|
|
|
Wuthering Heights |
作者Author /  Emily Bronte 艾蜜莉•白朗特 |
|
Wuthering Heights
|
|
Introduction
Heathcliff
Versions available on
DVD
Classic 1939 version
Fiennes-Binoche version
Television version
|
Introduction |
|
Emily Bronte's 1847 novel Wuthering
Heights has become a perennial favorite for the screen. The
love story of Heathcliff and Cathy has been filmed at least thirteen
times. And on many levels, fans of the book are still waiting for the
definitive film version. While some versions are works of art in their
own right, the book has so-far proved too difficult to film
satisfactorily.
I
must admit that I have a strong prejudice against most filmic versions
of the novel for I believe that they romanticize Heathcliff far too
much. Whenever my female students “ooh” and “ahh” over how romantic and
lovely Heathcliff is, I want to yell at them. And frankly, I usually
do. And the character of Heathcliff, as written by Bronte, is probably
one of the largest problems for directors and screenplay writers.
TOP
|
Heathcliff
|
|
Heathcliff is not the kind of
man you want to be bringing home. At best, he's a brute, and at worst,
he's a sociopath. And it's not just his terrible temper and the mental
cruelty he afflicts on those around him. He beats and even kills
animals; he beats women; and there's a good chance he's a murderer.
(See James Sutherland's essay “Is Heathcliff a Murderer” in Is
Heathcliff a Murderer ?).
I understand that he was a poor
orphan child and that his life was made miserable by Hindley Earnshaw.
And I feel sorry for him; I really do. But I still think he's become
damaged goods. He purportedly loves Cathy Earnshaw above all else on
earth, but he horribly mistreats and even hits her daughter, Catherine.
That's not love.
TOP
|
Versions
available on DVD |
|
Before I go on to discuss the
films in more details, I want to list the five versions that are
available on DVD today.
Although there are a number of film versions, many are no longer
available. I have not seen the French version or the two latest TV
versions, and any comments here are based on information from IMDB and
the Amazon.com customer comments sections, places I find are usually
quite reliable sources of information.
1939 version starring Laurence
Olivier and Merle Oberon. This is usually the overwhelming favorite of
film critics
1970 version starring Timothy
Dalton and Anna Calder-Marshall.
1985 version, in French,
originally titled Hurlevant, starring Lucas Balvaux and Fabienne Babe.
I include this for the sake of thoroughness. I have not seen it, and
almost all reviews I find are highly negative.
1992 version starring Ralph
Fiennes and Juliette Binoche
1998 TV version starring Robert
Cavanagh and Orla Brady
2003 version titled MTV's
Wuthering Heights, CA starring Mike Vogel and Erica
Christiansen Filmed for MTV Television, updated and set in California ,
and according to one reviewer, it's "pretty grisly unless you're 14
years old”. Although it sounds like a rather broad adaptation, it does
have a large number of fans.
TOP
|
Classic
1939 version |
|
The first major Wuthering
Heights is the 1939 version directed by William Wyler and
starring Laurence Olivier and Merle Oberon as Heathcliff and Cathy.
Most critics and fans of the book are quite fond of this version, and
on one hand, the film has stood the test of time. I find Olivier's
Heathcliff far too sympathetic, and many critics have complained that
the film ends before the end of the novel. In fact, the film covers
roughly the first 16 of the novel's 34 chapters. Our last shot of the
lovers is of their ghosts peacefully walking over the moors.
The ending was controversial in
its time: “Heathcliff is unable to unite with Cathy, but in a departure
from the book, Heathcliff and Cathy are shown walking hand in hand in
their afterlife, visiting their favorite place, Penistone Crag. There
was some controversy over this scene. Wyler did not want it but Sam
Goldwyn (the producer) insisted on it. This innovation was one of
numerous interventions by Goldwyn to ensure that the movie would not be
a commercial failure. In fact, after the movie became a big hit,
Goldwyn is said to have quipped “I made Wuthering Heights, Wyler only
directed it.” (Nuggehalli)
The film was a critical success,
earning eight Academy Award nominations, including, Best Picture, Best
Actor for Laurence Olivier, Best Supporting Actress for Geraldine
Fitzgerald (playing Isabella Linton), Best Director for William Wyler,
Best Cinematography for Gregg Toland (who was the only winner of all
the nominees), Best Screenplay for Charles MacArthur and Ben Hecht,
Best Interior Decoration for James Basevi, and Best Original Score for
Alfred Newman.
The fact that the film only won in
one category needs to be contextualized. That year, other films
nominated for best picture included the now-classic films The
Wizard of Oz, Dark Victory, Mr. Smith Goes to Washington , Stagecoach, and
Goodbye, Mr. Chips. That year's winner was Gone
with the Wind , which also took top honors for best
director, best writing, and best interior decoration (now called art
direction). Best actor went to Robert Donat in Goodbye, Mr.
Chips , and best supporting actress that year was the
historic win for Gone with the Wind's Hattie
McDaniel, the first African American to win an Academy Award, and the
first African American to attend the awards ceremony as a guest, not a
servant.
The year 1939 has gone on to become a famous one in film history for
the sheer number of quality films that opened then. Wuthering
Heights was one of them.
TOP
|
Fiennes-Binoche
version |
|
|
Video cover to the
Fiennes-Binoche version. |
The next major production of
the novel starred Ralph Fiennes in his film debut and Juliette Binoche
as the thwarted lovers. Directed by Peter Kosminsky in 1992, this
version has been universally panned by critics, many viewers enjoy it.
The particularly love the passionate scenes between the dark, brooding
Fiennes and the hauntingly beautiful Binoche.
One example of the criticism comes
from Time-Out : "Restoring the dangerous passion
and morbid obsession crucial to Emily Bronte's novel, Kosminsky's debut
feature eschews melodrama in favour of Gothic romance, with Anne
Devlin's skilful screenplay delving deep into the swirling currents of
Cathy's forbidden love for the gypsy foundling Heathcliff, whom she
later abandons for sensitive, refined Mr Linton. Where the film falls
down is in confining itself too much to gloomy rooms, thus failing to
point up the contrast between imprisoning social conventions and the
pagan pleasures of the moors.”
The Kominsky version is praised
for including the final chapters of the book and daring to end on a
negative note.
This version also adds a framing
device to the beginning and end of the film, casting Irish singer
Sinead O'Connor as Emily Bronte.
TOP
|
Television
version |
|
The most recent Wuthering
Heights was an English made-for-television version starring
Robert Cavanah and Orla Brady. According to most critics and regular
viewers, this is the closest in feel to the original novel.
|
Orla
Brady and Robert Cavanah
Source: Exxon/Mobil/Masterpiece Theater Program Description.
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/masterpiece/archive/programs/wuthering/fulld.html
|
TOP
|
Works Cited
|
Dirks,
Tim. “Wuthering Heights, 1939” Filmsite.org, (July 6, 2005) http://www.filmsite.org/wuth.html
"Wuthering Heights" Film Review. Time-Out. (July 6,
2005) http://www.timeout.com/film/64850.html
Nuggehalli, Nigam. “Wuthering Heights”
review, CultureVulture.net (July 6, 2005)
http://www.culturevulture.net/Movies5/WutheringHeights.htm
|
|
|
|
|
|
|