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| DVD - Wide Screen / Special Packaging | $5.99 |
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Closed Caption; An alternate beginning and more of Bridget's comic mishaps in never-before-seen deleted scenes; Who do you fancy? Mark or Daniel? Find out in the "Who's Your Man?" quiz; What happens when a big lawyer and a big liar face off for Bridget's affections? A comic look inside "The Big Fight" reveals all; Mark and Bridget Forever? Renée Zellweger and Colin Firth discuss the ups, downs and wobbly bits of their relationship; A hilarious interview from serious journalist Bridget Jones and actor Colin Firth
Full Product DetailsSide #1 --
1. A Brand New Diary (Main Titles)
2. Thinking of You
3. Meeting at Mark's House
4. A Changed Man
5. Manic Makeover
6. All Apologies
7. Holiday in Heaven
8. Family Arrangement
9. Boyfriend Blues
10. Travel Plans
11. Magical Thailand
12. Misunderstanding
13. Bail Bonds
14. Wet Behind the Ears
15. Homecoming Surprise
16. Wishful Thinking (End Titles)
Renée Zellweger packed on the pounds once again to play the pleasantly plump protagonist of Helen Fielding's bestselling novels in this delightful sequel. Some viewers didn't find Edge of Reason quite as funny as Bridget Jones's Diary, perhaps because Bridget's fate -- romantically speaking -- is never in much doubt. However, the sequel is richer in incident and offers Zellweger's character more expansive opportunities to make a fool of herself. The story opens with Bridget working on a popular TV show while she's happily involved with diplomat Mark Darcy (Colin Firth). But after they have a fight over practically nothing, she impetuously decides to accept an assignment that takes her to Thailand, where she runs into former employer and erstwhile cad Daniel Cleaver (Hugh Grant) and winds up in prison on a drug-smuggling charge. Even in her most hapless, dimwitted moments Bridget remains an appealing young woman, thanks largely to Zellweger's skill in making her believable and sympathetic. She isn't the first person who's made a wrong turn on the road to love, and even at her most foolish she retains an endearingly girlish charm. Grant and Firth repeat their characterizations from the first film with uncanny fidelity, although we personally think that getting them into another brawl over Bridget is a bit of a stretch. But this is Zellweger's movie all the way: she makes us love her even when she's embarrassing herself horribly, and that takes some doing. A lesser actress would never be able to pull it off with such aplomb. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble
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