In the low-budget production "Friends with money," Aniston is again cast as a character who doesn't fit in with her surroundings and personality. When I first read the introduction, it said that it was a story between friends like "Six People", but after reading it, I found that it was not so easy and fun at all. Some are similar to Alderman's "Short Films" and Paul Anderson's "Magnolia", which are also group-like films with many characters as the protagonists, but they are not as complex and ambitious as the first two, but they are also unique. Every character in the play is very distinctive, and each has his own unique problems. It seems strange, but it actually has a general representation of human problems. Aniston was originally a teacher, but according to her friends quit her job because wealthy students laughed at her for driving Japanese cars. She lives in poverty, but she lives among a group of rich people, and she is a person who doesn't know how to reject others. It is inevitable that she will be embarrassed from time to time. She has more personal issues. She fell in love with a married man with whom she had a brief relationship, still can't forget him, and calls every night with nothing to say. This is another good attempt by Aniston, but such films always have niche limitations.
Incomplete Notes on Jennifer Aniston's Movies:
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Friends with Money reviews