One is left yearning for the overheated melodrama of Bernard Rose's 1994 Beethoven biopic, "Immortal Beloved," which was trashy, but fun.
What are people saying?
What are critics saying?
Copying Beethoven has an ace up its sleeve: the wonder and drama of the Ninth Symphony itself (heard here in Bernard Haitink's tremendous 1996 recording with the Royal Concertgebouw).
ReelViews by James Berardinelli
This is one of those middle-of-the-road art pictures that will impress some music lovers and attract a small audience, but won't really excite anyone. Copying Beethoven does not do for its title composer what Amadeus did for Mozart, and that's a shame.
Entertainment Weekly by Lisa Schwarzbaum
Holland's empurpled bio-fantasy is hooey with an anachronistic feminist slant from start to finish.
The Hollywood Reporter by Michael Rechtshaffen
The picture never successfully comes off the written page.
Chicago Tribune by Michael Wilmington
Copying Beethoven, at its best, is a sort of grand cinema opera of the composer's life and music.
Aspires to the sublime, but it stalls at the merely ridiculous.
Seattle Post-Intelligencer by William Arnold
Has one knockout sequence: the deaf maestro conducting his Ninth Symphony as Anna coaches from the wings. It goes on for what seems a whole reel, but it's so sublime it seems too short and, by itself, could stand as one of the greatest classic music videos ever.