Film: Milo Forman's "Amadeus"
Film: Milo Forman's "Amadeus"
This paper analyzes the film "Amadeus", directed by Milo Forman, from the perspective of an historian especially as it portrays the Age of Enlightenment.
1,390 words (
approx. 5.6 pages) |
0 sources |
APA | 2005
Paper Summary:
This paper explains that the film "Amadeus", a fictionalized accounting of the life of Mozart, is set in the Enlightenment period in the late eighteenth century and depicts the higher urban, social class in Austria concentrating on rulers rather than commoners. The author points out that Salieri's telling the "Amadeus" story from a mental hospital is his penance, or his position in the Enlightenment purgatory. The paper relates that Mozart, viewed as an Enlightenment hero, is able to push some boundaries, such as composing the "Marriage of Figaro", because the Enlightenment was basically about shaking up the social structure.
Table of Contents
Introduction
Main Question
Conclusion
From the Paper:
"The characters in Forman's "Amadeus" are not fictional, but they are
fictionalized. They are based on real people who lived and died in Enlightenment Europe, but since no one was around to write down every word they said before they died, the director had to take liberties with dialog and action in a way that fictionalizes the story. The death of Mozart is already the stuff of legend and fiction, and this movie takes it further. The characters therefore represent actual historical figures, but they are still fictionalized. Forman's film was made in 1984, and this doesn't appear to have much impact on the story it is telling. The film was a Broadway musical before it was a movie."
Film: Milo Forman's "Amadeus" (2012, January 15). Retrieved February 10, 2012, from http://www.academon.com/Essay-Film-Milo-Forman's-Amadeus/61523
"Film: Milo Forman's "Amadeus"" 15 January 2012. Web. 10 Feb. 2012. <http://www.academon.com/Essay-Film-Milo-Forman's-Amadeus/61523>