This review may contain spoilers!
Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy is the fourth film in the Bridget Jones series and explores Bridget Jones's life one year after the loss of Mark Darcy. Here she faces the challenges of being a single parent, of grief, of returning to work and of course, learning how to find love again.
The quality that has always worked for the Bridget Jones films is still present here in abundance, and that is just how relatable Bridget is as a character. Watching Bridget feel awkward about how she dresses, stumble through dating apps, feel the pain of being ghosted, and judge her parenting based on the 'successful' parents around her really resonates with the viewing audience. It's nice to see a character with similar experiences to our own, even if it is still through the heightened view of a Hollywood romantic comedy.
The score is usually light and whimsical, yet it plucks gently at the heartstrings during the more morose moments. I was entirely thrilled by the soundtrack, which either batted for the 9s to match a scene's comedy or greeted us with a real empowerment ballad that lifted Bridget up alongside the viewer.
Mila Jankovic, who played Mabel, is such a hilarious young performer; Jankovic is a bit more wild and spontaneous than her on-screen sibling which results in some fun scenes. Hugh Grant, who played Daniel Cleaver, is out here running circles around this cast; Grant has a dry wit that is effortless and he plays his role's feelings of regret around his own son superbly. Colin Firth, who played Mark Darcy, might not be very present in this film but he does a lot with a little; gently reminding us he is the soul of the beautiful family at the centre of the story. Emma Thompson, who played Dr. Rawlings, does nothing but give herself over fully to comedy this time and it is gold; Thompson's deprecating remarks are often hilarious and always land. Neil Pearson, who played Richard Finch, is a welcome return of a classic cast member; Pearson's nonchalant and blunt TV producer role is the perfect way to introduce Bridget Jones back into the world of TV. Jim Broadbent, who played Colin Jones, really showed up for his big scene; it's quite an emotional one in which we see a father give his last thoughts to his daughter before passing. Leo Woodall, who played Roxster, is very charming and more than a little aloof; Woodall and Zellweger had decent chemistry and the moment of hesitancy he played to worked extremely well. Nico Parker, who played Chloe, was quite a bit of fun as the overly perfect nanny; Parker's over-earnest and detailed manner made her a fun quality of this film.
However, the best performance came from Chiwetel Ejiofor, who played Mr. Wallaker. This is the first time in a long time I've really seen Ejiofor cut loose and have some fun in a role. Just last year he was in one of my least favourite theatrical releases with the third Venom and didn't lend a lot to that production. But he has found something genuinely wonderful here. When first we meet Ejiofor as the high-strung Mr. Wallaker, he seems this by-the-book, overly strict teacher. Ejiofor dashes about on school duty reprimanding the kids and blowing his whistle, really commanding the little school set. As we come to know this role we see him as very matter-of-fact and reasoned, but brimming with empathy. Watching him emotionally connect with Bridget and her son, Billy, over the subject of loss is one of the greater emotional beats of the film. Though his third-act romantic chemistry with Zellweger comes so late, it is still so very charming and marks Ejiofor as a fine successor to Firth.
I might not have loved Bridget Jones's Baby but it was a fine end to a trilogy at the time and put a neat bow on things. After watching the movie that made all this a quadrilogy, I'm still scratching my head over the why. This film shatters a neat ending with Darcy to once again frame Bridget as being alone, needing someone else to fill the void left behind, and wedging in every cameo possible from the past three films (shy of Patrick Dempsey). The whole way Darcy is exited feels sad but is quickly played off for either humour or to advance Bridget's quest for romance. It's a strange choice to erase a nice moment of closure for another spin of the wheel. It also results in Bridget Jones weirdly talking about God and Heaven and the afterlife more than a movie of this calibre really warrants. It becomes a serious conversation point these writers aren't equipped for and is very jarring in a romantic comedy. This film is stuffed to the brim with subplots and extra characters, it gets far too busy at the best of times and the scenes are poorly shared unless you're the two biggest names in a given scene. The movie watches like something where a lot has been hacked and slashed out of it, to pull focus all the way back to Bridget. But, the result is a very disjointed film at times. The romantic storyline is the most one of these movies has felt like unrealistic wish fulfilment, like picking up and reading a $7 Mills & Boons novel. The final romantic interest is pretty predictable from his first scene, yet the film takes forever to even make him much of a contender. In fact, a lot of the final romantic plotline doesn't happen until all at once in the third act. It feels like they knew they weren't making another after this and overcrowded the film with as much content as they could, completely losing the main storyline somewhere in the middle.
The way this film is shot is very messy, but that's not too surprising. The nature of the Bridget Jones series has never been to be the flashiest-looking theatrical release and it doesn't hold that here either. The shots don't capitalise when they are on-location, cameras barely move within a set and the lens loves a nice, safe mid-shot. The editing is also quite slow at times, this is a long film and the pacing really lurches about.
Renée Zellweger, who played Bridget Jones, used to lead these films brilliantly and now she can barely show range in her facial expressions; Zellweger's high-pitched narration just grates on me at this point and I feel she has passed her time as Bridget. Casper Knopf, who played Billy Darcy, loses a lot of emotion in trying to present a similar serious edge to Firth; Knopf really struggles being given a more dramatic storyline to work through. Sally Phillips, James Callis and Shirley Henderson, who played Shazzer, Tom and Jude respectively, just feel like they've been pushed further and further to the back with each film; this group is supposed to be Bridget's closest friends and yet they are barely present. Gemma Jones, who played Pamela Jones, seems a bit confused and out of place in her scenes; she barely even engages with Bridget in a mother/daughter dynamic. Sarah Solemani, who played Miranda, was thrilling and fun as a new friend to Bridget but seems to have the spotlight off her this time; Solemani is given barely anything to work with making her role easier to disregard. Leila Farzad, who played Nicolette, is quite a tacked-on minor antagonist for Bridget; the uppity PTA Mum who rules the school role doesn't exactly break new ground here. Josette Simon, who played Talitha, is quite a relaxed and non-descript figure for a TV show talk host; Simon comes across as lazing her way through scenes which doesn't leave much of an impression.
Real evidence that there was never a need for a fourth Bridget Jones film. I would give Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy a 4/10.