Bridget Jones: The Edge of Reason
Bridget Jones: The Edge of Reason (2004)

Bridget Jones: The Edge of Reason

1/5
(10 votos)
6.0IMDb44Metascore

Detalles

Elenco

Errores

Daniel Cleaver's hair goes through at least three style changes as he speaks with Mark Darcy from the fountain during the fight scene.

When Bridget apologizing to and thanking Mark Darcy for getting her out of prison, she is carrying a small pink handbag.

When they go out to the corridor, the purse is missing.

In several scenes, the heart on Bridget's necklace switches sides.

The video footage coming from the camera strapped to Bridget's head when she is about to jump out of the plane doesn't match her head movements.

When her head is seen to nod on the Control Room screen on the left, the footage from the camera on the right screen doesn't nod.

During the skydiving scene when Bridget is under canopy she is seen holding a Metal D Handle in her right hand.

Metal D handles are only used for the reserve parachute, the reserve D handle is still clearly in place on her left webbing.

The parachute deployed is clearly a main parachute deployed using a BOC hand deploy pilot chute - not a rip cord.

Back at her workplace following the skydiving fiasco, as Bridget walks to her boss's office her sweater is buttoned the wrong way in one shot, the right way in the next, and back to the wrong way when she actually enters the office.

When leaving for work on the second morning, Bridget is wearing the same spotty blouse she had on the day before.

When she gets to the office she is wearing a pink jumper.

When Bridget runs through the rain to Mark Darcy's house, her hair and clothes are soaking as she stands in the porch.

From the next shot, she appears dry.

Then she is soaking again.

Then dry.

When Bridget and her dad are smoking in the lift, Bridget puts the cigarette to her mouth and then it cuts to a different point of view where she's holding the cigarette by her side.

In the scene with Bridget, Shazzer, Jude and Tom are smoking, and Jude is holding a book with the title, "What Men Want Today" her cigarette changes from her smoking it from her right hand to it being in her mouth as she holds the book up to Bridget.

When Bridget gets out of the ocean, she does not track any water onto the beach.

At the Law Council dinner when Bridget goes into the bathroom to correct her makeup, the shot of her drying her face shows that it is clearly a double and not Renee Zelwegger.

In the scene on the beach when Bridget is making a sand angel at Daniel's feet, some sort of tarp underneath the sand can be clearly seen being pulled tight between Bridget's legs as they move back and forth.

When Bridget rides to Mark Darcy's house in a Mercedes C-Class taxi, when she arrives at the house the car has different alloy wheels to the ones seen in a previous shot of the taxi driving through the streets.

Also when it drives off the beginning of the sequence the car has no model badge (such as C180) on the boot lid, in the next shot (it passes a row of taxis) it does.

In the sequence at the end where Bridget takes a black cab to go to the law chambers (and stops on the way to change her outside), two different cars are used, one with an H-reg numberplate and one with an N-reg numberplate.

Whilst stargazing on Daniel Cleaver's balcony, you see a shot of the sky which is full of clouds.

You wouldn't be able to see any stars with the amount of clouds in the sky.

At Mark Darcy and Bridget's wedding at the end, they are seen walking through a graveyard.

The gravestones are obviously computer generated because when you look closely, Bridget and Mark walk THROUGH one or two of them.

