Teen Vogue interviews both Owen Cooper and Charlotte Mellington. The young Heathcliff and Cathy in Wuthering Heights 2026:P. Claire Dodspn: What did Emerald Fennell tell you about how each of your characters is supposed to be when they're a young ...
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"BrontëBlog" - 5 new articles

  1. 'Mean Heathcliff is so hot'
  2. Wuthering Heights 2026 Reviews (XII)
  3. Lights, Camera, Brontë: East Riddlesden Hall on Screen
  4. Jane Eyre in Kenilworth
  5. Breaking: 'Brontë museum staff praise racy Wuthering Heights film'
  6. More Recent Articles

'Mean Heathcliff is so hot'

Teen Vogue interviews both Owen Cooper and Charlotte Mellington. The young Heathcliff and Cathy in Wuthering Heights 2026:
P. Claire Dodspn: What did Emerald Fennell tell you about how each of your characters is supposed to be when they're a young teenager?
Charlotte Mellington: Cathy's so sassy. She bosses everyone around, she owns the place. Because her dad i
Owen Cooper: I think Emerald just mostly said, "Look vulnerable." And there was a scene where I meet Cathy's dad for the first time, and it's got the two maids there, and then Cathy (Charlotte) grabs my hand, and we'd run. **~~into the thing.**I always remember Emerald saying, "These people could be doing anything to you. They could be planning to kill you. You don't know." Because [my character doesn't] really know how to speak, read, write anything then, I was just new to it all. I thought it was a bit weird to act at first, and then Emerald—being an amazing director—she just helped me through it.
CM: Also in that scene, to you, I'm this psychotic child. I'm like, "Ugh, can I dress him up?" He's like, "What the hell? Who is this kid?" I'm quite frightening, honestly, in that. I would be frightened anyway, because it seemed really weird. (...)
P. Claire Dodspn: : The ending scene: We come back to Heathcliff and Cathy as kids again. What did that feel like to have it end right where we began?
CM: I think it tries to keep the innocence of their love. They do love each other. All these things have happened, and they're trying to get revenge, and it's all quite messy. But when you strip it down, they do love each other. I think that reminds you of the innocence and how they were.
Secom thinks that the film is already a box office success:
The Wuthering Heights box office performance kicked off with a bang during Thursday night previews. Warner Bros reported that the film pulled in an impressive $3 million from 3,000 theaters nationwide – and that was just the appetizer.
But here’s where it gets really interesting. The studio is sitting on $14 million in advance ticket sales for the full weekend, which has industry analysts predicting something special. “We’re looking at potential opening weekend numbers between $40-50 million,” says entertainment analyst Mark Rodriguez. “That’s the kind of start that can make or break a film’s entire theatrical run.” (Bella Parker)
A contributor to Vogue shares '139 Thoughts I Had While Watching Emerald Fennell’s Wuthering Heights' and it's glorious--don't miss the whole thing!
  1. Okay, what I thought were sex sounds are actually the sounds of someone being hanged.
  2. Can’t say I care for these puppets.
  3. Not the hanging dickprint! Emerald, you’re so crazy for this one.
  4. As someone who dressed pretty sluttily to see this movie, I identify with this woman showing off her corset rack.
  5. OMG, the titular moors.
  6. The film’s name spelled out in hair is so creepy and cool and really doing it for me.
  7. “You look like a plate of corned beef” is an amazing way to greet your child.
  8. Oh, so this is baby Cathy.
  9. Pretty good likeness to Margot Robbie.
  10. Hats off to casting!
  11. Why did it just sound like someone yelled “SKINNER,” Superintendent Chalmers-style, from offscreen?
  12. She just named this random-ass kid Heathcliff?
  13. After her dead brother?
  14. I probably should have reread the book before seeing this movie, but here we find ourselves.
  15. Get this total bitch’s ass, Miss Nelly.
  16. It’s almost as though giving your child a human being and saying, “He shall be your pet” might lead to a weird dynamic between the two kids!
  17. If your initials aren’t woefully carved on a rock, is it even a proper period English romance?
  18. Aw, poor Nelly.
  19. There’s a solo adult man in my theater loudly shushing two giggling teenagers, which... I mean, they’re annoying me too, but get a life, bro.
  20. This dad is a dick, but smashing plates at your forgotten-about birthday dinner does look like fun.
  21. :(
  22. This sad, romantic little English lad is so “Wells for Boys”-core.
  23. Oop, Heathcliff and Cathy are adults now!
  24. With neighbors!
  25. Who made their fortune in textiles!
  26. Jacob Elordi’s wig is strongly giving Jesus, but it’s not not working for me.
  27. BRB, Googling “how to get cathy wuthering heights cheek blush.”
  28. HONG CHAU!
  29. Fellas, is it gay to make your fortune in velvet?
  30. Mist AND high-spirited horseplay? Things are getting horny!
  31. Who ever could have put eggs in Heathcliff’s bed?
  32. This Heathcliff-touching-the-eggs shot is soooooo vintage EmFen.
  33. Ahhhhh, Heathcliff keeping the rain out of Cathy’s eyes is proper hot.
  34. No offense to our boy Elordi, but I saw someone on Instagram say they can’t forgive Fennell for not casting Dev Patel as Heathcliff, and now I cannot stop thinking about it.
  35. Ladies, a man who will smash a chair for you is generally a red flag, but in this case, since he’s creating firewood, I approve.
  36. We have our first shirtless Heathcliff shot, ladies and gents.
  37. And neither I nor Cathy mind the sight, apparently.
  38. God, I’m so straight for this movie!
  39. I feel like everyone else on this property has a real “You two fuck yet?” attitude about Cathy and Heathcliff.
  40. This girlypop passionately discussing Romeo & Juliet is really serving me Shoshanna Shapiro.
  41. I hate the Lintons already.
  42. Cathy’s makeover is giving LoveShackFancy.
  43. I feel like Isabella may, in fact, not be the sweetest person alive.
  44. A ribbon room sounds lit, though.
  45. Mean Heathcliff is so hot.
  46. I fear I’m part of the problem.
  47. Why do all girls secretly want to be treated like a nuisance?!?
  48. JK, we actually want reproductive rights, but this dynamic is still mysteriously sexy to me.
  49. Is this the sexually violent turn that Tina Fey spoke of?
  50. But it’s not even Act 3!
  51. HOT!!!!!!!!!!!!
  52. Sorry, is me yelling “HOT” going to become tiresome over the course of this recap?
  53. Blame Emerald!
  54. And the definition in Elordi’s biceps! (Emma Specter)
Esquire features Nelly Dean as 'Unreliable narrator turns unscrupulous antagonist'.
What is the effect of giving Nelly such a power-player role? Certainly, it gives Hong Chau a little more to do than she might otherwise have: she plays Nelly with a steely internality that is a stark contrast from the other performances in the film. But it also gives Cathy and Heathcliff something of a moral get-out – that they are the pawns in someone else’s sublimated psychodrama, rather than slaves to their own malignant natures. It might not be as subtly proposed as it is in the book, but Brontë’s Nelly would certainly, perhaps secretly, be gratified by her promotion to centre stage. (Miranda Collinge)
While Time praises the changes in Isabella.
In the newly-released "Wuthering Heights" (purposefully stylized with quotation marks to distance the adaptation from its source material), on the other hand, filmmaker Emerald Fennell (Promising Young Woman, Saltburn) paints Isabella (played by a scene-stealing Alison Oliver) as the shy, skittish, and sexually repressed young ward of Shazad Latif's measured and mature Edgar—her guardian rather than, as in the book, her brother. Titillated by the introduction of Margot Robbie's Catherine into their lives, and even more so by the subsequent arrival of a newly rich and polished Heathcliff (Jacob Elordi), the delightfully unhinged Isabella transforms before our eyes.
"There are a lot of descriptions in the book about how she is infantile and ill-mannered, and can be quite like a petulant child, and obviously very romantic and spoiled," Oliver told ELLE Canada of her character's spin. "[This] Isabella is this sort of baby-woman, and she’s been kept a child by Edgar. The experience of having Cathy and Heathcliff come into her home is her stepping into a new phase of her life."
Despite some mean-spirited warnings from Cathy that Heathcliff will destroy her, Isabella ultimately gives in to Heathcliff's advances and consents to a loveless marriage in which she will serve as his tormented plaything. The novel's Isabella is coerced and tricked into this arrangement, and finds herself miserable, alone, and at the mercy of a sadistic abuser once the wedding deed is done. The Isabella of "Wuthering Heights," however, not so much.
When Catherine's handmaid Nelly (Hong Chau) shows up at Wuthering Heights in an attempt to retrieve Isabella from Heathcliff's clutches, she finds her chained up like a dog—an apparent dark wink to the reveal in the book that Heathcliff has hanged Isabella's beloved springer spaniel. But in a raunchy and unexpected twist on Brontë's tortured naif, when Isabella crawls across the floor and peers smirkingly up at Nelly with a mad glint in her eye, it becomes decidedly (if somewhat uncomfortably) clear that she's not only a willing participant in Heathcliff's cruel game, but also seemingly enjoying her role as submissive pet.
"'Emerald’s interpretation of Isabella’s story is the reverse of Cathy's; there's an uncorseting of her," Oliver told ELLE UK. "Like she becomes undone. There’s something so powerful about being underestimated." (Megan McCluskey)
Financial Times looks at the whole sexual approach of the film and how it reflects on the book.
Brontë’s romantic gothic novel is now considered to be one of the Best Books Ever Written. Her doomed romance between Catherine Earnshaw and her childhood friend (and possibly half-sibling) Heathcliff has since become a set text for adolescents, the subject of myriad adaptations, the spur behind a thriving tourist market in Yorkshire and a bastion of pop culture thanks to Kate Bush, whose own contribution to the discourse, the 1978 single “Wuthering Heights”, is celebrated globally by thousands of people re-enacting her iconic dance. 
Suffice to say, the book is robust enough to withstand wild interpretation. But, like a good student, I felt obliged to reacquaint myself with Brontë’s OG version before heading to the multiplex. I dusted off a copy (a GCSE paperback, RRP £2.25) found tucked into the bookshelf and now gently yellowed over time. I could feel the call of my younger spirit stirring as I opened its pages, the words “vivid as spectres” swarmed alive. The cold clutch of my own sad adolescence tapped me etc . . . etc . . . OK, you get the point.
