At this point, you could almost imagine devising something similar for Bridget Jones, the winsomely discombobulated London singleton who first appeared, in the novel “Bridget Jones’s Diary ...
By David Rooney Chief Film Critic What really distinguishes Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy, however, is the depth of feeling it brings to the protagonist’s grief and her gradual emergence from it.
Back in 2001, her casting as Bridget Jones, author Helen Fielding’s intensely relatable English klutz beloved by Brits, caused an uproar. An American as Bridget?! Outrageous. But Zellweger ...
Nearly 25 years after saying hello to beloved Brit Bridget Jones onscreen, we’re about to bid farewell to her in the fourth, and reportedly final, chapter of the Bridget Jones saga. Bridget ...
There's simply no doubting the success of the Bridget Jones franchise. Based on the series of novels by Helen Fielding, audiences across the world have reveled in the chance to see hapless ...
It is a truth universally acknowledged, as Bridget Jones herself might write in her diary, that at the end of any Bridget Jones movie, our heroine has triumphed over all doubts and obstacles and ...
The world may change, but one thing stays the same: Bridget Jones is still here to make us laugh. A new Bridget Jones movie, Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy, is being released as a Peacock ...
Twenty-four years since actor Renée Zellweger first appeared in the film adaptation of Helen Fielding’s literary bestseller “Bridget Jones’s Diary,” she’s back for her fourth turn as an ...
Bridget Jones is back – and she’s still the same self-obsessed, shallow-as-puddle, breathy-voiced, duck-waddling, artless ditz that we have always loved. And if this is the final one in the fr ...
In “Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy,” the neurotic, lovelorn heroine hasn’t just swapped cigarettes for Nicorette. She’s traded the big screen for Peacock, a second-tier streaming service ...
This fourth instalment in the series – which follows Bridget after the death of her husband – is the most moving. By Leaf Arbuthnot There was always something improbable about Bridget Jones being able ...