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A Letter about 
BRIDGET JONES
 

 

by Betty Jo Tucker

 Buy 
Bridget Jones's Diary 
on DVD!

Dear Emily,   

How many times have we agreed that Bridget Jones’s Diary couldn’t possibly be made into a decent movie? I remember the fits we threw when Texan Renee Zellweger got the title role. You wanted Kate Winslet and I preferred Toni Collette. Well, sweetie, I just saw the film and couldn’t wait to tell you we were v. wrong! Please don’t get angry with me, but I think the film is even better than the book.

That little Zellweger gal practically transforms herself into our darling, klutzy Bridget. Of course, she’s not petite in this movie like she was as Nurse Betty, having gained over twenty pounds to play the part. I’m glad she wasn’t afraid to show off her extra weight in some pretty revealing scenes. I loved the way her full-bodied charms overwhelmed a skimpy bunny costume in the disastrous “tarts and vicars” party sequence. She also sounds terribly British, so we shouldn’t have worried about her American accent ruining everything.

I think you’ll enjoy the performances of Hugh Grant and Colin Firth too. Grant is terrific as Daniel Cleaver. He’s just as seductive and slimy as we imagined Bridget’s flirtatious boss to be. What a change from that shy bookstore owner in Notting Hill ! And casting the dignified Firth as Mark Darcy, Bridget’s stuffy childhood friend, was a stroke of genius, if you ask me. Did you realize this is the same guy who played the Mr. Darcy in BBC’s Pride and Prejudice? (Oh, crikey, you’re the one who told me author Helen Fielding considers her book an updating of Jane Austen’s classic, so you probably know all about Mr. Firth too.)           

We were correct about one thing, Emsy. The role of Bridget’s newly liberated mum doesn’t suit Gemma Jones, the actress we admired so much in that television series about The Duchess of Duke Street. Your idea about Brenda Blethyn being better for the comedy bits is right on target. Brenda would have chewed the scenery in Mum’s t.v. spots for all she’s worth (like she dominated the screen in Little Voice), whereas Gemma just smiles and looks wide-eyed.

Call me sacrilegious, but I believe most of the story changes worked very well here. The best example is when Mark Darcy helps Bridget cook a meal for her friends. The big event ends in chaos anyway --- thanks to an unwelcome appearance by Daniel Cleaver. Although this incident isn’t in the book, I quite approve of the way it highlights the humor and apparent hopelessness of Bridget’s relationship problems.

I know we made fun of Bridget’s plans for self-improvement, inner poise, and losing weight while reading her amusing diary. We laughed at her whining over being a 30-something “Singleton” among a world of “Smug Marrieds.” But I’m warning you, Emily, the movie makes all that seem more poignant and real. I was completely surprised at how relieved I felt when Bridget finally discovers that  true friends and lovers like her “just the way she is.”

 Anyway, Emsy, please see Bridget soon. I’m dying to hear your reactions!

Your v. g. friend,

Betts

(read the review for Bridget Jones: The Edge of Reason, the sequel to this movie)

(Released by Miramax/Universal and rated “R” for language and some strong sexuality.)  

cover

Buy 
Bridget Jones's Diary 
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Bridget Jones's Guide to Life

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Bridget Jones: The Edge of Reason

    

  

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