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Girl With A Pearl Earring [2004] [DVD]
 
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Girl With A Pearl Earring [2004] [DVD]

DVD ~ Scarlett Johansson
3.9 out of 5 stars See all reviews (42 customer reviews)
RRP: £19.99
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Frequently Bought Together

Customers buy this item with The Importance Of Being Earnest [DVD] [2002] DVD ~ Rupert Everett

Girl With A Pearl Earring [2004] [DVD] + The Importance Of Being Earnest [DVD] [2002]

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Girl With A Pearl Earring [2004] [DVD]
92% buy the item featured on this page:
Girl With A Pearl Earring [2004] [DVD] 3.9 out of 5 stars (42)
£4.88
Girl With a Pearl Earring
3% buy
Girl With a Pearl Earring 4.5 out of 5 stars (17)
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Product details

  • Actors: Scarlett Johansson, Colin Firth, Tom Wilkinson, Judy Parfitt, Cillian Murphy
  • Directors: Peter Webber
  • Writers: Olivia Hetreed, Tracy Chevalier
  • Producers: Anand Tucker, Andy Paterson, Anna Campeau, Cameron McCracken, Daria Jovicic
  • Format: Anamorphic, PAL, Widescreen
  • Language English
  • Region: Region 2 (This DVD may not be viewable outside Europe. Read more about DVD formats.)
  • Aspect Ratio: 1.78:1
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Classification: 12
  • Studio: Pathe Distribution
  • DVD Release Date: 31 May 2004
  • Run Time: 103 minutes
  • Average Customer Review: 3.9 out of 5 stars See all reviews (42 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B0001K2L4W
  • Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 431 in DVD (See Bestsellers in DVD)

    Popular in these categories:

    #19 in  DVD > Documentary
    #80 in  DVD > Drama

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Girl With A Pearl Earring [2004] [DVD]

Girl With A Pearl Earring [2004] [DVD]

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Reviews

Amazon.co.uk Review
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 focuses 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), 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

DVD Description
In order to support her family, seventeen year old Griet becomes a maid in the house of Johannes Vermeer and soon attracts the master painter’s attention. Although worlds apart in upbringing and social standing, Vermeer recognizes her intuitive understanding of his work and slowly draws her into his mysterious world of art and passion.

Whilst she falls increasingly under Vermeer’s spell, his volatile family quickly grows jealous of her. Maria, his shrewd mother-in-law, struggles to maintain the family’s lifestyle, but seeing that Griet inspires Vermeer, takes the decision to let their relationship develop. Van Ruijven, also sensing the intimacy between master and maid, commissions Vermeer to paint Griet’s portrait. The result will be one of the greatest paintings ever created … but at what cost?

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Customer Reviews

42 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
3.9 out of 5 stars (42 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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39 of 41 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The exquisitely imagined story behind the famous painting, 30 May 2004
By Lawrance M. Bernabo (The Zenith City, Duluth, Minnesota) - See all my reviews
(TOP 50 REVIEWER)      
There are films about painters ("Lust for Life") and painting ("The Agony and the Ecstasy"), but it is rare to find a film about the art of painting, and that is one of the great strengths of "Girl with a Pearl Earring." The film is based on the novel by Tracy Chevalier, with a screenplay by Olivia Hetreed, that imagines a whole story behind Johannes Vermeer's painting, "Girl with a Pearl Earring" (1665-66) involving the Dutch painter, his family, and the model he used for what is his most famous and most intriguing painting.

Griet (Scarlett Johannson), is a young girl from a Calvinist family who has to seek employment as a maid in the Roman Catholic household of the famous painter. She is given her duties, one of which is to clean the upstairs studio, but only when the master is not busy painting. Even Vermeer's wife, Catharine (Essie Davis) will not enter that place, for reasons we will learn about later. Before she meets the artist (peter Firth), Griet sees his current painting, "Woman with a Pearl Necklace" (1664-65) and we can tell from her eyes that she is looking at something wondrous.

We know that Griet is no fool, because she refuses to accept bad meat from the local butcher, which causes his son, Pieter (Cillian Murphy), to notice her. But in the house she is beneath notice, told not to speak until spoken to first. One day she asks the ladies of the house, Catharina and her mother, Maria Thins (Judy Parfitt), if when she is cleaning the studio if she should do the windows. Her concern is that doing so would change the light. The women look at her without comprehension and Catharina tells her to go ahead and clean the windows. For Maria these are just paintings, things that allow her son-in-law to make money, but for Griet they are something else, and it while cleaning the windows in the corner of the studio that Vermeer used in most of his paintings, that the artists sees her and discovers a new source of inspiration.

