Evoke explores the filmography of Alison Oliver, including her Isabella in
Wuthering Heights 2026. The film is reviewed in
Vocal Media's Geeks (2 and a half weeks):
I do think this is one of those films that might work better if you have no attachment to the book. If I hadn’t read Wuthering Heights, I probably would have enjoyed it more as a visually striking, slightly chaotic gothic romance. But knowing the source material makes it hard not to notice what’s missing.
In the end, I couldn’t shake the feeling that I wasn’t really watching an adaptation of a literary classic, but rather someone’s personal, teenage interpretation of it. It’s a film that looks incredible, and there are moments that almost work, but it never quite captures the emotional depth or complexity of the original.
Olympic and
The Globe and Mail discuss how Piper Gilles & Paul Poirier won ice dance silver at the figure skating world championships:
After skating to Govardo’s cover of “Vincent” at Milano Cortina 2026, Gilles and Poirier returned to an old favourite for their free program, performing their iconic Wuthering Heights routine from two seasons ago, earning 125.07 points. (Chloe Robisnon)
I have also loved recent episodes of The Folk Show with Mark Radcliffe, including one in which Olivia Chaney shared the pinch-me backstory of how she heard that her haunting version of The Dark Eyed Sailor, recorded for Radcliffe’s show in 2013, was to have a star turn in the soundtrack of Emerald Fennell’s Wuthering Heights. (Patricia Nicol)
I consider myself fundamentally unshockable when it comes to sex in film and television. I sat through Emerald Fennell’s perfectly enjoyable but entirely silly Wuthering Heights, rolling my eyes as the director tried to unnerve her audience with sexual imagery. It’s going to take more than a bit of misused riding equipment to shock anyone who grew up in the internet age. I felt like a tired husband on Valentine’s Day, my wife parading morosely around in frilly underwear, unable to draw my attention away from my phone.
Entre sus últimas publicaciones destacan el artículo en inglés Catherine Earnshaw Meets Katherine Lester: Revisioning the Brontë Body by Sustaining the Self in William Oldroyd's Lady MacRbeth (2016) publicado en la revista especializada Brontë Studies 42(6); y el capítulo Reconsiderando y (des)mitificando cuerpos brontëanos a través de narrativas neo-victorianas en el volumen Narrativas y voces angloamericanas y gaélicas en clave feminista, editado por Rocío Riestra Camacho. (Translation)
Kelsie Beckman begins a series of videos where she tries to decide which Brontë she likes the most. In this first video, she discusses Emily Brontë's Wuthering Heights. Anne Brontë.org posts about The Brontës in Palm Day.
0 comments:
Post a Comment