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Part 1 of 5 of the 1978 adaptation of Emily Bronte's classic novel. Newly moved into the area, Mr Lockwood makes the fateful journey to visit his landlord Heathcliff at his desolate moorland farmhouse. Finding him and most of the occupants somewhat morose and surly, he is nevertheless forced to stop overnight after a snowstorm prevents him from leaving. But during the night he has an unnerving experience with a mysterious figure at the window begging to be let in and as he tries to calm his nerves he hears the story of the family, of Heathcliff and the ghostly figure of Catherine Earnshaw...

Starring Ken Hutchison, Richard Kay, Barbara Keogh, Brian Wilde, Cathryn Harrison, David Wilkinson, John Duttine, Kay Adshead, John Collin, Patricia Healey, Pat Heywood, Paul Dawkins, Maggie Wilkinson, Dennis Burgess, Wendy Williams, Barry Hart, Robin Glynn, Dale Tarry, Maria Swailes, Mitchall Varnam, Grant Bardsley and Julia Stark. Originally broadcast on September 24th 1978, this was recently repeated on BBC4 this week, which is why I decided to upload it here. This is my aunt's favourite version of Wuthering Heights, due to it being faithful to the novel and not curtailing it at Cathy's death (sorry, spoiler alert). However for me and possibly for some others, this is a little heavy going. However, the weather in the UK is rainy and windswept, so at least it sets the mood, as does the haunting doomy theme tune. So sit back and watch as we begin the story of how Cathy and Heathcliff first came to know each other.

Category

πŸ“Ί
TV
Transcript
00:00.
00:30ΒΆΒΆ
00:59ΒΆΒΆ
01:23Mr. Heathcliff?
01:25ΒΆΒΆ
01:29Mr. Lockwood, sir, your new tenant.
01:32I do myself the honor of calling on you as soon as possible
01:37to express the hope that I have not inconvenienced you
01:40by occupying Thrustcross Grange so soon.
01:44Thrustcross Grange is my own.
01:47I don't allow anybody to inconvenience me.
02:02Joseph!
02:04Take his horse.
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03:02Down, get down, down, down, down, get down.
03:32Not the bitten, are you?
03:36Mercifully not!
03:38What do you want to do to leave a stranger with a brood of tigers?
03:42They won't meddle with persons who touch nothing.
03:47The guests are so rare in my house that my dogs and I hardly know how to receive them.
04:02They're so smart...
04:05Are you ready?
04:07They're so quiet, thousand?
04:08Let's go loud.
04:11I'll stop.
04:12I could turn to explore some slices
04:15but that's not easy to eat.
04:20So let me pose these alive and another...
04:22Here you go.
04:34Joseph!
04:37Joseph!
04:52Mrs Heathcliff?
05:11Mrs Heathcliff?
05:14Mrs Heathcliff?
05:20Rough weather.
05:22You should not have come out.
05:24It was fine enough when I left the Grange.
05:35Allow me.
05:37I can get it for myself.
05:55Were you asked to tea?
05:57I should be glad to have a cup.
05:59Were you asked?
06:01You are the proper person to ask me.
06:14Do you not know the risk of being lost in the marshes?
06:24Perhaps one of your lads could guide me back to Thrushcross Cranes when the time comes if you can spare me one.
06:31No I could not.
06:33Catherine make the tea.
06:35Is he to have any?
06:36Get it ready will you?
06:39Hayton!
06:41Hayton!
06:43Hayton!
06:45It is strange.
06:47It is strange how custom can mould our tastes and ideas.
06:52Many could not imagine the existence of happiness in the life of such complete exile from the world.
06:58Yet Mr Heathcliff I'll venture to say that surrounded as you are by your family and with your amiable lady as presiding genius over your home and heart.
07:07My amiable lady?
07:09Mrs Heathcliff.
07:10Mrs Heathcliff your wife.
07:16You mean that her spirit has taken the post of ministering angel and guards the fortune of Wuthering Heights even though her body is gone?
07:28Is that it?
07:30Well no.
07:31I...
07:32I thought...
07:34I thought that this lady was...
07:36That lady's name sir is Catherine Heathcliff assuredly.
07:40She's not my wife or my daughter-in-law.
