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A young peasant maid working in the house of painter Johannes Vermeer becomes his talented assistant and the model for one of his most famous works.
[after bringing meat for the birth feast] Pieter: Not even a smile for my pains? Griet: Not today. Pieter: Come on. [she refuses] Pieter: I shall put it in the book, then: "Owed by Griet: one smile." [Griet gives in and smiles]
Van Ruijven: How hard is it to paint a pretty girl?
Maria Thins: [referring to Van Ruijven while speaking to Griet] You're a fly in his web... we all are.
Catharina: [in tears] Why don't you paint me? Vermeer: Because you don't understand. Catharina: [gesturing toward Griet indignantly] And *she* does?
Griet: [enters the room, where Maria Thins and Catharina sit quietly by the fireplace, and curtsies] Catharina: Yes? Griet: Madam, shall I wash the windows? Catharina: [Scoffs] You don't need to ask me about such matters. Griet: It's just...it may change the light. [both Catharina and Maria Thins stare at Griet questioningly]
[to Vermeer, after seeing her own portrait for the first time] Griet: You looked inside me...
Pieter: Don't get caught up in his world. Griet: I may only be a maid, but I would NEVER give in to Master Van Ruijven! Pieter: I wasn't talking about Van Ruijven...
Griet: Good morning, madam. [curtsies] Catharina: Don't speak until you are spoken to.
[after cornering Griet] Van Ruijven: [maliciously] Ripe as a plum, still unplucked.
[last lines] Tanneke: Well, I've come to the right place, then. This is for you.
[referring to a yellow paint which comes from cow's urine, used in Vermeer's portrait of Mistress van Ruijven] Van Ruijven: You've glazed my wife in dried piss.
Griet's Mother: Stay clear of their Catholic prayers. Or if you must be with them when they pray, stop your ears.
Tanneke: His by-blow was dry before the paint was!
Catharina: She's dishonest, always sneaking around, shirking her work!
[first lines] Griet's Mother: Griet! Leave that.
Van Ruijven: You have very wide eyes.
Van Ruijven: [speaking to Griet] I hear you have been of great use to your master. All that grinding and stirring, eh?