Despite its enduring stature as one of
the most exquisite novels ever written, Emily Brontë's Wuthering Heights (1847) has yet to receive a definitive screen
adaptation. If only by default, the most acclaimed version to date is a 1939
drama starring Laurence Olivier as brooding romantic antihero Heathcliff. Yet
by dint of the era in which it was made, the Olivier movie is chaste, even
though the level of implied sexual tension is high, so there was ample reason
to revisit the material in the '70s, by which time restraints upon the
depiction of taboo subjects had loosened. Ironically, however, pushing
cinematic boundaries is not the defining characteristic of the 1970 Wuthering Heights, which was a rare
venture into the world of highbrow cinema for B-movie specialists American
International Pictures. Although Patrick Tilley's intelligent script both accentuates
the lurid elements of Brontë's story and adds a few dark flourishes (such as
intimations about Heathcliff's parentage), the movie is, by comparison to other
pictures released at the same time, as restrained as the 1939 version was in
its day.
Making this stylistic choice even more surprising is the involvement
of director Robert Fuest, who later made his name helming gory but visually
inventive thrillers including The Abominable
Dr. Phibes (1971). Rather than running with the supernatural elements of
Brontë's tale, Fuest and his collaborators offer a straight transposition of
the novel, albeit with a handful of additions to and/or deletions from the
original narrative. What emerges from this creative process is a movie that's
perhaps a bit too respectable. The image-making, mood-setting, and storytelling
are all exemplary, but leading actors Anna Calder-Marshall and Timothy Dalton
fail to generate the necessary romantic heat. Make no mistake, this isn't some
uptight Masterpiece Theatre take on
Brontë. Quite to the contrary, this Wuthering
Heights is filled with betrayal and cruelty and heartbreak, often pitched
at a high level of emotional intensity. The minor but important caveat is
simply that the actors living inside Fuest's artfully composed frames don't
reach the transcendent heights, no pun intended, to which they aspire.
Still,
there's a lot to admire here. The underlying story, of course, is remarkable—a
twisted ordeal of capricious fate, overpowering love, and spiteful violence set
against the metaphorically rich backdrop of remote estates dotting the hills
and valleys of the English moors. Contributing fine elements to the movie are
cinematographer John Coquillon, whose claustrophobic and crisp images capture
the story's inherent fusion of danger and intimacy; composer Michelle Legrand,
whose plaintive melodies speak for the characters' tortured souls; and title
designer Maurice Binder, who sets the atmosphere perfectly with grim tableux of
ragged peaks juxtaposed with overcast skies. Plus, even if Calder-Marshall and
Dalton seem too controlled to get lost inside their animalistic characters, the
performers look their parts thanks to unruly hair and wild eyes—the image of
Cathy and Heathcliff as two halves of one otherworldly entity comes across
clearly.
Wuthering
Heights: GROOVY
I rode on the Underground with Anne Calder-Marshall last year from Shepard's Bush to King's Cross, she was charming, funny and delightfully down-to-earth.
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