Girl with a Pearl Earring

This slow, attentive movie about a painter and his model, the director Peter Webber’s 2003 reworking of Tracy Chevalier’s novel, is worth staying with: it casts a heavy spell as it unfolds the tale of Griet (Scarlett Johansson), a maid newly arrived in the house of Johannes Vermeer (Colin Firth). The year is 1665, and the period reconstruction, for those who are aroused by such things, is—apart from a few modern lines of dialogue—formidably detailed. The danger with such beautifying efforts is that it risks turning cinema into a branch of taxidermy; what keeps Webber’s movie alive is the tenseness of the setup (will this girl stay in the artist’s household, and, if so, will she become his lover or his muse?), and, above all, the presence of Johansson. She is often wordless and close to plain onscreen, but wait for the ardor with which she can summon a closeup and bloom under its gaze; this is her film, not Vermeer’s, all the way.