Jacob Elordi Returns for Margot Robbie in 'Wuthering Heights'
Emerald Fennell’s adaptation highlights the primal and sexual nature of the classic romance, featuring Margot Robbie and Jacob Elordi with new music by Charli XCX.
- Official trailer premiered online Thursday, showing Margot Robbie and Jacob Elordi's characters physically interacting with a pink tufted wall and featuring a new Charli XCX song.
- Emerald Fennell wrote, directed and produced her take on Emily Brontë's 1847 novel, aiming to recreate the `primal` and `sexual` experience she felt as a teenager.
- Shots show mundane tasks becoming erotic metaphors like kneading bread and fingers in mouths, intercutting intimate moments across childhood and adult scenes with Margot Robbie as Catherine Earnshaw and Jacob Elordi as Heathcliff on the West Yorkshire moors, enhanced by Linus Sandgren, cinematographer.
- Wuthering Heights opens on Feb. 13, 2026, timed for Valentine's Day, while Charli XCX released `House`, a collaboration with John Cale, earlier this week for the film's promotion.
- Following her Oscar win, Emerald Fennell returns with her third LuckyChap collaboration, after Promising Young Woman and Saltburn, but faced backlash for casting Jacob Elordi, a white actor, as Heathcliff.
53 Articles
53 Articles
'Wuthering Heights' New Trailer Gives Footage Of Jacob Elordi And Margot Robbie's Windswept Historical Romance
The official trailer for Wuthering Heights gives fans some more conventional looks at the new retelling by Emerald Fennell, but will it satisfy purists? That remains to be seen. When the teaser trailer came out, some fans were hoping that perhaps the film was about a woman who had read Wuthering Heights and was imagining herself in the world of the book. But that hope was because the teaser trailer was so far removed from what they had expected.…
Sorry, But These Wuthering Heights Trailers Rule
Margot Robbie grasped by a giant hand? Jacob Elordi against a ‘Searchers’ sunset? Everybody licking the big pink flesh wall? Emerald Fennell’s ‘Wuthering Heights’ trailers are already driving everybody insane, and that’s mostly a good thing.
The new adaptation of the classic novel is directed and written by Emerald Fennell.
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