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Wuthering Heights (1970 film)

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Wikipedia article




'Wuthering Heights' is a 1970 film directed by Robert Fuest and starring Anna Calder-Marshall and Timothy Dalton. It is based on the classic 1847 Emily Bront novel of the same name. Like the 1939 version, it depicts only the first sixteen chapters concluding with Catherine Earnshaw Linton's death and omits the trials of her daughter, Hindley's son, and Heathcliff's son.

Cast



* Anna Calder-Marshall as Catherine Earnshaw Linton

* Timothy Dalton as Heathcliff

* Harry Andrews as Mr. Earnshaw

* Pamela Brown as Mrs. Linton

* Judy Cornwell as Nelly Dean

* James Cossins as Mr. Linton

* Rosalie Crutchley as Mrs. Earnshaw

* Hilary Dwyer as Isabella Linton

* Julian Glover as Hindley Earnshaw

* Hugh Griffith as Dr. Kenneth

* Morag Hood as Frances Earnshaw

* Ian Ogilvy as Edgar Linton

* Peter Sallis as Mr. Shielders

Hindley Earnshaw



This film version differs from the book in several ways, and most of the differences involve Hindley Earnshaw. First it takes a more sympathetic look at Hindley. Usually portrayed as being a cruel oppressor of Heathcliff, in this version he is persecuted by his father and lives in Heathcliff's shadow. Also in this version, Nelly Dean, the narrator, is shown as being in love with Hindley and unable to express her feelings due to their class difference. After his wife's death, Hindley goes through a hedonistic stage but finally pulls himself out of it.

At the end of the film, perhaps the most controversial of all the differences, Hindley succeeds in fatally shooting Heathcliff and remains the owner of Wuthering Heights. Heathcliff and Cathy's ghosts are then reunited.

When first introducing Heathcliff, the film also suggests that Heathcliff might be Mr Earnshaw's illegitimate son and hence Cathy's half-brother.

Production



AIP were not traditionally associated with Gothic romance, but were inspired to make the film by the success of 'Romeo and Juliet' (1968).

The movie was shot on location in Blubberhouses, Weston Hall near Otley, and Brimham Rocks. Producer Lous Heyward said at the time:

I'm the only American here. For the first time in 30 years Hollywood said to me, 'No big names, no huge publicity, just a good film that stands on its merits'. This is very encouraging except now we stand naked in judgement. It has to be really good with two to three million dollars invested. The last version, with Laurence Olivier as Heathcliff and Merle Oberon as Cathy, portrayed him as a regular nice guy and her as sweetness and light. That was not the truth and Hollywood now goes in for the truth. Heathcliff was a bastard and Cathy a real bitch and that's how they'll be in this film.


Reception



Vincent Canby of 'The New York Times' remarked that the film "is simply petulant when it tries to be overwrought, which may be what American International Pictures publicity people mean when they describe the film as 'youth-oriented.'"Canby, Vincent (19 February 1971). [https://www.nytimes.com/1971/02/19/archives/screen-bronte-revivalscenes-glitter-anew-in-wuthering-heights.html "Screen: Bronte Revival".] 'The New York Times'. 23. 'Variety' called it "a competent, tasteful, frequently even lovely re-adaptation of Emily Bronte's Gothic, mystical love story. But the brooding tension, the electric passion of two lovers compelled to an inevitable tragedy is not generated.""Film Reviews: Wuthering Heights". 'Variety'. 16 December 1970. 17. Gene Siskel of the 'Chicago Tribune' gave the film one star out of four and wrote that the actors "are simply not equal to the demands of the script that, if not controlled, easily slips into laughable melodrama", adding that "the film has the unfortunate physical appearance of a vampire tale."Siskel, Gene (5 May 1971). "'Mad Dogs' and..." 'Chicago Tribune'. Section 2, p. 7.

Kevin Thomas of the 'Los Angeles Times' stated, "At the tag end of 1970, the sight of Emily Bronte's Cathy Earnshaw running all over those Yorkshire moors shouting Heathcliff! Heathcliff! seems supremely sillyat least in AIP's handsome new version of 'Wuthering Heights' ... The trouble is that it's impossible to care about any of these people, so self-indulgent are they in their romanticism. As a result, you come away from the film thinking how much healthier and honest are today's young people, the audience for which this picture presumably is intended."Thomas, Kevin (24 December 1970). "A New 'Wuthering Heights'". 'Los Angeles Times'. Part II, p. 8. Gary Arnold of 'The Washington Post' panned the film as "inane and incoherent", with "such a tenuous, sickly resemblance to the book it's based on (and whose reputation it's confiscating) that, in simple justice, the producers should be restrained from using the original title. Some of the film characters have the same names as Mis Bronte's characters, but the resemblance ceases right about there: her story, her atmosphere and her emotions are almost totally ignored, bungled or butchered."Arnold, Gary (3 March 1971). "Withering Wuthering". 'The Washington Post'. C9. David Pirie of 'The Monthly Film Bulletin' wrote, "At the very least, the combination of AIP and Emily Bront promises a creative tension; but it turns out to provide only a flattened and monotonous version of her classic novel ... they have played safe in the worst possible way, reducing and telescoping the action into a meagre, spiritless soap-opera, with everyone lacking conviction and Heathcliff in particular about as demonic as a shy farm-hand."

The film holds a score of 50% on Rotten Tomatoes based on 6 reviews.

AIP had announced a sequel 'Return to Wuthering Heights' but it was not made. Neither were other adaptations of classic novels mooted by the studio, including 'Camille', 'The House of Seven Gables', and 'Tale of Two Cities'.

Accolades



References




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