07:44Ah!
07:45Certainly.
07:46I see now.
07:47Then...
07:48Then you sir are the favoured possessor of so fine a lady.
07:51And happily for your conjecture sir we neither of us owner.
07:58Your mate is dead.
08:00Ah.
08:02Then this young man...
08:05Is not my son.
08:06This tea is most refreshing.
08:18Me name is Ayrton Ernsthorn.
08:19I'll counsel thee to respect it.
08:22Show no disrespect.
08:36I wonder how your compassion to sit there.
08:49He hide on us.
08:50When all of them's going out.
08:53Ah but you're a naughty.
08:55It's no use talking.
08:57Ah you'll never mend your old ways.
09:00Look a great devil like your mother have for you.
09:03You scandalous old hypocrite.
09:09Are you not afraid of being carried away bodily whenever you mention the devil's name.
09:15Look Joseph.
09:17I shall soon be competent at the black art.
09:21The red cow did not die by chance you know.
09:23And your rheumatism can hardly be reckoned among providential visitations.
09:28Now.
09:30Be off.
09:31Or I'll hurt you seriously.
09:34Go.
09:35I'm looking at you.
09:37Oh you're wicked.
09:40You're wicked.
09:42Oh.
09:43The Lord deliver us from evil.
09:47A little witch.
09:48A little witch.
09:49A little witch.
09:50A little witch.
09:51A little witch.
09:57Mrs Heathcliff.
10:00Do point out some landmark by which I may know my way home.
10:05Take the road you came.
10:07It's brief advice but as sound as I can give.
10:11And if you hear tomorrow that I have been found dead in a bog you will not blame yourself for it.
10:16I cannot escort you.
10:18They wouldn't let me go to the end of the garden wall.
10:20I would have swayed Mr Heathcliff to give me a guide.
10:29I hope there will be a lesson to you to make no more rash journeys on these hills.
10:36If you will not give me a guide Mr Heathcliff I fear I shall be compelled to stay.
10:41I keep no accommodation for visitors.
10:44I could sleep on a chair in this room.
10:47No.
10:49It'll not suit me to permit anyone the range of this place while I'm off my guard.
10:55Mr Heathcliff!
10:57I'll go with him as far as Park.
11:01You will go with him to hell.
11:06And the horses to look after themselves!
11:13Somebody must go.
11:14Not at your command!
11:17If you set store on him you'd better be quiet.
11:22Then I hope his ghost will haunt you yet.
11:25I'll go ahead.
11:42Sam!
11:44There is a room that Mr Heathcliff will allow no one to lodge in.
11:47If I take you to it, swear you will not tell him!
11:50Oh yes!
11:56Don't make no noise, sir!
11:57No noise, sir!
12:14I beg you not to tell him, sir!
12:17No!
12:18No!
12:19No!
12:23No!
12:25No!
12:26No!
12:27No!
12:30No!
12:31All right.
13:01All right.
13:31All right.
13:33Linton.
13:35Heathcliff.
13:37Earnshaw.
13:39Linton.
13:41Seventy times seven.
13:51And the first of the 71st.
13:55Your pious discourse.
13:57Yes, of course.
13:59Yes.
14:01Yes.
14:03Yes.
14:05Yes.
14:07Yes.
14:09Yes.
14:11Yes.
14:13Yes.
14:15Yes.
14:17Yes.
14:19Yes.
14:21Yes.
14:23Yes.
14:25Yes.
14:27Yes.
14:29Yes.
14:31Yes.
14:33Yes.
14:35Yes.
14:37Yes.
14:39Yes.
14:41Yes.
14:43Yes.
14:45Yes.
14:47Yes.
14:49Yes.
14:51Yes.
14:53Yes.
14:55Yes.
14:57Yes.
14:59Yes.
15:01Yes.
15:03Yes.
15:05Yes.
15:07Yes.
15:09Yes.
15:11Yes.
15:13Yes.
15:15Yes.
15:17Yes.
15:19Yes.
15:21Yes.
15:23Yes.
15:24Yes.
15:26Yes.
15:27SandΓ© times seven.
15:28Yes.
15:29Yes.
15:30A death casual with my soul.
15:32Yes.
15:33That woe art my man.
15:53I don't know.