Mainly I reread Wuthering Heights so that I could gorge on the spectacle of Jacob Elordi and Margot Robbie getting mucky while keeping my integrity intact. I wanted to wallow in lusty admiration for Elordi’s epic hugeness (hey, it’s February) while wearing an intellectual sneer. Fennell, a filmmaker who has evolved a successful franchise of soft-core erotic thrillers (see Saltburn), well understood the job. Her slimy, albumen-obsessed adaptation is ripe with innuendo, violence, pseudo-masochistic teasing. There’s also lots of sex. 
The plot, meanwhile, only glances at the shallowest features of the novel, derived mainly from the short romantic denouement of the couple’s love. Elordi’s Heathcliff is hot and broody, but neutered of any menace. And Margot Robbie’s “Cath” has been transformed from the dark, tormented victim of “perverted passion” (as Charlotte wrote in the preface), and reincarnated as a simpering blonde whose feral instincts now recall a Fulham Sloane post “sups” at Annabel’s. 
Fennell’s Wuthering Heights is a maddeningly slight, pink turd of an adaptation. Nevertheless I am eternally grateful to her for reacquainting me with Brontë’s book. The wonderful side-note in all the hype building to this “god-tier new classic” (as one breathless X post called the adaptation) is that the 178-year-old novel is trending once again. UK sales of Wuthering Heights have more than doubled since the trailer was released last autumn, says Penguin Classics, with sales having risen by 469 per cent since last year. Likewise, in the US, sales have doubled to 180,000 print copies compared with the previous year. 
Moreover, the adaption has spurred new conversation. We’re all eng-lit scholars now. Vogue launched its new book club with a study of the novel, and thousands of others are, like me, combing through a book not touched since high school in order to get up to speed. In desecrating one of the world’s favourite stories, Fennell has arguably reasserted its genius on a wider stage. Arriving hot into my WhatsApp chat group: Sexual Personae: Art and Decadence from Nefertiti to Emily Dickinson, Camille Paglia’s book of essays from 1990. I spent the weekend considering her theory in “Romantic Shadows” that “Emily Brontë’s sexual metathesis into Heathcliff is inseparable from the incestuous-twin theme.” Gor blimey. And of Brontë’s casual disregard for Christian taboos. I was especially taken also with Paglia’s appreciation for the “delicate lesbian eroticism” in which the book abounds.
Many have tutted about the lusty licentiousness with which Fennell has approached the text. She has called it an extreme story for extreme times. If only her interpretation was as demented as Brontë intended: this version is limp and curiously boring, a series of jump fucks designed for TikTok memes. The casting decisions have been tested — Heathcliff is supposed to be “a dark-skinned gypsy”. Cathy’s ghost has been exorcised. No! But the great sadness of this adaptation is in its refusal to embrace the madness at its centre. Wuthering Heights is a dark, deranged story about incest, appalling violence, sexual abuse and torture. It should be utterly unhinged. (Jo Ellison)
The New Yorker discusses the film with film critic Justin Chang.
Having the main characters—played by Jacob Elordi and Margot Robbie—be sexually intimate isn’t the only way Fennell strayed from the original text. How do you feel about the liberties she took?
Some of her liberties are nothing new. Like many “Wuthering Heights” adaptations, this one ignores the novel’s second half. The elaborate framing devices are gone, too; Emily Brontë’s book is, among other things, a story about storytelling, and Fennell’s film is not. My issue isn’t with the liberties themselves—every good adaptation takes its share of them. It’s more that Fennell pares away so much of Brontë’s great narrative material and, the glossy maximalism of her approach aside, I don’t think she gives us much in return. (Hannah Jocelyn)
The Indian Express talks to Professor Corinne Fowler about Heathcliff's possible origins.
He arrives as a foundling, a “dirty, ragged, black-haired child” found in the streets of Liverpool and deposited on the Yorkshire moors. He speaks “some gibberish that nobody could understand.” He is given a dead son’s name and raised among strangers who never let him forget he does not belong.
For nearly 180 years, readers of Emily Brontë’s Wuthering Heights have debated the origins of its most enigmatic character. Is he a gypsy, as the novel repeatedly suggests? A “Lascar” – the period term for an Indian or Southeast Asian sailor? The son of African slaves? An Irish famine orphan?
A growing body of evidence, drawn from the Brontës’ own reading material and juvenile writings, points to the possibility that Heathcliff may have been imagined as an orphaned Indian prince.
“There are lots of possible identities to him,” says Corinne Fowler, professor of colonialism and heritage at the University of Leicester and co-curator of the exhibition “The Colonial Brontës” at the Brontë Parsonage Museum in Haworth. “So one of them is, is he a gypsy? Some of the characters in the novel think he’s a gypsy, some of them think he’s a Lascar. So it could have been an Indian sailor. Some people think that he was descended from African people.”
The textual evidence is, by design, inconclusive. When Mr Earnshaw returns from Liverpool with the starving child, his wife threatens to throw “the gypsy brat” out. Later, the Lintons speculate that he might be “a little Lascar” – a term derived from the Urdu lashkar, meaning soldier or camp follower, and commonly used in the 18th century for Indian sailors employed by the East India Company.
But it is the servant Nelly Dean who opens the most intriguing possibility. Attempting to comfort the boy, she indulges in fantasy: “Who knows but your father was Emperor of China, and your mother an Indian queen?”
As Fowler says, “Nelly even says, ‘if you were a regular black,’ and she also suggests at one point he might be an Indian prince.” That distinction matters. Heathcliff is dark, but not “regular black” – a qualification that opens space for imagining a non-European origin that is not African. An Indian prince. A Lascar sailor. The orphaned child of some distant colonial encounter. (Aishwarya Khosla)
Variety also discusses Heathcliff's race.
While those in the literary world remain divided in opinion, there is one indisputable fact: Fennell’s adaptation is causing interest in the novel to skyrocket. Sales of Brontë’s “Wuthering Heights” in the United States more than doubled in 2025 compared with the previous year, reaching 180,000 print copies, while the United Kingdom saw a whopping 469% increase with over 10,600 copies sold in January 2026 compared to 1,875 in January 2025. 
“I’m loving that people are reading and rediscovering this book. [But] I’m seeing people watching the trailer and looking at some of that content, and then being quite shocked because [the book] isn’t what they were expecting,” says O’Callaghan. “No adaptation can ever really capture a novel, let alone a long, complex book like ‘Wuthering Heights.’ As long as people accept that and they do go and read the book, I think that’s really great.” (Arushi Jacob)
Dazed replies to recent accusations: 'No, Gen-Z aren’t too dumb to read Wuthering Heights'.
I think it’s beautiful that people are creating TikTok guides on how to tackle each section of the novel for those who don’t understand it immediately. As a friend told me recently, “Reading something requires you to sit with a certain degree of friction. Focusing, slowly getting into the flow of the text and either stopping to look up the period, location, specific language or glossing over it – it’s all a part of reading.” Instead of sneering at people for admitting that they find something difficult, we should recognise that we’re all just trying to use our brains, even as capitalism is trying its best to turn them to mush. (Halima Jibril)
A contributor to The Telegraph has visited Yorkshire 'in search of the inspiration behind Wuthering Heights'.
To gain an understanding of the Brontë sisters, this setting and their lives, I started my trip where their Yorkshire story began, in the village of Thornton, around five miles from Bradford and six from Haworth. Emily Brontë and her siblings Charlotte, Anne and Branwell were born here and lived in a house in the village until 1820. The house is now a community-owned museum, education centre and cafe called Brontë Birthplace, opened in May 2025 by Queen Camilla.
On a tour of the Yorkshire sandstone building with education officer Charlotte Jones, I saw the fireplace in the family parlour that local legend says the sisters were born in front of, walked on the original scullery flagstones that Charlotte told me “little Brontë feet would have run across” and climbed the original wooden staircase that the family used every day. [...]
Anna Gibson, general manager of the Brontë Birthplace, told me that the last month has been the accommodation’s busiest since opening in August 2025 and that both Charlotte and Emily’s rooms are extremely popular in February.
I stayed in Charlotte’s room, where there’s a pink and gold flock bedspread on said four-poster bed, a dusky pink chaise longue, an original fireplace and a small en-suite bathroom. The family’s original furniture is in the Brontë Parsonage, so antiques, books and furnishings here have been chosen to match the period and standard of the family. [...]
Anna Gibson, general manager of the Brontë Birthplace, told me that the last month has been the accommodation’s busiest since opening in August 2025 and that both Charlotte and Emily’s rooms are extremely popular in February.
I stayed in Charlotte’s room, where there’s a pink and gold flock bedspread on said four-poster bed, a dusky pink chaise longue, an original fireplace and a small en-suite bathroom. The family’s original furniture is in the Brontë Parsonage, so antiques, books and furnishings here have been chosen to match the period and standard of the family.
The museum is also home to the largest collection of Brontë items in the world, including Charlotte Brontë’s mourning bracelet, which is believed to be made from the hair of her sisters Emily and Anne. Margot Robbie wore a replica of this to the Wuthering Heights premiere in London. [...]
Whether you’re a fan of the new film or love the book, the Brontës’ “special place” deserves to be experienced. Just come prepared for the wild, “wuthering” weather I drove through; it’s all part of the romance. (Cathy Toogood)
Vulture follows a reporter through New York screenings of Emerald Fennell’s highlighting shocked laughter at scenes like “masturbation on the moors” and showing how reactions split between amused enthusiasm and dismay that Brontë’s novel has been turned into a gaudy, horny spectacle. Smithsonian magazine lists 'Five Things to Know About ‘Wuthering Heights,’ Author Emily Brontë’s Only Novel'. El Periódico (Spain) has a sensationalist article on Emily Brontë's life. A contributor to The Conversation says: 'Don’t fall in love this Valentine’s Day – read Wuthering Heights'. The Daily Beast claims that '‘Wuthering Heights’ Is the New ‘Romeo + Juliet’'.

