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‘Sex Education’ star Emma Mackey plays the ‘Wuthering Heights’ author with profound sensitivity
Dir: Frances O’Connor. Starring: Emma Mackey, Fionn Whitehead, Oliver Jackson-Cohen, Alexandra Dowling, Amelia Gething, Adrian Dunbar, Gemma Jones. 15, 130 minutes.
“How did you write it?” asks Charlotte Brontë (Alexandra Dowling) of her sister Emily ( Emma Mackey ). “How did you write Wuthering Heights ?”. This is where actor-turned-director Frances O’Connor begins her feverish reimagining of Emily Brontë’s brief life – not at the start but at the very end, Emily a wasted figure nearly consumed by tuberculosis. For O’Connor knows how tantalising that question of “how” can be to us.
Wuthering Heights was the only novel Emily wrote before her death, aged 30, in 1848. We don’t know much of who she was beyond those pages – she documented little about herself, and even her surviving diary entries diverge frequently into fantasy. The film, written and directed by O’Connor in her feature debut, stays faithful to that fervent sense of imagination. Having starred in Patricia Rozema’s own daring adaptation of Jane Austen’s Mansfield Park in 1999, O’Connor knows the rules of the period drama well enough to break them. Though it takes a liberal approach to biography, it’s so attuned to Emily’s creative spirit that it’s not implausible that this is how the author might have chosen to envision her own life if given the chance. Emily captures the soul of the artist, if not her reality.
“Her powers were unadapted to the practical business of life,” Charlotte famously wrote of her younger sister. “An interpreter ought always to have stood between her and the world.” It’s this particular description that fuels much of O’Connor’s vision, which offers us a heroine whose innate inability to conform to societal expectations leaves her constantly misunderstood and frequently lonely. She’s a source of concern and frustration for her father, Patrick (Adrian Dunbar), and sisters Charlotte and Anne (Amelia Gething). Her brother Branwell ( Fionn Whitehead ), her closest ally, is largely distracted by his own troubles with drink and opium.
It’s easy to read Emily here as neurodivergent, possibly autistic, as multiple academics have suggested. But O’Connor allows that interpretation to exist without enforcing it, carefully avoiding reductive depictions. There’s an equal sensitivity in Mackey’s performance. Her brows are often furrowed. Her eyes frequently downcast. She also plays her as a self-knowing woman with a profound and intense connection to the world around her.
While Charlotte and Anne swoon over the poetic sermons of William Weightman (Oliver Jackson-Cohen), the village’s new curate, Emily finds his words phony and trite. But when her father demands that she take French lessons from the clergyman, their heated philosophical debates quickly take on a carnal nature. It makes sense, really – the author of one of the most impassioned books ever written deserves an equally impassioned biopic. Mackey and Jackson bring true, tortured desires to their scenes, especially as they hungrily tear through the many layers of her voluminous gowns.
Emily , pointedly, does not wallow in the misery we like to ascribe to her short and frequently tragic life. There is great buoyancy and humour in the film. Here the Yorkshire moors – so dark and stormy in Wuthering Heights – are an equal source of wonderment and solace. The camera swims in Mackey’s eyes, in bold and confrontational close-ups, while Abel Korzeniowski’s score is a battle cry of violins which, at times, deliberately overwhelms the dialogue. O’Connor, in a sense, has challenged us to meet Emily on her own terms, even if those around her would not. “It’s an ugly book,” Charlotte says of Wuthering Heights . “Good,” Emily replies. At that moment, I could have cheered out loud.
‘Emily’ is in cinemas from Friday 14 October
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On Tuesday, TJ Schmidt shared a heartbreaking post on Instagram saying he’d visited Wyoming’s Grand Teton National Park
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Gabby Petito ’s brother has opened up about visiting the place where she was murdered.
It’s been a little over a year since Petito, 22, was murdered by her fiancé, Brian Laundrie, during a cross-country trip . As much of the national attention that fueled the desperate search for the New York native begins to wane, her family has continued efforts to remember and honour her memory.
On Tuesday, Petito’s brother, TJ Schmidt, shared a heartbreaking post on Instagram saying he had visited Wyoming’s Grand Teton National Park, the site where Laundrie killed Petitio sometime in August 2021 and where her body was found on 19 September of that year.
“This post is a tough one for me but visiting where my sister was taken from us was enlightening in many ways as painful as it was,” Mr Schmidt wrote. “But the signs of her watching over were everywhere.”
Mr Schimdt also shared snaps of the park and a picture that showed a tribute with Polaroids of a smiling Petito with her loved ones, and lilac and purple flowers. The post comes just weeks after the Petito family announced support for a bill that would streamline missing person reports nationwide.