16:23I don't know.
16:53I don't know.
16:54Oh, let me in.
16:55Let me go if you want me to let you in.
16:59I'll never let you in.
17:02None of you back but 20 years.
17:0620 years?
17:09It's been 20 years.
17:11God confound you, Lockwood!
17:19Who sewed you into this room?
17:21You're so unselessing!
17:33I actually wanted proof the place was haunted at my expense.
17:36Well, it is, yes!
17:38It's swarming with ghosts and goblins.
17:42You have reason in shutting it up, I assure you.
17:45If that fiend had gone in through the window, she probably would have strangled me.
17:53She's a queen.
17:54She's a queen.
17:55She's a queen.
17:56She's a queen.
17:57She's a queen.
17:58Learned sure old Lynn to know her if she's called me.
18:02I'll no longer endure the persecutions of your ancestor, Mr Heathcliff.
18:08I need not dread a repetition of my intrusion!
18:20Cathy?
18:21Cathy?
18:26Cathy?
18:31Hear me this time.
18:35Come in.
18:36Hear me this time, my hearts, darling.
18:47Cathy!
18:58Where are our presents, Father?
19:00You promised us presents.
19:01Yes, our presents.
19:03Our presents, Father.
19:04I've never been beaten with anything so much in all my life.
19:07But we must take it as a gift from God.
19:09God?
19:10It's as dark as if it came from the devil.
19:13Is it to live here, Father?
19:15Yes, Sindley.
19:16It is.
19:17I found him houseless, starving, as good as Dom.
19:22Not us all know him or even caring who he belonged to.
19:26Would you expect me to leave him in the streets of Liverpool?
19:28Yes, I would.
19:29I must be mad to bring a gypsy brat into the house.
19:34We've two bairns of our own to feed and fend for.
19:37Cathy, I brought you the rining crop you asked for, but I lost it to tend him to the lad.
19:43Cathy!
19:44It's broken!
19:47What, lad?
19:48It's broken!
19:49Helen!
19:50Yes, sir?
19:51Wash it!
19:54We shall call him Heathcliff.
19:57Our son's name?
19:59He's dead.
20:01He's got no use for it now.
20:03The boy needs one.
20:05Mr Hindley!
20:15Hindley!
20:17Yes, Father?
20:18Come here!
20:24You will treat him as a brother.
20:26Do you understand?
20:27He's fatherless.
20:29You will not persecute him.
20:32Do you understand?
20:33Yes, Father.
20:34Yes, Father.
20:35Right.
20:36To bed.
20:37Yes, Father.
20:46He has market devil on him.
21:04Helen!
21:05Helen!
21:06Helen!
21:07How did this boy get here?
21:08Why is he not with the children?
21:09They will not have him bed with it, sir.
21:10I confess, I thought it might be gone by tomorrow.
21:11See you.
21:12See you.
21:13No, no!
21:14I won't sleep with it!
21:15It's a ditty!
21:16I won't sleep with it!
21:17I won't sleep with it!
21:18It's a ditty!
21:19Ah!
21:20Ah!
21:21Ah!
21:22Ah!
21:23Ah!
21:24Ah!
21:25Ah!
21:26Ah!
21:27Ah!
21:28Ah!
21:29Ah!
21:30Ah!
21:31Ah!
21:32Ah!
21:34Ah!
21:35Ah!
21:37Ah!
21:38Ah!
21:39Bye!
21:40Ah!
21:41It's a ditty!
22:01I thought I might devote an hour this morning to explaining the theory of Pythagoras.
22:06If your pupils have the courtesy to appear.
22:11Good morning, Mr Earnshaw. Mr Earnshaw.
22:24Hendley?
22:26Yes, father?
22:28Mr Graham has been waiting for half an hour.
22:30And he has to be at Thrushcross Grange by 10.
22:33Has he, father?
22:35Are you being impertinent, Hendley?
22:37No, father!
22:39Heathcliff!
22:40That horse went lame.
22:42Did you let him walk?
22:44We didn't want to be late for our lessons.
22:46Did you let him walk?
22:48When you bought us a horse each.
22:50He wanted the finest and he took it.
22:52If it's gone lame now, it's his own fault.
22:54Stay with us, Colton!