We wonder why it's so necessary to highlight what Emerald Fennell has changed from the novel to the film, but seeing the amount of articles doing it it seems to be. People would be better off going to the book themselves, but we know that is quite crazy when there's a faster route to looking like a person who reads (and there's not much reading involved): Variety has an article on 'How Emerald Fennell’s ‘Wuthering Heights’ Movie Changes Emily Brontë’s Novel, From More Sex to Missing Characters'. The Federal: 'How Emerald Fennell reworks Emily Brontë’s novel about destructive love'. Hollywood Life: '‘Wuthering Heights’ Book vs. Movie: The Differences Between Emily Bronte’s Work & the Film'. 'The 13 massive differences between Wuthering Heights book and the movie' on Cosmopolitan. 'The Ending to Emerald Fennell’s Wuthering Heights, Explained' on Harper's Bazaar. 'Wuthering Heights Ending Explained: What Happens to Heathcliff?' on People.

Express shares 'The 4 best ever 'masterpiece' adaptations' based on Brontë novels. Her recommends 'Addictive novels to read if you loved Wuthering Heights', including Jane Eyre. Soundtracking with Emerald Fennell interviews Emerald Fennell on the Music of the film: 
   

Wuthering Heights 2026 Reviews (XII)

Good ones
Daily Mail gives it 4 stars out of 5:
But I soon found much to enjoy, not least the sheer confidence of Fennell’s exuberant, uninhibited film-making.
It may be Robbie (who Fennell starred with in Barbie) and Jacob Elordi (who was in Saltburn and here plays the glowering Heathcliff) who take centre stage, but do look out for Martin Clunes being rather marvellous as Cathy’s mercurial, hard-drinking father and Shazad Latif, who brings a dignity and indeed libido to the often rather wet role of Edgar, the poor man Cathy marries.
Libido? Yes, there is quite a lot of sex in Fennell’s version, as you may possibly have heard, one or two moments of which might actually frighten the horses.
But this is a 21st-century woman’s reworking of a 19th-century woman’s novel, and if romping in the heather is not quite your cup of tea, there’s always the costumes and production design to admire, which, from the fateful wedding onwards, are magnificent, albeit in the same over-the-top style as the rest of this fabulously fearless but slightly bonkers production. (Matthew Bond)
Visually, Fennell was equally ambitious. The cinematography features some of the most visually pleasing shots I’ve seen in a while, including sweeping landscapes, perfectly detailed interiors, and stylized compositions that lean into the story’s 'fever-dream' quality, as described by Fennell herself. She embraces color and texture, creating a mystical world for the film that feels almost surreal at times. [...]
Ultimately, Robbie and Elordi proved their acting skills once again, even if the movie itself wasn’t for everybody.
The new Wuthering Heights may not replace the novel in Brontë fans' heart, but as a bold reimagining, it delivers. (Kathleen O'Boyle)
Luckily for Wuthering Heights, Brontë purists are in the minority. So are Brontë fans, or even folks who  know the novel, and this is sad. I hoped that Fennell’s third film would channel the complex power dynamics of Promising Young Woman. Instead, it builds on Saltburn’s absurdity. Wuthering Heights is a sexy Valentine’s weekend movie that doesn’t take itself too seriously. As a valentine to its source material, it does not take itself seriously enough. (Melissa Strong)
Obviously, I loved it.
Forget about the source material, which, if we're being brutally honest here, wasn't the lightest read of junior year English class. Heavy on the incest, unbridled violence and generational trauma, "Wuthering Heights" was the only novel written by Emily Brontë, who died a year after it was published. The text was inordinately cruel for its time, particularly coming from a female writer. [...]
Damned if you do, derided if you don't. The "Wuthering Heights" purists need to unknot their knickerbockers and give writer-director Emerald Fennell a break. She takes her scissors to the storyline and cuts out characters and plot points (and maybe an entire half of the book, who's counting). What could be called an unadaptable novel finally gets a big-screen rendition with balls.
Naturally, it took a woman to give it to us this good.
"Wuthering Heights" is a loosey-goosey reinvention of Brontë's work, simplifying the otherwise complicated relationships and convoluted societal undercurrents to bring modern audiences a taste of the original with a sumptuous, spellbinding twist. [...]
Maybe this film was made for us, by one of us. It doesn't need to make perfect sense by every viewer if it makes those of us willing to give it a chance feel something more. (Candice McMillan)
The Brontë bodice-ripper is a feast for the eyes (Shanda Deziel)
A la directora le gusta la provocación, sabe cómo manejar las herramientas para captar a las nuevas generaciones, tiene inventiva visual y un excelente domino de las atmósferas más enrarecidas.
Pero, al mismo tiempo, no es una cineasta que pretenda gustar a todo el mundo, sino que arriesga con cada propuesta, que demuestra su capacidad para ir más allá de las convenciones sin miedo a los puritanismos. Bravo por ella. [...]
La propuesta de Fennell no se sustenta únicamente en lo visual, sino en el talento de sus intérpretes, que han sido injustamente menospreciados. Margot Robbie, experta en transmitir emociones encontradas en un solo plano, dota a Cathy de una complejidad emocional que contrasta con la intensidad visual de la película. Sin embargo, es Jacob Elordi quien recibe los mayores elogios por su encarnación de un Heathcliff cambiante, capaz de pasar de la melancolía al descaro más absoluto, consolidando su estatus como nuevo referente del género gótico tras su papel en Frankenstein. [...]
Hay un código en la película realmente sorprendente en el que se mezclan elementos de la fotonovela, el videoclip, el culebrón, la estética ‘pulp’, junto a unos códigos conceptuales de lo más depurados. Estamos ante una película realmente apabullante y vertiginosa, repleta de ideas y de planos que basculan entre lo austero y lo abigarrado, porque en ella no hay término medio.
Hay montajes visuales que pueden gustar más o menos, pero que exploran todos los matices del deseo: el aburrimiento conyugal, los celos, las rutinas domésticas, el éxtasis pasional, la rabia y la frustración. [...]
La consecuencia inevitable es un desenlace trágico, acorde con el clima moral de la época victoriana. El particular tratamiento de Fennell, lejos de resultar un simple ejercicio de estilo, desafía la tradición de las adaptaciones de la novela y se lanza sin reservas hacia una visión perversa y liberada de los tópicos del género.
Puede que Cumbres borrascosas no sea una cumbre, pero ni mucho menos es un precipicio. En cualquier caso, es una celebración del deseo, una puesta en escena de las relaciones tóxicas como pocas se hubieran atrevido en estos momentos, que además no resulta nada cursi, que es incluso perversa y sádica y que, además, es una interesantísima redefinición contemporánea del melodrama gótico. (Beatriz Martínez) (Translation)
‘Wuthering Heights’ Is Delightfully Perverted. (...)
None of that matters when you’re watching this campy bonbon unfold, transfixed by the pure chemistry of the star-crossed lovers that Fennell has framed so freakily. Sure, it’s bright, and so visually exquisite that the plot occasionally collapses under its own weight, like an overfrosted wedding cake. Half the frames look like a cover from a ’90s romance paperback, but who, exactly, doesn’t want to gaze upon the moving version of that?
By the end of the movie, everyone around me was openly sobbing, some clutching their chests. I had to ask a group of professionals—four girls, who were all actors and around 19—what they thought of what we’d just seen. “I don’t have words, really,” said one. “The colors!” said another, “The red. The white. The green!” “The green!” the others concurred. The green, indeed. (Suzy Weiss)

