Bridget Jones: The Edge of Reason Movie Review
Bridget Jones: The Edge of Reason Review

"Bridget Jones: The Edge of Reason" Overview

Rating: R
2004
Cast and Crew
Director : Beeban KidronProducer : Tim Bevan,Jonathan Cavendish,Eric Fellner
Screenwiter : Andrew Davies,Helen Fielding,Richard Curtis,Adam Brooks
Starring : Renée Zellweger,Gemma Jones,Jim Broadbent,Dominic McHale,Colin Firth,Donald Douglas,Shirley Dixon,Neil Pearson,Hugh Grant,Jacinda Barrett,Sally Phillips,James Callis,Shirley Henderson,Lucy Robinson,David Verrey,Mark Tandy
In the last three years, Renée Zellweger has lost all 25 pounds of her Bridget
Jones weight, vamped her way through Chicago, chunked up again for Cold
Mountain, waifed away for Down with Love, and -- finally -- put all that weight
back on for her long-awaited return to the role of an insecure Brit -- one
which she swore she'd never perform again.
Well, throw enough money at something and it's bound to change people's minds.
In fact, that seems to be the operating assumption for the entirety of this
sequel, Bridget Jones: The Edge of Reason, a lackluster follow-up to the mildly
enchanting original.
The entire original cast is back this time around -- no small financial feat,
I'd assume -- although Sharon Maguire (a friend of Helen Fielding who still has
one movie credit to her name) is out as director, replaced by To Wong Foo
director Beeban Kidron.
For the most part, the original plot is back this time around, too. Picking up
six weeks after the close of episode 1, Edge of Reason offers Bridget
(Zellweger) in a happy relationship with Mark Darcy (Colin Firth)… but not for
long. Bridget is wracked with jealousy over Darcy's time away from her, which
appears to involve a potential suitor in Rebecca (Jacinda Barrett) and doubt
about her physical appearance and mental insecurities. The titular "edge of
reason" is intense and crushing paranoia, made worse by the reappearance of
philandering Daniel Cleaver (Hugh Grant, again stealing the show).
Meanwhile, Bridget finds herself wrestling with familiar foibles, like trying
to ski, parachuting butt-first into a pig sty, and trying to get dressed. But
the laughs have no heart. Bridget is played a stooge for cheap laughs and
little more; the humanity that resonated in the first film comes off as a
desperate kind of slapstick this time around.
Sure, some of this is genuinely funny -- another tussle between Darcy and
Cleaver, and a clever struggle with Bridget trying to communicate in German --
but the most humorous moments of the film come off as retreads of the original.
When Reason tries to break free of its predecessor, we're thrust into unlikely
-- and unfunny -- comic scenarios. I don't know about you, but I never thought
we'd be forced to dig for the humor of Bridget wasting away in a Thai prison
and teaching the hookers incarcerated there to sing "Like a Virgin." Is this a
long way to go for a Chicago gag? Who knows? Chances are, you'll be bored of
the repetitive and choppy story long before then.
If you find yourself longing for another dose of Jones, simply rent the
original again and pretend it's a year later in Bridget's life. Or just get a
pint of Ben & Jerry's.
The DVD adds deleted scenes (with an alternate opening), commentary track, and
a collection of documentary featurettes.
Edge of bedsheets.
Reviewer: Christopher Null



