Wuthering Heights starts off the romantic weekend with $3 million in early Thursday previews

Wuthering Heights

Margot Robbie‘s Barbie success hasn’t deterred her from taking risks with films like A Big Bold Beautiful Journey. Now, she stars in a new adaptation of Wuthering Heights, which is said to be very erotic. The film opens in time for the Valentine’s Day weekend and our Chris Bumbray shared his feelings in his review, saying, “Now, while my own feelings on Wuthering Heights were mixed, there is something that needs to be acknowledged. […] While I didn’t invest in the characters in quite the way I’d hoped, I also felt like I was in the hands of a director who was making exactly the movie she wanted to make—and no one can say her vision isn’t singular in that respect. Wuthering Heights is a big swing, and even if it didn’t entirely work for me, I still had a great time watching it.”

Let’s get to the lovin’

Deadline is reporting that the Margot Robbie/Jacob Elordi period film is starting the weekend with $3 million in early Thursday previews. This total comes from 3,000 locations. The last time Valentine’s Day fell on a Saturday, with President’s Day giving a three-day weekend for some, it was when the first Fifty Shades of Grey opened eleven years ago. The new Wuthering Heights has more of an artistic vision in its visuals, but the sensual energy looks to be matching the famously kinky Grey. In fact, it may even surpass it.

The film

Emerald Fennell directs Wuthering Heights from her own screenplay. The film stars Margot Robbie (BarbieBabylonThe Wolf of Wall Street) as Catherine Earnshaw, Jacob Elordi (SaltburnEuphoria) as Heathcliff, Shazad Latif (MagpieFalling for Figaro) as Edgar Linton, Hong Chau (The WhaleKinds of Kindness) as Nelly Dean, and Alison Oliver (Conversations with FriendsThe Order) as Isabella Linton.

Wuthering Heights, first published in 1847, revolves around “Heathcliff, an orphan-turned-foster-son who falls in love with the daughter of the family who owns the estate on which he now lives, Wuthering Heights. After running away, Heathcliff rises up through the ranks of the gentry and exacts revenge on the families — the Earnshaws and the Lintons — who kept him from his true love.” Wuthering Heights has been adapted to the screen numerous times, including in 1939 with Laurence Olivier and Merle Oberon, 1970 with Timothy Dalton and Anna Calder-Marshall, 1992 with Ralph Fiennes and Juliette Binoche, and 2011 with Kaya Scodelario and James Howson.

Source: Deadline

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