“Lust and Jealousy on the Moors”
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What You Need To Know:
WUTHERING HEIGHTS is sumptuously filmed, with first-rate acting, costuming and art direction. However, the filmmakers take an old fashioned love story and turns it into a crude tale of lust. WUTHERING HEIGHTS has frequent scenes of partially explicit adultery. It also includes some weird and depraved psychological abuse in the relationship between Heathcliff and Cathy’s sister-in-law. WUTHERING HEIGHTS also contains some foul language, including one strong profanity and three “f” words.
Content:
More Detail:
In the original novel, Cathy has an older brother and their father dies. Also, the original novel tells the story of Cathy’s daughter and Heathcliff’s son by his wife, Cathy’s sister-in-law. Heathcliff marries the sister-o-law out of spite against the wealthy landowner whom Cathy marries. The new version of the novel with Margot Robbie eliminates the character of Cathy’s older brother, who eventually becomes a terrible gambler and drunkard, and doesn’t have Cathy or her sister-in-law giving birth.
Thus, as this movie opens, Cathy is 6-years-old and her father, Mr. Earnshaw, is the inveterate gambler and drunkard and owner of their rundown estate, Wuthering Heights. Cathy is friends with her father’s Asian housemaid, Nelly. One day, Earnshaw brings home a quiet orphan boy to be his adopted son and allows Cathy to name the boy Heathcliff. The movie follows Cathy and Heathcliff as they explore the countryside together. Cathy is a little bossy, but she and Heathcliff become inseparable. At one point, they hold hands. Meanwhile, Nelly is sad that she’s lost Cathy’s friendship.
Cut to 11 years later. Although Heathcliff is her father’s adopted child, Cathy and Heathcliff have become infatuated with one another. Cathy has even carved the letters C + H on a wooden post. In one scene, they spy on the family’s farmhand fornicating with a farmgirl. This leads to an affair with Heathcliff himself.
However, Cathy gets injured while visiting the fancy home of their neighbors, a wealthy family named Linton, including the young male heir, Edgar. Edgar’s younger sister is a bit ditsy, but she enjoys Cathy’s company greatly. Cathy stays there for several weeks, which irks Heathcliff a lot.
Shortly, thereafter, Cathy talks with Nelly about Edgar possibly proposing marriage with Cathy. Heathcliff secretly listens to the conversation, and Nelly sees him listening but doesn’t warn Cathy. Cathy says she’ll probably agree to marry Edgar because of his wealth, but she admits to Nelly she only truly loves Heathcliff. Sadly, Heathcliff doesn’thear Cathy say she loves only him. So, he angrily steals the family’s horse and runs away.
Consequently, Cathy ends up marrying Edgar even though she doesn’t really love him. He treats her nicely and lovingly, however.
Years later, Heathcliff suddenly returns, and the uncouth young man has become a rich gentleman. His return reignites Cathy’s lust for him. They begin a secret adulterous affair, but their secret can’t last forever.
WUTHERING HEIGHTS is sumptuously filmed. The acting, costuming and art direction are first rate. The beginning scenes of Cathy and Heathcliff becoming friends as children are beautifully done. However, eventually the filmmakers take an old fashioned love story and turns it into a crude tale of lust. WUTHERING HEIGHTS doesn’t have any explicit nudity, but it inserts many partially depicted scenes of fornication, marital sex and adultery, and some implied sex scenes. Taken individually, the scenes are not excessive, but the number or quantity of them is. Also, the filmmakers insert some weird and depraved psychological abuse in the relationship between Heathcliff and Cathy’s sister-in-law, whom Heathcliff marries after he and Cathy part ways for a second time. He does this out of revenge against Cathy and Edgar. All these scenes seem to become rather ugly and misanthropic. WUTHERING HEIGHTS also has about 15 gratuitous instances of foul language, including three anachronistic “f” words and one strong profanity.
MOVIEGUIDE® finds the movie’s strong Romantic worldview, multiple sex scenes and pagan hedonism ultimately abhorrent. As the Blackeyed Peas once sang, “Where is the love?”


