The story of unfortunate lovers Heathcliff and Cathy who, despite a deep affection for one another, are forced by circumstance and prejudice to live their apart. Heathcliff and Cathy first meet as children when her father brings the abandoned boy to live with them. When the old man dies several years later Cathy’s brother, now the master of the estate, turns Heathcliff out forcing him to live with the servants and working as a stable boy. The barrier of class comes between them and she eventually marries a rich neighbor, Mr. Edgar Linton, at which point Heathcliff disappears. He returns several years later, now a rich man but little can be done.
Starring Merle Oberon, Laurence Olivier, David Niven and William Wyler.
May be suitable for older children.
Parents need to know that kids might try to watch this movie as an alternative to reading the novel for English class, but it only covers a portion of the overall story. And while it’s framed as a ghost story, it’s not really for young horror fans — though the spooky angle might get some kids to sit down and watch a classic they wouldn’t otherwise. Heathcliff has summed up a “romantic” hero for generations of schoolgirls, but he is rarely heroic in the traditional movie sense. Rather, he’s vindictive and obsessed, and determined to make the woman he loves suffer because of his heartache. A lot of Heathcliff’s negatives are attributed to his “gypsy” ancestry, a bit of racism and classed-based discrimination from the old days. – Common Sense Media