22:55Get to your lessons!
23:01Wild like animals!
23:03Or perhaps the loss of their mother...
23:05That would have made no difference.
23:07Cathy was born mischievous and wayward.
23:09As for Hendley, Spike and his jealousy are growing and growing until they pass control him.
23:14And I will not enjoy his jealousy!
23:16Well, Hendley's of an age to go to college now.
23:19Is he?
23:20Oh, yes.
23:22Can you arrange that?
23:24If you wish it, Mr. Earnshaw.
23:26McGee!
23:27Gah!
23:28He's out of my way.
23:29He's out of my way.
23:30Never.
23:31I don't like mine.
23:32Come on.
23:33Come on.
23:34Come on.
23:35Come on.
23:36Come on.
23:37Come on.
23:38Come on.
23:39Come on.
23:40Come on.
23:41Come on.
23:42You must take justice with me.
23:56I don't like mine.
24:01If you don't, I'll tell your father you'll flog me three times this week.
24:16Throw it.
24:17And then I'll tell him how you'll say you'll throw me out of doors when he dies.
24:31Master Hindley?
24:33Miss Kathy?
24:34Heathcliff?
24:35I must come in for your lesson.
24:37Take it then, Gypsy.
24:39And I hope it breaks your neck and kicks your brains out.
24:49Will you take care of this then, lad?
24:50All right.
24:51Goodbye, Master Hindley.
24:52You're going now.
24:53Bye-bye.
24:54Take care.
24:55Come on.
24:56Goodbye.
24:57Come on.
24:58Bye.
24:59Hindley's gone.
25:00Are you glad, Heathcliff?
25:14I am.
25:15She's too fond of a lad.
25:16Do them all fetch her.
25:17Are you?
25:18I'm?
25:19I'm?
25:20I'm?
25:21I'm?
25:22I'm?
25:23I'm?
25:24I'm?
25:25I'm?
25:26I'm?
25:27I'm?
25:28I'm.
25:29I'm?
25:30I'm?
25:31I'm?
25:32I'm?
25:33I'm?
25:34I'm?
25:35I'm?
25:36I'm?
25:37I'm?
25:38I'm?
25:39I'm?
25:40I'm?
25:41I'm?
25:42devil will fetch you one of these days sure as she lives
26:12Oh
26:42I don't know.
27:11And the priest shall come and look, and behold, if the plague be spread in the house, it is a fretting leprosy in the house, it is unclean.
27:22And he shall break down the house, the stones of it and the timber thereof, and up, and all the mortar of the house, and he shall carry them forth out of the city into an unclean place.
27:35Look, will you just stop here.
27:37For over, he that goeth into the house, all the while, all the while that it is shut up, shall be unclean.
27:44Oh, Mr. Cowboy, you badder, sir.
27:48All the while that it is shut up, shall be unclean till the end.
27:52Miss Cathy!
27:57Oh, Lord, have mercy on your soul.
27:59The Sabbath knocked on and the sound of scriptures of your lunch and your darby licking.
28:02Shame on you.
28:05Oh, Miss Cathy!
28:08You're worse than your brother in the year.
28:11Your mother and I must rule the day we haven't read you.
28:14No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no.
28:20I cannot love you.
28:22Now, let's say your prayers and ask for God's pardon.
28:25And if the priest should come in and lead upon it and behold the plague hath not spread in the place.
28:34How did the house would pass with him play?
28:36Why cannot you all be a good lass?
28:38I can't you always be a good man, Father?
