The Prague Post - Bronte biopic 'Emily' delves into imagined author's darkness

EUR -
AED 4.189406
AFN 79.799397
ALL 98.243881
AMD 437.606371
ANG 2.041357
AOA 1045.955617
ARS 1356.067909
AUD 1.755192
AWG 2.046619
AZN 1.932429
BAM 1.956276
BBD 2.306961
BDT 139.633942
BGN 1.956276
BHD 0.428404
BIF 3401.426803
BMD 1.140627
BND 1.469557
BOB 7.894919
BRL 6.344507
BSD 1.142578
BTN 97.82878
BWP 15.285716
BYN 3.739109
BYR 22356.294261
BZD 2.295058
CAD 1.561803
CDF 3285.006289
CHF 0.936917
CLF 0.02769
CLP 1062.596781
CNY 8.200483
CNH 8.197791
COP 4698.939459
CRC 582.441577
CUC 1.140627
CUP 30.226622
CVE 110.291809
CZK 24.789538
DJF 203.459456
DKK 7.459736
DOP 67.446395
DZD 149.383311
EGP 56.363182
ERN 17.109409
ETB 156.014423
FJD 2.567324
FKP 0.842447
GBP 0.842564
GEL 3.113554
GGP 0.842447
GHS 11.710847
GIP 0.842447
GMD 80.984647
GNF 9903.407273
GTQ 8.780134
GYD 239.398192
HKD 8.950063
HNL 29.795242
HRK 7.533954
HTG 149.826419
HUF 403.460444
IDR 18610.474345
ILS 3.995127
IMP 0.842447
INR 97.849278
IQD 1496.763826
IRR 48034.655159
ISK 143.992681
JEP 0.842447
JMD 182.474355
JOD 0.808705
JPY 164.97519
KES 147.677055
KGS 99.74746
KHR 4584.114285
KMF 492.195325
KPW 1026.564541
KRW 1551.477669
KWD 0.349055
KYD 0.952131
KZT 582.721645
LAK 24666.995936
LBP 102372.684264
LKR 341.803084
LRD 227.935405
LSL 20.286431
LTL 3.367976
LVL 0.689954
LYD 6.221512
MAD 10.456342
MDL 19.691787
MGA 5154.252871
MKD 61.549961
MMK 2394.895664
MNT 4082.635278
MOP 9.233744
MRU 45.371029
MUR 51.693175
MVR 17.571372
MWK 1981.181576
MXN 21.788222
MYR 4.822005
MZN 72.95484
NAD 20.286431
NGN 1782.481279
NIO 42.050221
NOK 11.524418
NPR 156.526048
NZD 1.894006
OMR 0.436906
PAB 1.142578
PEN 4.142307
PGK 4.696142
PHP 63.453573
PKR 322.257033
PLN 4.286595
PYG 9121.217142
QAR 4.166813
RON 5.04283
RSD 117.198488
RUB 89.56531
RWF 1617.1931
SAR 4.285142
SBD 9.521261
SCR 16.764875
SDG 684.963904
SEK 10.989493
SGD 1.469704
SHP 0.896354
SLE 25.720962
SLL 23918.383535
SOS 652.958718
SRD 42.137034
STD 23608.681328
SVC 9.99743
SYP 14830.26304
SZL 20.27993
THB 37.286975
TJS 11.295546
TMT 3.992195
TND 3.388624
TOP 2.671466
TRY 44.769936
TTD 7.731879
TWD 34.14205
TZS 3036.33838
UAH 47.316001
UGX 4136.00536
USD 1.140627
UYU 47.481542
UZS 14598.548546
VES 112.226419
VND 29717.902586
VUV 136.34003
WST 3.134419
XAF 656.116486
XAG 0.031688
XAU 0.000344
XCD 3.082602
XDR 0.815998
XOF 656.116486
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.571612
ZAR 20.277969
ZMK 10267.01503
ZMW 28.306881
ZWL 367.281512
  • CMSC

