Move over, chocolates and roses—this Valentine’s Day, Warner Bros is serving something far messier, hotter, and way more chaotic: Wuthering Heights as you’ve never seen it.
Who would have thought that Emily Brontë's classic novel about love, obsession, and betrayal would turn into a pop culture spectacle? With Emerald Fennell at the helm, the provocative teaser seems to have glossed over the problematic parts of the relationship entirely to focus only on the sexual, with Charli XCX's 'Everything is Romantic' as the song of choice. Clearly, Warner Bros is all set to give us the most chaotic Valentine’s Day gift yet.
What’s the issue?
The trailer opens with a breathtaking countryside view before quickly pivoting to longing glances, suggestive touches, and a breathless closing invitation to “come undone.” Fennell’s signature style is on full display: decadent cinematography, emotionally charged scenes, and her trademark provocation—which, unsurprisingly, has sparked a mix of excitement and eye-rolls online.
Emily Brontë’s original story is no sweet romance. It’s angst, rebellion, shockingly selfish behaviour, and a whole lot of red flags disguised as devotion. At its core, though, it’s a powerful exploration of obsessive, possessive, and stubborn love. And who’s to say Catherine and Heathcliff’s all-consuming relationship—darkly aspirational to some, toxic to others—was “wrong”? Fennell, fresh off the unhinged Saltburn, has clearly decided this version needs less brooding and more visual spectacle: slow-motion kisses, sensual close-ups, surreal feasts, dream sequences, and Heathcliff looking like he stepped out of a luxury ad.
From a visual perspective, this trailer veers far from previous, more reserved adaptations. The modern pop soundtrack only heightens the divide: loyalists argue the glossy, stylised touches take away from the novel’s Gothic essence. Fans are split—some are here for the sensual fever dream, others want their Brontë with more gloom and less erotic slow-mo.
Casting: Margot, Jacob, and… Controversy
Beyond whether you personally ship Robbie and Elordi, this Wuthering Heights says a lot about how studios treat literary classics now. Reverence? Out. Reinvention? In.
Lead image: IMDb
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