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Who can give me a review of the movie Beethoven?

Most of the biographical films of famous celebrities list the life experiences in detail: single-threaded descriptions such as the growing pains of early intelligence, the twists and turns of career success and failure, the colorful emotional experiences and the many fates. Zhu's personal legend...everything is like a personal resume for a job recruitment, or an epitaph on a revolutionary cemetery. For viewers who use it to commemorate or worship or gossip, it would be too much to watch. When I feel tired, a bird appears in my mouth. Therefore, according to the principle of "there is no road in the world, as many people take it...", when the "correct answers" (or interpretations of mainstream ideologies) of those celebrities are repeated so much that the audience loses a lot of box office After their performance was dismal, filmmakers who were poor but wanted to change learned the magic weapons of "wrong interpretation", "misinterpretation" and "counter-interpretation" to win. Recently in the Mainland, there is a series such as "Joking About Someone" that has dominated the Mainland TV time slot for many years and is very popular. As far away as Hollywood, there is this "Eternal Lover" that makes bold guesses about Beethoven's life and attempts to solve one of the mysteries of Beethoven's life.

Speaking of Beethoven, children in the 1970s must be very familiar with it. His name appeared in our primary school textbooks since he was a child. However, the "ideological education course" that most prominently demonstrates its value is recommended. Every time the school launches an event calling for people to learn from Zhang Haidi, Beethoven will definitely be used as a human backdrop, and there will be another uncle "Ostrowski" running with him. These two guardians of the "physically disabled but strong" sect, after long-term propaganda and education by the ideological teacher human flesh loudspeaker, have misled me over time, that is, they have abandoned all the shortcomings and weaknesses of human nature and are made of special materials. , born to live for the realization of lofty ideals. As the Supreme Directive teaches us, we are "a pure person, a noble person, a person who is free from vulgar taste, and a person who is beneficial to the people." Even Beethoven never married, and was promoted by mainstream ideology to the point of "maintaining his virginity for music." This can't help but make me, a person who pursues "low-level taste" and only thinks about what good food is on the table today on the way to school every night, to stay away from Beethoven, a music saint who does not eat the fireworks of the world. However, this impression was soon broken by a magazine called "Reader's Digest" one summer vacation. I believe that the young literary people of that time were all familiar with this magazine. It was a magazine with a sales volume comparable to that of "Story Club" and a style similar to today's "Vientiane". It generally focused on thinking about life, discussing ideals, and engaging in the bourgeoisie. Mainly composed of Xiaoqing and minor tunes, it was the reading guide and fashion symbol of the young bourgeoisie literary youth reserve forces at that time. It's quite like today's Zhang Ailing who goes to the village tree or must go to Starbucks once a week. To follow the trend, you have to follow the trend with style. At least reading "Reader's Digest" at that time was considered a style. So don't be idle during the holidays, and push yourself to become a qualified literary young man "free from vulgar taste". Finally, on the title page of a certain issue of Reader's Digest, a page usually filled with famous quotes, I came across Beethoven's three love letters, "To the Eternal Beloved." "My angel, my all, my me: you must feel the pain - alas, I wish you to be with me wherever I live, and I will try to make it possible for me to live with you , What a life I have lived when you are not in front of me! ---I am followed by people's kindness everywhere, but I feel that I am not worthy of it and do not want it, but people's humility towards others makes me happy. My heart aches. When I look at what I am in the totality of the universe, and what the world calls the greatest person, when I think that you may have only received my first message on Saturday or Sunday, I start to cry. ---You have love too, but my love for you is stronger---Never hide yourself from me---Good night to you---Oh, my God, I must go to sleep. We are so close! Yet so far away! Isn’t our love a real castle in the air? But it is as stable as the sky. "When such words full of passion and love come to me. , I was stunned.

Historical Facts: Whether Beethoven and Julia’s first encounter was as dramatic as Rhett Butler and Scarlett Scarlett, it is no longer possible to verify. But the cruel reality tells us that Julia's love for Beethoven in history was never as romantic as in the film. The two met in 1800 and immediately fell in love. In 1801, Beethoven told his friend Wigler that she was "a lovely and charming girl. She loves me and I love her. For the first time in my life, I feel that marriage can be a happy thing." But. He also had doubts about the future of this relationship, "Unfortunately, she does not belong to my class." Sure enough, Julia's feelings quickly cooled down, and she turned her enthusiasm to Kaleb, an unpopular aristocratic musician. Count gram. The double blow of deafness and lovelorn plunged Beethoven into a desperate situation. In 1802, when Julia and the count were passionately in love, Beethoven tried to commit suicide and wrote the famous "Heiligenstadt Testament" --- "You people, treat me as or let people treat me as Hateful, crazy, or cynical, they really insulted me! You have no idea what lies beneath the surface!" Fortunately, this kind of despair and pain, both physical and mental, did not defeat him. As the will said, "It is art! It is art that keeps me. Ah! Before I felt that I had completed all my mission." I feel like I can't leave this world." We don't know whether Julia saw the three "To the Immortal Beloved", but in her later years she fondly recalled him as "very ugly, but very ugly." Noble, with elegant emotions and cultivation. "As for this famous "Moonlight Sonata", it was indeed dedicated to Julia by Beethoven. At that time it was actually called "Piano Sonata in C sharp minor". Later, because the German poet Leerstab compared the music of the first movement to the night on Lake Lucerne in Switzerland, a clever publisher took "Moonlight" as the title of this piece and it has been passed down to this day. This piece of work uses love to soothe the anxious soul. The water-like tenderness shows that Beethoven was so passionately in love with Julia at that time. But the pain and despair that followed pushed Beethoven into the valley of isolation from the outside world. He closed his mind and retreated into his own world, only using music to communicate with the outside world.

