Copying Beethoven (2006) poster
2006 · drama · music · sports

Copying Beethoven

Directed by Agnieszka Holland1h 44m2006
ElsewhereIMDb6.714kRT29%Metacritic59
  • sombre
  • gentle
  • intimate
Movie DNA

Sombre, steady, gentle drama / music, grounded in texture. Ambivalent, intimate, measured, hand-scored across twelve axes of taste.

How every film is hand-scored →

A fictionalised exploration of Beethoven's life in his final days working on his Ninth Symphony. It is 1824. Beethoven 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. A fictional character is introduced in the form of a young conservatory student and aspiring composer named Anna Holtz. 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, 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 private world.

Our read · Copying Beethoven (2006) reads as a sombre, steady, grounded drama · music · sports entry — gentle in intensity, intimate in scope, measured in temperature, ambivalent in outlook. Hand-scored on twelve axes of taste — mood, pacing, weirdness, hope, stakes, humour, reality, density, warmth, auteur, intensity, and era — with a derived palette drawn from its dominant cinematography.

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The shape of Copying Beethoven

Tonight, this looks like

What watching it is actually like.

You want Ed Harris as Beethoven wrestling with deafness, ego, and the Ninth.

ends warmyou’ll feel glowing aftera slow buildgrips by minute 10attention 3/5earns its length
Date nightWith friendsSoloWith parentsKids around

Skip it tonightSkip if stagy period biopics about classical music feel stiff or sentimental.

If Copying Beethoven is your film
Immortal Beloved (1994)
Beethoven's private anguish behind immortal concert-hall triumph
(unless darker romantic speculation feels too grim)
Mr. Holland's Opus (1995)
mentor passing musical passion to a gifted younger woman
(if you want actual historical figures)
The Red Violin (1998)
classical music carrying decades of longing and obsession
(unless globe-hopping structure loses you)
DNA · twelve axes

The reading.

Each axis is hand-scored — not derived from votes or genre averages. The marker shows where this film sits; the gradient fill uses the film's own cinematography palette.

Mood · HeavyCosy
Pacing · Slow-burnKinetic
Intensity · GentleExtreme
Weirdness · ConventionalSurreal
Hope · NihilisticRedemptive
Stakes · IntimateEpic
Humour · NoneBroad
Reality · GroundedFantastical
Density · SparseTwisty
Warmth · ColdTender
Auteur · TransparentSignature
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