In 1823, aged composer
Antonio Salieri attempts suicide and is committed to a
psychiatric hospital. He claims that he murdered
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. Father Vogler, a young Catholic priest, encourages Salieri to
confess his sins before
God. After Vogler fails to recognize him, Salieri plays three old melodies to jog his memory. Vogler cannot recognize the first two (which Salieri wrote) but is relieved to recognize the third (
Eine kleine Nachtmusik) at once. Salieri peevishly reveals that Mozart wrote it. Salieri begins his confession by saying that he grew up hearing stories of the child prodigy, Mozart. In his youth, Salieri was in love with music but was forbidden by his father from studying the craft. Salieri proposed that if God made him a famous musician like Mozart, he would give God his faithfulness,
chastity, and diligence. Salieri's father soon dies, which he interprets as a sign that God has accepted his vow. By 1774, Salieri becomes court composer to
Holy Roman Emperor Joseph II in
Vienna. However, he has enough taste to know that Emperor Joseph has no ear for music, though Salieri prides himself on the popularity of his work. After their first meeting, Salieri understands that Mozart is the better composer but is shocked to learn that Mozart is obscene, immature, and dissolute. He also learns that Mozart never needs to pen a second draft of his music, implying
divine inspiration. Salieri cannot fathom why God would choose a reprobate like Mozart as his earthly instrument. Salieri renounces God and vows to take revenge on him by destroying Mozart. Mozart's work is ahead of its time, and he has trouble finding employment in Vienna. He spends himself into debt, alarming his wife
Constanze. Salieri and Mozart bond over their shared contempt for Emperor Joseph's lack of taste, but Mozart is unimpressed by Salieri's populist work, which causes Salieri great pain. Mozart boldly adapts the subversive play
The Marriage of Figaro into a comedic opera. Salieri rejoices, thinking Mozart's career is ruined, but Mozart stuns Salieri by convincing the Emperor to approve the project. The Emperor finds the opera boring, however, and it is soon cancelled. Eventually, Mozart's father,
Leopold, passes away. In response to criticisms and his grief, Mozart composes
Don Giovanni, a dark, serious opera. Salieri is entranced but vindictively gets that opera cancelled, too. Renouncing Vienna's artistic establishment, Mozart agrees to write
The Magic Flute for a commoners' theater against Constanze's wishes. After watching
Don Giovanni five times, Salieri realizes that the dead commander who accuses Giovanni of sin represents Mozart's inferiority complex towards his father. Posing as an anonymous patron, in a costume Leopold had worn to a
masquerade ball, Salieri persuades the unstable and debt-ridden Mozart to accept a commission for a
Requiem Mass. Salieri plans to kill Mozart, claim the
Requiem as his own, and premiere it at Mozart's funeral, forcing God to listen as Salieri is acclaimed. Mozart overworks himself, juggling
The Magic Flute and the
Requiem. Constanze, who wants him to focus on the
Requiem but is fearful of his erratic behaviour, leaves with their son
Karl. Although
The Magic Flute is a success, Mozart collapses from exhaustion before he can finish conducting the opera. Desperate to complete his plan but also desperate for more of Mozart's heavenly music, Salieri begs the bedridden Mozart to keep writing the
Requiem. He takes dictation from Mozart throughout the night, during which he comes to terms with Mozart's superior talent. Mozart thanks Salieri for his friendship, and Salieri admits that Mozart is the greatest composer he knows. Constanze returns and attempts to kick Salieri out of the apartment, locking the
Requiem away before he can steal it. As Salieri protests, they are shocked to discover that Mozart has died from exhaustion. Due to his debts, he is buried in a
pauper's grave. Back in 1823, Vogler is too shaken to
absolve Salieri, who surmises that God would rather destroy his beloved Mozart than allow Salieri to share in Mozart's glory. As Salieri is wheeled down a hallway, he proclaims himself the patron saint of mediocrities. He absolves the asylum's other patients of their inadequacies as Mozart's laughter rings in the air. ==Cast==