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Friends With Money

Odds and ends from TIFF

Tuesday, September 9th, 2008

As we know by now, Management premiered at TIFF on Sunday night, and over a day later, reports continue to surface from the red carpet! Jen was met with a warm reception by the dedicated fans who turned up outside the theater, and Jen navigated the chaos with class, signing autographs for the rather enthusiastic crowd.

Amid the insanity of the evening, Jen did give some brief red-carpet interviews, talking to reporters not only about the film, but about her recent experience filming 30 Rock. Of her role, in which her character “manhandles a cop,” Jen told Entertainment Tonight that she worked with a “great group of people” and that she had a wonderful time on the set. Alec Baldwin had high praise for Jen, as well - he told Us Weekly, “She’s got the comedy crazy gene. She was a perfect fit for the show.” He also confirms the rumor that Oprah will appear on 30 Rock - when Access Hollywood’s Shaun Robinson asked Jen about these reports, she said, “I heard that! I thought I wasn’t supposed to say anything!”

As for Management, Jen had equally wonderful things to say about her experience working on the film - CBS News reports that Jen said of her role, “It’s a nice, quiet role. It’s beautifully written. The cast was amazing.” Her character, Sue, leads a very controlled life, and according to This Is South Wales, Jen says that playing the more guarded aspects of her character was a challenge that she welcomed:

“It’s messy. She’s really flawed, she’s really stuck,” she explained at the film’s Toronto premiere.

“Yes (it was challenging)! Oh my God, yes. In the best way. In order to let love in, you have to surrender control and that’s hard for some people.”

Stephen Belber, the director, had terrific things to say about Jen’s work on the set as well:

You have preconceptions as to how a certain scene should play. She comes in, does it that way and then she has the range to try it a different way,” he said.

“And it’s better. That kind of stuff is priceless for a director.”

He also praises her work ethic and down-to-earth approach, and says that “she has this great dramatic thing going on underneath the comedy.” Jen has shined in previous independent roles (Friends With Money, The Good Girl), and according to early reviews, Management is one to watch as well. As always, stay tuned!

Cinematic Love Lessons, Jen-style

Thursday, February 14th, 2008

The Break-Up

In the spirit of Valentine’s Day, here are some of the things that we’ve learned about love from Jen’s movies:

It’s the little things that count
In a famous scene from The Break-Up, Jen’s character Brooke notices that her boyfriend Gary has brought home three lemons instead of the twelve that she requested, and she is not pleased; this misstep is later worked into their knock-down, drag-out, break-up fight later in the evening. While something this small seems like a petty arguing point, it is not when it is a mere example of one partner’s pattern of behavior. Every day is a chance to show that you care.

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All Sorts of Friends

Tuesday, November 27th, 2007

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According to recent reports, Jen has been quite the social butterfly lately! In recent weeks, she has been spotted mingling with lots of people, from friends to fans, and remaining down-to-earth all the while.

While filming Management, Jen took the time to meet a very special fan. According to The National Ledger, Jen met with Isaiah Beeson, an 8-year-old with brittle bone disease. When Jen learned that Isaiah wanted to meet her, she made arrangements for the boy to be brought to the set. She signed a photo for him and according to relatives, Isaiah remarked that Jen was “super nice.” No surprises there, but it’s always nice to hear of her kindness with fans.

Monsters And Critics reports that last week, Jen took a trip to New York City to attend a reunion at the Rudolf Steiner School. As previously mentioned, Jen discovered her passion for acting while attending the Steiner School, and it seems that she also formed many close friendships. A fellow alum reported that “Jennifer was really happy to see everybody. She didn’t play the star and was genuinely interested in finding out how everyone else’s lives had turned out.” Once again, while this is not surprising, it’s always nice to hear.

Finally, Jen was spotted back in Malibu over the weekend; video posted at x17 Online shows Jen leaving a gathering at the Arquette residence. Fellow guests included Scott Caan, Sacha Baron Cohen, Isla Fisher, and baby Olive. However, on a less festive note, other footage shows Jen evacuating her beach house this weekend with Norman and Dolly in tow. Here’s hoping that all Malibu residents are safe from this current round of wildfires.

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Screen Style - Friends With Money

Monday, October 1st, 2007

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In Friends With Money, Jen plays Olivia, a single woman who is searching for a career and a husband of her own while surrounded by friends who have already achieved these objectives. She cleans houses to make ends meet while she searches for her calling; therefore, she spends most of the film in very casual clothing. As a contrast to her wealthier counterparts, on a daily basis Olivia favors an aesthetic that falls somewhere between shabby chic and just plain shabby, although on Jen this look reads as simply natural and bohemian. However, this is not to say that she doesn’t clean up nicely; for a gala near the end of the movie, she wears a formal dress designed by Jane (Frances McDormand) and looks beautiful. While much is made of Olivia’s limited means, it seems that even outside of these constraints, Olivia is weary of the fussiness that surrounds her in L.A. and prefers to keep things simple.