Lukewarm

A gut-punch exploration of love gone feral, it feels oddly relevant at a time when there seems to be no end to the stories involving crimes of passion.
Fennell chooses to focus on the erotic undercurrents and psychological torment. (...) This results in a taut runtime that not only feels propulsive but also avoids the drag of some prior versions. However, if you have read the novel more than once, you may balk and bristle at the liberties taken: characters having been combined, timelines shuffled, and key events reimagined for shock value. Fennell takes a subversive detour, declaring her intent to play by her own rules. All this makes the film less an adaptation and more a fever-dream reinterpretation. (Nawaid Anjum)
It does deliver when it comes to the erotic scenes, and the sexual chemistry between Margot Robbie and Jacob Elordi is palpable. Both actors are extremely good-looking and a treat to watch on screen. In fact, almost all of its important characters deliver engaging performances. The actors handle the script they are given with commitment.
Wuthering Heights does have a unique aesthetic though, using colour effectively to symbolise emotions, making for an enjoyable watch overall. The cinematography is scenic, with beautiful, isolated, stormy Yorkshire landscapes. Some scenes do appear to be digitally engineered, especially the night-time scenery, but that does not take away from the overall visual experience.
However, this is not a tale of enduring love but a tragedy narrating its failure. Viewed independently from the source material, Wuthering Heights presents a visually compelling and emotionally charged tragedy between two star-crossed lovers, undone by societal hierarchy and personal pride. However, it’s hard not to come away feeling a bit disappointed as this could have been so much better. (Val M)
America Magazine thinks 'The new ‘Wuthering Heights’ isn’t too wild. It’s too tame'.
This version of Heathcliff may make the film a more pleasurable and accessible watch. But Wuthering Heights is not heralded as one of the greatest works of British literature because it was palatable or easy. The very opposite is true. 
Emily Brontë tells a complex story about how alienation, discrimination and dehumanization damage us. Though Wuthering Heights is not a book with a clear or commanding moral imperative, the rippling effects of cruelty in the story demonstrate that humans are emotionally and spiritually shaped by how we are treated. The book forces us to grapple with the dark things that characters we might sympathize with become capable of when their spirits are broken. Brontë certainly offers her readers no relief. 
Despite the viscerality and sensuality of the new “Wuthering Heights,” the film hovers, as Woolf put it, in the realm of the “love of men and women.” It does not succeed at, nor even really attempt, any reckoning with a “world cleft into gigantic disorder.” 
Emerald Fennell’s project is beautiful, it’s evocative, it’s romantic. It may be a good Valentine’s Day watch. But it does not force us to face that which is most dangerous and frightening about being a person in relationship with other people, as we all are. It’s just another love story. (Brigid McCabe)
Far Out Magazine gives it 3 out of 5 stars.
That said, no one, including Fennell, has ever managed to fully capture the brutality, intensity, and elusiveness that have made this book such a literary earworm. The tormented love between Cathy and Heathcliff, a love that crosses from childhood to death and beyond, defies a faithful retelling, especially for those wanting to turn the villainy and selfishness of the central characters into something purely romantic. Fennell’s film is a sugar rush and a tearjerker. It’s stuffed to the gills with meticulous design, and it even, in some instances, draws directly on the text of the novel for dialogue. Ultimately, however, it fails to recreate that sense of timelessness and untameable passion that Brontë did. Fortunately, the book is still in print. (Lily Hardman)
“Wuthering Heights” is such a sumptuous piece of cinematic craftsmanship and design that part of me is tempted to pay to see it in IMAX, and I can’t completely dismiss it as being without merit. I can’t pretend that it’s not a thin, soulless and inane piece of fluff, either, and it’s hard not to be a bit of a purist when a great work is treated so poorly. (Patrick Gibbs)
Bad ones 

KGET:

The simple act of stating that the new film “Wuthering Heights” is “based” on the classic Emily Brontë novel gives those involved immunity from the criminal way the story has been adapted. Gone is all the textured structure of love and revenge that Brontë beautifully crafted. What’s left in its place is a barbaric and sadistic tale of lust and sex that replaces the original romance. (...)
Fennell makes a last-minute effort to pull the film back to being a romance with the last moments between Cathy and Heathcliff. Instead of that being a heart-touching moment there is nothing but a joy the film has mercifully ended.
It is painful when someone writes an original script and it becomes a horrible movie. That’s bad but it is a superficial kind of pain because the production will be quickly forgotten. There is some leeway because there was an effort to be original.
The crime is taking a masterpiece of literature – while hiding behind the plausible deniability the movie is only based on the original – and making a product that goes beyond bad to insulting. Fennell’s version of “Wuthering Heights” is criminally insulting. (Rick Bentley)
In the end, “Wuthering Heights” falls short as both an adaptation of a classic and as a compelling romantic drama. There is a hypothetical version of this adaption that succeeds as a beautiful period piece, boasting excellent set design and costuming, star power in Margot Robbie and Jacob Elordi, and a foundation of one of literature’s more unique explorations of romance and passion. But in a continuation of one of Hollywood’s most vexing and arrogant trends, the classic tale is suffocated under the weight of modern sensibilities. Thus, whether you had read the source material or not, the film offers little more for audiences than an opportunity to degrade themselves, like the story’s doomed lovers, in an indulgence of carnal sexuality. It may be a pretty looking film, but neither the characters nor the film itself seems to realize that true beauty is more than skin deep. (Daniel Blackaby)
Brig Newspaper gives it 1 star out of 5:
The dialogue of the film is simplistic. Whilst obviously, people speak the way they do in classic literature novels (formal, lots of big words to mean a few short ones), it’s as if the writers looked for excuses to say undertones out loud, to literally connect the dots for us. It came across as patronising and dryly humorous, though I still can’t tell if this was the intention. 
It’s a fashion movie that tries so hard to be revolutionary, sexually taboo, and arousing. But it never hits the spot. It brings a whole new meaning to the word anti-climax. It’s made for Pinterest, in the idea that someone who pays for Letterboxd is going to make a poster of it that makes it look so much cooler than it actually is. It’s visually stunning and (aims for) sexy, but that’s all it is. (Jess Urquhart)
Well, as they say, the third time’s the charm. Maybe now people will finally see Fennell as she truly is: not a whip-smart auteur, but a professional ragebaiter. (Serena Smith)
   

Lights, Camera, Brontë: East Riddlesden Hall on Screen

A new exhibition can be seen at East Riddlesden Hall:
Step into the atmospheric world of Wuthering Heights.
East Riddlesden Hall, Keighley
February 14 - May 20

Step into the atmospheric world of Wuthering Heights with Lights, Camera, Brontë: East Riddlesden Hall on Screen.
This exhibition uncovers the hall’s starring role in over a century of film and television adaptations of Emily Brontë’s iconic novel. Wander through historic rooms where directors once brought tempestuous romances and Yorkshire moorland drama to life, explore original screenplays and objects linked to the Brontës, and discover how the hall’s dark stone walls, rose windows and 17th‑century architecture inspired filmmakers from 1920 to the present day.
Blending literary heritage, cinematic history and local stories, this is your chance to experience East Riddlesden Hall as both a home of history and a star of the big screen.
The Telegraph & Argus gives more information:
Taking centre stage in the exhibition, being held at the National Trust property from Saturday (February 14), are three major adaptations of Emily Brontë's Wuthering Heights – a pioneering 1920 silent film, the 1992 production featuring Ralph Fiennes and Juliette Binoche, and the 2009 ITV series starring Tom Hardy and Charlotte Riley. (...)
Original film stills and production materials, and recreated sets based on the surviving screenplay of the 1920 film, offer a behind-the-scenes glimpse of how the classic story has been reimagined for the screen across generations. (...)
The exhibition also highlights the legacy of the Brigg family, which helped preserve both East Riddlesden Hall and the literary heritage of the Brontës.
John Jeremy Brigg, a founding member and later chair of the Brontë Society, played a key role in saving the hall from demolition in the 1930s.
An oak buffet linked to the Brontës, believed by some to be the inspiration for the 'pewter-bearing dresser' in the opening chapter of Wuthering Heights, is among the pieces that will be on display. (Alistair Shand)
   

Jane Eyre in Kenilworth

A new production of Jane Eyre opens today, February 14, in Kenilworth, UK:
By Charlotte Brontë adapted by Catherine Prout 
Director Ashley Hirons & Emma Marshall
Saturday 14 February 2026 19:30 
Saturday 21 February 2026 22:00
Priory Theatre
Rosemary Hill, Kenilworth, England, CV81BN

A gothic masterpiece of tempestuous passions and dark secrets by Charlotte Bronte, Jane Eyre follows the story of an orphan girl and her journey from a childhood of loneliness and cruelty to a life at Thornfield Hall and an unlikely relationship with the mysterious Mr. Rochester. Falling in love, she gradually uncovers a hidden past to the gloomy, forbidding Thornfield Hall, a terrible secret that forces her to make a heart-wrenching choice.
   

