Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy

Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy(2025)

R
02/12/2025 (US)Romance, Comedy, Drama2h 4m
6.5

"She's starting a new chapter. Just as she is."

Overview

Bridget Jones navigates life as a widow and single mum with the help of her family, friends, and former lover, Daniel. Back to work and on the apps, she's pursued by a younger man and maybe – just maybe – her son's science teacher.

Helen Fielding

Writer

Abi Morgan

Writer

Dan Mazer

Writer

Michael Morris

Director

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Part of the Bridget Jones Collection

Bridget Jones is a franchise based on the fictional columnist with the same name. English writer Helen Fielding started her Bridget Jones’s Diary column in The Independent in 1995, chronicling the life of Bridget Jones as a thirtysomething single woman in London as she tries to make sense of life and love with the help of a surrogate «urban family» of friends in the 1990s.

Media

Official Trailer

Official Trailer

Trailer

Watch Now

Watch Now

Teaser

“Let Me Get You Out Of Those Wet Clothes”

“Let Me Get You Out Of Those Wet Clothes”

Clip

Olivia Dean - It Isn’t Perfect But It Might Be

Olivia Dean - It Isn’t Perfect But It Might Be

Featurette

Sustainability

Sustainability

Behind the Scenes

Interview with Renée Zellweger, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Leo Woodall

Interview with Renée Zellweger, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Leo Woodall

Featurette

Celebrate Bridget Jones season with the official BRIDGET JONES: MAD ABOUT THE BOY podcast now

Celebrate Bridget Jones season with the official BRIDGET JONES: MAD ABOUT THE BOY podcast now

Featurette

Social

C
A review by CinemaSerf
7.0

Written on February 19, 2025

If only this had just had the courage of it’s convictions! It’s four years now since a land mine rendered “Bridget” (Renée Zellweger) a single mum with the lively “Billy” (Casper Knopf) and “Mabel” (Mila Jankovic) keeping her on her toes and giving her an excuse not to meet new people. It’s when she uses some chocolate buttons to lure her kids to the heath that she quickly finds herself stuck in a tree trying to rescue her children and in turn attracting the attention of their teacher “Wallaker” (Chiwitel Ejiofor) and the hunky ranger “Roxster” (Leo Woodall). Now she’d already met the whistle-obsessed tutor but the younger man, well he just sent her heart a flutter! A bit of internet flirting later and she’s “Bridget” reborn, reanimated and refocussed. Her friends are delighted, especially at his dog-rescuing skills. Thing is, though, there’s the age gap. There’s the children who miss their dad. There’s nerves and the ghastly millennial trait of “ghosting”. Meantime, “Billy” isn’t doing so well emotionally at school. This means that she must deal more with his teacher, and with the school in general - which leads to a revelatory school trip where it’s not just the marshmallows that get toasted. With choices galore, will anyone end up happy? Zellweger is in her element here and just exudes an enthusiasm for the part, and the kids also deliver quite naturally as they contribute to her daily maelstrom, but the whole selling point of this film just peters out and I found myself thinking her a rather cruel and selfish individual as a degree of more pedestrian predictability took over. Hugh Grant earthily livens up a few scenes but the old guard of Jones/Broadbent/Imrie don’t really feature enough to remind us of just why we ever really cared about “Bridget” in the first place. The television aspects with Neil Pearson are almost entirely devoid of humour and though Helen Fielding still has an entertaining grasp of what makes people tick and giggle, the spark has largely gone from the mix. Woodall is perfect eye candy and brings an engaging normalcy to his role but that rather sums this up - light and fluffy, worth a watch, but just a bit too cowardly for my liking.