THE LATEST WUTHERING HEIGHTS : OVER SEXED AND UNDER THOUGHT

Starting in 1920 with a silent version,  there have been umpteen  adaptations of Emily Bronte’s Gothic masterpiece  staring luminaries  of screen greats– Laurence Oliver, Merle Oberon,  Ralph Fiennes,  Juliette Binoche– even a Monte Python sketch in which the story was presented in semaphore.

The perennial question is how far movies strayed from the source material  considering thats exactly what happens to every great piece of literature that continues  to lure and to inspire  countless imaginings and semi-lucid high school term papers for decades to come.

This film is certainly a romp through the heather, produced with visual opulence and perilously  little sense, taking one of the great works  of English literature  and reduces it oversexed  and under thought lunacy.

WUTHERING HEIGHTS marks writer- director  Emerald Fennell’s third feature film after winning  the Oscar for Original Screenplay in 2020 for Promising Young Woman.  How can one go to a movie starring Margot Robbie and Jacob Elordi and not be enthusiastic,  considering  how easy they are on the eyes while accompanied  by an original soundtrack  by pop icon Charli XCX?!

WUTHERING HEIGHTS gives us a startling shock in the opening moments with a giant black screen where we hear creaking noises along with someone rapidly gasping,  which considering  the amount of PR promising hot and heavy action, engaging in humping is what our senses are guided towards. It turns out that what we were listening  to are the dying gasps of someone swinging from the gallows. OK, I’m  now fully engaged. Maybe that’s what agony and ecstasy  symbolises  while we get glimpses  of both the crowd below breaking into a fit of excitement  over the hanging,  as well as, a close-up of the prominent erection sported by the dead guy.

Among the spectators  at the hanging is young Catherine Earnshaw (Charlotte Mellington) who lives at an estate known as Wuthering Heights  with her sometimes loving, sometimes abusive drunken  sod of a father (Martin Clunes) and her sole companion,  a servant  named Nelly (Vy Nguyen).

That all changes one day when Mr Earnshaw comes home from an extended bender with an orphan boy (Owen Cooper) that he has chosen to rescue  from the streets. Catherine takes to the new addition, naming him Heathcliff. He is instantly besotted with her as well.

Cue the story years later…with Catherine  and Heathcliff now played by Robbie and Elordi– their  mutual adoration  is still there but complicated however by concerns about  the adult world.

They may have the hots for each other but the notion  that a union between a member of aristocratic  society  and a mere servant  simply was not on, is just a twee of a stretch.

Catherine,  who may secretly  love Heathcliff has serious  life-changing  decisions to make. Her father’s twin love for gambling  and alcohol  leads him perilously close to losing everything.  She has unabashedly  a love for the finer things in life, leaving her with the only recourse  to marry a person of wealth and happily for her, just such a person in the form of Edgar Linton (Shazam Latif) moves into the estate next door with his oddball sister, Isabella (Alison Oliver).

Short story follows….while spying on her new neighbour,  Catherine injures  her foot and is taken in by the Lintons to recover. By the time she leaves she has Edgar  wrapped around her finger.  While talking to Nelly (now played by Hong Chau) about her romantic dilemma  of choosing  between  Edgar  and Heathcliff,  Nelly goads her to choose Edgar, cause she has the hots for Heathcliff and knows  he is within earshot.

No surprise,  Heathcliff leaves Wuthering Heights,  Catherine  marries Linton and vacates her father’s  dissolute home.

Visually  the film is stunning  throughout  with Heathcliff’s exit from Wuthering Heights  set against a blood-red sky evoking his inner turmoil, is properly swoon-worthy.

Alison Oliver as Isabella,  although misused as her character,  finds the right offbeat  approach to the role. Robbie and Elordi  are both excellent  actors,  whose performances come across  as retreads of parts they have played in the past– Robbie,  too often gives off vibes of early Barbie while Elordi  is a better-dressed  version of the psycho he played in Euphoria – they don’t connect in a way that makes sense of their twisted relationship. It has the feel of an elaborate  Wuthering Heights-themed fashion  magazine spread.

When it comes to something  the film wants us to take seriously– the allegedly  passionate  affair– the results  are just inept. The director certainly  steamed up the duo’s various trysts to earn an “R” rating, without any palpable heat. While the two characters  go about their gyrations  we never get a sense  of the feelings of love, lust, anger and jealousies  that they are suppose to embody or embrace because we never buy Heathcliff  and Catherine,  either  as characters or as lovers.

This story ain’t  a straightforward  love story, by any means. It never hews closer to the Gothic horror of Bronte’s ultimate dark and gloomy narrative.  For me, it would have been better to see the full story  as writ by Emily Bronte, all liberties  taken by the movie, excepted.

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