The Varsity reviews Wuthering Heights 2026. Dear reader, this is not just a fundamental misreading. No, this is a deliberate bastardization of the story, which, at worst, serves the purpose of being a fantasy for Fennell, or at best, an extremely ...
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"BrontëBlog" - 5 new articles

  1. Masterpiece, misreading, bastardisation
  2. Sharon Wright “Brontë Mother’s Day – The Woman Who Put ‘Birth’ into ‘Birthplace”
  3. Love, Heathcliff
  4. Maëlle Dequiedt's Hurlevent Reviews
  5. Brontë Journey
  6. More Recent Articles

Masterpiece, misreading, bastardisation

The Varsity reviews Wuthering Heights 2026.
Dear reader, this is not just a fundamental misreading. No, this is a deliberate bastardization of the story, which, at worst, serves the purpose of being a fantasy for Fennell, or at best, an extremely shallow take on a very complex story. (Juliet Pieters)
The New Mexico Daily Lobo review is much more positive:
Along with its amazing cinematography, the actors brought the characters to life. Robbie and Elordi did a beautiful job bringing a romance full of toxic obsession into reality. One of my favorite scenes was when Heathcliff grabbed Catherine’s corset and lifted her to be eye level with him. The actors did such an amazing job in creating chemistry between their characters that you could feel the electricity between the two.
Another reason this movie is a masterpiece is because it makes you feel every emotion. You feel anger watching the dominos fall leading up to Catherine’s downfall. You feel the love and the obsession between Heathcliff and Catherine, even when they hate each other. But most importantly, you feel the story’s darkness, like a chill that never fully goes away. (Addie Gerber)
The M-A Chronicle discusses whether you should read the actual novel.
Some love stories are sweet. Some are messy. Then there’s Wuthering Heights.
Few novels are as haunting and emotionally complex as Wuthering Heights, which makes its film adaptation feel distant. By only covering the first half of Emily Brontë’s novel and reshaping the central themes, Emerald Fennell’s movie sacrifices the elements that make the original unforgettable, creating, in essence, a whole different story. Brontë’s novel is not a conventional romance but rather an exploration of the effects of abuse on children and the lasting effects of trauma on their relationships. While the movie appeals to some audiences, booklovers are likely to find it disappointing. [...]
If you came for the film’s sweeping romance, the book might break your heart, but its passion, obsession, and unforgettable story will captivate anyone who doesn’t need a happily-ever-after. (Niya Desai and Lucia Rose)
A contributor to Her Campus shares some 'Thoughts on Wuthering Heights'.

