Film Review – Wuthering Heights (2026)

2023’s “Saltburn” was meant to rock theaters with depictions of sexuality, kinks, and perversions. It was the follow up project for writer/director Emerald Fennell after she attracted attention with 2020’s “Promising Young Woman.” However, few saw the feature during its original theatrical engagement, with popularity arriving after its streaming debut, allowing viewers to dissect its extremity, turning scenes into social media moments. “Saltburn” went in a funny direction on its way to fame, but Fennell still has cinematic aspirations with her particular approach to eroticism, returning with “Wuthering Heights,” a loose, very loose, adaptation of Emily Bronte’s 1847 novel. The English stiffness of the source material has been eliminated, with Fennell after something more feral with the endeavor, and she’s perfectly happy to recycle habits and fixations for the period piece, out to “Saltburn”-up a tale of obsession, which often resembles a blend of music videos and telenovelas. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

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