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

Emma Mackey stars in "Emily" which had its world premiere at the 2022 Toronto International Film Festival
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GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/Getty Images via AFP/File | Michael loccisano

LOS ANGELES - 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?

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 Bronte and her sisters had macabre elements in their life growing up in Victorian England, says "Emily" star Emma Mackey
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GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/Getty Images via AFP/File | Jeremy Chan

"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.

Director Frances O'Connor's "Emily" deliberately ignores the trappings and conventions of the traditional period biopic
2022 Getty Images
GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/Getty Images via AFP/File | Michael loccisano

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.

Oliver Jackson-Cohen stars as curate William Weightman in "Emily"
2022 Getty Images
GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/Getty Images via AFP/File | Michael loccisano

"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."

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By Andrew Marszal

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