
Renee Zellweger wants more Bridget Jones movies
Renee Zellweger is keeping her "fingers crossed" for more Bridget Jones movies.
The 56-year-old actress - who has played her TV producer-and-reporter alter ego since 2001 - thought 2025's Mad About the Boy was the last film in the franchise, based on the novels by Helen Fielding.
But the Hollywood star is hoping Helen will want to share more of her career, as well as family, friends and romantic relationships experiences through more books and, potentially, more films.
In an interview with The Hollywood Reporter, Zellweger said: "My understanding was that this was kind of it, but I keep my fingers crossed that she might want to share some more of her own experiences through the world of Bridget."
Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy's director Michael Morris said more "chapters" would make sense, given Helen's children Dash and Romy are going to university.
Morris said: "And look who we've got: Chiwetel Ejiofor in the world now, and we've got Leo Woodall in the world now.
"We've got all these fantastic people and Helen's got her life, her kids are going to college. Let's hope for more chapters."
Mad About the Boy follows Bridget's life as a widowed single mom after her husband Mark Darcy (Colin Firth) dies, but she confronts her grief with Mark in the form of a vision.
And Renee admitted it was "impossible" to not cry in the scene where Bridget and Mark talk on the sidewalk outside the house because the "real-life journey" of sharing their love story with Colin was ending.
She said: "That was, ''I'm not supposed to cry in the scene,' and it's impossible not to cry in that scene.
"It was such a strange day seeing Colin there in his Mark Darcy finery. I had this moment of realisation that the real-life journey of sharing the Bridget and Mark Darcy love story with my friend was coming to an end.
"It really felt like a profound moment thinking about the nearly 30 years we've shared in telling this story. Then I thought, 'Yeah, I don't want this to end. I love Mark and Bridget!'
Agreeing that it was an emotional scene, Morris said: "What I love so much about your performance in that moment - it's critical actually for how we are setting up this particular story of this woman's journey on from her great love - is that while standing in the doorway, after experiencing all those feelings you just talked about, the character Jeremy (Neil Edmond) answers the door.
"He is obviously upset on this anniversary of his friend's death, and it's Bridget who consoles him. It's Bridget who hugs him and says, 'It's OK.'
"Then your voiceover comes in and we go into the scene as the audience is feeling this loss, and it's Bridget who is looking after us.
"She's saying that this is what happened and, 'I'm OK.'
"That's so Bridget in the way that you've made her over the years. When she wallows, she wallows. But for the rest of her life, she doesn't.
"I found that a really wonderful way to begin. All of the sadness was there, all the nostalgia was there, all the yearning for the past. But you were really present: you Renée, you Bridget."

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Perth Now
4 hours ago
- Perth Now
Owen Wilson to return for Meet The Parents 4
Owen Wilson will return for 'Meet The Parents 4'. The 56-year-old actor will join Ben Stiller, 59, Robert De Niro, 81 and popstar Ariana Grande, 31, in the eagerly awaited fourth film in the 'Meet the Parents' franchise, according to The Hollywood Reporter. Owen is set to reprise his role as Kevin Rawley, the ex-fiancé of Teri Polo's Pam Focker. Polo and Blythe Danner will also return for the new film, the first in the series since 2010 movie 'Little Fockers'. John Hamburg - who wrote the screenplay for the previous three movies, 2000's 'Meet the Parents' and its follow-ups 'Meet the Fockers' and 'Little Fockers' – will pen the script. De Niro is expected to produce the film alongside his Tribeca Festival cofounder Jane Rosenthal through Tribeca Productions, while Stiller will also produce through his company Red Hour films. The original film starred Ben as Greg, a nurse who suffers a series of unfortunate events while visiting his girlfriend's parents (De Niro and Danner). Polo starred as Greg's girlfriend. Plot details for the new movie are being kept under wraps but, according to THR, one of the main storylines revolves around Grande's character. In the upcoming movie, the son of Greg (Stiller) and Pam Focker gets engaged to a 'ball-busting woman who seems all wrong for him', played by Grande. The film is set for release on November 25, 2026.


