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Wuthering
Heights (1939)
In director William Wyler's superb romantic drama
- a melodramatic and brooding screen adaptation of Emily Bronte's
1847 romantic Victorian novel about a haunted love story and doomed
lovers with inseparable spirits, set on the windy Yorkshire moors
of pre-Victorian England:
- the opening scene as a solitary traveler, known
as Mr. Lockwood (Miles Mander), staggered through a raging blizzard,
a bitterly-cold snowy night on the Yorkshire moors, to find refuge
at the estate of Wuthering Heights; he was given lodging by the
landlord Heathcliff (Laurence Olivier) (the master of the house)
and his wife Isabella (Geraldine Fitzgerald)
- in an upstairs "bridal chamber" guest
room, Lockwood called out to Heathcliff that he had heard a "phantom"
woman calling named Cathy, and felt someone clutch his
hand in an icy cold grasp at the window
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Heathcliff Calling Out For Cathy
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Mr. Lockwood At the Window -
Hearing Cathy Calling
and Feeling Her Cold Hand
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- after throwing Lockwood out of
the room, Heathcliff flung open the window, and cried out for
his long-lost love: "Cathy, Cathy,
come in, Cathy come back to me...Oh my heart's darling. Cathy.
My own, my, Cathy"; half-mad, Heathcliff ran downstairs and rushed
out into the raging storm [Note: The film concluded when
he was reunited to the ghost of his Cathy, who had come back to
Wuthering Heights and was calling his name from the snowy moors.]
- the remainder of the film was a flashback - Heathcliff's
housekeeper Ellen Dean (Flora Robson) told about the tragic love
between Heathcliff and Cathy Earnshaw (Merle Oberon) ("a girl who died")
forty years earlier, and that they were being brought together: "Maybe
you'd know, as I do, that there is a force that brings them back,
if their hearts were wild enough in life"
- orphaned, dirty-faced gypsy Heathcliff (Rex Downing
as child) was adopted by widower Mr. Earnshaw (Cecil Kellaway)
on the streets of London and brought home to Wuthering Heights
to live with his two high-class, manor-born children: young
daughter Catherine or "Cathy" (Sarita Wooten as child) and his
son Hindley (Douglas Scott as child); although Heathcliff was the
stable boy and treated harshly by the tormenting and hateful Hindley
(Hugh Williams as adult), he fell in love with Cathy
- the romantic scenes of young Cathy and Heathcliff
in their make-believe castle on windy Peniston Crag on the atmospheric
moors where they imagined that he was a prince of noble
birth, and she was his queen; they professed their eternal love to
each other; when Mr. Earnshaw died, fortuned changed for Heathcliff;
after many years, Hindley had turned into a dissolute
alcoholic, and continued to bully, demean and order Heathcliff around,
and to call him a "gypsy beggar"
- on Peniston Crag, Cathy suggested to Heathcliff -
a foreshadowing: "Why aren't you a man? Heathcliff, why don't you
run away?...You could come back to me rich and take me away. Why
aren't you my prince like we said long ago? Why can't you rescue
me, Heathcliff?"
- one night with Heathcliff while eavesdropping on
a luxurious party held by their wealthy and glamorous neighbors
the Lintons, Cathy was injured by guard dogs, and was taken under their
care; as Heathcliff left her, he
cursed the Lintons for their snobbery, promising to repay them some
day for taking Cathy away from him: "I'll be back in this house
one day, Judge Linton, and I'll pay you out. I'll bring this house
down in ruins about your heads. That's my curse on you"
- meanwhile, Cathy fell under the seductive spell
of wealthy and glamour in their household and their refined neighbor Edgar
Linton (David Niven); but she was torn and did return
to express her love for Heathcliff when they retreated to their
favorite Peniston Crag make-believe locale; Heathcliff vowed: "Cathy.
