was watching "Immortal Beloved" a few days ago. It is an artistic biographical/biographical film about Beethoven. According to his friend and secretary, according to the secrets in his secret drawer. The letter sets off according to the figure, telling Beethoven's (love) story in semi-reminiscence. These letters are found in the movie at his desk, and the Beethoven biography written by Anne Baker is about the secret drawer in his cupboard. But this is just one of the many differences between the film and the historical facts. I don’t want to go into details one by one. What I want to say are those letters. People call them "Immortal Beloved". According to the German translation, they should be "Eternal". "Beloved" is, but I am not a linguist nor a casserole-breaker, so I don't go into the details.
The unusualness of these letters can be traced to the place where they were found. In Beethoven’s unlucky love career, even though she once showed her love to several girls who had eaten Guoguo and even asked for a baptismal certificate in order to get married, the woman rarely or did not have any feelings for his love. It is more about feeling being sought after and honoring. According to popular words, they think Beethoven is a very good brother/very perverse strange school. The song dedicated to Iris is an improvisation during this period and is included in the non-sequence works. Therefore, it is rare to see that passionate love in the letters before Antonie Brentano’s appearance. In the movie, Beethoven’s admiration was changed to his younger brother’s wife. I came to Beethoven because her father was seriously ill and her husband Franz Brentano came back to take care of his father. They were married when she was 18 years old under the help of her father. Franz is a wealthy businessman in Frankfurt). The brother in the movie is a combination of Beethoven's brothers in reality. Carl from tuberculosis and another brother who was considered surrendered by Beethoven, etc., maybe I didn't look carefully enough. Regardless of the plot, this is the director’s arrangement, and Gary Oldman, who plays the strange Shushu policeman in Leon, plays the weird Shushu Beethoven and expresses his love affectionately in the letter. Meaning: "Can our love endure without sacrifices, without our demanding everything from one another; can you alter the fact that you are not wholly mine, that I an not wholly yours? ... However much you love me - my love for you is even greater."
In Beethoven’s diary, there is rarely an immortal lover in a straight book. Beethoven often refers to her as T. (because Antonie’s nickname is Toni). If you are really idle and want to be voyeuristic, you want to see Bedo. In Fen’s diary, you will see sentences like: "With regard to T. there is nothing else but leave it to God, never go there where one could do wrong out of weakness." and "be as good as possible towards T .; her devotion deserves never to be forgotten." Look at these sentences and feel that the taste is not right? That's because Beethoven decided to give up being with her after a few times in his life, when the person he loved finally returned to him, because she was married and because her husband was also his good friend. Embarrassing, so intricate emotions. There is a wild history or speculation that Antonie's sixth child was born with Beethoven, which also explains why Beethoven decided to give up the pain when he was with her.
When Beethoven talked about giving up, he was afraid that marriage might affect his creative source.
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