Breathtaking Haworth winter walk The Haworth Circular Moorland on the Haworth Circular
Think of the name Brontë and it conjures up images of wild, wintery countryside beaten by whirling winds. So what better time of year to explore Haworth than in winter? The area is now known as Brontë Country as it inspired much of the family’s work, and you can see some of its biggest landmarks on this 7.5-mile route. Start at St Michael & All Angels Church and pick up The Brontë Way, which leads you through Penistone Hill Country Park. Along the way, you’ll pass flowing becks and crisp moorland on your way to the Brontë Waterfall. Once you’ve taken in the sights, walk across to Top Withens, a ruined farmhouse which acted as inspiration for Wuthering Heights, and over to Lower Laithe Reservoir on the path back into Haworth. Take the chance to pop into the Haworth Steam Brewing Co. bar before you leave the village. Start point: St Michael & All Angels Church – find it on Google Maps. Distance: 7.5 miles. (Joseph Sheerin)
And The Lancashire Telegraph does something similar, quoting The Yorkshireman choosing The Old Post Office in Haworth as the cosiest place to eat. Meanwhile BBC answers the question of "why is Bradford on Conde Nast's seven wonders list": Ilkley Moor is known for it's famous folk song, On Ilkla Moor Baht 'at, and Haworth's Penistone Hill was an inspiration for the bleak setting of many Brontë novels. (...) Brontë birthplace Haworth may be celebrating it's new title as a seven wonder but Machu Picchu - it's twin town - has had the accolade for decades. (Grace Wood)
The story of the Tan Hill Inn in North Yorkshire is discussed, once again, in The Northern Echo: In 1970, the pub was transformed into a moody backdrop for a film adaptation of Jane Eyre, starring George C. Scott and Susannah York. Unearthed photographs by former Northern Echo photographer Ian Wright reveal how the crew braved the wind-swept moors to capture the Brontë atmosphere. (Patrick Gouldsbrough)
Quiero empezar con dos afirmaciones que pueden parecer opuestas, pero no lo son: este libro no me gustó y, al mismo tiempo, es buenísimo. Entiendo perfectamente por qué Cumbres borrascosas es un clásico consagrado; sin embargo, no disfruté de su lectura hasta los capítulos finales. (....) Cumbres borrascosas no está hecha para el disfrute inmediato, sino para incomodarnos, agotarnos y obligarnos a mirar de frente lo peor del ser humano. (Carlota Mascareñas García) (Translation)
Of course, we still have websites announcing Wuthering Heights or discussing its controversies: People, Desde Entre Ríos, FandomWire, Netflix Junkie, Dawn, CBR, Echo Live, CNN Chile, Informador, Flair, Marie Claire, Movieplayer, Cinefilos, The Columbian ... On the other hand, Express insists that "the superior version" Jane Eyre 2006 is free to stream on BBC iPlayer
A new paper published in a Romanian literary journal: Ana-Blanca Ciocoi-Pop Journal of Romanian Literary Studies, 42 (2025), pp 137-40
Emily Brontë’s Wuthering Heights has long been read as a tale of destructive love and haunting passion, but this article proposes to examine the novel through the prism of the imaginary of love and death. Catherine and Heathcliff’s relationship transcends conventional social and psychological categories, entering instead a symbolic realm where love is inseparable from violence, transcendence, and mortality. Drawing on psychoanalytic theory, particularly Lacan’s concept of the imaginary order and Jungian archetypes, the study argues that Brontë constructs an alternative space of desire where union is achievable only in annihilation. Death emerges not as an end but as a continuation of passion, an “other world” where the lovers’ identities fuse beyond the constraints of society and narrative. The moors, spectral apparitions, and the Gothic atmosphere of the novel reinforce this imaginary, staging an interweaving of erotic intensity and existential dissolution. Ultimately, Wuthering Heights exemplifies how literature can project an imaginary where love is meaningful only through its proximity to death, offering both a critique of Victorian norms and a timeless exploration of the human psyche.
