- This summer, multiple controversies surrounding ‘It Ends with Us’ overshadowed the film’s press tour.
- Fans criticized Blake Lively’s promotion methods and speculated her and costar Justin Baldoni had fallen out.
- Four months later, Lively filed a sexual harassment complaint against Baldoni.
The “It Ends With Us” press tour this summer was overshadowed by rumor and speculation.
Ahead of the film’s release in August, fans suspected lead star Blake Lively and her costar and director, Justin Baldoni, were feuding. Fans blamed Lively without know what cause their apparent falling out, and criticized her on social media.
The film survived the backlash, becoming one of the biggest hit movies of the summer, grossing $350 million worldwide.
Over the weekend, Lively filed a legal complaint against Baldoni.
Here’s everything we know about the situation.
Baldoni did not interact with other cast members at press events.
Fans suspected that something was amiss when Baldoni and Lively didn’t interact during the press tour, despite playing partners in the film.
Lively teamed up with costars Brandon Sklenar and Isabela Ferrer for press events and with Colleen Hoover, the author of the book the film is based on, for interviews and TV spots. Meanwhile, Baldoni did a lot of solo press.
Even when they both attended the New York premiere on August 6, they were not photographed together.
Lively posed with her castmates, Hoover, her husband Ryan Reynolds, and Hugh Jackman, his “Deadpool & Wolverine” costar. Meanwhile, Baldoni was only photographed with his wife and some of the other producers who worked on the film.
While speaking to Entertainment Tonight on the carpet at the New York premiere, Baldoni explained why he was stepping back from the limelight.
“This isn’t my night — this is a night for all the women who we made this movie for,” he said.” This is a night for Blake, this is a night for Colleen. I’m just so grateful that we’re here, five years in the making.”
Regardless of his comments, fans theorized about the potential drama between the two on social media.
This speculation intensified after a user on the r/ColleenHoover subreddit posted on August 6 that Lively and Hoover do not follow Baldoni on Instagram. Fans also noticed that the film’s other stars, including Sklenar, Ferrer, and Jenny Slate, did not follow Baldoni either.
Business Insider could not verify whether they previously followed him.
For his part, Baldoni followed all of them except Hoover.
Fans wondered if the apparent beef was one-sided or if Baldoni was at the center of a wider fracture, especially since, during pre-production, Hoover and Baldoni appeared on each other’s Instagram feeds multiple times.
Adding to this theory was a clip of Slate seemingly sidestepping a question about Baldoni at the movie’s New York premiere. Asked about having Baldoni as both a scene partner and a director, she responded by not mentioning Baldoni and instead speaking about how “intense” it must be to do both jobs.
i just found out about the whole ‘it ends with us’ cast drama and omg they asked her what it was like to work with justin and she completely ignored the question 💀 pic.twitter.com/2DdlmvxS4x
— leah doesn’t do cocaine (@camis_unicorn) August 7, 2024
News reports fueled the speculation.
The Hollywood Reporter reported on August 8, citing unnamed sources, that the feud on set originated when two movie cuts emerged during the postproduction process.
Multiple sources told the outlet that Lively commissioned one of the cuts to be done by “Deadpool & Wolverine” editor Shane Reid. He was the same editor Lively previously used when she directed the music video for Taylor Swift’s “I Bet You Think About Me.”
However, the film’s final cut was credited to editors Oona Flaherty and Robb Sullivan.
It’s unclear if Reid’s cut was used in the film version that showed in theaters, but according to one source who spoke to THR, the team agreed on the final cut.
A day later, Page Six reported, citing an anonymous source, that the two talents didn’t see eye-to-eye while shooting the movie. Page Six reported that one source said Baldoni made Lively feel “uncomfortable” about her postpartum body during filming. Another source said Baldoni created an “extremely difficult” environment for the entire cast.
“It’s not just Blake. None of the cast enjoyed working with Justin,” the source was quoted as stating. “They certainly didn’t talk to him at the premiere.”
On August 13, People reported that a source close to the set said, “All is not what it seems,” and the principal cast and Hoover didn’t want anything to do with Baldoni.
Fans turn on Lively.
Though reports indicated that the cast had a problem with Baldoni, fans blamed Lively for the feud, accusing her of trying to take over the film.
This theory was supported by Baldoni and Lively’s interviews in the lead-up to the movie’s premiere.
On August 9, Baldoni told Today that Lively and Reynolds, who was not a producer on the film, contributed significantly to it.
“You can’t summarize Blake’s contribution in a sentence, because her energy and imprint is all over the movie and really, really made the film better, and from beginning to end,” Baldoni said.
Baldoni also said he struggled to balance allowing collaboration and having his voice drowned out entirely.
He said: “You don’t have to listen to everybody, and that didn’t happen all the time, but there were just moments where I would get out of the way too much.”
Baldoni also said that Lively should take over as director for the sequel to the “It Ends With Us” novel, “It Starts with Us.”
