The moors are about to burn. Warner Bros just unleashed the first full trailer for Emerald Fennell’s highly anticipated Wuthering Heights adaptation — and the internet is already calling it “50 shades of Heathcliff” meets Saltburn levels of unhinged obsession.

That one line alone — Margot Robbie’s Catherine Earnshaw whispering “So kiss me, or let us both be damned” while Jacob Elordi’s Heathcliff pins her against a rain-soaked stone wall — has racked up 28 million views in under 12 hours. The kiss that follows is feral: teeth, blood, and zero regard for Victorian propriety.

Fennell (Promising Young Woman, Saltburn) promised the “horniest, most toxic Brontë ever filmed,” and she’s delivering. The two-minute trailer is a fever dream of:

Margot Robbie in sheer black mourning lace, riding bareback across the moors at midnight.
Jacob Elordi shirtless, covered in mud and scars, snarling “I am Heathcliff!” like a demon possessed.
Slow-motion scenes of Catherine clawing at Heathcliff’s back until she draws blood.
A haunting cover of Kate Bush’s “Wuthering Heights” twisted into something dark and industrial by Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross.

Cast highlights:

Margot Robbie as Catherine Earnshaw
Jacob Elordi as Heathcliff
Andrew Garfield as Edgar Linton (looking tragically soft and breakable)
Florence Pugh as Isabella Linton
Barry Keoghan as Hindley (already giving unhinged little brother energy)

The Valentine’s Day 2026 release date is pure chaos — dropping the most doomed, obsessive romance in literature on the most romantic day of the year. Twitter is flooded with “this is going to ruin relationships” memes.

Early buzz from test screenings is wild:

“It’s like if Saltburn and Phantom Thread had a baby on the Yorkshire moors.”
“Margot and Jacob have chemistry that should be illegal.”
“I need to speak to my therapist after that trailer.”

Fennell told Vanity Fair: “This isn’t your grandma’s BBC period drama. Catherine and Heathcliff aren’t tragic lovers — they’re soul-eating monsters who happen to be in love. We’re leaning all the way in.”

Mark your calendars, lock your doors, and maybe don’t watch this with your situationship. Wuthering Heights — only in theaters Valentine’s Day 2026.