Displaying items by tag: Shirley Hendersson

Friday, 07 March 2025 11:37

Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy

brid j man

BRIDGET JONES: MAD ABOUT THE BOY

 

UK, 2025, 124 minutes, Colour.

Renée Zellweger, Chiwital Ejiofer, Leo Woodall, Hugh Grant, Colin Firth, Mila Jankowicz, Casper Knopf, Sally Phillips, Nico Parker, Sarah Solemani, Shirley Henderson, James Callis, Claire Skinner, Isla Fisher, Gemma Jones, Emma Thompson, Jim Broadbent, Neil Pearson, Celia Imre.

Directed by Michael Morris.

 

Bridget Jones came on the cinema scene almost a quarter of a century ago two very successful films. She was immediately popular, embodied in a British style by American actress Renée Zellweger. In 2016, she had a baby and another film. In 2024-2025, she is a widow, with two children at school, trying to manage, sad memories of her husband, played by Colin Firth and reappearing here in some pleasing ghostly presences. (Not too happy memories of previous films with real appearances of her parents, Jim Broadbent and Gemma Jones, and a number of old friends turning up, Sally Phillips, Shirley Henderson…).

Bridget Jones has been welcomed back by audiences – though, for many of us, her distinctive mannerisms, quirks of accent, tics of behaviour, can be often offputting or, at least, disconcerting.

So, what is the widow to do? Get some advice from her old friend-nemesis, Daniel, a welcome return by Hugh Grant, still the playboy attitude but soon to be threatened by age, illness, more than a touch of conscience, and a reconciliation with his absent Italian son.

She goes to Memorial dinners for her husband, gets loads of advice from her contemporaries, to be out and around, date, be on the market. She also gets her advice from her gynaecologist, Emma Thompson again, which is more grounded but not heeded until later.

What happens is that on Hampstead Heath, her children climb a tree, she tries to rescue them, and a handsome worker (Foxster, Leo Woodall) intervenes, she more than a touch smitten, he getting in contact, a whirlwind affair. Is this the answer to her longings? But is going back to work as a television producer, on a show for women and women’s issues, another answer?

By this stage, her fans will be hoping that she resolves life’s issues. But, in those who find her a bit offputting, not eliciting audience sympathy, would be tempted to give up on her.

But,   lifechanges, her toyboy puts his foot in it about age; she is still thinking of her husband; her children react, especially her son who misses his father. And she listens more attentively to her doctor’s advice.

And, there in the background is the teacher at the children’s school, Mr Willaker (a charming Chiwitel Ejiofor, despite his propensity for discipline and continually blowing his whistle, loudly).

So, gradually, some sensible moralising, some more considered choices, some sensible interactions, and Bridget Jones will have a future.

  1. Popularity Bridget Jones, Renée Zellweger’s presence and performance? Mannered style? Over almost 25 years and four films?
  2. The London settings, home, school, television studios? House parties, large parties, the range of songs?
  3. Bridget’s situation, widow, the death of her husband, charity work and his death, Colin Firth, his presence in memories throughout the film? The two children, their ages, her bond with the children, at school? Her going out to the Memorial dinner for her husband, her awkwardness? With the of the mothers, the Society mother, getting her to join in the activities and her later doing this?
  4. Memories of her dying father, his urging her to go out? Memories of her mother? The visit to the doctor, practical, urging her out?
  5. At school, encountering Mr Waliker, his whistle, his manner, with the children, stern? Later talks with him, his teaching science, rational, his criticisms of Billy’s work?
  6. The outings, with the children, climbing the tree, Roxster and his presence, climbing and rescuing them, Mr Waliker observing?
  7. The relationship with Roxster, his age, his work, his manner, the effect on Bridget? Tentative, going out, her infatuation, the beginning of the relationship, a fling? The effect on her? On the children? Especially Billy? Memories of his father? The party, the dog, in the water, Roxster diving in, the wet shirt, the reaction of Bridget’s friends?
  8. The range of friends, from the past, new friends, meetings, chatting, urging her to enjoy herself and break out?
  9. Daniel, from the previous films, the Hugh Grant’s style, his babysitting and bond with the children, his own life, his illness, in the hospital, the talk with Bridget, the talk about his son? And the son arriving at the party, charming, Daniel more at peace?
  10. Roxster, time of the relationship, his backing out, not communicating, later return, his mention of time travel, indicating she be younger, her retort that he should come into the future with her? The break?
  11. The work of the television station, the program, the focus on women, the guests, the personalities, the producer, Bridget enjoying her work, talking about her relationship and finding herself on stage with the applause?
  12. Chloe as the nanny, her being recommended by friends, her role in the house, her ideas, efficient in every way, bonding with the children, the perfect nanny? Bridget finally accepting her?
  13. Bridget and her memories of her husband, going through the documents, the diary, writing the message to him, and with children and setting the balloons?
  14. Mr Waliker and his class with parents, her setting up a television program, the girl with the chart, Billy and his apprehension, the discussion about fruit fly, turning the discussion to the presence of the soul, and another life after death?
  15. The shift in emphasis from the atmosphere of the fling to more serious? With the children? The discussions with Mr Waliker, going on the walk with him, the rain, the discussions, issues of reason, imagination, magic? The effect on him, the change, still blowing the whistle, but in class? The importance of his talk with Billy? The cut, the return to the concert, Billy singing, I’ll do Anything, in memory of his father, to have a memory of his father, the enthusiastic response?
  16. The visit to the doctor, her practical advice, common sensed, Bridget listening to it, memories of her father, discussions with her mother?
  17. The change of atmosphere, the light and more permissive episodes with her friends and with Roxster? The change, the serious interactions with Mr Waliker?
  18. A year later, happiness, a new beginning, Mr Waliker the piano, the friends, her mother, her future in her 50s and beyond?
Published in Movie Reviews
Thursday, 07 March 2024 11:58

