a film version of *Les Liasons Dangereuses,* called *Valmont* (1989), starring Colin Firth, Annette Bening, Meg Tilly, Fairuza Balk, Siân Phillips, Jeffrey Jones, and Henry Thomas.

  • @TheBigJD100
    @TheBigJD100 Před 9 měsíci +1

    LOVE this movie!! One of my favorites! So glad you did a reaction to this classic!

  • @a-top7090
    @a-top7090 Před 9 měsíci +1

    I’m so happy that you saw this movie. I saw this at my music class in high school. I remember my teacher almost crying at the end because of how heartbreaking the scene was when he passes away.

  • @harryrabbit2870
    @harryrabbit2870 Před 9 měsíci +1

    I've found that little discoveries like this, such as a movie you wouldn't ordinarily watch, can leave a more lasting impression and open up avenues of discovery. When this movie came out in 1984, it seemed like it was everywhere and was all people could talk about. But then, time casts a shadow over these gems and they fade away. Glad you enjoyed it.

  • @djyanno
    @djyanno Před 9 měsíci +4

    Cannot wait for this one. Hope I remain 100% in my suggestions

  • @francescobruno6172
    @francescobruno6172 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Oh I'm so happy you're watching this film! I absolutely loved it!

  • @jeffsherk7056
    @jeffsherk7056 Před 9 měsíci +3

    Centaine, what a wonderful reaction. Moazart was taken to a pauper's grave. People who had no money were buried in mass graves.

  • @goatkiller666
    @goatkiller666 Před 9 měsíci +3

    This movie introduced me to classical music. By the end of it, I had Mozart playing at my wedding. This is the greatest soundtrack album EVER, by the way. Three CDs, worth every penny.

  • @anthonyvictor3034
    @anthonyvictor3034 Před 9 měsíci +6

    Have never seen director’s cut. But the original film was stunning. I also saw a filmed version of a British stage production, that included an orchestra on stage.

    • @FightingTorque411
      @FightingTorque411 Před 9 měsíci

      I saw this film version at Edinburgh's Usher Hall, but with the score removed and a live orchestra playing all the music beneath the screen instead. One of the greatest nights at the theatre I've ever had.

  • @ironman0917
    @ironman0917 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Mozart was a genius, an absolute GENIUS

  • @grichard1585
    @grichard1585 Před 9 měsíci +2

    My favorite quote from this is ... "Too many notes!"

  • @Arsolon618
    @Arsolon618 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Absolutely my favorite movie of all time. Great to see someone reacting to it!

  • @peterdawson2403
    @peterdawson2403 Před 8 měsíci

    I am glad to see you smiling!

  • @jesselewis5699
    @jesselewis5699 Před 3 měsíci +2

    Amadeus & Glory are 2 of the greatest movies ever made. Period.

  • @feelthebern7662
    @feelthebern7662 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Not based on history at all but changes it up to tell a wonderful story about innate talent, those who don’t have it and knowing and reconciling your limits was fantastic. One of my favorite movies. The maid you said was a good actor grew up to play Miranda the lawyer in the Sex and the City series.

  • @joelds1751
    @joelds1751 Před 9 měsíci

    Always a good movie especially if you enjoy classical music. Your steep slope ceiling reminds me of my second floor bedroom in Copenhagen, when I was in college, 40 years ago.

  • @lawrenceallen8096
    @lawrenceallen8096 Před 9 měsíci +1

    The ending, where Mozart is dictating to Salieri, next-level film-making that has yet to be matched.

  • @Hiraghm
    @Hiraghm Před 9 měsíci +1

    About a year or so before this movie came out, I was in college. At the local music store they had a sale on classical music albums. I bought half a dozen just to have something to listen to.
    When this came out, I went to see it because I'd developed an appreciation for classical music.
    After seeing this movie, I have always wanted to see the Marriage of Figaro and The Magic Flute.
    I had gotten a book on video game programming about a decade later; incorporated into the theme of the example game was some "bogus music" being played... that turned out to be "Entrance of the Queen of the Night" from the Magic flute.
    Decades later, I would still whistle the Queen of the Night's soliloquy, having never seen the opera.
    When "Shaw Shank Redemption" came out, and they played the piece from Marriage of Figaro, and I remember thinking that it was actually the second best piece. My absolute favorite was Perdona Contessa, which I discovered while watching Amadeus. It was everything Salieri described; the voice of forgiveness.
    39 years later, and I still haven't seen either opera.