    -0.0700

    22.17

    -0.32%

  • BCE

    -0.0850

    21.78

    -0.39%

  • SCS

    -0.0250

    10.35

    -0.24%

  • BCC

    -0.7100

    86.8

    -0.82%

  • RELX

    -0.0900

    53.68

    -0.17%

  • RBGPF

    1.0800

    69.04

    +1.56%

  • GSK

    0.0550

    41.2

    +0.13%

  • RYCEF

    0.1300

    12

    +1.08%

  • NGG

    -0.3000

    70.7

    -0.42%

  • RIO

    -0.2000

    59.03

    -0.34%

  • CMSD

    -0.0510

    22.184

    -0.23%

  • JRI

    0.1100

    13.08

    +0.84%

  • BTI

    0.3200

    47.79

    +0.67%

  • BP

    0.2250

    29.29

    +0.77%

  • VOD

    -0.0170

    9.94

    -0.17%

  • AZN

    0.5300

    72.88

    +0.73%

Bronte biopic 'Emily' delves into imagined author's darkness
Bronte biopic 'Emily' delves into imagined author's darkness / Photo: Michael loccisano - GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP/File

Bronte biopic 'Emily' delves into imagined author's darkness

Was reclusive 19th-century author Emily Bronte inspired to write "Wuthering Heights" after experimenting with opium, tattoos and a steamy affair with the local clergyman?

Text size:

Actress Emma Mackey doesn't think so -- but she portrays Bronte doing all those things and more in "Emily," a new drama which deliberately ignores the trappings and conventions of the traditional period biopic.

"No. I don't. But also, I don't care!" the star, best known for Netflix hit "Sex Education," told AFP.

"It's not a documentary -- I had to wrap my head around just letting go of all the biographical elements, and really hold on to the fact that this is just a story" that writer-director Frances O'Connor "wanted me to tell," she said.

The question of how a shy Victorian woman who spent most of her short life on the remote Yorkshire moors penned a dark, passionate Gothic novel that shocked its contemporary readers has long vexed academics and fans.

"Emily," released Friday by Warner Bros in the United Kingdom, offers a non-literal answer, allowing elements of "Wuthering Heights" to "seep in and feed that real world" of its author, said Mackey.

Its heroine is led astray by her rebellious, troubled brother Branwell -- a prototype for her novel's brooding Heathcliff -- and romps with her father's curate William Weightman, who has parallels to the book's gentlemanly Edgar.

According to Mackey, in reality Emily and her sisters Charlotte and Anne probably drew their complex creative ideas from the extensive library of books, including Gothic literature, that they had access to growing up.

But, she notes, there were macabre elements in the Bronte family's real world too.

"Emily Bronte's actual room looks onto a graveyard in Haworth (in Yorkshire)... I think that innate morbidity was 100 percent there," she said.

The sisters would have seen people in the nearby mill town "dying of TB (tuberculosis) from the water that is infected by your own graveyard," Mackey added.

"Death was everywhere. They saw kids dying. It was very tangible to them."

- 'What's behind the door' -

The movie, which arrives in US theaters early next year, was a hit with critics following its world premiere at the Toronto film festival, where Mackey sat down with AFP last month.

The Guardian dubbed it "beautifully acted, lovingly shot, fervently and speculatively imagined."

Variety praised Mackey's "psychologically vivid Emily," although it noted that "Bronte purists may quibble with the futzing of the timeline."

Mackey, who has a reduced role in the upcoming fourth season of Netflix's raunchy teen comedy series "Sex Education" and is taking on more big-screen projects, agreed that "people are going to be probably very angry with this film" because they "care so much about" Bronte.

But the chance to work with female directors like O'Connor -- and Greta Gerwig in the upcoming "Barbie," starring Ryan Gosling and Margot Robbie -- has "been so interesting," she said.

"Seeing how they interact with people on set, how sets feel when they're led by women is really interesting -- there's this whole new energy that happens."

While she does not view Emily Bronte -- who wrote under a male pseudonym -- as a feminist per se, Mackey sees the movie as "a thank you for the impact that she's had on people, and women, and readers across the world, still today."

"There's something fascinating about a recluse and someone who is shrouded in mystery," said Mackey.

"It's like having a 'Do Not Enter' sign on your door. You want to enter and you want to see what's behind the door."

W.Urban--TPP