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Jennifer Aniston Source - Jennifer Aniston - Articles - Misc. - 2006 - April - Jolie Hits Out At Aniston




Aniston runs with a new set of ‘Friends’
By Dawn Taylor
16th April 2006

This third feature by writer-director Nicole Holofcener ("Walking and Talking," "Lovely & Amazing") is neither a small indie piece like her earlier films nor the broad mainstream comedy it’s being marketed as. Instead, the picture walks a delicate line between the two, and, for the most part, it succeeds. Even when it fails, it fails in ways that are still interesting.

Jennifer Aniston plays Olivia, who left her position as a teacher of affluent high-schoolers after they mocked her lack of wealth by giving her quarters to buy lunch. Now working as a housecleaner, she’s the odd gal out among her closest friends — three married couples, all of whom have a lot of money.

Holofcener’s script follows the seven people as they gossip, connive, conspire and generally talk around one another in the manner that close friends do. Franny (Joan Cusack) is married to Matt (Greg Germann) and sees no disconnect between donating $2 million to her child’s school and turning down Olivia for an $1,800 loan because that’s "a lot of money."

Christine (Holofcener veteran Catherine Keener) writes screenplays and fights a lot with her husband, David (Jason Isaacs). Jane (Frances McDormand) suffers bursts of rage when people cut in front of her in line and steal her parking spots, while everyone in the group is convinced that Jane’s metrosexual husband, Aaron (Simon McBurney), is gay.

The episodic story bounces between different combinations of characters chatting, and it soon becomes clear that what they all have in common is a singular lack of empathy. While they care about their spouses and friends, they all seem utterly incapable of reading one another’s behavior, instead filtering everything through their own narrow perceptions.

Were they able to step outside of themselves for a moment, they’d see what we see — that Jane’s uncontrolled anger and her refusal to wash her hair ("my arms get so tired," she says) are signs of an impending breakdown, and that Olivia’s struggles for money have eroded her self-esteem to the point where she dully continues dating a skeezy personal trainer (Scott Caan) who has sex with her in the house she cleans and then asks for a cut of her pay because he "helped."

Holofcener’s greatest success is in making us see the humanity behind her smugly entitled SUV-driving characters. We like them, even as we’re boggled that Christine can blithely construct a monstrous second story on her home, blocking her neighbors’ views, yet wonders why they’ve all stopped speaking to her — she’s not a bad person, just a supremely egocentric one.

Aniston is continually upstaged by the three better actresses she’s cast with here, which actually works in the picture’s favor. She’s the least dynamic of the four and continually adrift, and Holofcener gives her a morally ambiguous ending that doesn’t redeem the worst of her behavior so much as it rewards it.

There’s less of a cohesive sense of real community here than in the superb "Lovely & Amazing," but as for the social awkwardness that comes with the unspoken divide between America’s classes, Holofcener has made an intriguing, funny and very watchable thesis on the subject.

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