  • @NSAdonis
    @NSAdonis Před 9 měsíci +2

    This movie and Immortal Beloved (About Beethoven) are two that show music being felt, I love both for that. :)

  • @PamArtsValentine
    @PamArtsValentine Před 9 měsíci +1

    Love Amadeus- a fantastic movie! And, like all great films, it makes you dive into the real story & life of Mozart!

  • @dudermcdudeface3674
    @dudermcdudeface3674 Před 9 měsíci +1

    It's amazing that such a rich and heartfelt movie is also hilarious.

  • @blacksheep8427
    @blacksheep8427 Před 9 měsíci +2

    I agree about the director's cut. I don't know if it's worth it, with the possible exception of the scene between Salieri and Constanza - not because of the nudity, exactly, but because of the way he treats her. Maybe it's not necessary for her to come back that night, but she's doing it because she loves her husband and they're getting desperate financially, so she does something desperate. And it makes her attitude towards Salieri at the end make so much more sense.

  • @jamesmoore4003
    @jamesmoore4003 Před 9 měsíci

    I just noticed the maid that was hired by an “admirer” is what’s her face from Sex and the City. One of the girls on that show.

  • @johannesvalterdivizzini1523
    @johannesvalterdivizzini1523 Před 9 měsíci

    I first saw Amadeus on Broadway as a play---brilliant cast led by Tim Curry (amazing) as Mozart and Ian McKellen as Salieri, and Jane Seymour as Stanzi. I love this film. It was shot primarily in Prague, and off and on I was walking down streets I remembered from this film. There is also a Church there (St. Nicholas) that has an organ on which Mozart had performed in the 18th Century.

  • @ohedd
    @ohedd Před 9 měsíci

    10:39 when Mozart laughs, startling the emperor lmao

  • @davepangburn
    @davepangburn Před 8 měsíci

    Cut to End Scene. Salieri's dark, mocking laugh, observing the wrought he has brought upon the tortured Priest. "Your merciful God...", further delivering a malign sermon upon the innocent soul (and yet Salieri's words have the self-awareness to cast judgement upon himself). In the beginning, the Father had come thinking he could minister salvation upon the subject. But in the end, it is Salieri who is the Minister. A Minister of Vindictiveness towards his clearly shaken subject, rocking his faith, his confession also an instrument of visiting harm. "I will speak for you, Father. I speak for all mediocrities. I am their champion, I am their patron saint." Salieri laughs & smiles. "Mediocrities of the world, I absolve you..." Fade to divine laughter.

  • @riusu8672
    @riusu8672 Před 9 měsíci +1

    I was exactly your 1k Likes!!! :-P but - as for Mozart, He is one of my favorite composers a true Maestro and His Symphonies were Godly for his era. thanks for doing this reaction :)

  • @lindarne77
    @lindarne77 Před 9 měsíci

    Awww... I redmember this one :)
    we watched it at school in 9th grade.
    We needed a fair bit of help from our teacher to keep up with the subtleties and intricasies.
    but it is a great one :)

  • @MahahualOceanConditions
    @MahahualOceanConditions Před 9 měsíci

    "That is his brightest moment...also for me with the Sun!"....that was a great coincidence!

  • @fernandoroza6061
    @fernandoroza6061 Před 9 měsíci

    Thanks for reacting to this wonderful movie 😌👍👍

  • @thomasgriffiths6758
    @thomasgriffiths6758 Před 7 měsíci +1

    The young actress who plays the maid is Cynthia Nixon who later became famous for her role as Miranda in Sex and the City.

  • @BBFilms88
    @BBFilms88 Před 9 měsíci +2

    I really wish the theatrical cut existed.

  • @epicmage82
    @epicmage82 Před 8 měsíci

    This movie and Immortal Beloved are two of my favorite movies. The other one is about Beethoven. I didn't grow up with classical music, but got introduced to it through cartoons at a very early age, and these movies also helped me develop a curiosity, and appreciation that had me exploring the genre. Thankfully 😊.