Breaking: 'Brontë museum staff praise racy Wuthering Heights film'

Deadline announces that '‘Wuthering Heights’ Starts Valentine’s Day Weekend Affair With $3M Previews'.
EXCLUSIVE: Warner Bros/MRC theatrical release of Oscar winner Emerald Fennell’s Wuthering Heights smooched $3M from Thursday previews at 3,000 locations.
Before you comp the movie to the $7M previews for It Ends With Us (which opened to $50M), calm your jets. First that was a summer release. Second, distributione sources are seeing a big pop for moviegoing on Saturday, Valentine’s Day with a natural shift of foot traffic from last night to today, and into tomorrow. Let’s not forget the Monday Presidents Day holiday. The last time Valentine’s Day fell on a Saturday was 11 years ago; that’s when Fifty Shades of Grey opened to $93M over 4-days with Kingsman: Secret Service in second place with $41M. I hear that there’s $14M in presales already for Wuthering Heights which is eyeing $40M-$50M over the 4-day holiday in North America. Reviews are fresh for Wuthering Heights, but at 65% on Rotten Tomatoes. It Ends With Us was 55% Rotten with critics, but 87% with moviegoers. As we told you, Warner Bros on the Jacob Elordi-Margot Robbie starring feature take of the Emily Brontë novel for $80M, over Netflix’s $150M. (Anthony D'Alessandro)
The Guardian can hardly believe it, but 'Brontë museum staff praise racy Wuthering Heights film'.
Yet staff at the Brontë Parsonage Museum in Haworth, West Yorkshire, have offered a stout defence of the film, calling it “amazing”, “exciting” and “fantastic”.
“I loved it,” said Zoe, who works in housekeeping at the museum. “It made me quite emotional. I thought it was amazing.”
“It really does feel like a fever dream,” said Mia, her colleague from digital engagement. “From the stunning costumes and sets to the dramatic soundtrack, it’s a great escape to the world of Wuthering Heights. The themes of the novel do shine through.”
Ruth, a visitor experience coordinator, agreed that Fennell’s film – which was inspired by her experience reading the novel as a 14-year-old – captures “some essential truths to the book and the relationship between Heathcliff and Cathy”.
“I really enjoyed it,” she said, adding it made a refreshing alternative to previous adaptations, which include the 1939 version with Merle Oberon and Laurence Olivier, 1992’s take with Juliette Binoche and Ralph Fiennes, and Andrea Arnold’s 2011 film.
Many members of staff expressed the hope it would lead people back to the novel. “I think it will make a lot of viewers intrigued to read the book,” said Sam, from the museum’s programming department.
Others did concede there had been “a lot of changes to the original novel”. “Some may not like [that]”, said Sue, from the learning wing, “but it’s an exciting film to watch in its own right.”
“Is it faithful? No,” said outreach officer Diane. “Is it for purists? No. Is it an entertaining riff on the novel? Yes!” She also endorsed the casting of Jacob Elordi as Heathcliff, despite Brontë’s novel describing him as “dark-skinned”. The actor was “fantastic”, she said, “and nailed the accent”.
The staff watched the film at a preview screening on Thursday in Keighley organised by studio Warner Bros. “We weren’t involved in the making of the film at all,” said Rebecca Yorke, director of the museum and the Brontë Society.
“But Emerald Fennell was a guest at our Brontë women’s writing festival in September where she spoke eloquently about Wuthering Heights and her personal response to it. Any new interpretation is likely to appeal to one audience more than another and spark lively debate.”
Among those in the audience at the first public screening in Leeds on Friday morning was Brontë’s most recent biographer, Dr Claire O’Callaghan. “I enjoyed it,” she said. “Brilliant performances. There’s a lot of fun built into it, as well as the intensity and tragedy.”
Fennell made it clear the film was her own spin on the story, which was “really refreshing”, said O’Callaghan. “There’s no attempt to have fidelity to the original. If it was more of a period drama then people might get more upset. But this is so far removed from that, and so over the top.”
The Brontë Parsonage Museum is situated in the home in which Charlotte, Emily and Anne wrote their groundbreaking novels, which was bought by industrialist Sir James Roberts in 1928 and donated to the Brontë Society. Emily died in the house aged 30 in 1848, the year after she published her first and only book, under the pen name Ellis Bell. [...]
“We are expecting increased visitor numbers and have already a large increase in sales of Wuthering Heights,” said Yorke. “We have extended our opening hours and produced exclusive merchandise in response.” (Catherine Shoard)
The Guardian also asks readers to share whether Wuthering Heights 2026 has 'inspired you to read Emily Brontë’s novel'. Esquire celebrates Wuthering Heights: '“Long Live Wuthering Heights”: Why We Are Still Hooked on Emily Brontë’s 1847 Classic'.
I recall first reading Brontë’s novel at school, then again at university, and once more last summer while on holiday with my family (a good poolside read). I’m not sure how many times you have read the book – most adults have consumed it at least twice – but the contours are well-known. We are in Yorkshire, between the wind-battered outpost of Wuthering Heights and the comparatively lush Thrushcross Grange. The Earnshaws live at the former, while the wealthy Lintons move into the latter, setting up a toxic triangulation that will ruin the families for decades to come. Primarily, this story is about the passionate, cruel Catherine Earnshaw and the passionate, cruel adopted son Heathcliff, whose relationship drama is both hot and horrible. It was toxic before we started describing relationships as toxic.
Brontë’s tale – her first and only novel – is not only a love story. It is also about generational trauma (so hot right now!), domestic violence (each chapter is newly gruesome), and yes, race (Heathcliff is described as “dark-skinned”, and that has caused an unending discussion over his ethnicity). Like most Gothic novels, it is also ambiguous. You can read whatever you want into Brontë’s writing.
It is fair to say that in Emerald Fennell’s take, which is out in all its quotation-marked glory today, that we get a big-time focus on the love. Margot Robbie brings an impressive degree of yearning to Catherine and Jacob Elordi provides goes all in on brooding for Heathcliff. Fennell, working with production designer Suzie Davies, brings a punchy look to this well-worn story, emphasising class divides and heightening the natural backdrop in a generally doomed manner. Charli XCX’s soundtrack, also out today, is a synthy ode to yearning.
You might be wondering exactly why we needed another adaptation of Wuthering Heights. And the answer is: it’s in the public domain! You can do whatever the hell you want with it! According to IMDB, Brontë’s novel has inspired over 35 film and television adaptations. Does it feel like there have been… more? Maybe. But most adaptations bring new something new to our understanding and appreciation. Like Andrea Arnold’s 2011 interpretation, as raw in many ways to Fennell’s, which cast Black actors to play Heathcliff. Or the 2009 television series, which provided (a little) more breathing room for Brontë’s complications.
Fennell, I suspect, would not want “Wuthering Heights” to become the definitive adaptation. Part of the fun of adaptations is that you get to pick and choose: you like that actor’s performance with this director’s vision in this project’s specific format. The only hard and fast rule is that there’s very little, to borrow another modern term, closure. And that’s why you keep coming back for more. Long Live Wuthering Heights (with or without those quotation marks). (Henry Wong)

In The Times, Dominic Sandbrook writes about Emily Brontë: 'Emily Brontë was a genius — but an odd one'.