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This simple, go-with-the-flow approach extended to her hair and makeup. Prior to this production, Jen had recently wrapped Derailed. Having darkened her hair to play Lucinda, the look also worked for Olivia, whose low-maintenance aesthetic is well-suited by a natural-looking shade of brown and an unfussy style. Not much effort was made in the makeup department, either, due to director Nicole Holofcener’s commitment to authenticity. She has often expressed a distaste for the overuse of age-defying measures in Hollywood, and makes a somewhat ironic statement about it, with Olivia’s hoarding of anti-aging skin care. Nevertheless, Jen wore very little makeup as Olivia, and proved that in her case at least, natural is beautiful.

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Jen on work

Monday, March 12th, 2007

Derailed

As fans of Jen and her work, we would, of course, like to know what Jen has to say about her various projects. Here, then, is an assortment of Jen’s quotes about work:

“Mostly I like scripts that mix it up. Life can be funny and dramatic all in the same day. I don’t actually feel there’s a big difference between comedy and drama. You just step into the building and stuff goes out the door. Most of all, I just want to do work that comes from the heart.” - Chicago Sun-Times, January 2004

On Friends With Money
“It was great. A great group of women. I’ve never worked with all women. It was like camp. Actor camp. I felt very supported.” - Vogue, April 2006

“I think I’ve been lucky finding, once in a while, these little parts that are just so beautifully written. I read the [Friends With Money] script in about an hour and I just loved all these characters, especially Olivia. I thought, boy, she was really having a tough go at it.” - Entertainment Weekly, April 4, 2006

On The Break-Up
“I love this movie. I have a good feeling about it. It’s beautifully balanced and surprisingly emotional. I don’t think anyone has really seen anything quite like it.” - Vogue, April 2006

“This movie was fate. To be able to walk through a movie called The Break-up, about a person going through a breakup, while I’m actually going through a breakup?! How did that happen?! It’s been cathartic. It’s turned something into a fantastic experience - Not that divorce is fantastic, but I’ve never had more fun in a creative process.” - Elle, November 2005

On Derailed
“It took me so long to say yes because I was terrified of it. Not terrified—I don’t want to say that. But I’d gotten comfortable, and I knew it was going to be a challenge.”

Tell Aniston the ghost of Rachel Green did not appear once while watching Derailed and she squeezes her eyes shut, opens them, reaches her hand across the table, and says, “That is one of my greatest compliments.”

“I’m thinking, Good God, Jesus. It’s like watching a car wreck—you’re riveted and then disturbed. I thought, Why would I want to make someone feel this way?” - Elle, November 2005

On Along Came Polly
“It was five straight days where all we did was dance. My feet looked like raw meat. In fact, I don’t know how dancers do it.” - Chicago Sun-Times, January 2004

Friend Spotlight: Catherine Keener

Wednesday, February 28th, 2007

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Jen and Catherine have been friends for many years; they have been spotted together on many occasions since about 2000, but it is likely that their friendship goes back farther. Recently, they starred together in the film Friends With Money, and it was evident that they greatly enjoyed their time working together. Catherine had nothing but praise for Jen’s performance: “Oh, I love her in it. I think there’s such a poignancy in her. You just knew that person. She just was that, all the time. It was sort of effortless, graceful. I always love her, but this was a different part for her. It was great to see.” Catherine has been a loyal friend to Jen, even coming to her defense during Friends With Money promotion when a reporter crossed the line. Similarly, Jen has kind things to say about Catherine: “You’d think that you’d be nervous to work with a friend, because they know you so well they may see you acting! But with Keener, I felt like I’d done it before. She’s just so easy.”

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A not-so-critical perspective on Friends With Money

Tuesday, February 13th, 2007

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As stated in a previous post, I’m not exactly the most impartial person when it comes to Jen’s work. I do, however, think that her performance in this film was truly extraordinary. For reasons that are best not discussed here, she was in a very raw place at the time that this film was made, and she successfully channeled that into some of her best work to date. If you haven’t yet seen it, I strongly urge you to.