  • @goatkiller666
    @goatkiller666 Před 9 měsíci +2

    Cynthia Nixon is the only member of the Sex and the City cast to have an Oscar, because she played the maid in Amadeus. Not that SatC is high art or anything, but it was a happy accident for her that she played a small part in such an award-winning film.

    • @ADifferentVibe
      @ADifferentVibe Před 9 měsíci

      She didn’t win an Oscar (wasn't even nominated) but this was definitely one of her career highlights to be in an Oscar winning film.

    • @goatkiller666
      @goatkiller666 Před 9 měsíci

      @@ADifferentVibe - The movie won. Everyone in the movie won.

    • @AndyMatts44
      @AndyMatts44 Před 8 měsíci

      @@goatkiller666 - Yeah. That's not generally how that works. No one refers to Chris Messina as an Oscar Winner because he was in Argo, and they don't give each and every cast member a statue for being in the winning film.

  • @justwatching6186
    @justwatching6186 Před 9 měsíci

    Powerful movie. Incredible acting. Just shows no matter what the subject is, if the performance and writing are there the audience will appreciate.

  • @jeffreykaufmann2867
    @jeffreykaufmann2867 Před 7 měsíci +1

    Mozart wrote his last 3 Symphonies in 6 Weeks!

  • @omegapsi847
    @omegapsi847 Před 9 měsíci +6

    I recommend listening to Konfutatis and Lacrimosa one after another, it takes like 10min. They are part of Mozarts Requiem and played during his final scenes with Salieri. The amount of emotion I get everytime I listen to it is beyond words.

  • @RobFMDetroit
    @RobFMDetroit Před 9 měsíci +1

    Wow, nobody does this movie. One of my top 10. ❤

  • @xepfeon
    @xepfeon Před 7 měsíci

    one thing that is pretty accurate is that even though he was celebrated in his time, Salieri was still a third rate composer (and he knew it) with a god tier ear for music

  • @Lord_Legolas_Greenleaf
    @Lord_Legolas_Greenleaf Před 9 měsíci +1

    I remember watching this at the theater but don't remember much about it 😊

  • @paulklenknyc
    @paulklenknyc Před 9 měsíci +2

    Great reaction! FYI, this is pure fantasy, written as a Broadway murder play. The people are real, but the story is made up. A glorious film! Glad you enjoyed it!

    • @GregorySnipe
      @GregorySnipe Před 8 měsíci

      It's not pure fantasy, elements are true. Sallieri claimed to have killed Mozart.

  • @comment2344
    @comment2344 Před 9 měsíci +1

    This in my opinion is the greatest film of all time. I thought I would never watch a film better than the Godfather but I was wrong!

  • @rg3388
    @rg3388 Před 9 měsíci

    THE MAKING OF AMADEUS is one of my favorite documentaries of its type and is available on CZcams.

  • @acon2211
    @acon2211 Před 9 měsíci

    Bwahahahaha your editing here is perfect 20:51

  • @thecure1589
    @thecure1589 Před 7 měsíci

    In the museum of noses, there goes the friggin' Mona Lisa!

  • @sspdirect02
    @sspdirect02 Před 5 měsíci

    Tom Hulce is the voice of Quasimodo in Disney’s The Hunchback of Notre Dame.

  • @thomasnieswandt8805
    @thomasnieswandt8805 Před 8 měsíci

    I dont know if anyone commented it yet, but a cool fun fact
    When Mozart starts to instruct Salleri to write the requiem and Mozart repeats the "A minor...." that was not written. To stay true to the music and the beat, both Hulce (Mozart) and Abraham (Salleri) had earplugs, to go along in real time. But Hulce earplugs didnt work so he was waiting and repeating until he could start "composing". Its such a brilliant scene and the fact that Abraham played along, made it look like Mozart was to sick to compose

    • @SuperMarioBrosIII
      @SuperMarioBrosIII Před 8 měsíci +1

      @thomasnieswandt8805 All thw music heard in the movie is pre-recorded however Tom Hulce never misses a single note even when played upside down LOL as shown in one scene!🎹🎵🤔🧐

  • @terrylandess6072
    @terrylandess6072 Před 9 měsíci

    Every time a movie is made using historical figures or events, heck even fictional books as source material, there are those whom feel compelled to 'clarify'. :P I enjoyed this immensely. The music, acting, wardrobe, set design and script were treated with higher ambition and melded perfectly to lose the viewer in this period in time. I'm watching a movie, not a documentary. For a couple hours I was there.