For me, the most telling story about Emily concerns her relationship with her dog, Keeper, whom she supposedly adored. One day Keeper climbed on to the bed with muddy paws. Her reaction was to drag him downstairs and punch him repeatedly in the face until he was left “half-blind and stupefied”. No wonder Wuthering Heights is a dog lover’s nightmare. How, for example, does Heathcliff celebrate his elopement with the delicate Isabella Linton? By hanging her dog in front of her, naturally.
Perhaps, in some parallel universe, Emily Brontë lived to a ripe old age, wrote dozens of books and died as one of the most fêted dog lovers in the land. [...]
What to make of this strange, unhappy woman? Modern Brontë enthusiasts are very keen to diagnose her with anorexia or autism but this is surely carrying projection too far. The great biographer and critic Kathryn Hughes calls her “the patron saint of difficult women”. Dog lovers may take a more caustic view.
In any case — and yes, contradicting my earlier assertion that nobody can know what she would have thought — it’s very hard to believe Emily Brontë would have been comfortable with a big-screen version of her only published book. For one thing, she was totally indifferent to what other people thought so it’s difficult to imagine her countenancing the changes film producers demand.
More importantly, for all its brutality, claustrophobia and general brooding, Wuthering Heights is almost entirely lacking in the one thing Hollywood loves above all, which is sex. Given its author’s reclusiveness, that’s surely not surprising. But I find it extraordinary that so many people, including the director Emerald Fennell, consider it a sexy book. Perhaps they really, really hate dogs.
The New York Times weighs in on the whole whitewashing debate with an open-minded approach.
Susan Newby, learning officer at the Brontë Parsonage Museum in Haworth, England, said, “There is a sense that he is not white Anglo-Saxon, he’s something else, but you don’t know what that is.”
Some scholars believe that Brontë was using Heathcliff to comment on the Liverpool slave trade. Mr. Earnshaw brings Heathcliff from Liverpool, and Nelly, who narrates this part of the action, explains that Earnshaw saw Heathcliff starving and asked after his “owner.”
It makes sense that Brontë would be interested in slavery. Her father, Patrick Brontë, was associated with the abolitionist politician William Wilberforce, who, according to the Parsonage Museum, helped pay for Patrick to study at Cambridge.
Reginald Watson, an associate professor of literature at East Carolina University, has studied questions of Blackness in the works of the Brontës, including Emily’s sister Charlotte, the “Jane Eyre” author. “My belief is that because of the father’s involvement in abolitionism that both of the authors included connections to slavery in some form,” Watson said. His position is that while Heathcliff “may not be totally Black,” he is mixed.
Another theory, however, is that Brontë was using Heathcliff to comment on prejudices against the Irish, since her father was from Ireland and she was writing at the start of the potato famine there. “Think about Heathcliff who was brought from Liverpool and speaks a sort of gibberish,” said Elsie Michie, a professor of English at Louisiana State University. “The description of Heathcliff conforms almost exactly to the caricatures of the Irish.”
Michie added that the “dynamics of this novel are about otherness in various ways, and that otherness is in Heathcliff.”
Onscreen, however, Heathcliff has largely been played by white actors, including Timothy Dalton, Ralph Fiennes and, perhaps most famously, Laurence Olivier in William Wyler’s 1939 version opposite Merle Oberon as Catherine. (Oberon actually was South Asian but hid that to ascend in Hollywood at the time.) A notable exception is Andrea Arnold’s 2012 adaptation, in which the adult Heathcliff was played by the Black actor James Howson. In an interview with NPR at the time, Arnold said, “In the book it was clear he wasn’t white-skinned. I felt that Emily was not committing exactly; she was playing with her own difference as a female.”
Fennell’s version does away with references to Heathcliff’s race, instead largely focusing on his tortured romance with Cathy (Margot Robbie). Still, the cast doesn’t lack diversity entirely. Nelly is played by the Vietnamese American actress Hong Chau, and Shazad Latif, who is of Pakistani descent, plays Edgar Linton. [...]
But while Newby, for instance, said she believes that Brontë presents Heathcliff as nonwhite, she also thinks the author leaves room for discussion. “She deliberately keeps it ambiguous,” Newby said.
At the same time, Newby isn’t bothered by Elordi’s casting, in part because Fennell has been so explicit about the film being from her own perspective. The director makes a number of major changes, getting rid of some characters and altering details of Cathy and Heathcliff’s interactions. “Somehow I feel more bothered by some past adaptations that have very unquestionably, unthinkingly showed him as being white without ever really reading the book and thinking, ‘Right, this is how it’s described,’” Newby said. “It was almost that was a default. You won’t be taken seriously as a lead if he’s not white.”
The mystery is also part of the appeal of Heathcliff: We never do learn his origins before Earnshaw brings him into that household. (Esther Zuckerman)
The Guardian also weighs in:
There are, by my count, 18 different filmed adaptations of the book. More often than not, Heathcliff is played by a white actor – Richard Burton, Tom Hardy, Ralph Fiennes and countless others. It’s nearly impossible to accuse Fennell (who also cast the decidedly white roles of Linton and Nelly with actors of color) of whitewashing a story that’s been presented in that fashion for decades. There are exceptions, of course.
In the 2011 film directed by Andrea Arnold, Heathcliff is portrayed by James Howson, a Black British actor. Howson was the first Black actor to play Heathcliff in a film, was plucked out of obscurity for the role, was paid about £8,000 for his work, and quickly went right back to obscurity. The movie was a box office failure and one can’t help but think that one of the main reasons to cast an actor like Jacob Elordi is to ensure enough star power to make back the production budget. Who am I to argue against the holy Saint Commerce?
While I’m happy to accept Fennell’s rationale for casting based on her teenage imagination, I would likely go in the other direction if I were in her position. What did I imagine while reading Wuthering Heights at 14? Mostly battle scenes from Star Trek, while hoping my CliffsNotes version would arrive in the mail soon. Can I be criticized for wishing Heathcliff – a sour-faced weirdo whose sole goal in life is pitiless revenge against his foster family – wasn’t white or Black, but Optimus Prime from Transformers? I was 14. What the hell did I know about great literature? With a startling lack of spaceships or cars that turn into robots (and back again), what is an American boy supposed to relate to?
But now I’m an adult with a fully developed brain, and I can see Wuthering Heights as a powerful story of class resentment, prejudice and the way those terrible forces curdle the human soul. It seeks to nod to the way in which we other those we don’t understand.
Cathy and Heathcliff are kept apart because of his low social status – a status reinforced by Cathy’s brother Hindley forcing Heathcliff into life as a servant. That’s easy to accomplish because Heathcliff is explicitly different from the Earnshaws. Not just because he’s been adopted, but because he looks different. Even his backstory – his race and where he’s from originally – is a mystery that sets him apart from the other characters.
One of the most defining characteristics of my own personal backstory is that I’m the product of a interracial marriage and was raised in America, a country where such things were illegal up until the middle of the 20th century. I can still remember the feeling when a grocery-store checkout clerk asked my dad if I was adopted. Interracial relationships and the biracial progeny of them are still a rarity in popular media. One of the most prominent examples is 2015’s Focus, which ironically stars Margot Robbie and Will Smith. It’s a solidly entertaining film, but one that doesn’t really engage with the social subtext of that pairing. Not that it has to.
I’m not begging every movie with an interracial coupling to have something heady to say about it. If the charming conman plot of Focus stopped to preach to me about racial tolerance, it would be about as helpful as Transformers or the Starship Enterprise showing up in Wuthering Heights. But Focus wasn’t about those things. Wuthering Heights, in so many ways, is.
If I had the ability to make Wuthering Heights as a movie, first of all, I’d probably respectfully decline. I still can’t shake the need to include robots. But if I did do it, I’d probably emphasize the aspects of the story that spoke to me the most – the alienation, the othering and the feeling that basic respect is just outside of my reach.
The aspects of Wuthering Heights that spoke to Emerald Fennell the most are clearly kissing a hot guy that is sort of your brother. As is her right. But the one question I’d ask her is this: as a clearly intelligent and talented artist, why was she incapable of imagining a story with an interracial relationship? Maybe for the same reason I imagined Transformers stomping around on the moor. Because we see only what we want to see. (Dave Schilling)
CounterPunch wonders whether Heathcliff might have been Jewish.
The short answer to the question, “Is Heathcliff Jewish?” is an emphatic “No,” though that hasn’t stopped Emily Brontë scholars from suggesting that he is in fact Jewish, or at least that he has “Jewish roots.” That’s what Professor Sharon Lynne Joffe argues in a recent issue of Brontë Studies, the Journal of the Brontë Society, which was founded in 1893 and still going strong. Joffe writes that Brontë “incorporated nineteenth-century stereotypes of Jews into her character,” and that she “would have been familiar with these stereotypes through her reading of Blackwood’s Magazine.”
Not so fast, professor. Joffe takes a leap of faith–not a logical step–and adds that “Heathcliff’s physical characteristics, his initial inability to speak English, his lineage, and his eventual success support my contention that Brontë used Jewish stereotypes to create Heathcliff.” Nothing in the novel itself supports the notion that he’s Jewish, though like Jewish characters in fiction and Old Testament figures like Jonah, he’s the Outsider. Of course, Jews aren’t the only literary outsiders.
Nor does it help Professor Joffe’s case to summon Blackwoods to support her claims. My own reading of that magazine and others from the Victorian era, including Punch and Cornhill (I was conducting research for my book about British literature and the British Empire) taught me that editors, publishers and writers used racial stereotypes to describe anyone and nearly everyone on the planet, including the “wild” Irish. The word “wog, and the letters WOG, which stood for “Worthy Oriental Gentleman,” were used to describe the French, the Italians, the Indians from India and anyone with brown or black skin who didn’t speak proper English. Racism and anti-Semitism lurked at the heart of an empire where the sun supposedly never set.
In the page of the novel, Heathcliff is called all kinds of names:  “gipsy” (Roma in today’s lingo), “Afreet” (a dangerous figure in Islamic cultures) and a “Lascar” (a East Indian sailor who worked on English ships). But he’s never called a Jew, Jewish or Semitic. In chapter four, readers learn that Mr. Earnshaw, the master of Wuthering Heights, encounters “in the streets of Liverpool…a dirty, ragged black-haired child” who speaks “gibberish that nobody could understand.” Gender and ethnicity unknown. The child is initially referred to as an “it,” and neither masculine nor feminine. (Jonah Raskin)
According to Time, 'Wuthering Heights Was Not a Swoony Romance. Then Hollywood Got Involved.
When Sam Hirst teaches Emily Brontë’s 1847 novel Wuthering Heights, they often find the students who end up hating it are the ones who go in expecting it to be a love story.
“They come in thinking it’s a romance,” says Hirst, who lectures in English literature at the University of Liverpool and teaches courses at the Brontë Parsonage Museum. “And then they’re like, ‘This isn’t a romance, this is domestic abuse. This is a nightmare.’”
Victorian critics agreed. Early reviews of Wuthering Heights found it disturbing and violent. In fact, the first known movie adaptation—a (now lost) 1920 silent film—advertised itself as “Emily Brontë’s tremendous Story of Hate.” So why do so many modern readers expect it to be a romance?
“You really see a change in the way in which Wuthering Heights is understood with the release of the 1939 film with Laurence Olivier and Merle Oberon,” Hirst says. This film adaptation cut out the second half of the book, downplayed the violence committed by Olivier’s character, Heathcliff, and played up the romance between Heathcliff and Oberon’s character, Cathy.
Since then, there have been several feature film adaptations of Wuthering Heights, including the 1954 Mexican film Abismos de Pasión, the 1966 Bollywood musical Dil Diya Dard Liya, the 1970 British adaptation starring Timothy Dalton, the 1985 French film Hurlevent, and the 2011 movie by Andrea Arnold. Like the 1939 film, all five of these movies adapt the first part of the novel by focusing on Cathy and Heathcliff’s romantic (if destructive) feelings for each other, while excluding the second half of the novel in which Heathcliff exhibits some of his worst behavior. [...]
For the reader, Heathcliff’s horrific actions raise questions about the nature of his supposed love for the deceased Cathy.
“I mean, he abducts the daughter of the woman he’s said to love, and forces her to marry somebody,” says Claire O’Callaghan, a lecturer in English at Loughborough University and author of Emily Brontë Reappraised. “His bad behavior is not only because she chose somebody else, but because of the things he chooses to do as well.”
The highly acclaimed 1939 adaptation of Wuthering Heights doesn’t include any of Heathcliff’s actions toward the children, because it doesn’t include the children at all. Instead, it ends by fast-forwarding from Cathy’s death to Heathcliff’s death many years later, and then showing the ghosts of Cathy and Heathcliff happily walking together on the West Yorkshire moors. The 1954, 1970, and 2011 adaptations only include Hareton (“Jorge,” in the Mexican version) as a young child, and don’t portray Heathcliff or Cathy’s children.
Eliminating the second generation of characters and Heathcliff’s treatment of them “allows you to ignore that who he is persecuting are the innocent,” Hirst says. “You can’t think of it as a love story if you actually honestly portray that part of the story,” because “what his love actually looks like is this horrifying toxic nightmare of a thing.”
Early media coverage of Emerald Fennell’s 2026 adaptation has noted the film’s deviations from the novel, including Cathy’s age (Robbie is 35 whereas in the novel her character dies before 20); the casting of Elordi as Heathcliff, whose racial and ethnic identity in the book is ambiguous (characters frequently describe him using a slur for Romani people); and the film’s ahistorical costumes and sets.
Additionally, the new movie does not tell the second-generation characters’ stories following Cathy’s death and, in fact, overwrites some of their existence. In Fennell’s version, Cathy’s brother is dead by the time her father brings home a selectively mute boy, whom Cathy chooses to name Heathcliff after her deceased brother. The new film also doesn’t include Heathcliff or Cathy’s children.
All of which makes sense. It’s hard to spin a film as a Valentine’s Day movie if the romantic hero kidnaps the heroine’s daughter. (Becky Little)
Time also discusses 'How Emerald Fennell Changes the Villain of ‘Wuthering Heights’'.
Fennell doesn't portray this behavior as coming out of nowhere; Nelly's actions appear to be driven by her long-held bitterness at having been cast off as Cathy's closest friend as soon as Heathcliff entered the picture. As far as grudges go, this one runs dangerously deep.
Fennell's Heathcliff, on the other hand, is stripped of the majority of his villainy. Not only is there no next-gen of children for him to torture, but rather than a battered wife, Isabella (played by Alison Oliver) is presented as a seemingly willing participant in his sadomasochism. Introduced as Edgar's gleefully unhinged ward rather than his sister, Isabella enters into what appears to be a consensual dominant-submissive marriage with Heathcliff in which she gets off on his mistreatment of her. Heathcliff's greatest crime in Fennell's version? Loving Catherine with uncontrollably reckless abandon.
As far as true evil goes, that's not much of a crime at all. Manslaughter by neglect, on the other hand? Pretty unforgivable. (Megan McCluskey)
A contributor to Time also 'Watched 10 Wuthering Heights Adaptations. Here’s What’s Worth Your Time'.