Box Office

FechaÁreaBruto
16 January 2005 USA USD 40,203,020
9 January 2005 USA USD 40,069,690
2 January 2005 USA USD 39,877,945
26 December 2004 USA USD 39,594,770
19 December 2004 USA USD 39,314,970
12 December 2004 USA USD 38,413,455
5 December 2004 USA USD 36,321,105
28 November 2004 USA USD 31,963,405
21 November 2004 USA USD 21,511,685
14 November 2004 USA USD 8,684,055
USA USD 40,226,215
9 January 2005 UK GBP 35,612,127
2 January 2005 UK GBP 35,089,179
26 December 2004 UK GBP 34,168,360
19 December 2004 UK GBP 33,609,077
12 December 2004 UK GBP 32,473,118
5 December 2004 UK GBP 30,571,861
28 November 2004 UK GBP 27,007,461
21 November 2004 UK GBP 20,691,687
14 November 2004 UK GBP 10,435,193
worldwide USD 262,520,724
Non-USA USD 222,294,509
13 March 2005 Italy EUR 10,013,891
30 January 2005 Italy EUR 9,363,542
23 January 2005 Italy EUR 8,374,431
16 January 2005 Italy EUR 6,491,114
9 January 2005 Italy EUR 3,289,103
23 January 2005 Netherlands EUR 4,980,630
2 January 2005 Netherlands EUR 4,487,381
12 December 2004 Netherlands EUR 3,757,083
28 November 2004 Netherlands EUR 2,711,041
14 November 2004 Netherlands EUR 870,378
FechaÁreaBrutoPantalla
14 November 2004 USA USD 8,684,055 530
14 November 2004 UK GBP 10,435,193 504
5 November 2004 UK USD 3,608,816
12 November 2004 Australia USD 4,315,602 370
10 December 2004 Austria USD 311,678
10 December 2004 Belgium USD 351,516
3 December 2004 Brazil USD 693,663 155
5 November 2004 Europe USD 3,608,816 480
10 December 2004 Finland USD 194,839
10 December 2004 France USD 4,753,340
10 December 2004 Germany USD 2,153,146
17 December 2004 Hong Kong USD 85,001 30
19 November 2004 Iceland USD 54,546
9 January 2005 Italy EUR 3,289,103 399
18 March 2005 Japan USD 652,772 48
19 November 2004 Netherlands USD 753,576
14 November 2004 Netherlands EUR 870,378 109
19 November 2004 Norway USD 580,513
10 December 2004 South Africa USD 169,788 64
19 November 2004 Spain USD 2,049,316
19 November 2004 Sweden USD 522,910
26 November 2004 Switzerland USD 209,020
FechaÁreaBrutoPantalla
16 January 2005 USA USD 73,660 116
9 January 2005 USA USD 123,760 221
2 January 2005 USA USD 131,755 216
26 December 2004 USA USD 67,220 188
19 December 2004 USA USD 331,500 514
12 December 2004 USA USD 1,114,155 1,701
5 December 2004 USA USD 2,761,455 2,433
28 November 2004 USA USD 6,231,960 2,469
21 November 2004 USA USD 10,044,890 2,450
14 November 2004 USA USD 8,684,055 530
9 January 2005 UK GBP 217,915 163
2 January 2005 UK GBP 284,144 289
26 December 2004 UK GBP 81,733 308
19 December 2004 UK GBP 517,953 349
12 December 2004 UK GBP 863,219 427
5 December 2004 UK GBP 1,696,588 484
28 November 2004 UK GBP 3,009,954 487
21 November 2004 UK GBP 5,047,315 506
14 November 2004 UK GBP 10,435,193 504
30 January 2005 Italy EUR 649,090 235
23 January 2005 Italy EUR 1,331,123 357
16 January 2005 Italy EUR 2,177,639 428
23 January 2005 Netherlands EUR 63,269 59
2 January 2005 Netherlands EUR 126,217 102
12 December 2004 Netherlands EUR 352,044 111
28 November 2004 Netherlands EUR 585,059 111
14 November 2004 Netherlands EUR 870,378 109

Comentarios

The whole Bridget Jones uproar emerged in the 1990's when Helen Fielding's newspaper article about a fictitious single lady later materialized into a best-selling novel and that hit a positive note upon the the critical mass. Bridget who was fixated on losing weight and finding the right guy rehashed her story about the triumphs and failures along with her cynical humour which quickly made her mark famous.

As a die hard, life long horror fan I rarely review romantic comedies, but I did enjoy the first movie so I looked forward to watching this, the first sequel. I thought it started off as good as the first, but sadly about halfway through it goes downhill ( in more ways than one!

Not bad, not great. Watched this back-to-back with its predecessor last night and it felt more like a second 'episode' than a distinct film - have a feeling it may be a sign of the time it was released as binge watching is far more common 16 years later!

Pretty good but not as good as the first one.

This is definitely the weakest of the trilogy and I think for the most part that it's down to the fact that it deviates so far from the book, but it wouldn't really be appropriate for Bridget to fly off for an interview with Colin Firth, when she's already dating someone who looks just like him in this case would it? I think that would be rather crass, like Julia Roberts pretending to be herself in a casino heist film.

Another example of a sequel that's better than the original. In this episode, podgy, frumpy and thoroughly unattractive Miss Jones (Renee Zellwegger with added pounds) strangely continues to attract the sauve and eligible Hugh Grant and Colin Firth.

I am usually not really fond of sequels, and this movie sort of matched my expectations. I really, really enjoyed the first Bridget Jones movie.

Bridget (Renee Zellweger) is happily ensconsed with human rights lawyer, Mark (Colin Firth), who stays at her apartment...A LOT!

This new movie is OK, but I would have liked to have seen Sharon MacGuire direct instead of someone trying to steadfastly follow the tone of the first one. The narrative is very shaky and the first half of the movie was one embarrassing gag after another with only a few allusions to the original book (it veered off severely at certain points and made Bridget's friends and family very periferal to the story).

Comentarios