The fact that neither his perpetually pregnant wife nor his coin counting mother-in-law has any appreciation for art explains in large part why Vermeer is drawn to Griet. She might not be able to read but he asks her what color are the clouds, she knows the obvious answer is not right for a painter and comes up with the correct one. But then when Vermeer shows her the canvas he is working on, "Young Woman with a Water Pitcher" (1994-65), she knew that the colors were all wrong, and he explains why.

This is a film in which the most erotic moment comes when we finally see Griet's hair, although others might disagree and find mixing paints to be the height of the film's sexuality. But I tended to dismiss such things because I find "Girl with a Pearl Earring" to be about an intimacy that transcends the mere physical realm of sex (the actual painting is of intimate size, 18 by 16 inches). Whatever feelings they might have for each other have to be expressed in other ways, because this is a film that has its sensibilities firmly set in the world of art in the 17th century. Besides, the venality of man is amply represented by Vermeer's patron, the wealthy businessman Van Ruijven (Tom Wilkinson).

Ultimately the film comes down to not just the girl, but to the pearl earring, which belongs to Catharine, but which Vermeer insists must be dangling from Griet's ear in the portrait. Griet knows this is going too far, but we know that she cannot deny him in the end, especially since we have seen the finished painting, which is one of the most beguiling in art history this side of "The Mona Lisa." But also because she is given a push in a somewhat surprising move by one of the characters. The notion that if this is romance it is of a transcendent type that cannot be judged by normal rules. He immortalizes her in a painting and what does she do in return? She lets him pierce her ear and of equal importance, she moves a chair. I so admire films that can work on that lyrical a level.

This 2003 film has been nominated for Oscars for Cinematography Eduardo Serra, Art Direction, set director Ben van Os and set decorator Cecile Heidman, and Costume Design by Dien van Straalen. All clearly take their inspiration from Vermeer's paintings. The lighting throughout the film reflects that of Vermeer's studio, which means it never looks quite as good when we are elsewhere, because the studio is the heart of the film. Tanneke (Joanna Scanlan), the family maid, looks like "The Milkmaid" (1958-60) and Vermeer's wife at one point is costumed exactly like "Woman in Blue Reading a Letter" (1663-64).

Like the painting from which it takes its name and whose enduring image naturally ends the film, "Girl with a Pearl Earring" is Quiet and contemplative. The entire story is speculative because little is known about Vermeer besides his 35 painting, and whether his model for this one was his daughter, a neighbor, or a tradeswoman, no one will ever know. But it is impossible not to look at this painting without wondering who this girl was and what thoughts are going through her mind.

Johannson's performance commands the film, although she is seldom required to speak and rarely asked what she might be thinking. Parfitt as the true power in the Vermeer household offers the other stellar performance, while Firth's dazzling charm from other films is sublimated to his character's artistic temperament. Of course, the greatest compliment that can be paid to first time director Peter Webber is that he has crafted this film with the same care that Vermeer used in painting his own canvases.

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25 of 26 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars visionary art and artistic vision, 1 Jul 2004
By Priyan Meewella "Phoenix" (London, England) - See all my reviews
(TOP 1000 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)      
Intense and mesmerising, Girl with a Pearl Earring is an incredibly subtle film about Vermeer's inspiration for the painting in question. It is a work of speculative fiction (adapted from Tracy Chevalier's novel) since little is actually known about the model at all. As such, it could so easily have gone very wrong, but is succeeds, and indeed shines, through the way it never becomes overly melodramatic, nor produces lurid revalations about a possible relationship. Instead, in perfect period style, it remains subdued and reflective, while being incredibly intimate at the same time.

In Holland around 1665, Griet [Scarlett Johannson] takes a job as a maid once her blind father is no longer able to work. The household in which she finds employment is that of master painter Johannes Vermeer [Colin Firth]. Though not educated, Griet has an understanding of Vermeer's art and talent which draws the two together, and finally Vermeer decides that Griet is to be the subject of his next painting.

Although Vermeer is clearly attracted to Griet, a beauitful but retiscently modest girl, we are not here to witness a scandalous extra-marital sexual affair. Indeed the two barely even touch throughout the entire piece. But that makes the momentary visual connections infinitely more intimite.

As a film about an artist and painting, I had expected strong use of bold colours but in fact the appearance is very washed out. This certainly fits the period mood of seventeenth century Holland, but more importantly allows Eduardo Serra's cinematography to focus on use of rich light and shadows that perfectly compliments (and to a degree pays homage to) Vermeer's own style. The incredible attention to detail, in both the set design and the way in which they are lit, is one of the focal points of this film. Technical subtleties like focus shifting become incredibly symbolic as in the scene with Griet and Vermeer together mixing paints in silence in his studio.