The Michigan Daily has 'Book recommendations for Women’s History Month' including
“Wide Sargasso Sea” by Jean Rhys
“She’s mad but mine, mine.”
The madwoman trope can be traced back in literature to Charlotte Brontë’s “Jane Eyre.” Readers are introduced to Bertha Mason: the deranged woman locked in Mr. Rochester’s attic and the ghost that frequents Thornfield Hall. But aside from her role in threatening the marriage of Mr. Rochester and Jane and committing acts of destruction, little else is revealed of the haunted character. 
More than a century later, in response to “Jane Eyre,” Jean Rhys wrote “Wide Sargasso Sea.” Rhys’ novel is a reimagining of Bertha’s life, acting as a postcolonial prequel to the popular classic novel. Rhys gives Bertha the name Antoinette Cosway and places her in 1830s Jamaica. We follow her mother’s descent into madness after she’s married off to an Englishman and faces trauma and neglect, knowing that Antoinette is doomed to a similar fate. The novel explores the theme of madness as a consequence of patriarchal and colonial oppression, with Mr. Rochester — an intentionally first-nameless character — being the embodiment of these structures. 
“Wide Sargasso Sea” brings a new perspective to this madwoman in the attic, critiquing the systems that strip Antoinette of her agency and identity while developing a complex and intersectional backstory that has been overlooked. After reading Rhys’ novel, it’s impossible not to view Mr. Rochester, and all that he represents, as the true monstrous figure of “Jane Eyre.”
A contributor to Yorkshire Live writes about taking a Brontë Bus.
Getting to some of Yorkshire's towns and villages can be a little awkward due to a lack of rail travel, but thankfully, if you're planning a day out to one of Yorkshire's most famous towns, you're in luck.
BrontëBus services, which are run by the Keighley Bus Company, start from Keighley Bus Station, and you can travel in from further afield making use of the Aireline 60 from Leeds, the Shuttle 662 from Bradford, the 62 from Ilkley, and other services from other towns. As a result, it's pretty easy to get started on your journey.
The BrontëBus runs every 20 minutes Monday-Saturday, and every 30 minutes on Sunday, with three separate services taking three different routes. However, each takes you through the town of Haworth. [...]
For any literary fans, there are plenty of Brontë-based attractions around. If you want to know about their lives growing up, or even visit the home where Wuthering Heights and Jane Eyre were written, then you can take a trip to the Brontë Parsonage Museum.
Inside you can find artefacts from their lives as well as some information on the sisters themselves, and the long lives of their famous works.
Nearby, St Michael and All Angels' Church welcomes visitors, and has engravings dedicated to the Brontës themselves. Their father, Patrick Brontë was once the perpetual curate there, and is remembered on the list of incumbents.
There is also a Brontë Memorial Chapel inside, and you can see a marker for the Brontë Family Vault, where a number of the family were buried.
If you're looking for something else, then the famous Main Street is filled with shops and things to do. From curiosity shops to book shops, and even pubs.
What better way is there to end a trip out than with a coffee and some food, and places like the Haworth Old Post Office, which was still a post office when the Brontës were around. (Sebastian McCormick)
'The Brontës On Womanhood' on AnneBrontë.org.
   

Sharon Wright “Brontë Mother’s Day – The Woman Who Put ‘Birth’ into ‘Birthplace”

 After her recent talk at the NPG on her latest book, The Brontës in Brick and Mortar (cowritten with Ann Dinsdale, now Sharon Wright gives a talk at the Brontë Birthplace about her previous book, The Mother of the Brontës:
Speaker: Sharon Wright
Date: Tuesday,10 March, 2026 in-person at 18.30

Maria Branwell Brontë, who gave birth to Charlotte, Emily, Branwell and Anne Brontë, was an educated, well-heeled Cornishwoman who married a penniless curate for love. She moved to Thornton with two little children – and left with six. Hear how this often-overlooked Georgian gentlewoman was the very heart of the Brontë Birthplace in Thornton from Sharon Wright, author of Mother of the Brontës: The Life of Maria Branwell. Sharon reveals how her research throws light on the remarkable woman who put the ‘Birth’ into ‘Birthplace’. This talk will be followed by a book signing.



   

