Director: Emerald Fennell
Genre: Drama
Runtime: 136
minutes
Year:
2026
Starring: Margot Robbie, Jacob Elordi
Description: A passionate and tumultuous love story set
against the backdrop of the Yorkshire moors, exploring the intense and
destructive relationship between Heathcliff (Jacob Elordi) and Catherine
Earnshaw (Margot Robbie).
Review: The 2026 film adaptation of “Wuthering Heights”, directed by Emerald
Fennell (known for “Saltburn”), is a visual spectacle that unfortunately
sacrifices the emotional depth of Emily Brontë’s masterpiece for style and
provocation.
The film is undoubtedly
beautiful to look at. The cinematography captures the rugged Yorkshire moors
with and almost tangible atmosphere, and the costumes are Oscar-worthy. The
addition of modern music by Charli XCX gives the film a bold, contemporary
energy that will appeal especially to a younger generation.
Margot Robbie is the
strongest element of the film. Robbie portrays Cathy torn between social
expectations and wild desire. Cathy is highly unlikeable, complex character and
Robbie really captured that.
Although Jacob Elordi, as
Heathcliff, perfectly embodies the brooding heartthrob, his performance lacks
the raw, exclusion-fueled pain that is essential to the character. As a result,
he often comes across as a toxic, privileged man rather than the tormented orphan
from the book.
That this adaptation is
nothing like the book is an understatement. It’s a very bold interpretation of
Brontë novel. The biggest flaw is that the film prioritizes sensuality over
emotional depth. Fennell opts for shocking image and explicit scenes that
distract rather than reinforce the tragic love story. I cannot even call it a
love story, Cathy and Heathcliff are so toxic. There is really something wrong
with you if you think what these two have in this movie is romantic.
“Wuthering Heights” is a
bold, stylized reinterpretation that is great or the eyes but leaves the heart
cold. It is and interesting film for those who love modern costume dramas, but
those looking for the true soul of Brontë would do better to reread the book.
Which I am definitely planning on doing.
Rating: 3/ 5