“There isn’t a Bridget Jones with out Renée Zellweger, and the power of her efficiency and apparent admiration for the function do lots to skate over any off-kilter beats (just a few odd subplots, Bridget’s whole lack of concern round cash, and so on.) with effervescence and pluck. Loving Bridget means desirous to see her succeed. With Bridget Jones: Mad Concerning the Boy, she does that and extra.”
“It might come as a shock that dishevelled can be essentially the most emotional Bridget Jones entry up to now […] On the draw back, the film drags a bit in its overlong two-hour runtime. And though authentic director Sharon Maguire’s first and third movies stay the very best (and funniest) total, there’s nonetheless sufficient to take pleasure in right here.”
“It’s heat and comforting and nice to have the gang again collectively, however at occasions its humour feels somewhat reliant on yesteryear too, with some scripted comedic moments seeming dated or carried out earlier than.”
“If Bridget can gallivant with a doe-eyed stud 25 years her junior, then certainly she’d be up for the form of wild and saggy, drunken and crazy-stupid, delightfully embarrassing antics that powered the winningly debauched instalment[…] However that, alas, will not be the sort of film that is. It’s not one other unhinged Bridget bash — extra like a hearts-and-flowers finale.”
“To paraphrase her personal mode of self-criticism, this newest instalment within the saga of hapless London singleton Bridget Jones is v v poor. Michael Morris’s movie, tailored from Helen Fielding’s fourth novel, is a bloated, weeping sogfest that blunders laboriously by the established tropes of the sequence.”
“The Bridget Jones sequence has frankly run out of steam […] The actors are largely going by the motions, there’s so little chemistry between every of the 2 lead pairings they resemble a panda being compelled to mate with a flamingo, and Renée Zellweger’s efficiency is beginning to look eccentric.”
“If [Bridget Jones’s Baby] was a dying knell then Bridget Jones: Mad About The Boy is the deadly injection itself. It’s devoid of all of the pure, irreverent humour of the early motion pictures, specializing in being idyllic fanfiction for middle-aged ladies who dream of their London townhouses of getting a fling with a toyboy.”