Elle Decor has production designer Suzie Davies speak about 'building Emily Brontë's Yorkshire, creating a bedroom wrapped in Margot Robbie's skin, and more.
“When [Fennell] sent me the script I could see this wasn't going to be your average movie,” Davies tells ELLE Decor, and she was immediately all in. The enthusiasm was mutual and infectious. Davies describes Fennell as having that quality of making the impossible seem not just doable but necessary. Before long, Davies was building composite sets across three soundstages where a horse and carriage could ride up a long drive into Wuthering Heights's farmyard, where horses could be stabled and tea could be brewed in a kitchen, and where actors could climb the stairs to bed. She wrapped all of it in 360-degree high-resolution photographs of Yorkshire landscapes to complete the illusion.
The scale was staggering. Four weeks of drawings, as Davies made hand scribbles on an iPad before passing them to art directors who then transformed them into proper architectural plans. Then ten weeks of construction, turning empty soundstages into fully operational 19th-century estates complete with livestock and fires burning in hearths. They did spend two weeks in Yorkshire—in Wreath Valley, walking for hours across the moors in November with just Davies, Fennell, cinematographer Linus Sandgren and the location manager hunting for the perfect cliffs and ruins.
Every time they’d scouted, the weather cooperated beautifully: foggy, windswept, moody—everything you'd want for Wuthering Heights. Naturally, when they arrived to shoot, they got crystalline sunshine and had to manufacture the atmosphere with special effects like smoke. But that felt appropriate as part of the project's larger ambition to exist in what Davies calls “that slither between realism and unrealism,” where you can't quite tell if you're looking at Yorkshire or a soundstage recreation of Yorkshire, where the artificial and the authentic blur together into something more heightened than either individual space.
“When Cathy sees Heathcliff in those ruins, I don't think you know if you're on the sound stage or if you're in the real Yorkshire Moors, and I love that ambiguity,” Davies says.
The design is governed by a philosophy Davies attributes to working with Fennell: “There's no such thing as less is more; more is more.” Every choice is turned up, dialed past restraint into something more operatic.
At Wuthering Heights itself, the architecture makes an argument about belonging. The kitchen ceiling measures six feet four inches, but Jacob Elordi, who plays Heathcliff, stands six feet five inches tall. He cannot stand up straight in the house he eventually owns, and can never fully inhabit it. “So it doesn't belong to him. He's never going to fit in that property,” Davies explains. [...]
At Thrushcross Grange, the Linton family's estate, that “more is more” philosophy manifests as gilded captivity. “Everything is caged, even the garden is caged,” Davies says. The estate presents itself as paradise—Technicolor excess, marble staircases, rooms that explode with color and ornament—but every beautiful detail reinforces the same message: you cannot leave. Goldfish swim in transparent urns, their beauty entirely contingent on confinement (they could only use real fish for a single day of shooting—they had their own call sheet, required specific water temperatures, and then were replaced with mechanical doubles).
But it's Cathy's bedroom at Thrushcross Grange that becomes the film's most visceral expression of entrapment. Davies keeps a swatch of latex on her desk—skin-toned, tactile, and leftover from Saltburn where she'd used it for a privacy screen. When she read Fennell's stage directions for a room where the walls should feel like skin, that latex was sitting right there. She discovered, almost by accident, that stretched latex becomes translucent. So she asked Margot Robbie, who plays Cathy, to photograph her arms in high resolution—veins, freckles, texture, and all. Davies's graphics department manipulated the images, intensified the veins, experimented with latex colors, and printed Robbie's skin behind stretched, padded panels.
The room itself is deliberately sparse—a bed, a dressing table, a mirror, and nothing else. The beds sit slightly too low and the proportions feel wrong. “It brings more unease because there’s something not right about the room,” Davies says. There is nowhere to look except those walls, and no distraction from the fact that you’re enclosed by something living, that breathes and watches.
The color story operates in clear emotional registers: at Wuthering Heights, everything is black, white, or neutral. Thrushcross Grange explodes in Technicolor and red—the only color Cathy is allowed to wear, threaded through the film like a visual motif of passion and danger. Davies and Fennell, who both describe themselves as magpies when it comes to visual references, pulled elements from everywhere: a staircase from Chatsworth House, a brutalist fireplace from a contemporary building, and even an abandoned mine in Wales.
All of it coheres into spaces that feel less like sets and more like fever dreams made physical. Davies wanted the entire film to work this way, engaging every sense. “We want the audience to smell it, touch it, taste it, feel it,” she says. In the end, that's what Wuthering Heights delivers: two prisons, both inescapable—one where Heathcliff can never belong, and another where Cathy is wrapped in beauty that suffocates. (Julia Cancilla)
Refinery29 interviews Margot Robbie and Alison Oliver:
Both of these characters are messy. They're destructive. They're unapologetic. They put female desire first, which I think is going to piss some people off, but I loved that about them. It would be easy to say that their entire identities are wrapped up in romantic obsession. But talk about how important it was to show that female desire, that all consuming desire, and the choices that these women make for themselves? 
Margot Robbie: Do you know what felt radical? We have a scene — Alison and I — on the swing in the garden, and it's a scene essentially, where we're just fight over Heathcliff, and it felt so radical to do a scene like that. The ironic thing is that we've fought so hard to not have to do that in movies anymore, but now it's been so long since — I don't know if I've done a scene like this since I was on the soap opera I was on back in Australia when I was a teenager. It felt so radical to just be two women fighting over a man. It was crazy. “You have him. He's so handsome. Who you talking about? You could never take him!” It was weirdly exciting to do.
Alison Oliver: Yeah, it was strange. All of these characters do have — I feel like Emerald really gave them agency in their own ways as well, which within the sort of confines or the period, you do feel like they have agency in some sense. And I think that was important to show. 
Absolutely. They have depth and agency.
MR: Yeah, they all make the choices. And then everything you see in the movie happens because of the choices they make. Whereas usually, even now, when we're not doing scenes fighting about men, most of the time, you're usually playing a character that something happens to, and then you watch a movie about the effects of that thing happening to that female character. 
AO: They are the decider.
MR: For both of our characters, I feel like we make a choice, we do a thing, and it's not the right thing in most instances, and then we have to deal with the consequences.
OK, Margot, this does not work unless you and Jacob have the most insane chemistry we've ever seen on screen. And you did. I'm always fighting to bring back chemistry, and you guys did it. 
MR: Yes! Chemistry and charisma are two things that I'm like, why can't we have that? That's what I want in the movies. Charismatic characters or I want insane chemistry,
Was there a moment where you and Jacob were like, Oh, we got it?
MR: There were a couple of moments. Even on day one. [We shot] the first scene in the movie where Cathy flings open the bed hangings, and [Heathcliff is] lying in bed. And then we ended up cutting this bit but I walked up over him, and then crouch down and got like this close to his face and told him to, “get up, we've got neighbors,” or whatever it was. And we cut that bit because the proximity is something we wanted to save. But, I mean, that was day one, and even then, everyone was kind of like, “Whoa.” And we were like, “Okay, I think this movie's gonna work.” Also just because she's throwing something at him, and he's throwing it back, and he's like, “What?” There was already an intensity between them that I think we could build on from that point. (Kathleen Newman-Bremang)
The Guardian features actor Martin Clunes, 'the unlikely star of the bodice-ripping Wuthering Heights'.

