
Subtext: Conversations about Classic Books and Films The Music of Longing in “Amadeus” (1984)
Mar 3, 2026
A close look at Salieri’s rivalry with Mozart and whether divine favor can be unfair. A debate over historical truth versus the film’s dramatic mythmaking. An exploration of Mozart’s laugh, scatological humor, and how prodigyhood shapes a life. Themes of order versus chaos, longing in music, and Christlike imagery in the Requiem.
AI Snips
Chapters
Transcript
Episode notes
Divine Accounting Explains Salieri's Envy
- Salieri interprets musical genius as divine accounting, expecting moral repayment for talent while seeing Mozart as an uncollateralized miracle.
- That belief fuels his envy: Mozart's crude behavior becomes proof of cosmic unfairness rather than human complexity.
Historical Evidence Against The Poisoning Myth
- Aaron Olanek (Wes) cites Albert Borowitz's research debunking the Salieri-poisoned-Mozart myth and highlighting Salieri's popularity and students.
- Historical records show Salieri taught Beethoven and Mozart's son, undermining the murder legend.
Child Star Lopsidedness Explains Mozart's Behavior
- The film emphasizes the child-star dynamic: Mozart's prodigy status produces lopsided maturity, explaining both effortless genius and social immaturity.
- Parallel blindfolded childhood scenes link Salieri's envy to sibling rivalry for parental favor.

