Someone Like You & Bridget Jones's Diary
Producer Lynda Obst and director Tony Goldwyn for Someone
Like You, author and screenwriter
Helen Fielding and director Sharon Maguire for Bridget
Jones's Diary
Interview by Serena Donadoni
Why have romantic comedies suddenly become so ubiquitous? As the producer
of the romantic comedy Someone Like You (2001) and author
of Hello,
He Lied & Other
Truths from the Hollywood Trenches, Lynda Obst has a particularly
keen perspective.
"They're wish-fulfillment," she states simply, "because
we have a need to believe that true love belongs to all of us. It isn't
something just for the lucky. Part of the role of a romantic comedy is
to show, no matter what the obstacles, no matter how unlikely the person
to find their dream come true, it happens."
"Part of American movies in general are wish-fulfillment
movies," Obst continues, "and the romantic comedy exists to
keep the dream of love alive at a time of extreme cynicism, extreme gender
confusion. So it serves a particular function now that may be slightly
different than as it functioned in the 1940s, but it's the same
genre."
Someone Like You, based on Laura Zigman's mordantly
funny novel, Animal Husbandry, arrives in theaters two
weeks before the highly-anticipated
screen adaptation of Helen Fielding's comic touchstone, Bridget
Jones's Diary. Both novels carry the strong voice of their
protagonists, single white women living out the cosmopolitan dream (in
Manhattan and London, respectively) whose love lives have somehow gone
awry. In the adaptation process, these books have been transformed into
romantic comedies which place their exasperated central characters in unconventional
love triangles with men prone to contradiction.
Directing his second female-centered film (after 1999's A
Walk on the Moon), Tony Goldwyn found himself in the role of bringing in a stronger "man's
point of view." Someone
Like You, the tale of a woman so devastated when a relationship
suddenly — and inexplicably — implodes that she concocts
a bold thesis: that heterosexual male behavior can be explained by careful
observation of the animal kingdom.
"There used to be a line in the script," Goldwyn explains, "that
if theories like that really do exist, they're there for us to
see who's strong enough to break them. That to me the whole point: we grasp
desperately by trying to make sense of our emotions and control the chaos
of our hearts and the more we do that, the more we run amok."
"When you go to the intellectual to cover the emotional," concurs
Obst, "you're half-way through a journey, but it's not until you break
away the ideology, and break away the cerebral and get back to your heart
that you've made any real change."
Both films show that old-fashioned
romanticism lives, even among women who embrace feminism. Helen Fielding,
whose emblematic "singleton" Bridget Jones continually stumbles
while running the gauntlet of her great expectations, doesn't
see that as a conflict.
"One of the things Bridget is about," Fielding
says of her bestseller, "is that there are all these different things
you're supposed to be as a woman now: successful, independent, spiritual,
thin. Bridget has her own income, her own home, her own life, her own
friends. But if it wasn't true that even the most independent modern
women think about men quite a lot, then I probably wouldn't have
sold quite as many copies. It's part of human nature to want to love
and be loved and think about sex a bit. It doesn't mean you're not doing
the other stuff, too."
In creating the diary of the fictitious Bridget
Jones, Helen Fielding freely adopted Pride and Prejudice,
thinking "it
had been very well market researched over a number of centuries, and
Jane Austen wouldn't mind." (She was particularly taken with the
popular British television miniseries, where Colin Firth played the haughty
Mr. Darcy. Fielding named her hero Mark Darcy and in a postmodern twist,
Firth portrays him in the 2001 film of Bridget
Jones's Diary.) Austen's novels
have repeatedly been adapted, and Fielding sees several
reasons for her continued Hollywood popularity.
"One
is that she knew about plotting," she explains, "but also Jane
Austen was writing about the tiny details of women's lives and from that
you actually understood an awful lot about the society at that time and
women's position in it. So I was, in a fawning sort of way, trying to
imitate what she does by writing about why it takes three hours between
getting up in the morning and leaving the house. Just little silly things
but you learn a lot from the detail, I think. The big things and the
little things always co-exist in life, same as the serious and
the comic."
The makers of Someone Like You used The
Philadelphia Story (1940) as their template, but Bridget
Jones's Diary director Sharon
Maguire has a more contemporary model, one which embraces a peculiarly
modern form of romantic angst.
"The best romantic comedy ever is Annie Hall [1977],"
she asserts, "because it reflects our worries and anxieties about relationships
back at us and it still makes us laugh. When they reflect your life
back at you, with all its flaws and all the humor that goes with it,
then that's good."
What surprised Maguire, a documentary filmmaker making
her feature debut, was just how much could be conveyed simply by focusing
the camera on the hesitant gestures of two would-be
lovers.
"Little things fill the screen, you realize," she says with
amazement, "little moments of emotion."
© 2001, Serena Donadoni. All rights reserved.
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