Love, Heathcliff

The Brussels Times explores how Brussels shaped Charlotte Bronteë's "expat novel" with Helen MacEwan, whose The Brontës in Brussels is now available in paperback:
When most of us think of the Brontë sisters, we are transported to the wild, windswept moors of Yorkshire in northern England, where the celebrated sisters were born and raised – and where many of their books were set.
But for a crucial two-year period in the early 1840s, two of the Brontë sisters – Charlotte and Emily ­– briefly became Brusseleirs. From 1842 to 1843, before their literary careers took off, the women taught at a girls’ boarding school called Pensionnat Heger in the city centre.
“Very few people would associate the Brontës with Brussels, and they wouldn't think of Charlotte and Emily Brontë eating waffles in Grand Place – but they probably did,” says Helen MacEwan, a leading expert on the Brontë sisters and co-founder of the Brussels Brontë Group. (...)
Helen, who moved to Brussels in 2004, has made it her mission in life to educate people about the Brontë sisters and their time in Brussels. Villette provided her gateway into what she describes as her “obsession” with the Brontës.
“Shortly after moving here to work, I re-read Villette and became fascinated by the Brontë sisters’ time in Brussels,” says Helen. “You could say I became obsessed.”
The novel resonated with her because, she explains, it is an “expat novel”.
“It’s about an expat in Brussels observing, trying to adjust to a foreign city and foreign life. And it feels very modern, not only is it about a working woman, but there's a lot about mental illness in it – depression and isolation – and finding your place in a foreign city.”
According to Helen, Charlotte Brontë’s feelings towards Belgium were “intense, but they were also painful”.
“It was the place where she fell in love,” she says. “But she had mixed feelings because it was an unrequited love.”
Charlotte was, Helen explains, “fairly satirical about the country and the people in general”. She criticised Belgians, primarily for their Catholicism, but also for being “too phlegmatic, too laid back – and for not really caring very deeply about anything”. (...)
Over the years, Helen and the Brussels Brontë Group have made valiant efforts to inform people about the Brontë sisters’ link to Brussels – but she feels more can be done by local authorities to promote the connection.
“I've always thought that the fact that the Bronte sisters lived here for two years is a really good literary link for Brussels and Brussels has never made as much of it as it could,” says Helen.
In addition to the guided walks (organised via Waterstones) the group, which was founded in 2006, has organised numerous literary events over the years to celebrate the Brontë link.
Emerald Fennel’s recent film interpretation of Emily Brontë’s only novel, Wuthering Heights, has been a boon for the group, reigniting interest in the sisters’ work among a new generation of readers.
While the reviews for film have been mixed to say the least, Helen is not among the naysayers. “Let's just say that I went expecting to hate it, and I found that I was quite well entertained,” she says. “It's just visually so wonderful.” (Katie Westwood)
Maggie O'Farrell shares her Brontë influences in a brief video in The Independent:
Hamnet author Maggie O’Farrell has spoken about the figures who have shaped and inspired her career, as she appears on The Independent’s Influence List marking International Women’s Day.
From winning the Women’s Prize for Fiction in 2020 to seeing Hamnet adapted for the stage by the Royal Shakespeare Company — and most recently transformed into a star-studded film featuring leading British talent — O’Farrell has reflected further on the literary influences that have shaped her work.
“There are so many women I look up to,” she says.
“Creatively, I think about the Brontë sisters in their passage, writing, all three of them sat around the table and discussing their work and walking around and round the room reading it aloud to each other.” (Lucy Leeson)
BBC reports that the plans for building an escape room in Haworth's Main Street have been rejected:
Plans for an escape room attraction on a picturesque street near the world-famous Brontë Parsonage in Haworth have been rejected.
The application included converting the upper floors of two Grade II listed cottages into an eight-room venue above a cheese shop but planners said the works would result in "substantial unjustified harm" to the building. (Chris Young)
Examiner has a promotional article on several rental cottages in Haworth, and Far Out Magazine is fascinated by Haworth as the place where they live and write the Brontës:
It’s incredible to think that several of the greatest English novels were written by different authors in the same house, let alone that they were all related, and talent as rare as the Brontë sisters seems unbelievable, but in their Yorkshire home, titles like Jane Eyre, Wuthering Heights, and The Tenant of Wildfell Hall were penned by Charlotte, Emily, and Anne. 
The siblings were born in the village of Thornton, before moving to nearby Haworth, where their father became the perpetual curate at the parsonage – it was this small village, surrounded by sweeping countryside moors and perpetually gloomy weather, that inspired the sisters’ work, although one street in particular unlocked the key to their eventual success.
Take a trip to Haworth, and you can visit the Brontë Parsonage, where relics of the family’s creative endeavours and personal lives are on display… You can even see the very spot where Emily succumbed to her weakening health, passing away at the age of just 30, but once you walk a short distance up the street, past the churchyard where you can see a plaque dedicated to Emily and Charlotte, you’re on the main street that runs through the village, and it was here that the sisters were granted access to a world beyond their own.
The Huffington Post praises Elizabeth Gaskell, "The Unsung Author Jane Austen And Brontë Fans Will Love":
Last year, fellow Jane Austen fans had a bumper harvest of new shows and audiobooks as part of the 250th anniversary of her birth.
And though the response to Emerald Fennell’s 2026 film version of Wuthering Heights has been pretty mixed, there’s no denying it’s brought about a bit of a Brontë boom; sales of the book have skyrocketed.
(If you ask us, that’s a good reason to adapt the two Brontë novels that have never had a TV or movie version made).
To me, that also means we’re long overdue for an Elizabeth Gaskell revival. After all, the author is said to have been influenced by Austen’s Pride & Prejudice when writing North & South (to great success, IMO).
She also wrote the world’s first controversial Brontë biography, The Life of Charlotte Brontë; she had been friends with the subject. (...)
I think The New York Times were right to call her a “very Victorian feminist”. And I reckon fans of Brontë and Austen will enjoy her novels immensely; I certainly did. (Amy Glover)
The New York Times has a very funny article describing the falling of MAGA grace of the Kristi Noem and Corey Lewandowski DHS "first couple":
 Eat your heart out, Emerald Fennell.
You may have the alluring stars Margot Robbie and Jacob Elordi cavorting on the moors in your crimson adaptation of “Wuthering Heights.” But for radioactive romance, you can’t beat Washington.
Emily Brontë’s Cathy and Heathcliff are selfish, manipulative creatures, destroying each other and all around them as they indulge their passions and egos. But their damage was kept to one windswept village.
With MAGA’s version of “Wuthering Heights,” the far less alluring but equally intertwined Kristi Noem and Corey Lewandowski have been cavorting over the swamp, scandalizing the capital as they’ve spread their cruelty far and wide. (To Lewandowski’s credit, he didn’t try to kill a dog like Heathcliff did. That’s Noem’s department.) (...)
Like Heathcliff, Lewandowski is known as a menacing presence who has been accused of having some dark physical exchanges with women. (Now there’s a dog Noem won’t put down.) (...)
Like Cathy in “Wuthering Heights,” Noem was aspirational, always trying to move up. Cathy traded up to the big house nearby; Kristi commandeered the Coast Guard commandant’s waterfront residence. (Maureen Dowd)
The New Indian Express reviews the latest book by Ruskin Bond, Life's Magical Moments:
 Books, unsurprisingly, are his lifelong companions. As a child, he was shaped by classics such as Wuthering Heights and Jane Eyre. (Rashmi Gopal Rao
News9 celebrates Women's Day by listing iconic books by female writers: 
Jane Eyre´by Charlotte Brontë
A landmark Victorian novel tracing Jane’s journey from hardship to self-respect. Her insistence on dignity and independence gives the romance enduring depth and power. (Sangeeta Das)

