WUTHERING HEIGHTS

WUTHERING HEIGHTS
Project Title Wuthering Heights
Release Date 13 February 2026
Role Additional Music Editor
Director Emerald Fennell
Original Songs by Charli XCX
Composer Anthony Willis
Producers Emerald Fennell, Margot Robbie, Josey McNamara
Studios Warner Bros., MRC & LuckyChap Entertainment
Starring Margot Robbie, Jacob Elordi, Hong Chau, Shazad Latif, Alison Oliver, Martin Clunes, Owen Cooper, Charlotte Mellington
Production website www.warnerbros.com
IMDb www.imdb.com/title/tt32897959

“Wuthering Heights, the writer-director Emerald Fennell’s new adaptation of Emily Brontë’s groundbreaking Gothic novel, is her best film to date. […] The gleeful visuals and sounds, however, are what really propel the movie along.” The Atlantic

Janet joined Wuthering Heights at the outset of post-production to oversee score conception. She collaborated closely with BAFTA-nominated composer Anthony Willis, crafting a temp score that incorporated his compositions, material from Charli XCX, and additional third-party music — while ensuring a cohesive blend across all genres for a seamless listening experience.

Written and directed by Academy and BAFTA Award winner Emerald Fennell, this adaptation of Emily Brontë’s novel of the same name, starring Academy and BAFTA Award nominees Margot Robbie and Jacob Elordi, dives into what is often called “the greatest love story of all time”— a story in which love is an all-encompassing obsession that destroys anything in its path. Produced by Emerald Fennell, Margot Robbie, and Academy Award-nominated and BAFTA Award-winning Josey McNamara.

“Atonal, disruptive, industrial: despite all this, Wuthering Heights isn’t an album likely to alienate Charli’s existing fanbase, who in fairness have already reacted to House’s aural challenges by streaming it 10m times and meme-ing the living daylights out of its horror movie-worthy chorus. The songwriting is uniformly fantastic – she clearly doesn’t view pushing at the boundaries of what she does as any reason to abandon her pop smarts – and furthermore, it works as an album completely independent from the film it’s intended to accompany.” The Guardian