Among many, many other sites announcing that Wuthering Heights 2026 is now available for streaming, Decider wonders whether to stream it or skip it:So are we drinking the Wuthering Heights (now streaming on HBO Max, in addition to VOD platforms like ...
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"BrontëBlog" - 5 new articles

  1. Moorcore travel trend
  2. No Coward Soul is Mine by Elli Belle
  3. Courage in the Face of Unknown
  4. The Racial Representation of Heathcliff
  5. 'What author would be without the advantage of being able to walk invisible?'
  6. More Recent Articles

Moorcore travel trend

Among many, many other sites announcing that Wuthering Heights 2026 is now available for streaming, Decider wonders whether to stream it or skip it:
So are we drinking the Wuthering Heights (now streaming on HBO Max, in addition to VOD platforms like Amazon Prime Video) bathwater, or are we scowling at it in disgust? That’s the question of the day, my friends. Hot-button filmmaker Emerald Fennell’s third provocative outing after Saltburn and Promising Young Woman is a version of Emily Bronte’s 1847 all-timer of an English novel, albeit stripped down to bare bones covered in sweaty goosepimples. Fennell famously turned down $150 million from Netflix and took $80 million from Warner Bros. so the film could enjoy theatrical release, and the gamble worked – it was a $250-plus million worldwide hit, and its damp, soupy atmospherics (I’m guessing about $60 million of that budget went towards fog machines) and lush photography look even more stunning on a big screen. Oh, and so do its stars, Margot Robbie and Jacob Elordi, who lick each other up and down more than I remember from the novel. Not that I remember much. It’s been a while. And that’s probably for the better in this case. [...]
What Movies Will It Remind You Of? Different Brontë sister, but Cary Fukunaga’s spooky, horror-coded 2011 take on Jane Eyre is highly memroable. And Sophia Coppola is a clear influence – see the many brilliantly styled anachronisms in Marie Antionette. 
Performance Worth Watching: Of course Elordi and Robbie are magnetic, even in underwritten roles. But what a movie like this needs, and gets, is a weird little wacko supporting character who steals scenes like Michael Shannon in Revolutionary Road, and we get one in Oliver’s hilarious, screw-loose characterization of Isabella, whose every display of lovely decoupage inevitably looks like engorged human genitalia. Crafty girl, this one.
Sex And Skin: Buckets of it, although we see no bits, butts or boobs. 
Our Take: So: Are we slurping up Wuthering Heights or not? A little. Not heartily mind you, but Fennell heats up a frothy concoction that’s worth some sips, especially if you’re not a traditionalist potentially upset by significant alterations of the source material. Personally, I care not for authenticity of adaptation, and admire the audacity of Fennell’s interpretation, which indulges sloppy pig slaughter, big oozy snails leaving trails on windows, the slapping-flesh sounds of bread dough being kneaded, a pile of pink hairless pig’s feet that look like dicks, a couple instances of BDSM, a soundtrack heavy with Charli XCX, and the walls of Cathy’s bedroom at the Linton mansion, which are pink with freckles and delicately veiny, modeled after her luminescent skin. Fennell has never been afraid of getting fetishy with her films, but Wuthering Heights takes the cake and smashes it on everybody’s tits. So to speak.
This is Fennell feeding Masterpiece Theatre or Merchant-Ivory into the meat grinder. This is no stodgy period piece bursting with repressed yearning. Its throb ‘n’ heave is considerable, even if its horniness is somewhat restrained at times, a few hairs shy of going over the top. Of course, it’s still ridiculous, a story set in a universe where logic is less than nil and passion is all, and narrative and thematic sloppiness is a byproduct most of us can deal with, in the context of the director’s robust and sensual visual aesthetic. (What’s the movie “about”? Death, sex and weather, in the broadest terms.) This is absolutely gorgeous trash, Fennell roping us in with meticulous and rigorously conceptualized eye candy and rubbing our face in egg yolks, pig’s blood and assorted varieties of mucus or mucus-adjacent substances. 
You likely know the basic what-happens of the Wuthering plot, but not the how, and within that margin Fennell gets playful, gross, lusty and funny. There’s absolutely no way you’ll take a single second of this seriously; it’s sexual obsession transformed into a sort of deranged comedy, intentional or otherwise, and Elordi and Robbie, faced with sketchy and uninspired renderings of their characters, lean heavily into their ability to explode screens with concupiscence. Try as I might, I can’t argue against that. 
The punkish lack of respect for classical English lit means you won’t likely feel emotionally involved enough to sense the depths of Cathy and Heathcliff’s pain, considering how much thematic barley this movie harvests from skin. Just skin. Skin everywhere – beading up, blushing pink, scarred and bleeding, on faces and bosoms and backs, even the damn walls around this joint. (You might actually wish it went a little farther here in the era of best picture Oscar nominee The Substance.) Wuthering Heights is all blood, sweat and tears, but unlike Saltburn, no semen, surprisingly. Progress? Or regression? Yeah, no. Sure? Maybe. You tell me. Inevitably, the liquids run low, and the film doesn’t end, it just slowly bleeds out, like a hog with its throat slashed. Come to think of it, maybe that’s what Fennell does to the source material. But so fucking what?
Our Call: Wuthering Heights, wuthering blights on traditional literature. Approach it like it’s a very expensive soap opera and you’ll have a pretty damn good time. STREAM IT. (John Serba)
Escribiendocine  and Micropsia (in Spanish)  review Wuthering Heights 2026:
Con Cumbres Borrascosas, Emerald Fennell deja de lado la reverencia al texto original para ofrecer una adaptación que responde más a su propia sensibilidad autoral que a la tradición literaria. Es una propuesta arriesgada y, por momentos, irregular, pero también apasionada y visualmente potente. Si en Saltburn la obsesión se expresaba a través del exceso, aquí se canaliza mediante la estilización y la emotividad. El resultado es una versión distinta, provocadora y decididamente contemporánea de un clásico eterno. (Laia Cabuli) (Translation)
Digital Spy explains the ways how you can stream the film in the UK: 
Emerald Fennell's Wuthering Heights has landed a new UK streaming home in time for the Bank Holiday weekend. Whether you're going in for a rewatch or a first watch, it's available to watch right now.
Warner Bros has now added Wuthering Heights to HBO Max, but there is an important caveat if you're a subscriber in the UK. The Basic with Ads plan – which is included in the Sky Ultimate subscription or automatically given to existing NOW Entertainment subscribers – doesn't include brand-new Warner Bros movies.
You'll need either the Standard with Ads plan (£5.99/month), Standard without ads (£9.99/month) or the 4K-enabled Premium tier (£14.99/month) to be able to watch the movie today,  (...) However, HBO Max is not the only way to stream the movie tonight as Wuthering Heights has also now been added to Sky Cinema and NOW (with a Cinema membership). (Joe Anderton) 
The Straits Times has an article on 'Why Emily Brontë’s Wuthering Heights withstands multiple readings and adaptations'.