  • @oxhine
    @oxhine Před 9 měsíci +1

    Hey, Centane! One is not required to have any knowledge of musical theory or jargon to appreciate the transcription scene. As Mozart rattles off instructions which he perceives in his mind with absolute clarity, Salieri struggles to keep pace. He is getting insight into his idol's mind and process. He is breathless and astonished. As Salieri had noted throughout the film, Mozart would not make any corrections and the entire composition was already flawlessly constructed in his mind. At one point, Salieri reaches an impasse and doesn't understand what Mozart is saying; he cannot comprehend such an arrangement. That is his limit. Salieri has hit his wall, the barrier that keeps him from genius. Mozart demonstrates the music and, upon hearing the notes, Salieri is nudged past his mental block and witnesses beauty pour forth. It's a masterful scene and a tragic one well-played by both Hulce and Abraham. Salieri's love and hate are intermingled palpably.
    This is an extraordinary movie and my all-time favorite.
    The Director's Cut adds superfluous scenes. The theatrical cut is best.
    It was originally an 1830 short story called "Mozart and Salieri" written by Alexander Pushkin which was adapted into an 1897 opera also called "Mozart and Salieri" by Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov.
    The 1979 London stage play adaptation was written by Peter Shaffer and debuted at the Royal National Theatre with Paul Scofield as Salieri and Simon Callow as Mozart. Callow played the head of the working class theater company who commissioned Mozart's "Magic Flute" opera in the film.
    The 1981 Broadway production starred Ian "Gandalf" McKellen as Salieri, Tim "Wadsworth" Curry as Mozart and Jane "Dr. Quinn" Seymour as Constanze. The production won multiple Tony Awards.
    The 1999 Broadway revival starred David "Poirot" Suchet as Salieri and Michael "Lucian" Sheen as Mozart. This production was similarly lauded.
    The 1984 film by Milos Forman won multiple Oscars including Best Actor for F. Murray Abraham as Salieri.
    The play is a fictionalized dramatization but Mozart was a prodigy, a spendthrift and an impractical creative type in life. He is buried in an unknown pauper's grave and is considered the greatest composer who ever lived.

  • @FeaturingRob
    @FeaturingRob Před 9 měsíci

    - This was based on a stage play, and the actor who played Mozart in the original National Theater production was Simon Callow, who plays the actor Schikaneder, who commissions The Magic Flute in the film. When the play went to Broadway, the main three leads were Ian McKellen (Salieri), Tim Curry (Mozart), and Jane Seymour (Constanze). McKellen won the Tony Award for Best Actor in a Play.
    - How do you connect Amadeus to Game of Thrones? Actor Roy Dotrice, who plays Leopold Mozart, was on a TV series in the 1980s called Beauty and the Beast, one of the main writers of the series was George R.R. Martin, and they became friends. When Martin published 'A Game of Thrones', he asked Dotrice to narrate the audiobook, which he did for all of the 'A Song of Ice and Fire novels until he died in 2012. He was originally supposed to play Grand Maester Pycelle in the series but bowed out due to health reasons, but still appeared in two episodes of the series as Wisdom Hallyne the Pyromancer. He was also the father of Karen Dotrice, best known for her role as Jane Banks in Walt Disney's Mary Poppins in 1964.
    - Before this Tom Hulce (Mozart) was best known for playing Larry "Pinto" Kroger in National Lampoon's Animal House. Today, he has produced two rock musicals on Broadway, Spring Awakening, for which he won a Tony for Best Musical, and Green Day's American Idiot. He was nominated for the Best Actor Oscar for his role as Mozart in this.
    - F. Murray Abraham won the Oscar for Best Actor as Salieri, and in his speech said that the only way the win could have been better was if Tom Hulce could be on the stage also winning the award with him.
    - Lorl, the maid was played by Cynthia Nixon, when she was still a teenager many years before gaining fame as attorney Miranda Hobbs on Sex and the City and the follow-up series And Just Like That. At the time the film came out, she also had two small roles in two separate Broadway plays at the same time just two blocks from each other. She started as a kid and apart from her 2018 run for Governor of New York she lost, she has worked pretty consistently as an actress.

