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Audience Rating: Parental Guidance
Binding: VHS Tape
EAN: 5024165072486
Format: Dolby, PAL, Surround Sound, Widescreen
Label: Warner Home Video
Languages: EnglishOriginal LanguageAnalogGermanOriginal LanguageAnalogItalianOriginal LanguageAnalog
Manufacturer: Warner Home Video
Number Of Discs: 1
Number Of Items: 1
Publisher: Warner Home Video
Release Date: March 20, 2000
Running Time: 153 minutes
Studio: Warner Home Video
Theatrical Release Date: September 19, 1984
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Editorial Review:Amazon.co.uk Review:The satirical sensibilities of writer Peter Shaffer and director Milos Forman (
One Flew over the Cuckoo's Nest) were ideally matched in this Oscar-winning movie adaptation of Shaffer's hit play about the rivalry between two composers in the court of Austrian Emperor Joseph II--official royal composer Antonio Salieri (F. Murray Abraham), and the younger but superior prodigy Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (Tom Hulce). The conceit is absolutely delicious: Salieri secretly loathes Mozart's crude and bratty personality but is astounded by the beauty of his music. That's the heart of Salieri's torment--although he's in a unique position to recognise and cultivate both Mozart's talent and career, he's also consumed with envy and insecurity in the face of such genius. That such magnificent music should come from such a vulgar little creature strikes Salieri as one of God's cruellest jokes, and it drives him insane. Amadeus creates peculiar and delightful contrasts between the impeccably re-created details of its lavish period setting and the jarring (but humorously refreshing and unstuffy) modern tone of its dialogue and performances--all of which serve to remind us that these were people before they became enshrined in historical and artistic legend. Jeffrey Jones, best-known as Ferris Bueller's principal, is particularly wonderful as the bumbling emperor (with the voice of a modern mid-level businessman). The film's eight Oscars include statuettes for Best Director Forman, Best Actor Abraham (Hulce was also nominated), Best Screenplay and Best Picture. --
Jim Emerson Note: this region two DVD is a "flipper" with a break between sides A and B.
Amazon.co.uk Review:A note-perfect cinematic event whose immortality was assured from its opening night,
Amadeus is an unlikely candidate for the Director's Cut treatment. Like one of Mozart's operas, the multiple Oscar-winning theatrical version seemed perfectly formed from the outset--ideal casting, costumes, sets, cinematography, lighting, screenplay, music, music, music--so the reinstatement of an extra 20 minutes simply risks adding "too many notes". Yet though this extended cut can hardly be said to improve a picture that needed no improvement, it does at least flesh out a couple of small subplots and shed new light on certain key scenes.
Here we learn why Constanze Mozart bears such ill-will towards Salieri when she discovers him at her husband's deathbed: he has insulted and degraded her after she came to him for help. We also see deeper into the reasons why Mozart has no pupils: not only has Salieri poisoned the Emperor's mind against him, but the only promisingly lucrative teaching job he can find ends disastrously when he realises that the master of the house just wants music to quiet his barking dogs. In a humiliating coda to that episode, a drunk and desperate Wolfgang returns later to beg for money only to be coldly rejected. The structure of the picture is otherwise unaltered.
On the DVD: Amadeus--The Director's Cut finally accords this masterful work the DVD treatment it deserves. The handsome anamorphic widescreen picture is accompanied by a choice of Dolby 5.1 or Dolby stereo sound options, and it's all contained on one side of the disc (the original single-disc DVD release was that crime against the format, a "flipper"). Director Milos Forman and writer Peter Shaffer provide a chatty though sporadic commentary, but they're obviously still too mesmerised by the movie to do much more than offer the odd anecdote. Disc 2 contains an excellent new hour-long "making of" documentary, with contributions from Forman, Shaffer, Sir Neville Marriner and all the main actors, taking in the scriptwriting, choice of music, casting and problems involved in filming in Communist Czechoslovakia with half the crew and extras working for the Secret Police. --
Mark Walker
Average Rating:

Rating:

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Sumptuously filmed in beautiful colours, and with a Dolby sound track that will have your upstairs neighbours hammering in rage on your ceiling with their walking sticks, this film presents a largely fictional account of Mozart's last years, and quite libellously portrays Antonio Salieri as Mozart's murderer. It's all about envy, God and getting your just deserts, according to one Amazon reviewer, and I suppose that according to this school of thought, the fact that it's a seriously inaccurate reconstruction ...
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Perhaps the only thing I need to say is that this movie won 8 Oscars, including Best Picture, when it was released in 1984. Amadeus offers much to be enjoyed visually through stunning scenery and costumes, aurally through some of the greatest music ever written, and theatrically through superb writing and acting performances. It's a film that makes just about every critic's top 10 and certainly mine. In fact, if I was allowed to take just three video discs with me to a desert island, this would have to be one ...
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This is unquestionably a great film - a masterpiece, as other reviewers have already commented on at length. I would however draw people's attention to the fact that the Region 2 (Europe) version of this DVD is one of those incredibly irritating 'flipper' DVDs that you have to turn over towards the end (and climax!). Very frustrating - hence the deduction of two stars. If you have a multi-region DVD player you can buy the Region 1 (North America) version.
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The great thing about this film is that it is a true celebration of Mozart's life and music. How many films can truly convince you that classical music is something worth listening too? It is also a more accessible way of understanding the history and context behind some of Mozart's most famous works. A more unique film in that the music takes centre stage and not so much the storyline or the action. As a musician I truly envy Mozart. I can understand why Salieri was so jealous. It would have truly been a great ...
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I thought this fim was in poor taste because it seemed to me to mould and transplant the fimmakers ideas on an interesting enough life already. Why couldnt they have told Mozarts life which was extraordinary enough without making up this fictional rivalry and boring envy plot? This film told me more about the authors and their hangups. It did not do its proper job of illustrating Mozarts life and that is why it felt fake and sad to drag the life of an remarkable person into a false story of someone elses making.