Mozart Meets Bob Dylan: Amadeus VS A Complete Unknown

(via WETA) by James Jacobs

I recently saw A Complete Unknown. Bob Dylan is one of my favorite artists, and I actually got to meet and work with Pete Seeger (in fact I visited his log cabin that Dylan spends the night in early in the film, and I can attest that they got those details right) so I was excited to see those two icons acknowledged in our current popular culture and introduced to a new generation. Judging from reactions to the film on social media, the movie was a resounding success on that front (though Joan Baez seems to be the artist depicted in the film who’s really resonating with the younger generation.)  

There is no such thing as a perfect biopic that will satisfy both the people who know the history going in and those for whom the film acts as an introduction to the subject. I knew the film would take liberties, and that my reaction would be colored by my own feeling of connection to the period and milieu it depicts. The movie opens in 1961, the year Dylan arrived in New York at age 19, and also the year I was born on Long Island approximately 35 miles east of Greenwich Village. 31 years later I moved to New York and I played at some of the same clubs Dylan played in and got to meet icons like Pete, and Alan Lomax, and Theodore Bikel. I figured that’s the world I would be obsessed with upon exiting the film. 

Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2024 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.rchlight Pictures

But instead I left the film thinking about another artist I am obsessed with but had never previously associated with this universe: Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. 

Actually I thought about TWO Mozarts: the real one and the one dreamed up by the demented Antonio Salieri in Peter Shaffer’s play and screenplay Amadeus.  

Both Amadeus and A Complete Unknown are about immature genius savants who produce art that contains a deep well of wisdom and humanity completely lacking in their social personalities. The main characters are almost supporting players in their own stories, because what they’re really about are the people who try to connect with them but just can’t make sense of the profound disconnect between the sublime music and the selfish brats that produced it.  

Bob Dylan’s journey from provincial Minnesota to exciting New York is remarkably similar to Mozart’s escaping Salzburg for Vienna. They were both young, hungry, probably on the neurodivergent spectrum, had a justified confidence in their own abilities that made them both impatient with those who didn’t “get” them and distrustful of those who did, craving attention but unwilling to follow the established protocols necessary to cultivate their reputation and status within the industry – though they intuited that their rebelliousness actually helped their celebrity status even as it aggravated those managing their careers…

Read more: https://weta.org/fm/classical-score/mozart-meets-bob-dylan-amadeus-vs-complete-unknown

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (seated at piano) with his sister Maria Anna (left) and his father Leopold

2 Comments (+add yours?)

  1. ER's avatar ER
    Mar 12, 2025 @ 03:28:01

    Great article, was thinking of the same comparisons between both films recently as well. Although I might add that Joan Baez strikes me more as a Salieri characterization, as she seems the most perplexed and frustrated by the ease with which these impactful, genuine lyrics arise out of Dylan. And in fact, she often seems spiteful that she cannot conjure the same inspiration for her own music and lyrics even though she’s convinced that those words mean more to her than to Dylan. Of course, he knows full well what she thinks and uses his gift to his own spiteful advantage in sometimes cruel ways with her.

    Reply

Leave a reply to ER Cancel reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.