Los Angeles Times highlights '7 ‘Wuthering Heights’ movie changes that will surprise fans of the book'.
Fennell’s Heathcliff is white
Brontë’s “Wuthering Heights” leaves Heathcliff’s racial identity ambiguous, with characters referring to him as a “gipsy brat,” “lascar” and “Spanish castaway” at different points throughout the novel. But one thing is clear: He is not white.
As the Lousiana State Unversity professor Elsie Michie writes in the academic journal article, “From Simianized Irish to Oriental Despots: Heathcliff, Rochester and Racial Difference,” Heathcliff’s racial othering is how “he becomes, for others, a locus of both fear and desire.” In other words, Heathcliff’s role in the novel, and thus his fraught romance with Cathy, is predicated upon his non-white identity.
Fennell’s film instead relies on class differences — and a meddling Nelly (to be discussed later) — to form the rift between its love interests.
Cathy’s brother dies young
When Mr. Earnshaw presents a young Cathy with her companion-to-be early in the film, she declares that she will name him Heathcliff, “after my dead brother.”
For the remainder of the film, Brontë’s character Hindley Earnshaw is subsumed into Mr. Earnshaw. Rather than Hindley, it is Mr. Earnshaw who devolves into the drunk gambling addict whose vices force him to cede Wuthering Heights to Heathcliff. Mr. Earnshaw’s abuse of young Heathcliff in the film makes the latter’s revenge plot more personal than his book counterpart’s against Hindley.
Cathy meets Edgar Linton as an adult
In Brontë’s novel, Cathy and Heathcliff first encounter their neighbors, the Lintons, after an outdoor escapade gone awry. Cathy gets bitten in the ankle by an aggressive dog and stays at the Lintons’ for a few weeks to heal.
Cathy sustains a similar injury in the film, but this time, she’s an adult woman, who falls from the Thrushcross Grange garden wall after attempting to spy on its grown residents Edgar and Isabella. (In the book, the two are siblings. Here, Isabella is referred to as Edgar’s “ward.”)
Aside from providing some comic relief, Fennell’s revision also fast-tracks the marriage plot that severs Cathy and Heathcliff.
Nelly is a meddler, and a spiteful one
Whereas Brontë writes Nelly as a largely passive narrator, Fennell abandons the frame narrative structure altogether and instead fashions the housekeeper into a complex character with significant control over Cathy’s life.
It is she who ensures Heathcliff overhears Cathy as she laments how marrying him would degrade her, causing him to flee Wuthering Heights and leave Cathy to marry Edgar. Nelly’s ploy comes shortly after Cathy demeans the housekeeper, claiming that she wouldn’t understand Cathy’s predicament given she’s never loved anyone, and no one has ever loved her. Thus, Nelly is characterized as vengeful toward Cathy — although, as the latter lies in her death bed, the two share a brief moment that complicates their relationship to each other.
Regardless, Fennell gives Nelly and Cathy’s relationship psychological depth that Brontë’s novel doesn’t seem to afford them.
Cathy and Heathcliff have sex (and a lot of it)
Brontë’s Cathy and Heathcliff never explicitly (in the text) consummate their professed undying love, save for a few kisses just before Cathy breathes her last.
Fennell’s “Wuthering Heights,” on the other hand, grants them an entire Bridgerton-style sex montage — they even get hot and heavy in a carriage. It’s nearly impossible to keep count of the “I love you”s exchanged during the pair’s rendezvous.
These smutty sequences certainly validate the Valentine’s Eve release.
Isabella is a willing submissive
One particular still of Alison Oliver’s Isabella is already making the rounds online, and for good reason. The shot, which depicts the young woman engaging in BDSM-style puppy play, is a stark contrast to Brontë’s characterization of Isabella as a victim of domestic violence.
In Brontë’s book, Isabella marries Heathcliff naively believing he might shape up into a gentleman and flees with their son when she realizes that is out of the question. In the film, Heathcliff is clear from their first romantic encounter that he does not love Isabella, will never love her and pursues her only to torture Cathy — and the young woman still chooses to be with him.
There is no second generation
Perhaps Fennell’s most glaring diversion from her source material is her complete omission of the second half of Brontë’s novel, which centers on a second generation comprised of Cathy and Edgar’s daughter Catherine Linton, Heathcliff and Isabella’s son Linton Heathcliff and Hindley and his wife Frances’ son Hareton Earnshaw.
In her introduction to the Penguin Classics edition of “Wuthering Heights,” Brontë scholar Pauline Nestor writes that many literary critics interpret the novel’s latter half as “signifying the restoration of order and balance in the second generation after the excesses and disruption of the first generation,” while others contend the violence that stains Cathy and Heathcliff’s relationship is bound to be replicated by their children. Either way, the structure of Brontë’s novel encourages readers to interpret each half through the lens of the other.
Fennell’s film instead ends where Brontë’s first act closes, hyper-focused on Cathy and Heathcliff. In the same way the doomed lovers see each other, Fennell figures them as the center of the world. (Malia Mendez)
Similarly, Buzzfeed looks at 'How The Characters Are Different To The Novel, And What Emerald Fennell Had To Say About The Changes'. USA Today does something similar too: ''Wuthering Heights' movie makes these big changes from the book – Readers beware'. 'Why Wuthering Heights Cuts So Many Characters From Emily Brontë's Book' on ScreenRant. 'Every cringey way that Margot Robbie and Jacob Elordi attempted to promote Wuthering Heights' on The Tab. Sliding into ever sillier territory, People has an article on 'Which Wuthering Heights Character You Are, Based on Your Zodiac Sign'.

ArtNet looks into 'How ‘Wuthering Heights’ Has Haunted Art History' highlighting the works of Edna Clarke Hall, Balthus, L.S. Lowry, and Sam Taylor-Johnson.

According to Escape (Australia), 'The UK countryside that inspired Wuthering Heights is perfect for book lovers'. Closer to Haworth, Manchester Evening News says that 'Charming village that was home to Emily Brontë is just 1hr drive from Manchester'. Time Out also lists the filming locations of Wuthering Heights 2026. SlashFilm recommends the '5 Best Movies To Watch After 2026's Wuthering Heights'.
   

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