  • @TheBrotherdarkness9
    @TheBrotherdarkness9 Před 6 měsíci

    When i was in 5th or 6th grade our teacher from music class gave us as homework to watch this movie since it played on a saturday evening iirc. I ended up watching even the rerun that came a day later and in the next music class i was one of the few who actually watched it, but not only once but twice and i was literally the only one who enjoyed it. I was a weird kid, lol.

  • @jamesdakrn
    @jamesdakrn Před 8 měsíci

    As someone who thought who was hot sh*t in HS who was humbled in a “prestigious” university I can relate so much to this movie

  • @charlescallen460
    @charlescallen460 Před 4 dny

    What an excellent and thorough reaction to a great movie! You impress every time young lady! 🙂💯

  • @penfold7455
    @penfold7455 Před 9 měsíci

    Yeah, there are some accuracies and inaccuracies in this film. The one interesting accuracy in it was that Emperor Joseph II did actually say once that one opera he heard had simply "too many notes"; with another opera he also opined that the "bass sounded too low".
    But yeah, the writing of the Requiem was not done in a span of 24 hours between Mozart and Salieri. It actually was done over a period of a few months by Mozart and his one assistant/pupil named Franz Xavier Sussmayer; when Mozart died, he was in the middle of working on the Lacrimosa movement (this is the music you hear during the rainy funeral scene). From that point on, Sussmayer completed the Requiem using ideas Mozart had sketched out for the remaining movements while he had been alive.
    Another inaccuracy was that Salieri was the anonymous patron who commissioned the Requiem. While the patron was anonymous in real life, later in history it was found that the patron was this older Viennese aristocrat named Count Walseg von Stuppach. This guy had a penchant for commissioning music from composers, but when the music was premiered during his social functions he would tell everyone he had written the work and not give any credit to the actual composer. He commissioned the Requiem to be used for the funeral of his 17-year old wife who had recently died.

    • @AndyMatts44
      @AndyMatts44 Před 8 měsíci

      Not sure if you watched the movie or not, but the movie doesn't pretend or depict the Requiem being written in 24 hours.
      Don't you remember his friend coming in and seeing the Requiem Mass written and complaining that they needed him to put The Magic Flute on paper so they could begin rehearsing? Then the fictionalized collaboration happens after the opera is in full production to the public.
      This movie is based on a play where the author imagined what would happen if some of the conspiracy gossip that went around were true, and what that might look like. There is no claim to be accurately biographical or factually historical. It's always been a dramatic work of fiction. Talking about what it "got wrong" is so tedious, pedantic and pretentious. It's wearing to have to slog through all the "experts" talking about what a completely made-up work of fiction "got wrong" every time someone reacts to the movie or someone posts a scene from it.
      It didn't get anything wrong, because it's always been known to be made-up fiction.

  • @lindacowles756
    @lindacowles756 Před 2 měsíci

    33:10 City. She left Vienna for Baden where there was a health spa.

  • @user-nu9py1vc6j
    @user-nu9py1vc6j Před 9 měsíci +1

    I am glad for me that you watch this film.

  • @JulieB1387
    @JulieB1387 Před 7 měsíci

    Amadeus and Auntie Mame (Rosalind Russell version) are my favorite movies of all time. I have to watch them at least once a year.

  • @jcg1576
    @jcg1576 Před 9 měsíci

    One of the great things about this movie is that despite its length it goes by somewhat quickly or at a pace that doesn’t make audiences to bored while watching it. Another reason why it is a probably not to boring for audiences who enjoy it is the ay it blends the mix of drama and comedy throughout the movie and story it tells regarding the life and times of Mozart as told by the character Saleri. Though not historically accurate on various aspect’s including the relationship between Mozart and Saleri who were, despite being rival composers, in fact friends and or felt great respect for each other, the movie is nonetheless fun and enjoyable.