The storyline is simple and uncluttered, with there are no subplots to draw attention away from the films focus, but equally this means the pace is painstakingly slow. But the reward are the moments of incredible intensity when we see the two characters alone together, beginning with the camera obscura, and climaxing as Vermeer pierces Griet's ear in an obviously symbolic act representing the sexual intimacy that they know will never be consumated.

Johansson's performance as Griet is astounding (further casting a dark light over the Academy who failed to nominate her for an Oscar for either this or her other recent masterful performance in Lost in Translation). She captures Griet's curiosity as she discovers her own intuitive ability to appreciate and understand art, which is what draws Vermeer to her. She becomes his muse, inspiring some paintings, and even improving them. In a flawlessly touching sequence she stares at the canvas of Vermeer's half-completed work, then adjusts a chair in the scene. Later we see Vermeer, moved by her observation, has also removed the chair from his painting.

Colin Firth is enigmatic and convincing as the teacher Griet is drawn to. However, his understated acting does occassionally loses its charisma. Tom Wilkinson has the opposite effect with his leering, charismatically dispicable role of Vermeer's patron, obsessively attracted to Griet himself. Essie Davis as Vermeer's wife brilliantly portrays her frustration as she feels overshadowed by the presence of her mother, the talent of her husband, and soon by Griet too.

Visually moving, the story being told is simple but powerful as the two figures make an intellectual connection, an unfulfilled romance emerges from mutual respect, in an impossible situation. Although beautifully filmed, much of the 95 minutes is not hugely memorable, but instead builds up to the occassional moments that are genuinely breathtaking and have an indescribable intensity as we share in the connection between Griet and Vermeer, and these scenes show just how powerful the medium can be.

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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Movie versus Book, 31 Oct 2006
By Karen Rosenstrøm Laursen "karen_dk" (Denmark) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
While I would recommend reading the book over watching the movie it isn't a bad movie...the cast is what makes the movie float. Scarlett Johansson is perfect as Griet, she really make the character from the book come alive. Colin Firth does a good job as Johannes Vermeer, for once his acting style fits right in.
Usually when a book is filmatised the movie turns out to be a dissapointment...this is not the case here, however a few things are missing from the movie, things that would have given the story a bit more depth.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

2.0 out of 5 stars Disappointing
I found the way that Griet, who was no more than a girl, had her fate held in the balance throughout this move rather distasteful. Read more
Published 2 days ago by Softugo

1.0 out of 5 stars extremely tedious

why was there such a fuss about this film? It was dreadful. The script must have taken up less than 10 pages, so there was nothing to film except meaningful stares. Read more
Published 4 months ago by C. Smith

1.0 out of 5 stars Can I have that 103 minutes back please?
I now know a little bit about mixing paint, other than that this was a complete waste of time, very glad I saw it on telly and didn't waste money on it, would rather watch the... Read more
Published 10 months ago by K. A. Dearness

5.0 out of 5 stars Art in life; life in art
I almost feel yet another review would be redundant, but want to add my comments because this film appeals in an age that almost deifies trash! Read more
Published 11 months ago by R. J. Barton

4.0 out of 5 stars Like a masterpiece in oils, this film builds layer by layer
GIRL WITH A PEARL EARRING is based on the book by Tracey Chevalier. Many may be familiar with the painting of the same name by the Dutch artist, Vermeer. Read more
Published 18 months ago by Brida

5.0 out of 5 stars Girl with a Pear Earring
I watched this film just recently, having been enthralled by Tracey Chevalier's book first of all. It was brilliantly produced with real sensitivity - and every scene was... Read more
Published 20 months ago by Mrs. J. Harvey

4.0 out of 5 stars Atmospheric and beautifully photographed
This is a fine film, atmospheric and beautifully photographed.

I've no wish to go over the ground already well covered by the many reviews here but when I watched... Read more
Published on 13 Jan 2007 by P. Smith

5.0 out of 5 stars simply stunning
The cinematogrphy in this film is simply stunning, it is like looking into a masterpiece. Scarlett Johansson plays a classical part with REAL acting taking part, her minimal... Read more
Published on 30 Oct 2006 by L. C. Auton

5.0 out of 5 stars A sensual revelation
Girl With a Pearl Earring is a genuine revelation, a quite remarkable film that pares down the narrative to concentrate on the unsaid, creating a remarkably sensual film in every... Read more
Published on 22 Sep 2006 by Trevor Willsmer

1.0 out of 5 stars girl with pearl earring - terrible
this was such a letdown, slow, tedious, the set was lovely but that was about all. really really boring and i like "arty" films.
Published on 17 Jul 2006 by cyber-secretary

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