A contributor to Mirror 'tried the 'moorcore' travel trend'.
“Wuthering” is a Northern English term for a strong, roaring wind or a storm-lashed place, which is highly appropriate for Emily Brönte’s only novel – Cathy and Healthcliff’s tempestuous story of passion and revenge. It’s a harder sell for a holiday.
That hasn’t stopped ‘Moorcore’ from becoming the latest trend in UK breaks. And what is Moorcore? It's a move-on from the cutesy cottagecore vibe (all roses round the windows, thatched roofs and cats curled by the fire). It’s wild and free. The feeling of standing atop a gritstone edge, a heathery moorland vista stretching to the horizon, tumbling waterfalls, fairy glens, fresh air in your lungs.
There’s no better place to channel moorcore than on Haworth Moor – whose wild, heather-strews footpaths were well-traipsed by the Brontës. Two miles from their parsonage, Royds Hall Cottage is marked on maps from 1847, the very year Wuthering Heights published, and it’s likely it was a familiar sight for the sisters on their rambles. As we arrive, the breeze tusseling daffodils along the embankment and a buzzard hovering above, it feels magical. [...]
On an energetic five-and-a-half mile loop from the cottage front door, we took in the waterfall at Lumb Beck (detailed in Charlotte’s letters to her friend, Ellen) and the desolate farmhouse at Top Withens – said to be the setting for Cathy and Healthcliff’s home. From there, across the moorland paths we discovered the Fairy Kirk at Ponden Clough (‘Penistone Crags’ in the novel), and beautiful Ponden Hall, which Emily Brontë used as Edgar Linton’s Thrushcross Grange and where her sister Anne set The Tenant of Wildfell Hall.
Around Top Withens and the waterfall, there were scores of walkers admiring the famous views but, only a crow-call beyond, we saw barely a soul – just swooping curlews with their strange warbling cries and a roe deer bouncing off into the distance. It’s easy to find both wild inspiration and, afterwards, scones and clotted cream at Ponden Mill.
In the other direction, Haworth village was less than an hour’s stroll. It's the focal point of Brontë pilgrimage, so it was busy – yet still so beguiling, with a sense of the sisters at every turn. Visiting on foot meant we could skip the car park and enter the village – just as they would have – from the footpath at the end of Church Street.
Their house (now an unmissable museum) is the first you come to on the cobbled street. From the parlour table, the one Emily and her sisters worked at, you can still look out at the graveyard with its overcrowded, flat-lying gravestones. (Octavia Lillywhite)
A contributor to The Guardian 'tried to live for 24 hours without using oil-based products' and so
Before dinner, I would usually mindlessly watch television but instead I lay a cotton cloth on the floor and enjoy an 1897 edition of Jane Eyre lent by a colleague.
I have hundreds of books but didn’t realise most paperbacks made after 1900 use adhesives and plastic laminate, unlike the good old days of animal-based glue and wheat starch paste. (Caitlin Cassidy)
She could get this question from the Financial Times weekend quiz right then:
In Charlotte Brontë’s novel, who does Jane Eyre marry? (James Walton)

