52 Films Directed By Women Vol 1: 59. BRIDGET JONES’S BABY (Director: Sharon Maguire)
The Bridget Jones
trilogy (Diary, Edge, Baby) is the only franchise to be
directed by a woman. A woman director can set up a franchise (Catherine
Hardwicke, Twilight; Sam
Taylor-Johnson, 50 Shades of Grey;
Anne Fletcher, Step Up) but if it
makes money, a fella gets to take over. Maybe these directors wanted to develop
their respective franchises in exciting ways, only for the money men to say,
‘forget it, we want the same movie, only sexier’. Channing Tatum owes his
career to Anne Fletcher; without Step Up,
there would be no Magic Mike. That
might be one of the reasons that Magic
Mike has been embraced as a feminist text. The money men should trust the
smarts of woman directors a little more – they cast men exceptionally well.
This brings us to Bridget
Jones’s Baby in which the eponymous diary writer hasn’t become an author. I
was surprised. You write a diary – a novel is the next logical step. Salman
Rushdie, who appeared in the first movie, could have been a major help. (‘They
guard you when you offend an organised religion, and you don’t have to pay the
money back.’) No. At the start of this movie, director Sharon Maguire’s third
feature, and her first since 2008’s Incendiary
starring Michelle Williams and Ewan McGregor, Bridget is all by herself on
her 43rd birthday. She didn’t intend it that way, but unlike her
peers, she hasn’t settled down. She has however slimmed and given up
cigarettes, an acknowledgement that she is a symbol for the ban on smoking in
public places. She also looks less alluring, a symbol for the ban on smoking in
public places. (The line sounded good in my head.)
Bridget is accident prone. She falls over in wellington
boots. She is guilty of egregious faux pas (which isn’t a puff pastry). She is
also an anomaly. By my count, she should be a success in her profession as TV
news producer – and indeed she is, though she sails close to the wind. The
character is almost different. Her new best friend is Miranda (Sarah Solemani),
who is at least ten years younger than her and talks to Bridget as if she was
the younger inexperienced woman. Part of the problem with the film is that she
really does appear to have learnt nothing.
Franchises should generally complete story arcs. Here,
Bridget adjusts to impending motherhood. But she doesn’t have cravings, express
concern about bringing up a baby in a conflict-stricken world or even plan for
a baby seat in her car. No, she is obsessed with balancing two possible
fathers: old flame, Mark Darcy (Colin Firth, who delivers his lines as if he
were lifting a heavy book) and Jack Qwant (Patrick Dempsey), who is an internet
dating magnate. He talks about his algorithm so much, you wonder why Bridget
doesn’t ask whether it’s a flower?
The original script – that is, not based on a novel – is by
series creator Helen Fielding, Sacha Baron Cohen collaborator Dan Mazer and Emma
Thompson. There isn’t a Richard Curtis in sight. His contribution – a brand of
warm, fuzzy ensemble comedy – is sadly missing. I don’t think Curtis would have
written two scenes in which Bridget says the wrong thing into a TV presenter’s
ear piece (one scene was enough). The scenes of Bridget at work are easily the
least successful.
Bridget gets a new boss (Kate O’Flynn) who wants her to
replace genuine news stories for sensationalist guff. In any other film, this
would turn in to a battle of wills (à la Morning
Glory) but here it is just filler. There is a logical point at which
Bridget would lose her job – encouraging members of the public to contribute
their own news stories. But her boss waits until Bridget is almost full term
before expressing displeasure. It doesn’t make sense.
There is one really good, charming scene, when Jack, who by
now discovers he may be a father, delivers a series of presents to illustrate
the dates they missed out on. I reckon that’s a Dan Mazer idea – an off-cut
from his romantic comedy, I Give It A
Year. There is one genuinely funny scene when three characters negotiate a
revolving door – Zellweger truly is a sporting Academy Award winner. For the
most part, it feels tired and old, like the dated references to Pussy Riot,
‘Gangnam Style’ and ‘Jump Around’. What happened to a movie defining a
soundtrack for a generation?
The only other laugh involved a bunch of portaloos (portable
chemical toilets, not a station in South East London) being knocked over. Ed
Sheeran’s cameo is the only vaguely contemporary reference that hasn’t dated.
The fact that Bridget refuses amniocentesis (a test of the
baby’s health not to mention a way of taking a DNA sample to determine
parentage) is the film’s way of delaying our discovery of who the father is.
Because this is a franchise film, we know how it will end. It isn’t even a fair
contest.
Bridget Jones’s Diary
featured the spectacle of Hugh Grant and Colin Firth engaged in the kind of
fighting best done with rolling up newspaper – nowadays people hit each with
i-pads, which doesn’t have the same longevity. There is no comedy violence this
time around. What we have are more sub-plots – Bridget’s mother (Gemma Jones)
standing for a seat on the parish council, unapologetically as a Tory. The best
near-joke in the film occurs when Bridget is accompanied to her ante-natal
class with Mark and Jack and the group leader thinks she is a surrogate mother
carrying a baby for a gay couple. Emma Thompson amuses herself as Bridget’s
gynaecologist who attempts to keep up appearances. She is a more vivid comic
creation that Bridget herself – you’ll see her best bits in the trailer.
I really wanted to like Bridget
Jones’s Baby, but it feels like it was made by a committee, with members
working independently from one another. Hugh Grant sat this one out – the film
begins with the funeral of his character. Shrewd move!
About that casting: Grey’s
Anatomy star Dempsey is a good foil for Bridget, but you wait for the
character to have a dark side. He doesn’t. In the end, Dempsey is undone by the
committee of filmmakers who produced the film; a good idea used badly.
Reviewed at Cineworld O2, North Greenwich, London, Sunday 25 September 2016 – watched ‘all by myself’
Originally published on Bitlanders.com
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