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Friday, May 7, 2010

Bridget Jones's Diary (film)

Bridget Jones's Diary, is a 2001 British romantic comedy film, based on the novel of the same name written by Helen Fielding. The adaptation stars Academy award winner Renée Zellweger as Bridget, Golden Globe winner Hugh Grant as the caddish Daniel Cleaver and Academy Award nominee Colin Firth as Bridget's "true love" Mark Darcy. A sequel, Bridget Jones: The Edge of Reason, was released in 2004.
Before the film was released, a considerable amount of controversy surrounded the casting of the American Zellweger as what some saw as a quintessentially British heroine. However, her performance is widely considered to be of a high standard, including her English accent.
Helen Fielding has stated in many interviews that her novel was based upon both Jane Austen's work Pride and Prejudice and the popular 1995 BBC adaptation Pride and Prejudice. This was also reflected in the decision to cast Colin Firth as Darcy, since he played the 'real' Mr Darcy in the BBC adaptation of Pride and Prejudice. This is not the film's only connection to that serial – the screenplay was co-written by Andrew Davies, who had written the adaptation of Austen's novel for the BBC.Another co-writer was Richard Curtis, and there are elements of Four Weddings and a Funeral and even more so of Notting Hill.
The director of the film, Sharon Maguire, is one of Fielding's friends whom the character of "Shazzer" was reportedly based on. In the film "Shazzer" was played by Sally Phillips.
Renee Zellweger was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actress for her role in the film.

Plot

Bridget Jones is frustrated; in her early thirties, still single, and worried about her weight. She works in publicity at a book publishing company in London where her main focus is fantasizing about her boss Daniel Cleaver. At a Christmas party hosted by her parents, she meets Mark Darcy, the barrister son of her parents' friends. After their initial meeting, Mark thinks that Bridget is a fool, and Bridget thinks that he is arrogant and rude. On New Year's Day, she finally decides to turn it all around and starts her own diary, which covers all her attempts to stop smoking, lose weight, and catch her Mr. Right.
Bridget and Daniel begin to flirt heavily at work, first over email. They eventually start dating, despite the fact that he is a notorious womanizer with a questionable personality, which Bridget is aware of, stating earlier in the film that he is an "alcoholic, workaholic, peeping-tom, megalomaniac, emotional fuckwit and a pervert". Bridget learns from Daniel that he and Mark have a history and as a result, hate each other. Daniel informs Bridget of their fallout, telling her that Mark broke their friendship by sleeping with his fiancée.
Daniel's dubious character becomes clearer and clearer to Bridget, and eventually she breaks off their relationship when she catches him with another woman, a colleague of his, Lara, from work in New York. She finds a new job in television. In the meantime, she and Mark have a series of run-ins at a book launch, at a bed-and-breakfast, and at a mutual friend's dinner party. During the party, Mark (who has come to the dinner with his colleague, Natasha) privately confesses to Bridget that, despite Bridget's faults, he likes her just the way that she is. He later helps her to land a major interview for work. Bridget begins to develop feelings for Mark. Just as Bridget and Mark's mutual attraction for each other comes together at a birthday dinner party hosted by Bridget, Daniel comes back into the picture claiming Bridget's attention. Mark originally leaves the party, but comes back to face Daniel. Mark punches Daniel and the two fight, resulting in Daniel passing out. Bridget, still thinking that Daniel had been the wronged one, chastises Mark. Afterward, she tells Daniel that she doesn't want to be with him.
Bridget eventually learns the truth about Mark and Daniel's fallout, in which Daniel had seduced Mark's ex-wife when they were still married. At a dinner party the same day, Bridget confesses her feelings for Mark, only to find out that he and Natasha are both leaving to accept jobs in New York. Just as Bridget starts to embark on a trip to Paris with her friends to mend her broken heart, Mark returns to stay with Bridget.
As they're about to kiss for the first time, Bridget exits to her bedroom to change her undergarments, remarking that it is "an occasion for genuinely tiny knickers". While Bridget is changing, Mark spies her diary, in which she has written many insults about him. Bridget returns to find that he has left. Realising that he had read her diary and that she might potentially lose him again, Bridget runs outside after him in a thin coat and her undergarments. Unable to find him and disheartened, she is about to return home when Mark appears holding a new diary. It becomes apparent that the new diary was to be a gift from Mark to give their relationship a fresh start. They kiss in the snow-covered streets and the movie concludes.

Cast

Renée Zellweger as Bridget Jones
Hugh Grant as Daniel Cleaver
Colin Firth as Mark Darcy
Gemma Jones as Mrs. Jones
Jim Broadbent as Mr. Jones
Celia Imrie as Una Alconbury
James Faulkner as Uncle Geoffrey
Shirley Henderson as Jude
James Callis as Tom
Charmian May as Mrs Darcy
Paul Brooke as Mr Fitzherbert
Sally Phillips as Shazzer
Embeth Davidtz as Natasha
Patrick Barlow as Julian
Felicity Montagu as Perpetua
Honor Blackman as Penny Husbands-Bosworth
Joan Blackham as Shirley[2]
John Clegg as Elderly Man
Rebecca Charles as Receptionist
Lisa Barbuscia as Lara
Neil Pearson as Richard Finch
Paul Ross as Mr Sit Up Britain
Claire Skinner as Magda
Toby Whithouse as Alastair
David Cann as Cameraman
Lisa Kay as Eleanor Ross Heaney
Sulayman Al-Bassam as Kafir Aghani
Donald Douglas as Admiral Darcy
Emma Amos as Pauline
Sara Stockbridge as Melinda
Stewart Wright as Stage Manager
Dolly Wells as Woney
Mark Lingwood as Cosmo
Dominic McHale as Bernard
Gavin Worsdale as Handsome Stranger
Gareth Marks as Simon in Marketing
Matthew Bates as Kafka Author
Joseph Alessi as Interviewer No 1
Rhydian Jai-Persad as Interviewer No 2
Millennia Strings as The Musicians
Nhigel Hinkson as Count Azul
Robert Campbell as Mr. Ramdas
Jacob Strackeljahn as Malcolm X
Salman Rushdie (cameo) as Himself
Jeffrey Archer (cameo) as Himself


Soundtrack

The movie's soundtrack was composed by Patrick Doyle.
It also features two hit songs which were released as singles, "Out of Reach" by Gabrielle and "It's Raining Men" by Geri Halliwell. Aaron Soul's song "Ring, Ring, Ring" was used in the film and released as a single, but did not make the soundtrack. Robbie Williams contributed two songs to the soundtrack and Sheryl Crow contributed one. "
"Killin' Kind" by Shelby Lynne
"Kiss That Girl" by Sheryl Crow
"Love" by Rosey
"Have You Met Miss Jones?" by Robbie Williams
"All by Myself" by Jamie O'Neal
"Just Perfect" by Tracy Bonham
"Dreamsome" by Shelby Lynne
"Not Of This Earth" by Robbie Williams
"Out of Reach" by Gabrielle
"Someone Like You" by Dina Carroll
"It's Raining Men" by Geri Halliwell
"Stop, Look, Listen (To Your Heart)" by Diana Ross and Marvin Gaye
"I'm Every Woman" by Chaka Khan
"Pretender Got My Heart" by Alisha's Attic
"It's Only A Diary" by Patrick Doyle
[edit]Soundtrack chart positions
Year Chart Position
2001 Australian ARIA Albums Chart 1
2001 UK Albums Chart 2
Preceded by
Moulin Rouge! (soundtrack) by Various artists Australian ARIA Albums Chart number-one album
13 August - 9 September 2001
17 September - 23 September 2001

Source:wikipedia.

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