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 Bridget Jones's Diary
 Release Date - April 13, 2001 Nationwide
 Distributor - Miramax Films
 Duration - 94 mins.
 Type - Comedy (Rated R)
 Writer : Helen Fielding, Andrew Davies and Richard Curtis.
 Producer : Tim Bevan, Jonathan Cavendish and Eric Fellner
 Director : Sharon Maguire.
 Starring : Renee Zellweger, Hugh Grant, Colin Firth, Jim Broadbent, James Callis.
 Synopsis
At the start of the New Year, 32-year-old "singleton" Bridget decides it's time to take control of her life and starts keeping a diary. Now the most provocative, erotic and hysterical book on her bedside table is the one she's writing. With a taste for adventure and an opinion on very subject--from her circle of "smug married" friends, to men, exercise, food, sex, and everything in between--she's turning a page on a whole new life. Despite her efforts to get her act together, she finds herself caught between two men: a man who's too good to be true, and a man who's so wrong, he could be right. Meanwhile, her new employers think she is nuts and her scatter-brained friends are no help whatsoever.
 Critic Reviews
Based on Helen Fielding’s popular novel, and capably directed by first-timer Sharon Maguire, the movie chronicles 32-year-old Bridget’s journey through early-30s singleness in London, England. She’s spunky and smart, constantly trying to lose weight, quit smoking and cut down on her drinking – especially when she’s home alone feeling sorry for herself. Not exactly endowed with great judgement, Bridget leaps into a relationship with her dashing but devious boss, Daniel Cleaver ( Hugh Grant ), and pooh-poohs her mother’s would-be match with Mark Darcy ( Colin Firth ), an overly serious lawyer about whom Daniel has terrible stories to tell. It’s obvious to everyone watching – and likely to Bridget as well – that things aren’t likely to work out with Daniel, and that Mark is a much better choice. But Bridget needs to learn these lessons on her own, even if that means she’s going to end up with neither of them. Bridget Jones’s Diary is funny, heartbreaking, inspiring and wonderful. Zellweger has fabulous comedic timing and inspires huge empathy. She even pulls off an English accent flawlessly. Zellweger is helped here by strong performances by Grant and especially Firth, whose restraint makes his character utterly real and all the more tantalizing when he seems unattainable. The magnificent Jim Broadbent and Gemma Jones are also wonderful as Bridget’s troubled parents. This is romantic comedy that’s a thousand times more like the real world than the stuff Hollywood pumps out by the dozen each year. In Bridget’s world, there are five – or ten – heartbreaks for every triumph, nobody is as perfect – or as awful – as they look, and fights between jealous men tend to involve more wrestling and kicking than spectacular but fake-sounding right crosses. From start to finish, Bridget Jones’s Diary feels like the real thing. And in this case, the real thing is a very, very good thing.
  For rating reasons : filmrating.com, mpaa.com                                    For Parents : Parentalguide.com