Trouble with Jessica, The

trouble with jessica

THE TROUBLE WITH JESSICA

 

UK, 2023, 89 minutes, Colour.

Shirley Henderson, Rufus Sewell, Olivia Williams, Alan Tudyk, Indira Varma, Sylvester Groth, Anne Reid.

Directed by Matt Winn.

 

There has always been trouble with Jessica. She is a novelist, sometimes reclusive, manipulative, tantalising in her relationships, and has just published a novel with references to her friends. She has turned up at a dinner at Sarah and Tom’s house, not entirely welcome. Sarah and Tom are also hosting a couple who have been long-time friends, Richard and Beth.

At first, this seems to be a variation on the Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf kind of gathering, some surface pleasantries, then difficulties emerging, criticism, insults, tantrums. But, after 15 minutes, looking for Jessica, they find she has hanged herself in the garden.

While the angry interchanges of the Virginia Woolf kind continue throughout the film, The Trouble with Jessica then becomes a variation on the theme: how do you conceal, then get rid of the body. This idea was popular in some of the small budget comedy thrillers of the 1930s. However, it became a significant theme when Alfred Hitchcock made The Trouble with Harry, 1955. In fact, Agatha Christie use the theme in The Spider’s Web. And, at the end of the 1980s, there was the American comedy, Weekend at Bernie’s. What to do with the body? How to conceal it?

The two couples are middle-aged, have known each other since they were young. After the shock of Jessica’s suicide, Sarah, who had had an altercation with her, takes charge, wanting to conceal the death, with a plan for the body to be transferred to Jessica’s house and set up as a suicide there. Tom more or less goes along with this plan. One of the reasons for the plan is that they are in financial difficulties, need to sell the house, have an eager client who wants to buy and they don’t want a body to be in the house when they come to inspect.

Richard is a practising lawyer, defence lawyer, quoting legal practice but somehow rather persuaded to join in the plan by Sarah threatening to reveal some dubious actions in the past. Beth, on the other hand, want to immediately go to the police, dials 911, the police turning up, pleasant exchanges, one of them discovering the desert, one of his favourites! And, a neighbour comes to the door eager to meet the writer and to get her to autograph a book.

With a lot of interchanges and recriminations, exposures of each of the characters, Richard having had an affair with Jessica and Beth’s wanting a divorce, Sarah being dominating, Tom acquiescing. The prospective buyer turns up to look at the house, the concealing the body under the stairs, the visitor wanting to look inside the cupboard, their getting the body upstairs, his leaving.

The atmosphere license, Sarah standing guard, they get the body into the car, drive to her flat, a police car pulling up beside them at a red light, a couple in the corridor, but they get the body into the room and the set up.

On the return, the prospective buyer, an affluent German businessman, returns, elicits the secret from them, wants to settle the sale immediately and, with some moments of hesitation, there is agreement. Sarah and Tom is saved but Sarah suddenly changes her attitude, wants to call the police. This is all to do with a reference in Jessica’s book and Tom, while the audience obscene flashbacks, admits an occasion with Jessica before they met. Richard then confesses that he has had the affair but, by this time, Beth has somewhat calm down after participating in the setting up of the suicide.

The film has a top cast, Shirley Henderson top lining the film as Sarah, with American Alan Dudek is her husband. Rufus saw and Olivia Williams are the other couple. And the cameo scene of the neighbour wanting the autograph – and it was an angry when the car with the body is about to leave and she is upset that the author will not come out of the car – played by Anne Reid.

There is one barrier that many commentators have noted – the proliferation of swearing throughout the film, judge it excessive, and many surprised at this group of actors, including Anne Reid, prepared to mouth such constant coarse language.

Published in Movie Reviews