Friends star Matthew Perry did not hold back when it came to expressing his thoughts about fellow actor Keanu Reeves…
The fifty-three-year-old actor shared the details of a feud in his new memoir, Friends, Lovers and The Big Terrible Thing.

This comes as a particular shock as Keanu Reeves is known as one of the nicest men in Hollywood.
“He sounds jealous that Keanu turned out to be more successful and a better human being than himself, what a shame, jealousy is an awful thing,” one person commented.

“Keanu has been to much darker places than Perry realizes, the loss of his child, his wife helping his sister through her illness, the things he has had to endure would have been enough to turn ANYBODY to drugs or alcohol or even both. But he chose a different path stayed humble and he still came out of it a better man with a generous heart and a beautiful soul. He’s worth 10,000 Perrys!” raged another.
Scroll on to find out more…
Now, we were first introduced to the Friends gang in 1994.

Ross, Rachel, Chandler, Monica, Phoebe, and Joey burst onto our screens in September 1994.
It was an instant hit.

The comedy followed the friends, who live in the same New York apartment block, as they navigated through their mid-twenties.
We got to know the ins and outs of their everyday life…

And in a way, they became our own friends… It’s corny, but it’s true.
The show navigated some serious topics…

Ross and Rachel were not on a break. Period.
There were many iconic moments throughout the show’s ten seasons.

Rachel’s English trifle, Chandler’s nubbin, the time Joey got a Thanksgiving turkey stuck on his head…
The list could go on.

Despite the show coming to an end in 2004, it stands as one of the most-watched shows on Netflix, and its fanbase is as strong as ever.
They all embodied their characters completely.

And none of us can quite see them in anything else.
The gang earned a lot of money during those 10 years…

Allegedly, the cast was each on an eye-watering $1 million salary per episode in the later seasons of the show – a history-breaking figure.
Despite everyone’s love for the show, behind the scenes, one of the actors was struggling immensely to stay afloat.

Matthew Perry, who played the lovable Chandler Bing, has opened up about struggling with addiction while he was filming the show.
Perry has spilled all in his memoir, Friends, Lovers, and the Big Terrible Thing, which is coming out on November 1.

“I wanted to share when I was safe from going into the dark side of everything again,” he told PEOPLE.
“I had to wait until I was pretty safely sober — and away from the active disease of alcoholism and addiction — to write it all down.

“And the main thing was, I was pretty certain that it would help people.”
In his memoir, Perry admits that he almost died at the age of forty-nine after his colon burst from using opioids.

He shared that while he was being treated in hospital, “the doctors told my family that I had a 2 percent chance to live.”
“I was put on a thing called an ECMO machine, which does all the breathing for your heart and your lungs. And that’s called a Hail Mary. No one survives that.”

Perry revealed that he first began with an alcohol addiction aged twenty-four while working on Friends, which slowly turned into drug use.
“I could handle it, kind of. But by the time I was thirty-four, I was really entrenched in a lot of trouble,” he admitted.

“But there were years that I was sober during that time. Season 9 was the year that I was sober the whole way through. And guess which season I got nominated for best actor? I was like, ‘That should tell me something.'”
And after being admitted to rehab fifteen times over the years, Perry revealed that he’s sober and feeling a lot healthier.

He has also learned a lot: “It’s important, but if you lose your sobriety, it doesn’t mean you lose all that time and education,” he said. “Your sober date changes, but that’s all that changes. You know everything you knew before, as long as you were able to fight your way back without dying, you learn a lot.”
And while he’s been through a lot over the years, Perry is incredibly grateful to be here to tell his story and help others.

“I’m an extremely grateful guy. I’m grateful to be alive, that’s for sure. And that gives me the possibility to do anything.”
In an exclusive look at the trailer for his interview with Diane Sawyer, airing October 28, Matthew Perry opens up about his struggles with addiction—and which Friends co-star helped the most.

