by Lions Gate
| Average Rating: |
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| Sales Rank: | 4637 (lower is better) |
| Price as of: | 11/27/2008 5:16:15 PM MST |
| Price Used: | $4.00 |
| Shipping: | Free Shipping on most orders over $25* |
| Availability: | Usually ships in 24 hours |
| Director: | Peter Webber |
| Release Date: | 2004-05-04 |
| Label: | Lions Gate |
| UPC: | 012236155225 |
| Binding: | DVD |
| Published By: | Lions Gate |
| ASIN: | B0001US61O |
| Category: | DVD |
Actors and Actresses
Editorial Reviews and Product Descriptions
Product Description
Holland 1665. 17 year old griet works to support her family as a maid in the house of johannes bermeer where she attracts the painters attention. Master van ruijven senses intimacy between them & contrives a commission for vermeer to paint griet alone. The result will be one of the greatest paintings ever created. Studio: Lions Gate Home Ent. Release Date: 02/15/2005 Starring: Colin Firth Tom Wilkinson Run time: 100 minutes Rating: Pg13
Amazon.com
You wouldn't think a movie could look like a Vermeer painting, but Girl with a Pearl Earring is filmed with an amazing range of luminous glows that evoke the Dutch artist's masterworks. Of course, it helps that much of the movie centers on Scarlett Johansson (Lost in Translation, Ghost World), whose creamy skin and full lips have a luminosity of their own. Johansson plays Griet, a maid in the household of Johannes Vermeer (Colin Firth, Bridget Jones' Diary, Fever Pitch), who finds herself in a web of jealousy, artistic inspiration, and social machinations. Though the pace is slow, Girl with a Pearl Earring genuinely conveys some sense of an artist's process, as well as offering many chaste yet sensual moments between Firth and Johansson. Also featuring Essie Davis as Vermeer's bitter wife and Tom Wilkinson (In the Bedroom) as a wealthy patron with eyes for Griet. --Bret Fetzer
Customer Reviews
If Vermeer Was Brit - Reviewed on 2008-06-25
This beautifully made film is worth seeing for the heavily meditated transmission of 17th century Dutch art to the screen, a stunning achievement. Delft is wonderfully recreated based on the works of Vermeer and many other painters. The basic story line about a Calvinist girl warily going into a Bohemian artist household is fine, and Scarlett Johanson is very good, as is her butcher's apprentice boyfriend.
The only problem is that this isn't Vermeer -- they should have simply used another name as in ordinary Roman a' clef novels such as The Sun Also Rises. While we do not have a dense background on Vermeer, we do know enough to say he wasn't a broody British Heathcliff. Painting wasn't his only gig nor even perhaps his main one -- he traded rugs & paintings & took over his dad's tavern. He knew all the artists in town and painted himself as a happy camper at least 3 times we know of. There is no reason to imagine his marriage and household wasn't happy, either -- it's an island of calm in 25 pics painted over 25 years. I guess you can't slander the dead, but as they used to say in the old days, there oughta be a law.
Colin Firth is otherwise fine as Heathcliff in this spin off of Wuthering Heights moved to Delft, and the rest of the cast as Heathcliff's batty family. Remove the historicist pretension and the film works beautifully. Unfortunately, the cartooning of major artists is getting epedemic with films like Shakespeare in Love and Amadeus. For kids raised on the History Channel, Hollywood as history, this is bad candy which shouldn't be accepted from stangers. They are getting the past recreated with great visual acumen, but 0 inner light.
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Book Subjects
- Adult Language
- Adult Situations
- Atmospheric
- Biography
- Biopic [feature]
- Brief Nudity
- Color
- Creative Block
- Crumbling Marriages
- Drama
- English
- Feature
- Feature Film-drama
- Intimate
- Life in the Arts
- Luxembourg
- Movie
- Reflective
- Romance
- Sensual