Copying Beethoven Movie Review
Copying Beethoven Review

"Copying Beethoven" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2006
Cast and Crew
Director : Agnieszka HollandProducer : Sidney Kimmel,Stephen J. Rivele,Michael Taylor,Christopher Wilkinson
Screenwiter : Stephen J. Rivele,Christopher Wilkinson
Starring : Ed Harris,Diane Kruger
Does Agnieszka Holland hate Beethoven? That's the only explanation I can offer
for this horrible, horrible attempt at making the maestro's final year of life
into a biopic. Where to start? Oh, let's look to the obvious: the casting.
Ed Harris plays Beethoven, bringing none of the soul he imbued into Jackson
Pollock, instead playing the composer as an uncontrollable creep who runs
around with an ear-horn and yelling at people because he's deaf, annoying his
neighbors, drinking heavily, and generally making an ass out of himself. Under
heavy makeup (namely a clown nose and a long wig), Harris is nearly
unrecognizable. Into his world comes Anna Holtz (Diane Kruger), a copyist who
helps him complete his famous Ninth Symphony. As is the norm for movies with
difficult main characters, he alternately adores and abuses her, such that the
film consists largely of her leaving then coming back then leaving again.
Say what you will about Beethoven being a jerk, but Copying Beethoven is just
cruel and malicious. Seriously: I'm not a historian but I stil doubt Beethoven
would have made fart sounds as he sang aloud the composition of aspiring
composer Anna Holtz (who appears to be entirely fictional, by the way). Copying
Beethoven also plays pretty loose with history in general, giving us a
Beethoven who was still able to hear to some extent up until he keeled over.
As bad as the script is, Harris is worse, brashly shouting his lines when he's
not mooning the camera. (Again, I'm not joking.) It's a testament to how bad a
movie when Diane Kruger, hardly cinema's most gifted actress, is the best thing
about a movie.
Holland, now light-years away from her 1990 Europa Europa pinnacle, is
completely off her rocker here. The film is disjointed and random, unable to
decide if it's about Beethoven of Anna, or maybe neither. The film's
centerpiece is a performance of the Ninth Symphony, with Holtz
shadow-conducting for Beethoven, who can't keep time. It goes on for nearly 10
full minutes. I'm not sure I've ever seen a mainstream, narrative movie with
such a long stretch of nothing happening, action-wise. And yet it's easily the
best part of the film.
The studio must have known: Copying Beethoven had a token release and was a
massive flop at the box office, earning a few hundred thousand dollars against
its $11 million budget. Now on DVD, you can hear Holand and Harris's commentary
on the film, plus get deleted scenes and a making-of featurette. But I'd
suggest you avoid it altogether... especially if you're a classical music fan.
Beethoven pulls a finger.
Reviewer: Christopher Null





