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    Trouble on the Horizon

    Bad girls emerge amid helicopters and Harlequin romance novels on The Bachelor

    Jennifer Chininis
    Jan 14, 2013 | 11:11 pm

    Two hours is a long time to sit through an episode of The Bachelor — even if you can fast forward through the commercials.

    We know we’re supposed to be interested in the one-on-one dates, but the real action is always back at the house, where the frenemies are stewing about what’s happening with the one lucky girl who gets to hang with the hunk.

    Sean chooses one-armed Sarah for his first official date — and he picks her up in a helicopter. Because, you know, that’s how first dates usually start.

    Let’s just cut to the end, when Sarah declares, “I feel like I’m falling in love with Sean. I don’t know how I got so lucky.”

    To which we say, honey, that’s the adrenalin talking. You just jumped off the top of a 35-story building and plummeted 360 feet to a cocktail party pour deux waiting at the bottom.

    Next up, a group date, in which Sean and 13 girls dress up for a photo shoot to compete for a Harlequin romance novel cover shot. Model Kristy knows she’s got this competition locked.

    During hair and makeup, the truth starts to come out. “One girl is driving me bananas: Tierra. I don’t appreciate her personality,” says Robyn from Houston.

    “Tacky hoes are a dime a dozen,” says the makeup artist.

    But Tierra’s like the honey badger. Tierra don’t care. Tierra don’t give a shit. She’s got her eye on the prize. Among our favorite Tierra-isms:

    • “I wouldn’t mind if all the girls go home.”
    • “I’m not going to let any girl stop me from getting a rose.”
    • “I’m not here to meet friends. I’m here to meet Sean.”
    • “No girls are getting in my way.”
    • “I’m not here to play dress up. I’m here for Sean. And I want Sean to see what Tierra really wants.”

    And sweet, trusting Sean falls for Tierra and her mascara. “I want someone who is very sweet, has a good, genuine heart, who is sincere. It just took me five seconds to realize you have that,” he says to her back at the house. Um, what?

    Also back at the house, there’s a bachelorette casualty. Yoga instructor Katie is the first to come to her senses and decides that this is, in fact, a really weird way to meet a guy.

    “I just feel like this is not the right setting for me. I really do. I feel like I need to go home,” she says. And off she goes.

    Fast forward to one-on-one date No. 2, with Desiree. After he plays a practical joke on her at an art show, they take a dip in the obligatory hot tub and banter about how comfortable they are with each other.

    “You want to know a secret?” he says. “You’ve seen every side of me. Like, this is me. You’ve seen 100 percent of me. And no one else has brought that out in me yet.”

    “We’re a pretty good match,” she replies.

    “I know,” he says.

    There must be something in the hot tub water.

    “I can see myself being with Des,” Sean says later. “And I can see myself marrying someone like Des. Right now, I see every quality I would look for in a wife. And a best friend.”

    Show’s over, right? Not yet, friends!

    Cut back to the house, preceding the rose ceremony. Tierra’s not the only one causing trouble. The girls can’t figure out Amanda, who sits on the couch, scowling. She is oddly quiet with them but turns on the charm with Sean.

    These girls know how to work Mr. Nice Guy. He gives Tierra a rose, and the camera cuts to Robyn, who looks away.

    When Amanda gets a rose, Des shakes her head.

    Game on.

    The girls don't like Amanda. But she gets a rose.

    Amanda on The Bachelor
    Photo courtesy of ABC
    The girls don't like Amanda. But she gets a rose.
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    Movie Review

    Lust eclipses romance in new adaptation of 'Wuthering Heights'

    Alex Bentley
    Feb 12, 2026 | 2:15 pm
    Jacob Elordi and Margot Robbie in Wuthering Heights
    Photo courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures
    Jacob Elordi and Margot Robbie in Wuthering Heights.

    Emily Brontë’s 1847 novel Wuthering Heights is one of those classic books assigned in high school English classes, and it has received a number of film adaptations over the years, each of which differ in numerous ways from the source material. Purists won’t receive any reprieve from Emerald Fennell’s 2026 adaptation, with a title that is stylized as "Wuthering Heights” for good reason.

    Cathy (played as an adult by Margot Robbie) and Heathcliff (Jacob Elordi) have known each other their entire lives, with Cathy’s alcoholic and inveterate gambler father (Martin Clunes) taking in Heathcliff on a whim when he was a boy. The two bond as they grow up together, although Cathy always seems to have an eye on moving up in society from their relatively impoverished lifestyle.

    Cathy finally gets her wish when the rich Linton familyled by Edgar (Shazad Latif), moves in down the road, Despite discovering she has feelings for the now grown-up Heathcliff, Cathy sees Edgar as her way out and agrees to marry him. A scorned Heathcliff flees, returning years later as mysteriously wealthy. His reappearance ignites something in Cathy’s soul, and the two engage in a perhaps unwise affair.

    Fennell (Promising Young Woman, Saltburn) infuses the dusty material with an energy that’s not typically present in stories set in this particular time and place. Aside from the occasional Charli XCX song (the singer created a whole concept album for the film), the film looks and feels like a period piece, albeit one that doesn’t get bogged down in the drudgery that can sometimes come from films set in the distant past.

    Much of that has to do with the lust the filmmaker puts into the story. Even if you’re not familiar with Brontë’s book, you can rest assured that Fennell has strayed far from the text, giving Cathy and Heathcliff thoughts and actions unthinkable in the 19th century. Fennell plays with expectations by opening the film with audio featuring creaking noises and a man grunting, conjuring up a situation far different than what is actually happening, and she also makes liberal use of rain, sweat, and tears to make the actors enticing.

    What she can’t do, however, is make the two lead characters compelling. Cathy is a striver who never seems to know what she wants out of life, and Heathcliff goes from a bore to a brute over the course of the film, with no clear indication that he likes anybody, much less Cathy. Anyone expecting some kind of grand romance will be disappointed as Fennell is much more interested in making the film weird, like having the walls of Cathy’s room look like her skin, complete with freckles.

    Robbie and Elordi do well enough with the material, and it’s clear that both of them are committed to bringing Fennell’s vision to life. Their styles tend to balance each other out, and if the story had been committed to their characters’ relationship, they might be lauded for their chemistry. In the end, though, the supporting actors feel more interesting, including ones played by Hong Chau, Alison Miller, and Clunes.

    This version of Wuthering Heights should never be construed as an alternative to reading the book for any high schoolers out there. While Fennell makes the film interesting with her technical filmmaking choices, the story never finds its footing as it fails to sell the one thing that it seems to promise.

    ---

    Wuthering Heights opens in theaters on February 13.

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