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Wuthering Heights

 
Movies:

Wuthering Heights

  • Director: Suri Krishnamma
  • AMG Rating: starstar
  • Genre: Romance
  • Movie Type: Teen Movie, Musical Romance
  • Themes: Star-Crossed Lovers, Class Differences
  • Main Cast: Erika Christensen, Mike Vogel, Chris Masterson, Johnny Whitworth, Katherine Heigl
  • Release Year: 2003
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 90 minutes

Plot

Leave it to MTV to cook up a musical version of Emily Brontë's brooding 19th century British novel Wuthering Heights, updated to the 21st century and relocated to Southern California. This time around, the kindly Mr. Earnshaw (John Doe), father of spoiled-rotten Cate (not Cathy) and Hendrix (not Hindley) Earnshaw, lives in a reconverted lighthouse which he has christened Wuthering Heights. One day, Earnshaw brings home an abandoned child named Heath (not Heathcliff), whom he semi-adopts, much to the dismay of his natural son, Hendrix, but to the delight of the willful Cate. Upon reaching adulthood, Heath (Mike Vogel) declares his love for Cate (Erika Christensen), but they are kept separated by the envious Hendrix (Johnny Whitworth) and by the covetous Cate's intention to opt for wealth and security by wedding preppy snob Edward (not Edgar) Linton (Christopher Masterson). The spurned Heath decides to get even with Cate by spitefully entering into a marriage with Edward's sister, Isabel (not Isabella, played by Katherine Heigl), who manages to entrap the sexy Heath (who has achieved a measure of fame as a rock singer) with the help of her bitchy best friend, Raquelle (Aimee Osbourne), a character with surprisingly no counterpart in the Brontë original. The original songs were penned by Jim Steinman, the man largely responsible for Meat Loaf's classic album Bat out of Hell. Originally titled Wuthering Heights, CA, apparently out of concern that somewhere, someone might confuse this opus with the original novel, Wuthering Heights first aired on September 14, 2003. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

Cast

Joe Doe - Mr. Earnshaw

Credit

Suri Krishnamma - Director, Emily Brontë - Book Author

Similar Movies

William Shakespeare's Romeo + Juliet; Hamlet; O; Carmen: A Hip Hopera; Save the Last Dance; crazy/beautiful; Wuthering Heights
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Wikipedia: Wuthering Heights (2003 film)
Top
Wuthering Heights
Directed by Suri Krishnamma
Produced by Donald L. West
Written by Max Enscoe
Annie deYoung
Starring Erika Christensen
Mike Vogel
Christopher Masterson
Music by Stephen Trask
Cinematography Claudio Chea
Editing by Jeff Wishengrad
Distributed by MTV
Release date(s) 14 September 2003
Running time 90 min.
Language English

Wuthering Heights was a modern-day adaptation of the classic novel that aired on MTV in 2003 and was later released on DVD. It stars Erika Christensen, Mike Vogel, Christopher Masterson, Katherine Heigl, John Doe, and Aimee Osbourne.[1] The screenplay was by Max Enscoe and Annie deYoung, from an original screenplay by Jim Steinman and Patricia Knop. Although set in California, it was filmed on location in Cabo Rojo, Puerto Rico.

The executive producer was Jim Steinman. It features his song "The Future Ain't What It Used to Be", which originally appeared on Original Sin, the concept album he wrote and produced for Pandora's Box. Wuthering Heights is one of Steinman's favourite books, and it was the inspiration for his song "It's All Coming Back to Me Now."[2]

Contents

Soundtrack album

The original soundtrack album (produced by Steinman, Steve Rinkoff, Jeff Bova, and Pat Thrall) was co-released by Ravenous Records and the MTV Original Movies label in November 2003. The track list is:

  • "Prelude: The Future Ain't What It Used To Be" (Jim Steinman)
Vocals by Erika Christensen
  • "More" (Andrew Eldritch/Steinman)
Vocals by Erika Christensen and Mike Vogel
  • "I Will Crumble" (Hewitt Huntwork)
Vocals by Erika Christensen and Mike Vogel
  • "If It Ain't Broke (Break It)" (Steinman)
Vocals by Mike Vogel
  • "Shine" (Huntwork)
Vocals by Mike Vogel
  • "The Future Ain't What It Used To Be" (Steinman)
Vocals by Erika Christensen

"If It Ain't Broke (Break It)" and "The Future Ain't What It Used To Be" were both recorded by Meat Loaf for his 2006 Bat out of Hell III: The Monster is Loose album. The latter had previously appeared on the Steinman-produced 1989 concept album Original Sin, by Pandora's Box. "More" was originally written and recorded for The Sisters of Mercy's 1990 album Vision Thing.

Personnel

Production notes

This movie was filmed in Puerto Rico.

References

External links



 
 

 

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