The Everygirl recommends Gothic books to binge, including Jane Eyre and Wuthering Heights. The Brontë Sisters UK explores in her latest video What Charlotte Brontë Though Was Worth Reading. 

   

No Coward Soul is Mine by Elli Belle

This is a selection of songs inspired by several of Emily Brontë's poems recently published on Soundcloud, along with some AI visuals (you know, the usual slow motion, slightly creepy, and exceedingly cringey AI stuff)
No Coward Soul is a modern reinterpretation of the emotional and philosophical world of Emily Brontë.
Blending indie rock, dark alternative, and atmospheric production, the album explores resilience, grief, identity, and quiet defiance.
Inspired by 19th-century poetry but rooted in a contemporary sound, this project reimagines the Brontë voice as something immediate, raw, and alive.

2 · Nothing Lovely Here - Stanzas - Emily Bronte
3 · Still I Remain
4 · Cold in the Earth
5 ·The Old Stoic
6 · I Will Not Bend
7 · Shadowed Grave
8 · No Coward Soul in Mine
9 · I Am Not Yours to Bury

   

Courage in the Face of Unknown

Originally broadcast in 1996, this TV period drama deserves recognition amongst the finest examples within the genre - at least according to enthusiastic fans..
Drawing from Anne Brontë's 1848 novel, The Tenant of Wildfell Hall is a British production made for the BBC under Mike Barker's direction.
Spanning three episodes broadcast in 1996, the series presents the novel's narrative in a manner many devotees consider faithful to the source material. (Emily Malia)
The Chester Standard presents a production of Sally Cookson's Jane Eyre in Chester. next Autumn:
This autumn, a powerful reimagining of Charlotte Brontë's Jane Eyre will be staged at Storyhouse in Chester from November 10 to 21, 2026.
Helen Redcliffe, Head of Producing at Storyhouse, said: "One of the key themes of Jane Eyre is personal discovery and development, which feels especially fitting as we celebrate the RTST Sir Peter Hall Director Award and its commitment to championing the next generation of theatre-makers.
"At Storyhouse, we are thrilled to be part of this partnership and to support Lily as she takes this exciting step in her career.
"From the moment we encountered her work, we were struck by her bold, imaginative style and her instinctive understanding of our venues and audiences.
"Her Jane Eyre promises to be a heightened, deeply theatrical experience, using the very best of storytelling to bring this beloved classic to life — and we are proud to play a part in what we’re certain will be an extraordinary journey for her and a memorable production for our community."
Jane Eyre is a co-production between Storyhouse, the Mercury Theatre, Colchester, and Rose Theatre Kingston. (...)
Lily Dyble, director, said: "What I see at the heart of this story is courage in the face of the unknown.
"Jane Eyre reminds us of the risk and enormity of love, but also how uncertainty can breed hope as well as fear; that we can choose to fiercely love each other and ourselves, even within chaos, and even when our old lives have been lost to the fire.
"I’m thrilled to be bringing Jane’s story to audiences across England this autumn, with the support of four wonderful venues and the RTST." (Josh Price)
La Stampa (Italy) visits the "Wuthering Heights's Yorkshire"... with some creative orthography: Woundering Heights, Kheigley...
Però lo Yorkshire della Emily Brontë e delle sue blande cime vince sul Wessex, sui Cotswolds, sul Somerset e Dorset perché è davvero ruvido, gotico e più selvaggio suscitando introflessioni talvolta dilanianti. Così, come non dire dell'ultima versione hot di "Woundering Heights" girata da Emerald Fennel con Jacob Elordi e Margot Robbie (una Cathy troppo adulta rispetto a Heathcliff) e trasformata in un fiaba nera, piena di sangue, sesso e sospironi? Un adattamento sicuramente meno sognato, rispetto alle storiche precedenti, ma pur sempre infarcito di dimore fatiscenti e scorci strazianti. Non solo cuori infranti ma pure danza amorose, macabre o salvifiche e ad alto tasso erotico. Per cui di grande successo anche in quel pubblico giovane che la Brontë manco sapeva chi fosse. (Andrea Battaglini) (Translation)
KPBS publishes an audio with Natasha Lester, author of the Jane Eyre retelling The Chateau on the Sunset, in conversation with renowned author Kaylie Jones. The Boston Globe talks about Wuthering Heights 2026 being now on streaming on HBO Max. The Times also recommends the film:
Wuthering Heights
Sky Cinema Premiere/Now, 8pm
Emerald Fennell isn’t mucking about with her adaptation of the Emily Brontë classic. As well as ravishing Aussies in the lead roles (Margot Robbie as Cathy and Jacob Elordi as Heathcliffe), we get eye-popping cinematography, songs courtesy of the hyperpop princess Charli XCX, Martin Clunes as Cathy’s cruel alcoholic father and the young Heathcliff played by Owen Cooper. (2026)
   