Vogue offers an exclusive glimpse into 'The Wild And Wonderful Costumes Of Wuthering Heights' and an interview with costume designer Jacqueline Durran. No wonder, then, that Fennell and Margot Robbie – our new Cathy, who is also a producer on the forthcoming romance and previously collaborated with Durran on Barbie – recruited the supremely talented Brit for their sweeping new epic, though they couldn’t possibly have guessed the column inches her work would generate long before the film even hit screens. From the moment the first grainy paparazzi shots surfaced from the set, the internet was ablaze with hot takes on the costumes’ period inaccuracies and general outlandishness. Fennell, Robbie and Durran remain unfazed. Wuthering Heights was always envisioned as a kind of fantastical fever dream – a contemporary take on a ’50s soundstage melodrama which gleefully mixes historical references with glitzy modernity. As the film’s first trailers show, this Cathy would not be a pared-back brunette drifting through the moors in muted high-waisted frocks – she would instead be an exuberant blonde living it up in German milkmaid-esque corsets, high-shine showstoppers and Elton John sunglasses. And her co-stars – Jacob Elordi as a brooding Heathcliff, Alison Oliver as an angelic Isabella Linton, Hong Chau as a steely Nelly Dean and Shazad Latif as a swaggering Edgar Linton – would also be subverting our expectations. Ahead of the film’s release on 13 February, on the cusp of Valentine’s Day, Durran gives Vogue an exclusive closer look at her incredible work and some of the images on her mood board, and talks us through the most important looks. From Cathy’s translucent wedding night ensemble to a giant furry Russian hat, and the “latex dress” that’s got everyone talking (correction: it’s not actually latex), there’s much to unpack. Firstly, how many costumes does Margot’s Cathy have in Wuthering Heights? With overlaps and reuse, we created between 45 and 50 costumes just for Cathy. Talk me through your mood boards. So, Emerald had been working on Wuthering Heights for maybe a year, maybe longer, by the time we met to talk about it. She had this massive range of references, which had a bit of everything – the Tudor period, the 1950s, contemporary things sprinkled throughout. On our mood boards, there were images I’d received from Emerald, plus others we liked. There was some vintage Mugler and McQueen in there – there’s nothing in the costumes that are a recognisable homage to those designers, but they were definitely a big influence on my approach to the costume design. Our references ranged from Elizabethan through to Georgian and Victorian, and from paintings and historical dress to contemporary fashion and representations of period costume in 20th-century films. The challenge was to distill that into looks that told the story that Emerald wanted to tell. The German milkmaid-style dress has generated a lot of buzz. Can you tell us about that outfit, and Cathy’s earliest looks in the film? This is the first time we see adult Cathy. As the film opens, we’re trying to lay out our intentions – this is a stylised version of Wuthering Heights, and it’s difficult to nail this look because it has a nod to the period, a nod to contemporary fashion and also a nod to Old Hollywood. It has all the themes that we want to bring in visually to the movie, so it was about meshing it all together. It’s a costume and you know it’s a costume – and it’s not necessarily realistic or unrealistic. What were the key inspirations and references behind Cathy’s incredible wedding dress? The wedding dress was an amalgam of Victorian and 1950s fashion – from [Franz Xaver] Winterhalter to Charles James. And there’s amazing vintage Chanel jewellery in the film too, in the form of pieces sewn onto Margot’s hair and costumes. What was that collaboration like? Chanel are amazing. We needed jewellery for Cathy that was exquisite and bold – it was great for us if you could see the historical origin in the designs, which were at the same time so exciting and modern. I contacted Elsa Heizmann [Chanel’s global director of cinematic relations] and she went through their archives with a fine-tooth comb, uncovering the most wonderful vintage pieces. When the packages arrived we were beyond thrilled. Then, Cathy has an unforgettable wedding night look. What went into creating it? One image Emerald showed me was this amazing 1950s picture of a woman wrapped up in cellophane, like a gift with a bow around the middle. That was the starting point for this look, and we thought how can we recreate this? It’s about Cathy being a gift on her wedding night, making herself a gift. And what about the red latex dress? It’s actually not latex – it’s just an ultra shiny, synthetic, plasticised contemporary fabric. Red is a key colour for Cathy throughout the film, and she wears a few high-shine pieces. That idea of shiny surfaces is key to Cathy’s character and costumes. We used this look in this scene because it was about combining the dress and the set in a really artificial and highly stylised way, because it has this rubberised, high-shine red floor. They seem to blend into each other, and then the walls of the library are white like her blouse. There’s also an extraordinary dress that’s made of this blueish black, high-shine fabric? It’s something that takes you