And now, the Wuthering Heights 2026 section: 

Laura Ramos in Clarín (Argentina), author of Infernales. La Hermandad Brontë, goes against the current and thinks that Wuthering Heights 2026 is the most faifhful adaptation of the novel (with the sole exception of the Luis Buñuel one):
El enorme mérito de la versión cinematográfica 2026 de Cumbres borrascosas es haber destruido, con una ráfaga de ametralladora de utilería FN SCAR–H color rosada, el malentendido –la maldición bienintencionada– trenzado durante casi dos siglos sobre Emily Brontë y su obra.
El grito de horror propinado por las lectoras de literatura romántica ante la brutalidad –el grado cero de sevicia– del héroe brontëano del film, Heathcliff, es el grito de todas las generaciones que se rehusaron a aceptar la verdad intolerable de la demoníaca novela original.
Ya fuera por razones de marketing, por su asociación con el género de terror, porque las prácticas BDSM exploten las taquillas; ya sea por los motivos más espurios, viles, bajos, antiartísticos y mercantiles, ninguno va a lograr opacar el hecho contundente de que esta versión capturó el espíritu bestial de la novela.
Un espíritu que ninguna de las hermosas –románticas– versiones anteriores pudieron tomar. Aunque Lawrence Olivier haya sido el más grande actor trágico inglés y Juliet Binoche atesore toda la espiritualidad de la que carece Margot Robbi; pese a que Ralph Fiennes –¡un Heathclif rubio!– actuara y transpirara el personaje, cosa que no pudo hacer Jacob Elordi; aun así, las adaptaciones anteriores de Cumbres borrascosas son más infieles a Brontë que la directora Emerald Fennelll.
A excepción, claro, del genial Luis Buñuel, que con el 1% del presupuesto de Fennelll, bajo los chaparrales tórridos de México y en las peores condiciones posibles, con actores de telenovelas con acento polaco –pese a que la productora se llamaba Tepeyac– logró realizar la más embrujada y fantasmagórica versión de Cumbres borrascosas del cine.
El artefacto se llamó Abismos de pasión y, a diferencia del film de Fennelll, el suyo comulga hasta el tuétano con la pasión metafísica, el material del que está hecha la novela. Con sus actores de cuarta categoría, un vestuario lastimoso y los acentos espurios, Buñuel trazó con maestría las tensiones entre una superficie dramática y las profundidades del bien y del mal.
Porque Cumbres borrascosas, y eso Buñuel lo entendió muy bien, es un romance metafísico: trata más de fuerzas que de personas. (Translation)
Quillette, on the other hand, has a completely opposite opinion: 
Emerald Fennell’s misbegotten adaptation of ‘Wuthering Heights’ destroys the very structure of Emily Brontë’s classic story. (...)
But for most of the film’s running time, I was bored. After about an hour, I began to wonder when, how, and if all of this was going to end. Part of the problem is that for all their strenuous exertions, there’s no chemistry between Elordi and Robbie at all. Elordi is good-looking and swarthy enough, but he doesn’t have the hammy charisma of, say, Laurence Olivier in William Wyler’s 1939 adaptation. It doesn’t help that, for the first third of Fennell’s movie before he makes his fortune and cleans himself up into Hot Mr. Darcy, Heathcliff resembles a stringy-haired, bushy-bearded hobo (like Charles Manson, but a lot taller). Whenever he kissed Margot Robbie, much less licked her fingers, I recoiled on her behalf. (...)
Nor is Robbie well-served by the movie’s much-praised but actually ugly and unflattering costumes—the handiwork of Jacqueline Durran (who also designed the costumes for Barbie). Nearly every one of Robbie’s frocks features a tight-waisted bodice that makes her look like an opera coloratura instead of a Yorkshire ingenue, and a neckline (if it can be called that) cut to emphasise her heaving cleavage (I don’t know whether it was push-up bras or nursing, but Robbie isn’t that busty). (Charlotte Allen)
Mint doesn't like the 'oversimplifications' of this adaptation:
 I am a sucker for movie adaptations of literary texts. So, despite the deluge of bad press, I simply had to watch Emerald Fennell’s recent remake of Wuthering Heights. Let’s say, the only good thing to have come out of that experience was my keen desire to revisit Emily Brontë’s first and only novel, published in 1847 under the pseudonym “Ellis Bell”, a year before her untimely death at the age of 30.