You're still my queen"; in the flashback, Ellen described the situation,
in voice-over: "And as time went by, Cathy again was torn between
her wild, uncontrollable passion for Heathcliff and the new life
she had found at the Grange that she could not forget"
- Cathy's love for Heathcliff was eventually
thwarted when he denounced Linton: ("Who turns you into a vain, cheap,
worldly fool? Linton does"); and then Cathy denounced Heathcliff
for his lowly status: ("The people's servant were all you were born
to be, a beggar in the center of the road, begging for favors");
they violently quarreled and Heathcliff struck her twice across the
face: ("That's all I've become to you. A pair of dirty hands. Well,
have them then!")
- in a key scene, Heathcliff overheard Cathy in the
kitchen, without her knowledge, telling
Ellen that she was considering Edgar's proposal of marriage and her
insulting statement about Heathcliff - that she wouldn't marry him
because of his unsuitable low birth: "He gets worse everyday. It
would degrade me to marry him"
- in a rage, Heathcliff left before hearing
Cathy's confession that she wasn't made for Edgar's Heaven, and was
more suited for Heathcliff; she dramatically stated to Ellen her
feelings about him: "He seems to take pleasure in being mean
and brutal. And yet, he's more myself than I am. Whatever our souls
are made of, his and mine are the same. And Linton's is as different
as frost from fire...Ellen, I AM Heathcliff"
- when Cathy realized
Heathcliff had been listening to her initial words and then had fled,
she raced in a driving rainstorm to Peniston Crag to find him -
and to tell him of her long-repressed feelings and love, but Heathcliff
had already disappeared; she collapsed there and suffered from a
bout of pneumonia
The Scene of Heathcliff's Departure After Eavesdropping
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Heathcliff Listening
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"Oh Heathcliff. He gets worse everyday"
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"Ellen, I am Heathcliff!"
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Cathy at Peniston Crag in Driving Rain Looking to Find Heathcliff
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- as a result of Heathcliff's abandonment, Cathy soon
after married Edgar; Heathcliff had left for America,
and then two years later, he suddenly reappeared to see Cathy - he
was transformed into a worldly, refined, wealthy gentleman but also
dark and troubled; he spitefully claimed to Linton and Cathy: "The
truth is, I remembered that my father was an emperor of China and
my mother was an Indian queen, and I went out and claimed my inheritance.
It all turned out just as you once suspected, Cathy: that I had been
kidnapped by wicked sailors and brought to England - that I was of
noble birth"
- he had secretly bought Wuthering Heights from Hindley,
to become the Lintons' neighbor; with the tables turned, Heathcliff
announced to Hindley: "I'm master here now"; to find his revenge
(or to incite Cathy's jealousy), he romanced Edgar's naive sister
Isabella Linton, while still expressing his love for Cathy, but she
refused to listen to him: ("I'm not the Cathy that was. Can you understand
that? I'm somebody else. I'm another man's wife and he loves me.
And I love him"); Cathy realized that Heathcliff's plan was to vindictively
and lovelessly marry Isabella and then neglect and abandon her: "Don't
you see what he's been doing? He's been using you to be near me"
- it was soon proven that Cathy's prediction was correct,
and Isabella was treated coldly and indifferently by Heathcliff after
marriage; when Cathy became ill, Isabella speculated that Cathy's
death might help her own marriage and turn Heathcliff's love toward
her at last
- the long-hindered, passionate love affair of Cathy
and Heathcliff emerged in death; in a memorable,
tragically-romantic deathbed scene in Cathy's bedroom, Heathcliff was
reunited with the heartbroken and seriously-ill Cathy - she was possibly
dying of a broken heart and suffering from an incurable disease
- the two pledged their enduring,
undying love and became reconciled after so many years of mutual
unhappiness and bitterness. They passionately hugged and kissed each
other, finally revealing their truest emotions to each other. Heathcliff
argued as he stood up: "Oh
Cathy, I never broke your heart. You broke it! Cathy! Cathy! You loved
me! What right to throw love away for the poor fancy thing you felt
for him, for a handful of worthiness. Misery and death and all the
evils that God and man could have ever done would never have parted
us. You'd be better alone. You wandered off like a wanton, greedy child
to break your heart and mine." Cathy replied: "Heathcliff,
forgive me. We've so little time." He vowed
to stay with his dying love as her strength ebbed: "I'll never leave
you again"
The Classic Deathbed Sequence
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"Don't let me go"
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"Will you forget me when I'm in the earth?"
