Amadeus imdb movie#
Forman directed the film version of " Hair," and Mozart in this movie seems to share a spirit with some of the characters from "Hair." Mozart's wigs do not look like everybody else's. Perhaps his confidence in his locations gave Forman the freedom to make Mozart slightly out of period. The movie was shot on location in Forman's native Czechoslovakia, and it looks exactly right it fits its period comfortably, perhaps because Prague still contains so many streets and squares and buildings that could be directly from the Vienna of Mozart's day. Murray Abraham), the gaunt court composer whose special torture is to understand better than anybody else how inadequate he is, and how great Mozart is. The patrons, especially Joseph II, the Austro-Hungarian emperor, are connoisseurs and dilettantes, slow to take to Mozart's new music but enchanted by the audacity with which he defends it. The wife, played by delightful, buxom Elizabeth Berridge, contains in one person the qualities of a jolly wench and a loving partner: She likes to loll in bed all day, but also gives Mozart good, sound advice and is a forceful person in her own right. The father never can be pleased, and that creates an undercurrent affecting all of Mozart's success. It centers on the relationships in Mozart's life: with his father, his wife, and Salieri. It's more human than the play the characters are people, not throbbing packages of meaning. Most of them will be unfamiliar to those who have seen Peter Shaffer's brooding play, on which this film is based Shaffer and Forman have brought light, life, and laughter to the material, and it plays with grace and ease. The film is constructed in wonderfully well-written and acted scenes - scenes so carefully constructed, unfolding with such delight, that they play as perfect compositions of words. Hulce would seem all wrong for Mozart, but he is absolutely right, as an unaffected young man filled with delight at his own gifts, unaware of how easily he wounds Salieri and others, tortured only by the guilt of having offended his religious and domineering father. The character is played by Tom Hulce, and if you saw " National Lampoon's Animal House," you may remember him as the fraternity brother who tried to seduce the mayor's daughter, while an angel and a devil whispered in his ears. One of the movie's wisest decisions is to cast Mozart not as a charismatic demigod, not as a tortured superman, but as a goofy, immature, likable kid with a ridiculous laugh. The movie flashes back to his memories of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, the child genius who composed melodies of startling originality and who grew up to become a prolific, driven artist. Murray Abraham, sits hunched in a madhouse confessing to a priest. Salieri, played with burning intensity by F. The movie examines the ways in which this possibility might be true, and by the end of the film we feel a certain kinship with the weak and jealous Salieri - for few of us can identify with divine genius, but many of us probably have had dark moments of urgent self-contempt in the face of those whose effortless existence illustrates our own inadequacies. The movie begins with the suggestion that Salieri might have murdered Mozart. He knows how good it is, he sees how easily Mozart seems to compose it, and he knows that his own work looks pale and silly beside it. He is not a great composer, but he is a good enough composer to know greatness when he hears it, and that is why the music of Mozart breaks his heart. The truth enters in the character of Salieri, who tells the story. "Amadeus" is not only about as much fun as you're likely to have with a movie, it also is disturbingly true.