My singular takeaway this time around is a deep appreciation of the story’s resistance to following a single arc or steady moral compass. The plot is unsuited to quick judgements because it is hard to affix feminist or misogynist labels on the text and be done with it. The psychological complexity of Brontë’s characters creates a slippery cognitive terrain for the reader. The frequent twists and turns in the plot, triggered by the gap between action and intention, leave us confused, unsure of whether to align our feelings with Catherine or Heathcliff, the two central figures. This difficulty also explains Fennell’s Mills & Boons-style interpretation in her movie version. The only way she could attempt to tame, and make presentable, a sublime but rugged masterpiece was by turning it into a Hollywood-style sob story. (Somak Ghoshal)
Dirty Movies explores the costume design of the film:
 What remains largely unacknowledged is the middle ground between these poles – between the “savage” and the over-civilised, between material necessity and aesthetic excess. It is precisely this missing middle that makes the film so revealing. In glossing over labour while amplifying wardrobe spectacle, Wuthering Heights inadvertently mirrors the logic of contemporary fashion culture.
Clothes come and go. Identities shift. Surfaces remain immaculate. What quietly disappears is the work – and the responsibility – that makes such transformations possible.
Wuthering Heights ultimately gestures toward a reality the film itself only partially acknowledges. Beneath the heightened emotions and romantic excess lies a far more persistent force: the clothes that quietly regiment bodies, environments, and outcomes. (Piret Ilves)
Valencia Plaza is all for creative freedom (as are we):
 Con todo esto, Fenell ha hecho su película importándole un bledo el realismo, la coherencia histórica y, sobre todo, la fidelidad a la obra original, porque a lo que es fiel a su propia visión y a lo que para ella significa la novela. Y, francamente, nada que objetar a esto. La creadora, cualquier creador, puede hacer lo que le dé la gana con los materiales previos. Libertad creativa, se llama eso.  (...)
¿Que le ha salido desequilibrada y desigual? No hay duda. ¿Que a ratos funciona y a ratos no? Así es. ¿Que es muy bella, pero en algunos momentos parece carecer de alma? También, también. Pero, ¿que esto es cine autoral, por más comercial que parezca la operación y todo el marketing previo? Indudablemente. (Áurea Ortiz Villeta) (Translation)
La Tribuna (Chile) is taxative:
 Esta Cumbres Borrascosas, es pésima, porque no cuenta la historia real, sino que un relato frívolo de quienes son la pareja de actores "bella" de la época. Obvio, no busca ser la versión definitiva y eso está bien, pero no es una película para quien espere un romance gótico clásico. Es una disección del amor cuando se convierte en obsesión. Y en ese sentido, es coherente, aunque no siempre equilibrada, lo cual la hace olvidable. (Leonardo A. Ramiro Reyes) (Translation)
Scott Meldeson discusses the weekend's box office and makes an interesting remark about the film (and the film industry in general):
Before we get into the meat of the thing, WB’s Wuthering Heights passed $75 million domestic on Friday and had previously passed $200 million globally on Thursday, with an as-of-Friday $205 million worldwide total. That probably deserved its own post, but... at least for the moment, discussing yet another “not what conventional wisdom says is successful” win for Warner Bros. is yet again a bitter pill. Once again, the likely reward for such efforts will not be fortune, glory, and/or promotions, but another round of consolidation-motivated lay-offs. That’s not even getting into broader concerns about consolidation and the political machinations behind what gets made and why.
Daily Mail explains a nice anecdote concerning Jacob Elordi:
 A lucky Jacob Elordi fan got the surprise of her life last month when the Aussie actor gifted her with a piece of priceless memorabilia. 
Patricia Albassit had a chance encounter with the 28-year-old Brisbane-born actor during a commercial flight while he was in Australia to promote his new movie, Wuthering Heights.
After landing, Elordi excused himself and ducked into a nearby bookshop and returned with a copy of Emily Brontë's famous novel. 
Elordi gifted her the book after he signed his autograph and included a message: 'Dear Patricia! I hope the sun comes out for you today. Love, Heathcliff.' (Anthony James)
On BBC Radio 3's Sound of Cinema, Edith Bowman interviews the Wuthering Heights 2026 composer,  Anthony Willis. His soundtrack is reviewed on Cinemagavia. According to the Official Classical Chart, the album is number 6 in its first week on the chart.