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"Cathy! You loved me! What right to throw love away..."
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"Heathcliff, forgive me. We've so little time"
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"I'll never leave you again"
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"Take me to the window."
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Looking Out the Window Together
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"How Beautiful It is"
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- he
heard her claim that he was always the only man she ever loved: "When
you went away that night in the rain, I told you I belonged to him,
that he was my life, my being...It's true. It's true. I'm yours,
Heathcliff. I've never been anyone else's"
- she requested to be
picked up: "Take me to the window. Let me look at the moors with
you once more, my darling. Once more." He carried her in his arms
to her bedroom window for one last look out on the moors and Peniston
Crag where they had played together as children.
- before slumping at his side
after breathing her last breath and dying in his arms, they made
a pact to be together for eternity. She promised to wait for him
there in death until they were reunited again one day: "Heathcliff,
can you see the Crag over there where our castle is? I'll wait for
you 'til you come."
- distraught
by Cathy's death, Heathcliff gave an impassioned plea to his deceased
beloved to haunt him for the rest of his days. He wished that he
wouldn't have to suffer a long separation: "What
do they know of Heaven or Hell, Cathy, who know nothing of life?
Oh, they're praying for you, Cathy. I'll pray one prayer with them
- I repeat 'til my tongue stiffens - Catherine Earnshaw, may you
not rest so long as I live on! I killed you. Haunt me, then! Haunt
your murderer! I know that ghosts have wandered on the Earth. Be
with me always. Take any form, drive me mad, only do not leave me
in this dark alone where I cannot find you. I cannot live without
my life! I cannot die without my soul!" - the flashback ended
- it
was claimed by the family physician, Dr. Kenneth (Donald Crisp), who
entered the room to find Ellen and Lockwood, that after desperately
searching for Cathy's ghost in the snowy cold storm, he thought he
saw Heathcliff walking with his arm around a woman, but then he was
found frozen to death. Ellen informed the doctor that Heathcliff was
not dead, but that his soul had joined his love in death at their favorite
place forevermore: (Ellen: "No,
not dead, Dr. Kenneth. And not alone. He's with her. They've only
just begun to live")
- in
the final memorable image, the young, ghostly spirits of Cathy and
Heathcliff were re-united for eternity (super-imposed as they walked
over the snow) in death on the Peniston Crag moorlands, where they
had spent many happy hours together in their childhood walking joyously
across the heath.
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Young Cathy (Sarita Wooten as child)
Young Heathcliff Tormented by Hindley
Cathy on the Moors With Young Heathcliff
At Peniston Crag Together as Children
Years Later on Peniston Crag as Adults
Eavesdropping on the Lintons
Cathy with Wealthy Fiancee Edgar Linton (David Niven)
Love With Heathcliff Rekindled on Peniston Crag
Cathy Struck Twice Across the Face By Heathcliff
Cathy's Marriage to Edgar Linton
Heathcliff's Return to Wuthering Heights After Two Years
At Wuthering Heights to Hindley: "I'm master here now"
Cathy's Sister-in Law Isabella Hinton - Heathcliff's Future Wife
Now Married, Cathy Refused to Listen to Heathcliff's Confession of Love
Heathcliff's Neglected and Abandoned Wife Isabella - Begged Heathcliff That
She Could Make Him Happy
Cathy Dead in Heathcliff's Arms
Heathcliff's Final Vow and Prayer: "Haunt me, then!"
End of Flashback: Ellen's Final Words About Heathcliff and Cathy
Last Image: Together Reunited on Peniston Crag
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