  • @stevenhernandeznon-profitf968

    Yes!!! An amazing film

  • @tubekulose
    @tubekulose Před 9 měsíci

    One of my all time favourite movies! ❤

  • @fidel2xl
    @fidel2xl Před 9 měsíci +2

    Great reaction, Centane. Another great but underrated movie about another composer is 1994's 'Immortal Beloved' (about Beethoven) starring Gary Oldman as Ludwig Van Beethoven. It's actually a Rom-Dram-Mystery movie. You should definitely check it out --- 'Immortal Beloved' (1994).

    • @Alexis40ar
      @Alexis40ar Před 9 měsíci

      Great reaction?? Did you even watch the video??

    • @fidel2xl
      @fidel2xl Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@Alexis40ar I said what I said. Whatever issues you have is your problem.
      Btw, I had actually already responded to your dumb comment 16 hours ago (within an hour of you posting it), but the CZcams algorithm seems to have deleted my original response since it was deemed 'offensive'. You're very lucky that we currently live in a SOFT snowflake CLOWN-World era. So, I want you to use your imagination as to what my original response was. I meant every word of it. 😈

  • @larasemerad2605
    @larasemerad2605 Před 9 měsíci

    First time seeing director's cut- I like to see more about Mozart. Thank you.

  • @AndyMatts44
    @AndyMatts44 Před 8 měsíci

    I don't think this movie claimed that Salieri wasn't known for his own work, so I wouldn't call that an inaccuracy. He even talks about how he was one of the best known and popular composers in his day, and the Emperor did proclaim his opera to be the best yet.
    What it made a statement about was that, yes, to a certain extent, Salieri's name has faded into obscurity a bit (he's more known now because of his movie than because of his own enduring musical fame), while Mozart's work has lasted, immortal and recognized still for its genius.

  • @JeremyStevens-gw1hl
    @JeremyStevens-gw1hl Před 9 měsíci

    I am writing this to help out Kamila and this video and this channel with the algorithm 🥰❤️✌️☺️

  • @Joseph-xt3el
    @Joseph-xt3el Před 9 měsíci +1

    Actually solieri did really admit to killing mozart when he was in a psych ward. Most people think he was just crazy when he said it. There were also people of the time who thought solieri poisoned mozart.

  • @justitia257
    @justitia257 Před 6 měsíci

    Beautiful movie

  • @Charlesbaker3017
    @Charlesbaker3017 Před 9 měsíci +1

    I played Emperor Joseph II..in a production..best part of rehearsals was .introducing myself to Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart..out of this world 🌎..MUSIC..

  • @davidyoung745
    @davidyoung745 Před 9 měsíci

    I love F. Murray Abraham. What a brilliant actor.

  • @jathygamer8746
    @jathygamer8746 Před 9 měsíci

    Love the music 🎧 💓 🎶
    Love the movie 🎥 💓 🍿

  • @Kunsoo1024
    @Kunsoo1024 Před 9 měsíci +3

    Mozart most likely died of consumption. Salieri couldn't have had anything to do with that. What I liked about the film, which separated it from so many other period pieces, is that the servants and lower level people weren't just background. They kept a stoic position, but you see them watching what is happening with curiosity or other emotional reactions. They hide it from the aristocracy, but not from us beyond the 4th wall. As for the historical accuracy, I wish they had changed the names (like they did in Inherit the Wind - about a real trial, but with the poetic license the makers decided to change the names) and just used the music. But it might have impacted the draw. Speaking of Inherit the Wind, you should consider watching that! Original version please.

    • @rmhanseniii
      @rmhanseniii Před 9 měsíci

      I disagree on one point…Salieri could have certainly contributed to Mozart’s death. If a person is inches away from death’s door, a small amount of stress would be all that is needed for death. The consumption weekend him so badly that the stress put on him by Salieri theoretically could have put him over.

    • @lindacowles756
      @lindacowles756 Před 2 měsíci

      G'day, Kunsoo! I admit my ignorance, but could you please explain to me what "the fourth wall" means?