The Racial Representation of Heathcliff

A recent Brontë-related talk:
Ellen Sayuri Okido Matsumoto, Giovanne Gabriel Ramos André, Universidade Estadual Paulista "Júlio de Mesquita Filho" - UNESP
Intercom – Sociedade Brasileira de Estudos Interdisciplinares da Comunicação ,48º Congresso Brasileiro de Ciências da Comunicação – Faesa – Vitória – ES, September 2025

Este artigo analisa como a racialização do personagem Heathcliff nas adaptações cinematográficas de O Morro dos Ventos Uivantes (1939 e 2011) impacta a recepção e a interpretação da obra literária de Emily Brontë. Dialogando com os estudos de representação (Hall, 2003), outridade (Carneiro, 2005) e necropolítica (Mbembe, 2019), a pesquisa realiza uma análise comparativa entre as duas produções, observando como o apagamento ou a evidência da negritude de Heathcliff se inscreve na linguagem cinematográfica e nas leituras críticas da narrativa original. A pesquisa utiliza metodologia qualitativa de caráter bibliográfico e fílmico, com suporte teórico nas abordagens de adaptação (Stam, 2000; Andrew, 2000).  
   

'What author would be without the advantage of being able to walk invisible?'

Mirror recommends To Walk Invisible.
Fans of period dramas - particularly those inspired by the brilliant Brontë sisters - are in for a real treat, as there's a little-known film being praised as the 'most authentic and real' portrayal of their lives.
Available to stream at no charge on BBC iPlayer, this underappreciated treasure has received rave reviews from all corners, with audiences left captivated by how accurate and genuine the narrative and its settings appear.
The majority of the film's shooting occurred on location in Haworth, West Yorkshire (where the sisters actually spent their childhood), and a three-storey, wooden life-size recreation of the Brontë Parsonage and its rooms was built with meticulous precision on Penistone Hill in Penistone Country Park, relatively near to the actual building's site.
To Walk Invisible initially aired in the UK on BBC One in December 2016 and in the US on PBS as part of the broadcaster's Masterpiece series in March 2017. Since its transmission, the film has received outstanding reviews, though it has remained somewhat of a hidden and underrated treasure. [...]
The drama's title derives from a letter that Charlotte Brontë penned to her publisher about an encounter with a clergyman who failed to recognise that she was the renowned Currer Bell.
Charlotte believed it served her and her sisters well that they remained unknown, as she expressed in her correspondence: "What author would be without the advantage of being able to walk invisible?" (Parul Sharma)
The quote comes from a letter from Charlotte to William Smith Williams dated January 4th, 1848.

Starts at 60 recommends The Chateau on Sunset by Natasha Lester among 'Six books worth reading this May'.
The Chateau on Sunset by Natasha Lester
Natasha Lester returns with another sweeping historical novel, blending Old Hollywood glamour with literary intrigue. Moving between continents and timelines, the story draws inspiration from Jane Eyre while carving out its own identity through strong, determined female characters navigating ambition, secrecy and reinvention. Lester’s strength lies in her ability to balance historical detail with emotional storytelling, and here she builds a world that feels both immersive and accessible. There is enough drama to keep the pages turning, but also a deeper exploration of identity and legacy that lingers long after the story ends. (Emily Darlow)
A retired teacher and writer has written a letter to Diario Sur (Spain) in praise of Ángeles Caso's fictional take on the Brontë family, Todo ese fuego.
   

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