Meanwhile, Lively told E! News on August 7 that Reynolds helped pen the opening scene of “It Ends With Us.”
The film’s screenwriter Christy Hal told People a day later that she wasn’t aware that Reynolds had written some of the dialogue used in the final version of the script.
“When I saw a cut, I was like, ‘Oh, that’s cute. That must have been a cute improvised thing,'” Hall said. “So if I’m being told that Ryan wrote that, then great, how wonderful.”
The film is about a florist whose husband becomes abusive, and Fans also criticized Lively for speaking about the film’s romantic elements during the press tour, and less about the domestic abuse plot. This was in line with the film’s marketing.
Baldoni was the only cast member who consistently spoke about the domestic abuse element.
Baldoni recruited a PR crisis manager who represented Johnny Depp during his trial with ex-wife Amber Heard.
The Hollywood Reporter reported on August 13 that the actor hired veteran PR crisis manager Melissa Nathan, who represented Johnny Depp during the Amber Heard trial in 2022.
Nathan launched her agency in 2024, specializing in crisis communications and reputation management.
A clip of Lively acting hostile toward a reporter in a 2016 interview resurfaced amid the ‘It Ends With Us’ drama
Journalist Kjersti Flaa released a clip of an interview with Blake Lively on August 10, titled “The Blake Lively interview that made me want to quit my job.”
“It actually took me a while to get over the experience,” Flaa told Business Insider in an email on August 19.
“Every time I entered a room after this I got nervous that something similar might happen again,” she wrote.
Lively’s costar put out a statement asking people to stop focusing on ‘what may or may not have happened.’
Sklenar, who plays Lively’s other love interest in “It Ends With Us,” spoke out about the speculation in an Instagram post on August 20.
“I wanted to take a minute and address all this stuff swirling online,” he wrote, going on to condemn people for “vilifying” women who were part of the film.
“Colleen and the women of this cast stand for hope, perseverance, and for women choosing a better life for themselves. Vilifying the women who put so much of their heart and soul into making this film because they believe so strongly in its message seems counterproductive and detracts from what this film is about,” he said.
“This film is meant to inspire. It’s meant to validate and recognize,” Sklenar added. “It is not meant to once again, make women the ‘bad guy,’ let’s move beyond that together.”
Representatives for Baldoni, Lively, Reynolds, Hoover, and Sklenar did not respond to requests for comment from Business Insider.
Lively files a complaint against Baldoni, accusing him of sexual harassment.
On December 20, Lively filed a legal complaint against Baldoni, accusing him of sexual harassment, retaliation, breach of contract, inflicting “emotional distress,” and conspiring to damage her public reputation.
The complaint also named Wayfarer Studios, Baldoni’s production company, and Jamey Heath, the company’s CEO, as two of the 11 defendants in the lawsuit.
In the lawsuit, Lively said an “all-hands” meeting about Baldoni and Heath’s behavior on set was held in January 2023. She accused him of showing her nude videos and images of women, improvising kissing scenes or intimate scenes, and entering her trailer while she was naked.
Lively said she held the meeting for all the female cast members and requested an intimacy coordinator to be hired.
Lively said Heath and Baldoni retaliated against her by orchestrating a “multi-tiered” plan to “destroy” her public reputation and stop her or anyone else from speaking out about what happened on set.
Lively said Baldoni hired the crisis PR, Nathan, and a Texas-based contractor named Jed Wallace, both defendants in the lawsuit, ahead of the film’s premiere to carry out this plan. She said it involved feeding theories on social media to shift the narrative against Lively.
She also claims in the lawsuit that the cast agreed to a marketing plan created by the film’s distributor, Sony Pictures Entertainment, to avoid talking about the sad parts of the movie, which Baldoni broke away from.
“What the public did not know was that Mr. Baldoni and his team did so to explain why many of the Film’s cast and crew had unfollowed Mr. Baldoni on social media and were not appearing with him in public,” the complaint said.
Baldoni’s attorney said Lively blamed Baldoni to fix her reputation.
Bryan Freedman, an attorney for Baldoni and Wayfarer Studios, told BI in a statement: “It is shameful that Ms. Lively and her representatives would make such serious and categorically false accusations against Mr. Baldoni, Wayfarer Studios and its representatives, as yet another desperate attempt to ‘fix’ her negative reputation, which was garnered from her own remarks and actions during the campaign for the film; interviews and press activities that were observed publicly, in real time and unedited, which allowed for the internet to generate their own views and opinions.”
Freedman said Nathan was hired because Lively made multiple demands and threatened not to show up to set or promote the film if they were not met.
A representative for Lively referred BI to a statement shared with The New York Times on Saturday: “I hope that my legal action helps pull back the curtain on these sinister retaliatory tactics to harm people who speak up about misconduct and helps protect others who may be targeted.”
Lively’s costars from 2005’s “The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants” — America Ferrera, Amber Tamblyn, and Alexis Bledel — and Hoover have shared statements in support of Lively after she made the complaint.