What makes this film float -- if at times just barely -- is the characterization of Beethoven by Harris and the Christopher Wilkinson script.
Copying Beethoven (2006)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:78
Fresh:20
Rotten:58
Average Rating:4.7/10
Consensus: A pretentious historical drama that's ultimately a drag, despite Ed Harris' powerful performance.
Theatrical Release:Nov 10, 2006 Limited
Box Office: $210,945
Synopsis: Classical music aficionado or no, it's tough not to be moved by the soaring notes of Ludwig van Beethoven's Ninth Symphony. The work stands as both a defining highpoint in the composer's career and... Classical music aficionado or no, it's tough not to be moved by the soaring notes of Ludwig van Beethoven's Ninth Symphony. The work stands as both a defining highpoint in the composer's career and a dynamic and beguiling legacy of its era. An imaginative exploration of Beethoven's life in his final days working on the Ninth, Copying Beethoven draws inspiration from the music itself. Directed by acclaimed filmmaker Agnieszka Holland, the film is both thrilling and romantic. It is 1824. The composer, played brilliantly by Ed Harris, is racing to finish his new symphony. However, it has been years since his last success and he is plagued by deafness, loneliness and personal trauma. A copyist is urgently needed to help the composer finish in time for the scheduled first performance - otherwise the orchestra will have no music to play. Insightful young conservatory student and aspiring composer Anna Holtz (Diane Kruger) is recommended for the position. The mercurial Beethoven is skeptical that a woman might become involved in his masterpiece but slowly comes to trust in Anna's assistance and in the end becomes quite fond of her. By the time the piece is performed - a moment in history captured in an exquisitely moving shot from Anna's perspective, as she sits on the orchestra floor helping the deaf Beethoven to keep time - her presence in his life is an absolute necessity. Her deep understanding of his work is such that she even corrects mistakes he has made, while her passionate personality opens a door into his proud, private world. Harris is no stranger to bringing iconic, larger-than-life figures to the screen; his lead performance in Pollock was a masterful exploration of a tormented but talented artist. He channels a similar esprit here: his Beethoven is ribald and volatile, vulnerable and, ultimately, endearing. He is matched in intensity and skill by Kruger, who makes the young Anna both an enraptured apprentice and a paragon of willful female independence and ambition. These two characters break down barrier after barrier, and the result is a harmonious wonder. --© SKE Films [More]
Starring: Ed Harris, Diane Kruger, Matthew Goode, Phyllida Law
Starring: Ed Harris, Diane Kruger, Matthew Goode, Phyllida Law, Nicholas Jones, Joe Anderson
Director: Agnieszka Holland
Director: Agnieszka Holland
Screenwriter: Christopher Wilkinson, Stephen J. Rivele
Studio: MGM
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Reviews for Copying Beethoven
A feminist fantasy that you can either embrace -- as director Agnieszka Holland (Europa Europa) seems to have done with an unbecoming schoolgirl gushiness -- or repeatedly be pulled out of the story by its falseness.
If you're going to tackle Ludwig van Beethoven, you've got to go as hard and high as he did. All this movie does is flounder and flail around his tempestuous spirit.
A movie with some flaws but also with moments of beauty and intensity most other films can't match.
If Harris scores another Academy Award nomination for his role, it'll be for the quantity rather than the quality of his acting.
Knows as much about the creative process as Beethoven does about snowboarding.
Thank goodness for the music, for it is the only thing that can be heard above Harris' embarrassing bellowing.
I have nothing against historical fiction: books or movies using real characters in situations that didn't happen. However, one would hope in such cases that the authors would have a story worth telling.
So many of the films I see lack any obvious passion, or sense of theatrical flair, and whatever its flaws, Copying Beethoven does not stint on those.
The whole thing is sitcom, but that isn't necessarily a bad thing. This is really great television that works as a movie.
Perhaps poor in execution, but I'd rather have this exaggerated depiction and reminder of the man than no film about him at all.
Bargain-basement Amadeus, this Beethoven biopic is even worse than the 1994 Immortal Beloved. Laying a false feminist streak on the narrative, Holland has made a cliche-ridden, dull film about the obsessive-ill artist, played in hammy way by Ed Harris
While this is no 'Amadeus,' the fictionalized tale of Beethoven's relationship with his young, female copier hasexquisite music, pretty scenery, and a booming Ed Harris.
Will there ever be a decent movie made about any part of Ludwig van Beethoven's life?
There's a lot of Romantic hokum here that probably won't play well with many postmodernist sensibilities.
That Ed Harris actually makes a fairly convincing Ludwig van Beethoven is undoubtedly a testament to his ample abilities, and it's his electrifying performance that keeps the viewer engaged throughout Copying Beethoven's admittedly erratic running
Its fictional frame about a woman copyist helping the maestro complete the masterwork hits too many duff notes.
Latest News for Copying Beethoven
November 09, 2006:
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