El Periódico (Spain) reviews the Charli XCX album. MovieWeb remembers Wuthering Heights 1978 TV series and Wuthering Heights 1992 are the only adaptations implementing the second half of the novel correctly. Her Campus analyzes the controvers(ies) around the film. Koimoi thinks that there are similarities between the film and Bridgerton. Milenio (México) also reviews the film. Riffrreporter (Germany) argues that Emerald Fennell's films — beyond being a love story — highlight the ecological importance of the moors. Frankfurter Allgemeine (Germany) thinks the film is a glossy, oversexualized Instagram-era adaptation that sacrifices Brontë's dark, complex novel for aesthetic spectacle and mainstream appeal. Time Out Barcelona (Spain) highlights the increase in sales of the original novel:
Hace unos días, el portal Milanuncios anunciaba que el estreno de Cumbres borrascosas el pasado 13 de febrero había disparado las búsquedas del libro en plataformas de segunda mano, que habían aumentado un 455%. Club Victòria y Proa –que disponen de versiones en catalán del libro de Emily Brontë– han explicado a la ACN que el film ha impactado positivamente en las ventas, ampliando y renovando lectores. "Hay una nueva generación que lo ha descubierto, y eso es significativo" sostiene Josep Lluch de Proa. Blanca Pujals, de Club Victòria, cuenta que tuvieron que sacar adelante una nueva edición para servir bien a todas las librerías y subraya que es su título más vendido desde febrero. (...)
El éxito de Cumbres borrascosas también ha puesto el foco en otras obras y ha hecho que lectores se interesen por ejemplo por Jane Eyre, de la hermana de Emily Brontë, Charlotte, un hecho que Lluch encuentra comprensible teniendo en cuenta que se trata de otra de las "grandes novelas inglesas del XIX".
También lo confirma Pujals, que reconoce que ya se está notando "tímidamente" y que puede ser una tendencia que vaya a más. "Cuando uno empieza con una Brontë, tiene ganas de más", bromea. (Borja Duñó) (Translation)