Gabby Petito and her brother, TJ Schmidt
On the anniversary of the day that Petito’s remains were found last month, Petito’s father thanked the public for spreading the word about his daughter’s disappearance ultimately helping find her.
“It’s because of all of you we were able to bring [Gabby Petito] home. Today is particularly hard for us but if you can, please take a moment and share a [missing persons] story to help bring them home safe,” Joseph Petito wrote on Instagram.
In addition to endorsing The Help Find The Missing Act federal proposed bill, the family also started the Gabby Petito Foundation in October last year.
The foundation aims at addressing “the needs of organisations that support locating missing persons and to provide aid to organisations that assist victims of domestic violence situations, through education, awareness and prevention strategies”.
Law enforcement officials sound Petito remains last year, weeks after the social media influencer went missing during a “dream” cross-country trip from New York to Oregon with her fiancé.
Police released body camera footage of the couple almost a month before a search got underway for the 22-year-old. The almost hour-long video shows officers from Moab City Police Department separating them after they had an argument.
Her family has since filed a $50m wrongful death lawsuit against the department, alleging that their negligence led to the vlogger’s death.
Petito, from Blue Point, Long Island, was last seen on 24 August when she checked out of a hotel in Salt Lake City, Utah, with Laundrie, her partner of two and a half years. On 15 September 2021, North Port Police in Florida revealed that Laundrie was a “person of interest” in the case.
Two days earlier, Laundrie himself went missing, although his family did not report his absence to the police for several days. He was believed to have headed to the nearby Carlton Reserve with just a backpack, prompting an intense manhunt in the area.
While law enforcement was searching for Laundrie in Florida on 19 September, investigators announced they had located a body believed to be that of Petito in the eastern portion of Grand Teton National Park.
Gabby Petito on police bodycam footage
The discovery was aided by another travel YouTuber who spotted Ms Petito’s van in a video they had been editing.
On 20 October 2021, skeletal human remains found inside the Myakkahatchee Creek Environmental Park in Florida were confirmed to be those of Laundrie.
Autopsy results showed Laundrie died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound, and a notebook found alongside the remains contained a note claiming responsibility for the murder.
Family members and police had conducted a nationwide search for the missing “van life” blogger after her mother, Nicole Schmidt, reported her missing on 11 September, ten days after Laundrie had returned home to North Port, Florida, in the couple’s white Ford transit van without her and declined to cooperate with inquiries from Petito’s family.
The couple had been documenting their travel experiences as “van lifers” since setting out from New York on 2 July via a YouTube channel called Nomadic Statik .
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Gabby Petito and her brother, TJ Schmidt
Gabby Petito and her brother, TJ Schmidt
Gabby Petito on police bodycam footage
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Colorado family pleads for 14-year-old Chloe Campbell's return
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Mr Ramsey said the Boulder police lacked ‘passion’ to find a missing girl and to solve his half-sister’s murder
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The half-brother of JonBenét Ramsey — a six-year-old girl who was murdered in 1996 and whose killer was never caught — has crticised the Boulder , Colorado, police department for its handling of the disappearance of Chloe Campbell.
John Ramsey lashed out at the department on Twitter.
"Damn shame @boulderpolice refused the help of the much more experienced Denver PD," he wrote, linking to an article about an 18-year-old cold case the DPD solved.
Mr Ramsey also told The Daily Mail that the department’s “delay” and “inaction” should be examined after Chloe is found and returned to her parents.
“It’s a lack of passion and heart, that’s what we’ve been up against, apathy and you see it playing out here in the Chloe Campbell case, it is the same thing we were up against. Where is the passion?” he told the outlet.
Mr Ramsey also criticised the Boulder Police Department after the Denver Police Department announced it had solved a cold case from 2004.
Denver police announced that the department had arrested Jason Groshart, 49, in a sexual assault and burglary case that occurred in 2004.
The department issued a statement on Wednesday announcing the arrest.
"The arrest of Groshart demonstrates our commitment to victims of crime and that the Denver Police Department never forgets," Denver Chief of Police Ron Thomas said in the statement. "We will continue to pursue and bring to justice those who harm our community. Groshart committed a crime of violence against a member of our community and thanks to the Genetic Genealogy & Familial Match Searching grant, we hope we are able to provide some relief to the survivor."
The Boulder Police department has not cateogorised the death of JonBenét a cold case and has reportedly refused to allow independent investigators examine the DNA evidence connected in the case, according to Fox News . Some investigators wish to compare the DNA from her death to potential new suspects in an effort to bring the case to a close.
JonBenét was reported missing by her mother in December 1996 and said she found a ransom note demanding $118,000 in exchange for the girl. Her body was found later that day in the home's basement.
The girl's cause of death was determined to be strangulation and a blow to the head. No suspects have ever been convicted.
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Chloe Campbell, 14, was last seen at a football game at Boulder High School
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