Jen plays Olivia, a single woman whose friends are all married and more successful financially than she is. She has quit her job teaching at a prep school, and is now cleaning houses to make ends meet while she searches for her calling. The characters in this film all have very telling quirks; Olivia’s is her tendency to hoard samples of a particular brand of anti-aging treatment, perhaps as a means of “slowing the clock” to give herself more time to find herself.

Here is the review that I wrote for the Chicago Maroon at the time of release:

Friends with Money explores the bonds between women and their pocketbooks

In college, if we’re lucky, many of us will make friends whom we will have for the rest of our lives. Our lives will change, without a doubt, but hopefully some of these treasured bonds will remain. That is not to say, however, that they won’t be tested.

Franny (Joan Cusack), one character in Nicole Holofcener’s Friends With Money, wonders whether she would be friends with Olivia (Jennifer Aniston) had they met at a different point in time, before life took them in drastically different directions. However, because of the sisterly bond they’ve formed, these characters, as well as their friends Jane (Frances McDormand) and Christine (Catherine Keener), continue to celebrate and commiserate together as they approach middle age.

As the film opens, we meet Olivia, in the form of a pair of hands that we see tidying belongings that don’t belong to her. These hands then open a bedside drawer and help themselves to a vibrator. You see, Olivia is a maid who is, as you might guess, single. After one too many taunts from the rich kids whom she taught at an elite prep school, she has taken up an occupation where her doormat tendencies earn her clients who argue down her price. She passive-aggressively hits back by hoarding department-store samples of anti-aging cream and swiping the full-size jars from her clients (it seems that her fixation on anti-aging skin care is an attempt to prolong the period in which she can “find herself”).

While it’s implied that Olivia is younger than the other characters, her aimlessness remains a point of concern and gossip for her friends, all of whom are married and in settled financial straits.

Christine is a screenwriter married to her writing partner, David (Jason Isaacs). They bicker over everything, from dialogue to Christine’s junk-food indulgences. It seems that the only thing that they can agree upon is an addition to their house, and once construction is underway, they even come to disagree about that. Christine’s clumsy tendencies have also escalated of late, but far be it for David to notice that.

Jane is a successful fashion designer who is bursting at the seams with the rage of a woman who realizes that the course of her life has been set. She even refuses to wash her hair (it’ll just get dirty again), and she has a moment of fitful indignity when someone cuts in front of her at Old Navy. She feels that the only difference she can make is to call out the small injustices of daily life. She also must contend with the very common assumption that her fashion-obsessed husband Aaron (Simon McBurney) is gay.

Franny, on the other hand, serves as a happy, somewhat smug foil for the other characters. From a moneyed background, she argues with her husband Matt (Greg Germann) for overpriced shoes for their children - not over their ability to pay, but out of sheer principle. Franny feels free to advise Olivia to seek therapy - but is it that Franny has it all figured out, or that she never had to figure it out to begin with?

The script has a slice-of-life feel to it that makes the film easy to watch. There is food for thought here; it isn’t force-fed but served comfortably for the viewer to sample as desired. Holofcener has a knack for writing characters with telling detail, and the women in particular seem like people she must have known at some point.

This script is done justice by excellent performances all around. The role of Jane seems tailor-made for McDormand, who particularly shines in the moments where her rage manifests itself as sarcasm. Similarly, the role of Olivia is the perfect vehicle for Aniston to capitalize on her more grounded sensibilities. Her ability to play morally ambiguous characters was previously best showcased in The Good Girl and somewhat underutilized in Derailed, but here, stripped of the trappings of her real-life fame and wealth, she is completely believable as an ordinary and very confused woman.

Keener, something of a muse for Holofcener, is wonderfully relatable as Christine. With the capability that she radiates, however, it is curious that Christine remains unaware of certain developments for so long. Finally, Cusack is as sympathetic as anyone in the smugly married role could be. Franny is as much a lightning rod for the group as Olivia seems to be, but even she feels human enough to not be a complete archetype.

Friends With Money is a highly intelligent, easygoing film that offers the viewer much to ponder afterwards. Every word in the film is carefully thought out and highly quotable. The observations about these women’s relationships resonate: Do they gossip because they care, or to make themselves feel better? Either way, I can safely say that if I saw this movie at a different point in time, I’d still enjoy it.

And here are some pictures from the premiere:

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About Jennifer Aniston Watch

Tired of blogs that profess to come from a mature place, and then in the same breath spew childish nicknames for your favorite stars? You won't find such games here. This site is a place where fans of film and television actress Jennifer Aniston can learn about her career and lifestyle, and express their own appreciation. Frequent topics include past and future films, her work on Friends, her real-life friends, and her fabulous style. Above all, we love how Jen keeps it real, and here, we can do the same.

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