Bridget
Jones’s Baby Is Worth The Wait,
And A Whole Lot Of Fun
Leigh
Blickley | The Huffington Post – September 15, 2016
Renée Zellweger, Colin Firth and Patrick Dempsey charm their way through
the franchise’s third installment.
♪ I’m ready for this, there’s no denying ♪
That lyric – from Jess Glynne’s song “Hold My Hand” – has been
appropriately featured in the trailers for
“Bridget Jones’s Baby,” and pretty much explains our feelings on the
new installment of the beloved film franchise finally coming
out. The rom-com is definitely worth the wait, and, let us assure you, it
will make you belly laugh from beginning to end.
The film sees the long-awaited on-screen return of Renée
Zellweger, who took six years off to
focus on life outside of Hollywood. Of course, it was the one and only
Bridget Jones who convinced the actress to re-enter
her career, and our hearts, once again.
“It was pretty selfishly motivated, actually,” Zellweger
told AOL Build host Ricky
Camilleri of reviving the character. “She’s kind of fun. She’s
really fun to play!”
Thinking back, Zellweger
beat out a competitive list of actresses to
nab the coveted role of Bridget, an accident-prone, self-conscious,
love-hungry British book publisher turned television producer, in 2001’s
“Bridget Jones’s Diary.” Considering she was born and raised in
Texas, Zellweger being cast over stars like Kate Winslet, Toni Collette
and Cate Blanchett was a huge deal.
Despite some controversy, she ended up capturing the character perfectly
and even received an Academy Award nomination for her work. Now, with 12
years passing since the release of the not-so-great “Bridget Jones: The
Edge of Reason,” bringing Bridget back to the big screen is scary but
beyond fulfilling for Zellweger. She’s aware that the return of the
franchise could fail, but tried her best to ensure that wouldn’t happen
during production. “[I was] just participating and making sure that what
we were doing was going to be worthwhile and not just ‘good enough.’
‘Cause just ‘good enough’ is not good enough,” she said on Build.
Well, with the addition of Patrick Dempsey and the always memorable
Emma Thompson, combined with the return of Zellweger, Colin Firth and
“Diary” director Sharon Maguire, the franchise is back to its
hilarious, slapstick roots.
Although Hugh Grant is not in the third installment (apparently he
“didn’t think the script completely worked”), newcomer Dempsey does
a great job rivaling fan-favorite Firth in the movie, which finds Bridget
pregnant and unsure of who the father is. Dempsey plays Jack Qwant, the
charming founder of an online dating site whom Bridget meets at a music
festival. Firth revives his role as Bridget’s longtime love, Mark Darcy,
who still has feelings for his quirky, lovable ex despite their
up-and-down history. Both guys are good men, trying to do the right thing
– the opposite of the previous iterations, which saw Grant’s
character, playboy Daniel Cleaver, always letting Bridget down.
In this film, we see a confident Bridget – no longer hyper-focused on
her weight and appearance.
“I never thought she had a weight issue,” Zellweger told “Today”
when discussing the idea that the character reached her “ideal
weight.” “But I had long conversations with Sharon Maguire, the
director, about that and she said, ‘No, in deciding how we show that
she’s evolved, let’s have her have that one thing, that one thing that
she’s always obsessed about, that she’s always presumed was the golden
ticket to her happiness and let it have no bearing on her life at all.’
And I kind of liked the message in that.”
But although she’s more comfortable in her own skin, in this movie,
Bridget is still tackling her work life, friendships, family drama and
heartbreak, all while trying to prepare for motherhood without knowing
which man is her baby’s daddy. So yes, Ms. Jones (and her thought
bubbles and wacky wardrobe) are back in full effect.
One of the best scenes comes at the end of “Baby,” when, after months
of contemplating who the father is, Bridget’s water breaks. Both men try
to get her to the hospital in the best way they know how: by carrying her
down the streets of London.
“That was one of my favorite sequences in the movie,” Dempsey said on
Build.
“I carry a baby quite a bit in this film and that gets really heavy
after 10 hours, I can’t imagine carrying me for two or three days,”
Zellweger added of the prosthetic baby bump she had to wear, which Dempsey
said “must have been 60 pounds of just all plastic.”
Aside from fake bumps, we see familiar faces, new faces, Ed
Sheeran and a whole lot of
comedy. All in all, “Baby” truly embraces the rom-com way while
bringing Bridget Jones – and all her perfect insecurities – back to
life.
“It’s sort of a coming-of-age story for people at a different stage of
their lives,” Zellweger said. “It subverts the myth that you’re
supposed to have it all together by a certain time in your life. It’s
just not true. We’re always kids trying to figure it out.”
And, if you still care at all about Daniel Cleaver, Grant
shared his take on ”Bridget 3” with Bustle, admitting,
“There’s some very funny stuff in it.”
Yup, and some of it involves him ?
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