Incidentally, The Sunday Times Bestsellers list puts Wuthering Heights as number 5 in the Fiction paperback section. 

InStyle (Spain) lists the Brontës in an article about female writers who used male pseudonyms when published her novels. El Progreso de Vigo (Spain) has an article about Heathcliff in the novel of Emily Bronttë:
 No sabemos quién es Heathcliff. En la novela, es un crío sucio, hambriento y oscuro que el señor Earnshaw recoge en las calles de Liverpool, lo que ahora llamaríamos un MENA, acrónimo que se ha convertido en un insulto que dice más y peor de quién lo enarbola en una manifestación contra un centro de acogida, que de los propios niños solos en un mundo tan violento como el de Cumbres borrascosas.  (...)
A Heathcliff, de existencia y corazón miserable, nada le importa más que su recuerdo y a los cineastas no les importa que la novela vaya mucho más allá de la muerte de Cathy. Emily no redime a nadie. Todos pierden en Cumbres borrascosas y, sin embargo, cuánta belleza en esta novela despiadada. (Mercedes Corbillón) (Translation)

El Español (Spain) visits Haworth, including the KVWR heritage train, the Parsonage and the moors. El Comercio (Perú) mentions a live Peruvian TV Cumbres Borrascosas from 1964, of which no recording survives. The Telegraph & Argus asks locals about Haworth pronunciation and well... it's complicated.

   

Maëlle Dequiedt's Hurlevent Reviews

Some reviews of the Maëlle Dequiedt Hurlevent adaptation performed recently in Valenciennes, France

