Movie
Review | Girl with a Pearl Earring
Reviewed by: Susan
Granger
MODA MAG.COM -- As this film unfolds, you're transported
back in time to the 17th century of Dutch artist Johannes Vermeer.
Based on Tracy Chevalier's best-selling novel, screenwriter Olivia
Hetreed and director Peter Webber speculate on the circumstances
surrounding the mysterious creation of Vermeer's most famous painting
- and their fiction is presented so realistically that it's
convincing.
Set in Holland, in 1665, the story revolves around 16 year-old Griet (Scarlett
Johansson), the modest Calvinist daughter of a Delft tilemaker, who is
hired as a servant in the tempestuous Catholic household of Vermeer
(Colin Firth). As she's dutifully cleaning the artist's attic studio,
she becomes fascinated by the interaction of light, space and color.
Gratified by her interest in his craft, he teaches her how to mix
paints, but their intimacy arouses his wife's (Essie Davis) jealousy
and his mother-in-law's (Judy Parfitt) ire. Tension is escalated when
Vermeer's conniving patron, Master van Ruijven (Tom Wilkerson),
demands that he, secretly, paint a portrait of Griet, who is
psychologically tormented as she's also being courted by the butcher's
son (Cillian Murphy).
Having scored earlier this year in "Lost in Translation,"
Scarlett Johansson radiates luminous intelligence, bearing uncanny
resemblance to the real model for the painting, while Colin Firth
embodies the artist's muted conflict. Cinematographer Eduardo Serra,
production designer Ben van Os and costumer Dien van Straalen pay
tribute to Vermeer by meticulously constructing each scene as a
vibrant work of art, and the sensuous, inherent intrigue is augmented
by Alexandre Desplat's musical score. On the Granger Movie Gauge of 1
to 10, "Girl With a Pearl Earring" is an elegant, exquisite
8. Watching it is to see a painting come to life before your eyes.
Grade: 8/10
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