He reveals that in the height of his addiction, he was taking ”55 Vicodin a day,” alongside the ”Methadone, Xanax, a full quart of vodka a day” mentioned by Sawyer.
Perry also tells Sawyer that he was in a coma ”and escaped death really narrowly.”

He goes into more depth about this in his upcoming memoir.
He recalls the moment that his friends co-star Jennifer Aniston, whom he calls ‘Jenny,’ once confronted him about his struggles.

”We know you’re drinking,” she said.
”Imagine how scary a moment that was,” Perry tells Sawyer.

He describes Aniston’s support as crucial, and that she played a huge part in his journey to recovery.
He explains that “She was the one that reached out the most, I’m really grateful to her for that.”

During his interview with People, Perry noted that his co-stars in the Friends cast — Aniston, Courteney Cox, Matt LeBlanc, Lisa Kudrow and David Schwimmer — were all also supportive. He describes them as “understanding” and “patient.”
But it seems he had a deeper connection with Aniston than the rest.

In an extract of his memoir Friends, Lovers and the Big Terrible Thing published in The Times, Perry opened up about his friendship with Aniston.
And how he wanted to be more than friends.

“I was immediately taken by her (how could I not be?) and liked her, and I got the sense she was intrigued too – maybe it was going to be something,” he said.
When Perry got the call that he’d got the role of Chandler, he immediately rang her, telling her: “‘You’re the first person I wanted to tell this to.’

“Bad idea,” he wrote. “I could feel ice forming through the phone. Looking back, it was clear that this made her think I liked her too much or in the wrong kind of way… and I only compounded the error by then asking her out.
“She declined (which made it very difficult to actually go out with her), but said that she’d love to be friends with me, and I compounded the compound by blurting, ‘We can’t be friends!’”

Perry admitted that although he still liked Aniston, they were “able to sail right past the past and focus on the fact that we had both gotten the best job Hollywood had to offer” on the hit sitcom.
He continued: “Fairly early in the making of Friends I realized that I was still crushing badly on Jennifer Aniston. Our hellos and goodbyes became awkward. And then I’d ask myself, how long can I look at her? Is 3 seconds too long?

“But that shadow disappeared in the hot glow of the show. (That, and her deafening lack of interest.)”
Following that bombshell, news broke about yet another love interest of Perry’s from the set of the show…

None other than Julia Roberts herself!
The Notting Hill star had reportedly stipulated that in order to guest star in Friends, she wanted her character to be involved with Chandler.

In the wake of the show, the pair dated for around 3 months.
He explained: “3 or 4 times a day I would sit by my fax machine and watch the piece of paper slowly revealing her next missive.

“I was so excited that some nights I would find myself out at some party sharing a flirtatious exchange with an attractive woman and cut the conversation short so I could race home and see if a new fax had arrived. 9 times out of ten, one had.”
However, Perry revealed that the pair’s relationship quickly fizzled…

He said: “Dating Julia Roberts had been too much for me. I had been constantly certain that she was going to break up with me.”
“Why would she not? I was not enough; I could never be enough; I was broken, bent, unlovable.

“So instead of facing the inevitable agony of losing her, I broke up with the beautiful and brilliant Julia Roberts,” Perry said.
The pair split a couple of months after the Friends episode with Roberts aired.

But that isn’t the only celebrity encounter Perry opened up about in his tell-all memoir…
Perry also took a jibe at fellow actor Keanu Reeves.

“Why is it that the original thinkers like River Phoenix and Heath Ledger die, but Keanu Reeves still walks among us?'” Perry wrote in a passage obtained by Page Six.
This refers to how Reeves’ friend, River Phoenix, passed away in 1993 from apparent drug use.

With Perry implying that Reeves was the lesser of the 2 talents.
Many people found these comments particularly distasteful, given that Perry’s memoir deals, in a large part, with his own addiction.

And bringing up another drug-related death just doesn’t sit right with many.
But it has hit the internet particularly hard, because, well, we all love Keanu Reeves!

Perry might be the only person in the world who doesn’t.
And this bitterness from Perry has got to hurt.

What do you think about his comments?