28:42two birds and seed of wood and scarlet and this and he shall kill the one of the birds
28:49in an earthen vessel of a running water
28:51this is the law of leprosy
29:12this is the law of leprosy
29:42time for prayers mister
29:52mister
30:34nay nay
30:36he's dead
30:40he's dead
31:12earth to earth ashes to ashes dust to dust
31:16ensure uncertain hope of the resurrection to eternal life through our lord jesus christ
31:22we shall change our vile body that it may be like unto his glorious body
31:26according to the mighty working whereby he is able to subdue all things to himself
31:32he is quite delightful
31:38i protest i've never seen so many lovely things
31:42the pewter dishes and the delve case and the scrap floor and the fireplace
31:50so much room to move about in
31:54oh
31:56it's so beautiful
31:58i've got to hurry and come home to a wedding it's sinful
32:02none the less
32:04i intend some changes to be made
32:06from henceforth joseph and ellen
32:08you were caught to yourselves in the kitchen
32:10and to find such a lovely sister we should be such friends shall we not
32:22heathcliff
32:24heathcliff
32:26don't run away heathcliff
32:28are you not sad
32:32sad
32:34yes my father was so kind to you and now he's dead
32:36is that not sad
32:38shall you miss him
32:40yes
32:42i believe you
32:44and you shall have good cause
32:48my father gave you a home
32:50i shall not go against his wishes
32:52but it is time that you and i assumed our separate tasks in life
32:56i as master here you a servant
32:58from tomorrow you will work in the fields and you will eat with the rest of the servants
33:02and no more lessons
33:04come and greet your new mistress
33:06i won't serve you
33:08then you must go elsewhere
33:10walk the roads
33:12find another shelter
33:14what an unpleasant route
33:16come
33:18show me my room
33:20Kathy
33:22what splendid times we shall have
33:24is it awful of me
33:26i cannot endure funerals
33:28or black clothing
33:30or blonde faces
33:34you think me silly and ill-natured
33:36i'm sure
33:38i don't mean to be
33:44i hate it when people die
33:46i don't want to be concerned with such things
33:58death makes me afraid
34:00which is to be my room
34:02that one
34:04i feel like the delicate simplicity of the place
34:08do you
34:10what a noise
34:14yes
34:28joseph
34:30joseph
34:32joseph
34:34joseph
34:40joseph
34:42when was this boy last thrashed
34:46yesterday mister
34:48a whole day without a thrashing
34:50thrash him again
34:52aye mister
34:54tell you I'm mixed Joseph
34:58what are you smiling at go to your room
35:24I will send Joseph up to set you some more chapters and you will not come down until you have them by heart
35:54they won't be home till sunset we could climb Peniston Crab we haven't done that since Hindley came back
36:05I'll show you everything I learned from Mr. Graham this morning
36:11I'll be flung
36:24it's past sunset they'll be home by now
36:48do you know what that house is
36:53it's Lusk Lusk Lusk Lange
36:54do you think the lintons spend their Sunday evenings shivering in corners reading sermons
37:00while their father and mother sit eating and drinking and laughing in front of the fire
37:04do you think they do
37:05let's see if they do Heathcliff
37:08come on
37:09I can find her nowhere sir
37:16and Heathcliff
37:21I haven't set eyes on him since morning sir
37:25bolt the doors
37:32no one shall let them in
37:35do you hear
37:35no one
37:37let them perish
37:42let go it's mine
38:00what children they are
38:02I wouldn't change my life for theirs
38:05not even if I could throw Joseph off the roof and paint the house with Hindley's blood
38:10mumma, papa, papa, come quickly
38:21mother
38:22father
38:23son, father, papa, beste
38:49Oh
39:19let me go you bastard
39:21let me go
39:23come on let me go you bastard
39:25what pray Robert?
39:27it's a girl sir
39:29you'll go to the gallows for this
39:31Mr Linton don't lay by your guns
39:33bring them inside we'll furnish a reception for them
39:49so
39:51you thought to rob me is that it
39:53father
39:55it's Miss Earnshaw
39:57Miss Earnshaw what sky in the country with a gypsy
39:59I've never heard of such an instance
40:01it is mother
40:03it is I've seen her in church
40:05yeah it is
40:07she could be lame for life
40:09Jenny Robert put her on the sofa
40:11Jenny hot water
40:13well who is this then Mary
40:15wicked boy by all of us quite unfit for a decent home
40:17oh this is that strange acquisition my late neighbor made
40:21did you hear the language Linton?
40:23I'm shocked that they should have heard it
40:27come on lads the kitchen for you
40:35Robert cut him out
40:41tell Mr Earnshaw what's happened
40:43say I'll call on him tomorrow
40:45say I'll call on him tomorrow
40:49come on lads
41:13just come
41:29ee
41:31why Cathy you're quite abusive
41:33where's he priest?
41:35Isabella Linton is not to be compared with her is she cancer?