Perth Now
10 hours ago
- Perth Now
Kacey Musgraves is 'in a lot of pain' after breaking a rib
Kacey Musgraves has broken a rib after suffering a fall in Mexico. The 36-year-old singer has revealed via social media that she's "in a lot of pain" after she recently suffered a fall. Alongside an image of her X-ray, Kasey wrote on Instagram: "Sooo I'm in Mexico with a f****** broken rib. "Wednesday night it was raining and I was running to grab some towels and had an extremely hard fall on some very slick tile I didn't see. Thankful I didn't smack my head but I landed very very hard on my back left ribcage, and I broke rib number 6. "This s*** is no joke. I'm in a lot of pain and doing ANYTHING is extremely difficult but I'm managing and being well taken care of. (sic)" Kacey is currently unable to perform live because of her injury. The singer has also been forced to reschedule the live recording of a podcast. She continued: "There is no physical way I can get on a plane and fly back to Nashville for the @singforscience event with @paulstaments on Sunday at @theryman. I am extremely bummed to have to reschedule as I have been looking forward to this for months but there is literally no other option. I'm so sorry for the inconvenience. (sic)" Kacey released her debut album, Same Trailer Different Park, in 2013, and she's subsequently become one of the biggest names in country music. The singer - who was born and raised in Texas - recently revealed that she loves taking her music overseas and engaging with her international fans. The Merry Go 'Round hitmaker told The Hollywood Reporter: "I'm going to South America, then Asia and Australia. "I'm playing Brazil for the first time. I know the energy and the fans there are unlike anywhere else. I'm playing this massive rodeo [Sao Paulo's Jaguariuna], which is really cool. Rodeo is huge in Brazil. "It's been really cool to see the rest of the world come to love country music, because, really, country is more about a mentality and an attitude versus geography. Real country music is based on real emotions all humans have, no matter where you're from."


Perth Now
16 hours ago
- Perth Now
Danny Boyle 'couldn't make Slumdog Millionaire today'
Danny Boyle "wouldn't be able to make" Slumdog Millionaire today. The 68-year-old filmmaker helmed the 2008 drama movie - which told the story of 18-year-old Jamal Malik from the Juhu slums of Mumbai - but Danny believes the acclaimed film was of its time and that the world has now moved on. He told the Guardian newspaper: "Yeah, we wouldn't be able to make that now. And that's how it should be. It's time to reflect on all that. We have to look at the cultural baggage we carry and the mark that we've left on the world." The film - which starred Dev Patel and Freida Pinto - won a number of awards at the time, including seven BAFTA Awards and four Golden Globes. However, it received mixed reviews in India. Asked if the movie amounted to a form of colonialism, Danny replied: "No, no. Well, only in the sense that everything is. "At the time it felt radical. We made the decision that only a handful of us would go to Mumbai. We'd work with a big Indian crew and try to make a film within the culture. But you're still an outsider. It's still a flawed method. "That kind of cultural appropriation might be sanctioned at certain times. But at other times it cannot be." Danny remains proud of Slumdog Millionaire, but he feels that such films should be made by "a young Indian film-maker" instead. He said: "I'm proud of the film, but you wouldn't even contemplate doing something like that today. It wouldn't even get financed. Even if I was involved, I'd be looking for a young Indian film-maker to shoot it." Danny enjoyed his big career breakthrough with Trainspotting in 1996. The director helmed the hit drama film - which starred the likes of Ewan McGregor, Jonny Lee Miller and Robert Carlyle - but Danny never imagined that the movie would become such a huge success. He recently told The Hollywood Reporter: "I remember there was a wave of disapproval of it building. They had shown a trailer or something on one of the TV movie shows here. And one of the prestigious critics said, 'Well, that looks shockingly irresponsible about drugs.' Things like that were building. "And then there was this journalist, Muriel Gray, and she wrote this piece about Irvine's [Welsh] book, and about the film. She spoke with authority saying, 'You do not know what you are talking about,' all these people piling disapproval on top of it. It was a tipping point." Danny relished the experience of working with Ewan on Trainspotting, remembering that the actor was "fanatical" about his role. The director said: "His agents were putting him in period romances, for which it was perfect. And he shaved it off before we'd offered him the part of Renton in Trainspotting. He shaved it off and lost weight. And then he continued to lose weight. He was fanatical about that. And he was right."