II. "Between the lips and the voice, something is struggling"——Beethoven and Anna

Video: Schendler, through Julia's guidance, Came to Central Europe. Julia believed that this "immortal lover" was Countess Anna of Hungary. They met at a bad concert. At that time, Beethoven's conductor was in disarray due to his deafness. Amidst the laughter and jeers from everyone, Anna bravely stepped forward to help him out of the hall. At that moment, two soul-connected people came together. The countess lived alone in Vienna with her three children, but Napoleon's iron hoof to conquer Europe shattered their peaceful life, and the war claimed the life of her youngest son. Beethoven sent his own music to Anna who was immersed in pain. He said, "Let us express it through music." After the war, Beethoven lived with Anna and her two daughters in a manor. Anna told Schindler that the year she lived with Beethoven was the happiest time in their lives. Because they are attached to each other like glue. Beethoven called the Countess "the God of Penance" and talked about everything about her. When Schendler was glad that he had found his "immortal lover" and decided to teach Anna the three letters, Anna rejected him. Anna believed that she was definitely not this mysterious lover, because she knew that there was always a secret lover in Beethoven's heart. So Schendler set out on the road again.

Historical facts: The prototype of Anna is the Hungarian aristocrat Countess Josephine von Brunswick. Her relationship with Beethoven began in 1804. At that time, she was an outstandingly charming young woman who had been married to a nobleman 30 years older than herself. She had recently become a widow and lived alone in Vienna with her three children. Beethoven fell in love with her in 1805 and wrote her many love letters. But she made it clear that she was not ready to develop a further relationship with Beethoven.

She said, "My love for you is indescribable, just as one tender soul loves another," and emphasized, "Can't you accept such an agreement?" Her relationship with Beethoven did not last long, and ended in 1810. Married another nobleman in 1998. Seeing this, perhaps we will understand why Beethoven, who swept Europe in music, suffered repeated defeats in love. In that hierarchical society with strict barriers, Beethoven, who came from a humble background, lost the right to love as a human being, even though he had a vast heart, a noble soul and an exciting life. Love, which is supposed to soothe lonely souls, has become a poison. If your emotions are as intense as Beethoven's, you may have to drink poison to quench your thirst.

III. "I love you, like something dark is loving" - Beethoven and Joanna

Video: After Anna's guidance, Schendler returned to Germany, visited Beethoven's sister-in-law Joanna. Because the Countess believes that Joanna is the "immortal lover". Joanna was the wife of Beethoven's late brother Jasper. When Schendler took out three letters for Joanna to confirm, Joanna admitted that she was the "immortal lover" called in the letters. Schendler was shocked by this, so Joanna told the whole story. In their early years, Beethoven and his younger brother Jasper both fell in love with Joanna, the daughter of a furniture dealer, and pursued her. Soon Joanna became pregnant with Beethoven's child, and the two met at a hotel to elope. Due to heavy rain on the road, the carriage got stuck in the mud and could not arrive immediately. Joanna, who was waiting at the hotel, thought Beethoven had broken the promise and left. By some mistake, Joanna married Jasper. Beethoven believed that Joanna was a playboy, so he made things difficult for her and broke up with his brother Jasper. When Jasper died of pneumonia, Beethoven took his nephew, Karl, his and Joanna's illegitimate son, to raise him and train him to learn music. Carl was a young man with neither talent nor ambition. Under his uncle's prodigy training program, he felt suffocated and failed to commit suicide. Beethoven was in trouble both internally and externally at this time, but his late work "Ninth Symphony" still caused a sensation in the city. After listening to his "Ode to Joy" conducted by Joanna, she took the initiative to break the ice and visit the seriously ill Beethoven until he passed away peacefully. At the end of the film, against the background of the Fifth Piano Sonata, Joanna read the end of the letter in front of Beethoven's tomb, "It's time for me to go to bed now, don't be impatient, my love, today, today, I long for you to come with tears in my eyes, You...you are my life, my everything, then don't stop loving me, always yours, always mine, always ours..."

Historical facts: For any audience who knows a little bit about Beethoven's life, this plot design can be said to be outrageous. Only screenwriters like Hollywood, who are surprisingly successful, dare to make such bold conjectures. So far, there is no data to support this conjecture, and no critics have come out to agree with this design. Because Beethoven and his sister-in-law were historically incompatible, bringing them together was like sparks hitting the earth. His sister-in-law was a very unruly woman who had a bad reputation before marriage. After her husband's death, Beethoven fought with her for four years over the custody of her nephew. This became a major problem for him in his later years. He devoted a lot of effort to his nephew Carl, hoping to train him to become a musician. However, in order to resist his uncle's high-pressure policy, Carl actually committed suicide with a musket. As a result, he did not kill himself, but was seriously injured. This incident almost killed Beethoven. His health deteriorated in his later years. He even got caught in the rain while searching for Karl and developed pneumonia, which ultimately accelerated his death. This dark love story woven by Hollywood may be more suitable for the audience's curiosity. All I can say is that this kind of adaptation is too Hollywood and too un-German.

IV. "Joy, like the sun moving in that magnificent sky" - Beethoven's Love in the Sky

In fact, apart from the few women involved in this film, , historians have other speculations about the "immortal lover". For example, the famous "Alice"---Theresa Malfati. When she died in 1851, she still kept the manuscript of Beethoven's famous piano ditty, which was written "To Elise", and Elise was Beethoven's nickname for Teresa.

With a map in hand, do we really know where we are going?

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I also transferred it, it’s a bit long but it’s well said