Chris Hobson
Well-Known Member
- Relationship to Diabetes
- Type 2
How I got my first exposure to this movie is now lost in the mists of time. I never saw it at the cinema and I think that a VHS video might have been among my wife's possessions when we first set up house together in 1993. It is rather long at about two and a half hours and is a little strange as it starts as a lively comedy but ends as a rather dark tragedy. I quite liked it and watched it more than once before it became something residing in the back of my mind.
A year or two ago we got a new Sky box which uses a satellite dish but is also connected to the WiFi router and allows us to watch You Tube videos on the big telly. Because I have an interest in classical music, the YT algorithm started to suggest videos about Amadeus, what makes this movie great, the making of Amadeus, how historically accurate is Amadeus, along with various clips from the movie. Watching these has rekindled my interest in the film and I thought that I would like to watch it again. We have quite a big collection of DVDs and for some reason I assumed that Amadeus would be among them and was disappointed when I couldn't find it. I realised that it was probably on a VHS, either in the loft or possibly not having been sold at our last car boot sale. Of course Amazon saved the day once again and I ordered a DVD.
This DVD edition is the Director's Cut which is almost three hours long so you can understand why the original version had to be cut down a bit. In this version there is a scene where Elizabeth Berridge gets her togs off which, while being a treat for the boys, might originally have been cut in order to get a less adult oriented rating at the cinema.
Amadeus is the film version of a play of the same name by Peter Shaffer. It is a completely fictional story but based on real life characters Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart and Antonio Salieri. The story is narrated by Salieri as an old man via the well proven medium of flashbacks. Salieri wanted nothing more than to be a great composer and gradually becomes insanely jealous of Mozart's God given talent, especially as he is such a totally obnoxious little brat. Much intrigue follows and so many of the scenes are really memorable which is presumably why so many clips appear on You Tube. What makes this movie great? The acting is brilliant, as are the costumes, the scenery, the soundtrack and everything else about it. It won't be everyone's cup of tea obviously but, if your attention span can take it, it is well worth a look.
This edition came with a bonus disc that included the making of the movie. It was filmed in Prague during the Cold War. The totally paranoid communist government caused plenty of problems but the scenery, both indoors and outdoors was more or less stuck in the eighteenth century to start with so that saved a lot of work and helped to make the scenes look really authentic.
A year or two ago we got a new Sky box which uses a satellite dish but is also connected to the WiFi router and allows us to watch You Tube videos on the big telly. Because I have an interest in classical music, the YT algorithm started to suggest videos about Amadeus, what makes this movie great, the making of Amadeus, how historically accurate is Amadeus, along with various clips from the movie. Watching these has rekindled my interest in the film and I thought that I would like to watch it again. We have quite a big collection of DVDs and for some reason I assumed that Amadeus would be among them and was disappointed when I couldn't find it. I realised that it was probably on a VHS, either in the loft or possibly not having been sold at our last car boot sale. Of course Amazon saved the day once again and I ordered a DVD.
This DVD edition is the Director's Cut which is almost three hours long so you can understand why the original version had to be cut down a bit. In this version there is a scene where Elizabeth Berridge gets her togs off which, while being a treat for the boys, might originally have been cut in order to get a less adult oriented rating at the cinema.
Amadeus is the film version of a play of the same name by Peter Shaffer. It is a completely fictional story but based on real life characters Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart and Antonio Salieri. The story is narrated by Salieri as an old man via the well proven medium of flashbacks. Salieri wanted nothing more than to be a great composer and gradually becomes insanely jealous of Mozart's God given talent, especially as he is such a totally obnoxious little brat. Much intrigue follows and so many of the scenes are really memorable which is presumably why so many clips appear on You Tube. What makes this movie great? The acting is brilliant, as are the costumes, the scenery, the soundtrack and everything else about it. It won't be everyone's cup of tea obviously but, if your attention span can take it, it is well worth a look.
This edition came with a bonus disc that included the making of the movie. It was filmed in Prague during the Cold War. The totally paranoid communist government caused plenty of problems but the scenery, both indoors and outdoors was more or less stuck in the eighteenth century to start with so that saved a lot of work and helped to make the scenes look really authentic.
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