Picture Credits: © Frederic Iovino

Cette adaptation du célèbre roman d’Emily Brontë fourmille d’excellentes idées de mise en scène, mais fait curieusement l’impasse sur le cœur du roman. (...)
 Présentée au Cabaret des curiosités de Valenciennes, juste après l’angoissé Tout doit disparaître de Stéphanie Aflalo, cette nouvelle adaptation du chef-d’œuvre d’Emily Brontë nous cueille avant même que le top départ n’en soit donné.
La faute à cette scénographie somptueuse, qui annonce d’emblée son goût du spectaculaire : au plafond, une douzaine de ventilateurs souffle à toute berzingue sur cette lande fictive du Yorkshire, tandis qu’au sol, rochers et rideaux aux teintes pâles ceinturent l’ensemble. Autant dire que tout est déjà en place, de l’hostilité de ces terres froides et hostiles en passant par la dégénérescence des personnages qui y évoluent dans une solitude quasi complète. Comble de l’étrange, une musicienne (Nadia Ratsimandresy) susurre au micro la géniale ambiance sonore du spectacle, faite de chuchotements façon ASMR tortueux, en français autant qu’en version originale. (...)
Si le choix de faire l’impasse sur la passion amoureuse entre les deux héros est une piste intéressante – et peu explorée –, Maëlle Dequiedt ne lui propose pas vraiment d’alternative. Résultat des courses, son Hurlevent se conclut à la hâte, sans que l’on sache ce qu’elle a souhaité mettre en avant, ni ce qui l’a passionnée dans ce matériau littéraire.  (Emma Poesy) (Translation)
Cult.News:
Hurlevent de Maëlle Dequiedt, une déclaration de passion gothique pour le Théâtre (...)
Et entre-temps, alors que la scénographie nous emporte dans des délices et des surprises, parfaitement alignées avec l’esprit gothique du roman, une petite télévision pleine de neige nous donne le signal : on est mille fois plus proche de l’univers des soeurs Brontë sur scène qu’au cinéma.
Ça chante, ça danse, ça grince, certaines grandes des phrases du livre sont mises en exergue en anglais. Et Heathcliff parvient même à manipuler une marionnette qui incarne son neveu. Car la malédiction pèse bien jusqu’à la génération suivante, à grand renfort d’insignes et de bois qui tombe. Le tout est une expérience théâtrale complète portée par des comédiens bilingues et hors pair. Un coup de maître où la beauté vénéneuse du texte est transposée en expérience visuelle, par-delà le contenu éternellement romantique de l’intrigue. (Yaël Hirsch) (Translation)
Avec Stéphanie Aflalo et Maëlle Dequiedt, l’amour inconditionnel et l’amour trahi flirtent avec la mort. (...)
Superposant à l’intrigue du roman d’Emilie Brontë, centrée sur le couple Cathy et Heathcliff, son frère adoptif, les jeux littéraires auxquels se livraient les sœurs Brontë et leur frère depuis leur enfance, Hurlevent met en jeu deux fratries en miroir. Vêtu·es de la même robe bleue à volants, les interprètes jonglent avec les langues et la musique, modelant des personnages qui surjouent l’enfance pour expulser leurs fureurs d’adulte. Narquois ou acerbes, les enfantillages auxquels se livrent les jeunes Brontë entre elleux ou les pages de leurs livres, finissent par contaminer la mise en scène, cantonnant la noirceur qui se dégage du roman aux blocs de pierre et à la terre se déversant des cintres sur le plateau.  (Fabienne Arvers) (Translation)
   

Brontë Journey

A new Brontë-inspired poetry book:
Liliana A. Pasterska
Cinnamon Press
ISBN: 9781788641968
March 2026

Liliana A. Pasterska is the maven of finding emotional depth in the detail of the everyday. In Brontë, Journeys we are invited to walk alongside a love story, one that is sundered by loss, yet shines all the more brightly for that.

The language is clear and precise. The places resonate with the beauty and grief that unfold in the personal story of Charlotte Brontë and Arthur Bell Nichols at the heart of the collection. The voices of her subjects carry across time, not an act of ventriloquism, but of empathy and immersion. And if for Arthur, grieving as he leaves Yorkshire six years after Charlotte’s early and sudden death, “Roadside fuchsia will greet him / as if nothing had passed.”, the clue is in the ‘as if’. For so much has passed and this exquisite collection has allowed us in, invited us to share a moment with creatures whose lives still touch us.

An elegant, heart-stopping collection.

   

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