out of the period, but it was exciting to mix the shape of a Victorian dress with a fabric that was completely modern. This black dress was particularly designed to be worn in the moonlight. When [cinematographer] Linus [Sandgren] lit the scene, the way it bounces the light back… it feels almost like she’s exuding that moonlight, too. Which one costume are you most excited for viewers to see? I’m so excited to see how the costumes are in the finished film – I haven’t seen it yet – but there was one look which particularly transformed on camera. When Cathy returns to Wuthering Heights to see her father, she wears a red velvet cape and silver dress, and I loved watching Cathy walking through a snowy landscape in that bright red cape. Red capes like that are actually historically accurate for the era, though our cape isn’t particularly historically accurate. It’s very much like a costume, referencing the past but also 1950s melodramas. But, with that look, I was even more pleased to see what happened to the dress under the amazing lighting, designed by Linus for that scene. It has a kind of fractured overprint that’s icy, which looked incredible in that snowscape. Cathy also wears a lot of bejewelled crosses. This is an opulent, stylised Gothic story and Gothic crosses were a big thing, so we loved using them everywhere. There’s also a dress which has an armour-like quality. What’s the story there? Weirdly, that look is very historically accurate. It’s a Swiss peasant costume from the mid-19th century, and there are many different paintings of that look. It’s not exactly accurate for Wuthering Heights, but it’s more historically accurate than many of the other things. I just loved it so much. The version I used as inspiration was from a Winterhalter painting. I love the combination of the white and the velvet and the chains. I felt like it earned its place in our story. What’s the significance of the chains in this story? Maybe the implications of binding yourself in chains? But we didn’t want to be too specific. And can you please talk to me about Cathy’s madcap hats? There’s an oversized straw hat that she wears in a picnic scene which has shooting stars on it, which is a motif we liked. It’s playing on the idea of what you might wear to a picnic, but bigger and more stylised. And then there’s a Russian hat, which she wears at Christmas with a white dress that’s got this silver thread running through it. It’s glamorous and appropriate for the weather, and there’s also an icy cold brittleness to the whole image. Coming onto Jacob’s Heathcliff, what are the details to look out for in his costumes? He’s much more Georgian, and more historically accurate. Our dates are all confused in the sense that we’re not representing a moment in time at all – we’re just picking images or styles that we like for each character. Heathcliff has always been a sort of Georgian-era hero, and we thought that really worked for Jacob. So, for him we lent into a kind of turn-of-the-century 1800s style. He wears dark colours – he’s obviously very brooding. He has these classic romantic hero white shirts, and a long black coat. It’s a heroic, Byronic look that’s been established over time in cinema and theatre. And then there’s Alison’s Isabella Linton, who’s quite doll-like in her candy-pink gowns and bows? Our references for her were much more based in the historical period than Margot’s – specifically the 1860s. I particularly love the skirt shape from the 1860s, and we looked in fashion manuals of the period for all the ways in which people would trim things and add bows and lace, and how complicated their dresses would be and how fussy. Isabella, as a character, is someone who’d spend all day making ribbons and bows and trimmings, so we just really went to town with that idea, and even overdid it potentially. It’s all quite childlike and naive, and it’s our own exaggeration of that historical period. And finally, what about Hong’s Nelly Dean and Shazad’s Edgar Linton? It was a challenge to find ways to bring Hong’s Nelly into the exaggerated world that we’d created with the other characters, so that it felt like they all belonged in the same film. We brought in textures and embroidery to add individuality. And with Shazad’s costumes, they were really quite unusual – we were trying to represent the new wealth that his character has, and you can see it in his house but also in the way he dresses. Everything was really incorrect for the period – shiny, sparkly, overdone – but the actual shapes and silhouettes of his clothes are quite accurate. We just chose fabrics that would never normally be used for a Victorian gentleman’s clothes. We wanted to heighten his looks so they fit into his heightened environment. (Radhika Seth)
Wuthering Heights Emerald Fennell’s (apparently) profane, impressionistic take on Emily Brontë’s novel, with Jacob Elordi and Margot Robbie as the doomed lovers Heathcliff and Catherine, is already the most talked-about movie of 2026. Detractors have bemoaned the (racially and chronologically) inaccurate casting. Others have required smelling salts to cope with the anachronistic wedding dress. (Tara Brady)
Now that the costume designer herself has explained what's behind the wedding dress--definitely not any effort to make it contemporary to the novel's time period--we hope we can lay that 'argument' to rest.