41:37I'm prepared with her consequences. Isabella hasn't her natural advantages.
41:42But she must mind and not grow wild again here. I'll do that Ellen.
41:47We mustn't disarrange her curls.
41:50Why Kathy you look like a lady.
41:53Five weeks in civilized company can quite transform a girl.
41:57Where's Heathcliff?
42:00Heathcliff?
42:02You may come forward and wish Miss Kathy welcome.
42:05Heathcliff!
42:07Have you forgotten me Heathcliff?
42:11How black you look.
42:13How funny and grim.
42:15Shake hands Heathcliff.
42:17Once in a while is permitted.
42:19I won't be laughed at!
42:21Couldn't help it.
42:22It was just that you look so odd.
42:24If you wash your face and brush your hair it'll be all right.
42:27But you're so dirty.
42:29You don't have to touch me!
42:30I want to be dirty!
42:31I like being dirty and I will be dirty!
42:37What is it?
43:01hello
43:10met me decent
43:11I'll go up with good
43:12high time, Heathcliff
43:14you've grieved, Miss Cathy
43:16she's sorry she ever came back home, I dare say
43:18did she say she was sorry?
43:20she cried last night when I told her you were off again
43:22well, I cried last night, too
43:24and I had more to cry about than her
43:25you had the reason for going to bed with a proud heart and an empty stomach
43:28proud people breed sad sorrows for themselves
43:32nay
43:33I'll steal time
43:35to arrange you so that Edgar Linton
43:37shall look quite a doll beside you
43:39you're younger than him, but you're taller
43:41and you're twice as broad across the shoulders
43:43you could knock him down in a twinkling
43:45don't you feel you could?
43:47I could knock him down 20 times
43:49that won't make me more handsome than him
43:51oh, Heathcliff
43:52come to the glass
43:53and I'll show you what you would wish
43:55mate, you see those two lines between your eyes
43:59and those sunken brows
44:01they're like a couple of black fiends
44:04now look
44:05don't you consider yourself rather handsome
44:08you're fit for a prince in disguise
44:10who knows but that your father was emperor of China
44:15and your mother an Indian queen
44:17able to buy up with one week's income
44:19thrushcross Grange and Wuthering Heights together
44:22and you were stolen away by wicked sailors
44:24and brought to England
44:25if I were you
44:27I'd frame high notions of my birth
44:30and those thoughts would give me the courage
44:32and dignity to support all the oppressions
44:34of a little farmer
44:36and you must be unsure to allow us to share your Christmas hostility
44:42this is the small remorse
44:44for the man in which you cared for my sister
44:46and brought her back to hell
44:47Helen!
44:50Helen!
44:53keep this fellow out of my sight
44:55put him in the garret till after dinner
44:57nay sir
44:58he must have his share of the dainties as well as we
45:00he'll have a share of my hand if I catch him downstairs again till after dark
45:03what's this?
45:05tempting the cocks come are we?
45:08perhaps I might pull those elegant locks a little longer before the day's out
45:11they're long enough already?
45:15it's like a colt's mane of his eyes
45:17well put Mr. Linton
45:19well put
45:19I shall give myself the pleasure
45:35you should not expect him
45:38he'll be flogged
45:39I hate him to be flogged
45:40why did you speak to him?
45:42I didn't
45:42I will say one word him and I didn't
45:45I will say
45:46it's all right
45:49oh what are you crying about?
45:50you're not hurt
45:51oh
45:52oh
45:55oh
45:55oh
45:57oh
46:07oh
46:08oh
46:09oh
46:14oh
46:16oh
48:18I've brought you this.
48:25Eat it.
48:48Give me some bandies here.
48:55What are you thinking?
48:56I'm thinking I can pay Hindley back.
49:01Don't care how long I have to wait as long as I get him in the end.
49:04The cure, it says that only God must punish wicked people.
49:07God will have the satisfaction that I'll have!
49:13Well, I wish I knew the best way.
49:16I'll work it out.
49:18While I'm thinking of that, don't feel any pain.
49:22I'm thinking of that, don't feel any pain.
49:26I have to wait as I get him in the end.
49:30I'm thinking of that.
49:32I'm thinking of that.
49:34PIANO PLAYS
50:04PIANO PLAYS
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