  • @emdeeeff
    @emdeeeff Před 9 měsíci +1

    Don't think of it as a story about things happening, but about living with the characters in their world. You're not watching a bunch of similar events happen, you're watching Mozart's life and health slowly crumble, while you're also watching Salieri's control and sanity crumbling alongside. By the end you can start to wonder who's even telling the story and how much of it is even true.
    Also the music. And the costumes. And the music. And the sets. And the music. I always watch thing with the lights out so I can't see anything but the screen, and the sound turned waaay up, and just let it wash over me.

  • @victormanteca7395
    @victormanteca7395 Před 9 měsíci

    They dumped his body because that was the way burials were in Vienna those days for the non-nobles. Space in cemeteries was limited and mass graves were the usual thing, and in Vienna it was even by law. It's not because he was that poor, as has been said. Unfortunately, because of that, we don't know where his body is, nor Vivaldi's and others who died there in the 1700s. Beethoven was rewarded with a suntuous proper tomb because of how famous he was in his late life.

  • @MulberryBuccaneer
    @MulberryBuccaneer Před 9 měsíci

    One of the greatest movies ever made! ♥

  • @victormanteca7395
    @victormanteca7395 Před 9 měsíci +1

    As for historical accuracy, the movie is not based on the real history, but on a theatrical play by Schaeffer, which is itself based on a tale by Pushkin. So it's a movie on a play on a fictional account of a real story, so you get the convoluted origin of it all. Historical fact is that Salieri was in no way a mediocre composer, that he and Mozart were in good terms, and that he was the teacher of Beethoven and a well-liked person in general. I've listened to his work and he's really, really good (if not a groundbreaking innovator).

  • @MikeWood
    @MikeWood Před 9 měsíci

    The maid is played by a very young Cynthia Nixon who would later star in Sex in the City. I was surprised I didn't know that till you commented on her performance. A really engaging story. Wonderful movie and music. Not being a musician it is interesting to think those who are revere others like Salieri did of Mozart (in the movie at any rate) :)

  • @ericbeltran1158
    @ericbeltran1158 Před 9 měsíci

    It was a story his wife made up years after his death to try and boost his popularity cause he wasn't that popular in his time. It worked made him into what he was a genius. Later was discovered this was made up by her. The same thing happened with Vincent Van Gogh. Story made up by his Sister in law to bring him to where he belong. You can go to the Smithsonian Museum in Washington and see his Genius. Where they buy a Original by Beethoven and there are correction and rewrites thru out his work one one piece. Then there are 2 symphonies dine by Mozart and both had none all done and written all at one time no errors ,correction rewrites just perfect. Amazing. No copies period.

  • @davidstenow5055
    @davidstenow5055 Před 9 měsíci

    F. Murray Abraham gave the performance of a lifetime. Such a fantastic movie!

  • @DragonWolfEntertainmentFilms
    @DragonWolfEntertainmentFilms Před 9 měsíci +1

    Would love to see you do Ted Lasso...Might be the wrong place to suggest, but here i am. :P

  • @terencemccormick8178
    @terencemccormick8178 Před 8 měsíci

    As at least one other commenter has noted, this wasn't intended to be biographical, or even historical in an academic sense. Peter Shaffer deliberately spun a sort of "what if" fantasy out of murky historical elements here, in order to explore further one of the most persistent themes in his work as a playwright: namely, the reaction of the merely ordinary when confronted with genius. Amadeus is a wonderful result, but it's not even his best exploration of this theme. For that, I would recommend Equus, which also received a cinematic treatment (but about a decade earlier, in the 70s).

    • @oliverbrownlow5615
      @oliverbrownlow5615 Před 8 měsíci

      I would argue that in his best works (including *Amadeus),* Peter Shaffer is obsessed with "religious" questions. The film version of *Equus* (1977) starred Richard Burton and Peter Firth. This is the same work in which, decades later, Danny Radcliffe of *Harry Potter* fame made his startling stage debut. An earlier movie based on a Shaffer play, *The Royal Hunt of the Sun* (1969), starred Robert Shaw and (in a performance that will stun *Sound of Music* fans) Christopher Plummer.