Irish Examiner is both looking forward to Charli XCX's album and the film itself. Charli XCX - Wuthering Heights, Feb 13 How do you follow up Brat and its wide-reaching cultural impact? Charli XCX channels Emily Brontë with an album called Wuthering Heights that grew out of Charli XCX’s collaboration with Emerald Fennell on the filmmaker’s new adaptation of the novel. “Without a cigarette or a pair of sunglasses in sight, it was all totally other from the life I was currently living.” [...] Wuthering Heights, February 13 Director Emerald Fennell scored a massive break-out hit with Saltburn (2023). Now she directs the latest adaptation of Emily Brontë’s classic tale of obsessive love on the Yorkshire moors, which stars Margot Robbie as the wilful Cathy Earnshaw and Jacob Elordi as the brooding Heathcliff.
The book I reread Most books worth reading are worth rereading. I revisit Austen, Charlotte Brontë, George Eliot, noticing how their teenaged heroines and wise or bitter older women look different as I age. [...] The book I could never read again I never liked Wuthering Heights as much as Jane Eyre, and these days I can’t see around the eroticised abuse, not that there isn’t some of that in Jane Eyre too. Exemplary narrative structure all the same.
Collider ranks 'The 10 Best Kate Bush Songs That Aren't " Running Up That Hill' and unsurprisingly here's number 1: 1 "Wuthering Heights" From 'The Kick Inside' (1978) With “Wuthering Heights,” Kate Bush took the famous novel of the same name (soon to have a 2026 adaptation) and wrote some lyrics about it, adding one of the best melodies in pop history, and there you have it: an all-timer of a song. She made it look easy here, but listening to “Wuthering Heights,” it’s hard to figure out how she came up with this and made it all work so well, because it’s weird yet really easy to enjoy. It’s an earworm, but an artsy one, and also one that you don’t mind having stuck in your head. If it weren’t for the resurgence in popularity “Running Up That Hill” experienced in 2022, “Wuthering Heights” would likely remain the most popular, most played, and highest-charting song of Bush’s career. Still, second-best to that other titan of a song isn't bad. And, like “Cloudbusting,” “Wuthering Heights” is a song that, in quality, pretty much equals “Running Up That Hill,” so those three songs make up one hell of a trio, collectively demonstrating Kate Bush at her – and 20th century music more generally at its – absolute best. (Jeremy Urquhart)
Far Out Magazine has an article on Orson Welles's poor opinion of his J ane Eyre co-star Joan Fontaine. It was only shortly after Citizen Kane won him an Academy Award for writing that Welles was cast alongside Joan Fontaine in an adaptation of the classic novel Jane Eyre from director Robert Stevenson, a highly respected filmmaker who would go on to direct Mary Poppins, The Love Bug, and Beadknobs and Broomsticks for the Walt Disney Company. Welles may not have made any remarks about Stevenson’s direction, but he certainly had thoughts on the performance by Fontaine, which he described as “no good”. Welles’ affinity for the source material isn’t surprising considering how well-read he was, as Jane Eyre is a novel that has fascinated filmmakers for years and has been adapted for the screen many times. So, it seems he was displeased by the way Fontaine was portraying the titular character, which he felt was inconsistent with the original material, and his frustration was heightened by the fact that he was not in the director’s chair to adjust her performance. “She’s just a plain old bad actor,” he declared, adding salt to injury, “She’s got four readings, and two expressions, and that’s it, and she was busy being the humble governess, so fucking humble, which is a great mistake because she’s supposed to be a proud little woman who, in spite of her position, stands up for herself. That’s why she interests this bastard of a man.” None of it mattered, however, because Jane Eyre didn’t end up being a particularly acclaimed film for either Fontaine or Welles, and the 1943 version was vastly outdone by Cary Fukunaga’s 2011 reimagining of the novel, which starred Mia Wasikowska in the titular role and Michael Fassbender in Wells’ shoes. (Liam Gaughan)
There's a new episode of the Behind the Glass podcast with the writer Holly Ringwald as a guest, and also a new video from The Brontë Sisters UK where Kate visits the Bankfield Museum in Halifax and their previous exhibition, Costume Drama (which included To Walk Invisible).
Exploring the feminine in Wuthering Heights: Ciucu Diana Nicoleta, School of Literary and Cultural Studies, Faculty of Foreign Languages and Literatures, University of Bucharest, Romania Journal of Media & Management Vol. 7 No. 10 (2025): Volume 7 Issue 10
The intention of the paper is to demonstrate the way in which the feminine in Wuthering Heights films is rendered on screen, in consideration of the historical, cultural and socio-economical context of the adaptations, but also on whether the director of the film was a woman or a man. This particular issue is of interest to me, as the feminine in the Wuthering Heights screenings, I shall consider overtly, speaks for the role of the women and the way in which they were perceived by the societies of those times. In my endeavour, I shall focus on analysing various Wuthering Heights adaptations in terms of their fidelity or lack of it to the source text; moreover, it is my intention to also address this inquiry in terms of intertextuality and with reference to the layering process that undergoes an addition in meaning, through the adding and or altering of previous re workings. The partial conclusion so far is that Wuthering Heights film adaptations imply both recognition and remembrance of the novel, while also carrying an individual aura within them in terms of the way in which the original material is filtered and staged. I contemplate that my project contributes to the field of adaptive studies, while also addressing instances of cinematic depictions, especially as regards the way in which the feminine is delivered to the public.
Variety has selected 'The Most Anticipated Albums of 2026' including Charli XCX, ‘Wuthering Heights’ (Feb. 13) Charli has been known to veer between pure pop and edgier modes, and her soundtrack for Emerald Fennell’s Emily Brontë movie adaptation is surely veering toward the latter, based on the first teased song, a collaboration with Velvet Undergrounder John Cale. So maybe it won’t show up as a meme affecting pop culture and even electoral politics, but even a side project from Ms. XCX is an event, post-“Brat.” (Chris Willman, Jem Aswad, Steven J. Horowitz)
A contributor to Mamamia discusses the 'unbothered wife'. I was scrolling on Instagram when I noticed that my feed was flooded with girls posting their engagement announcements (collaborated with their fiancé ofc), 15-slide carousels of anniversary celebrations (solely photos of him sitting across the table) and seven Instagram story slides recapping HIS birthday — complete with a caption that reads like an automated LinkedIn post written by Emily Brontë. (Emily (Em) Vernem) Contiki 'explores' Wuthering Heights. A contributor to El diario montañés (Spain) discusses it too. Paloma & Nacho (in Spanish) includes Cathy and Heathcliff among the 'most controversial couples' in the movies. Jane Eyre 1944 can be seen tomorrow (09:55 AM) on BBC2 (and is streamed for a month on its website).
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