Cameron Diaz and Justin Timberlake’s romance is reportedly on the rocks after a blazing row in a Los Angeles nightclub.
Onlookers claim the star couple ended up arguing during a night out at the trendy Spider Club earlier this month when Justin flirted with a “curvy blonde".
Stunning Cameron was said to be so upset she left the club in tears - alone. America’s In Touch magazine reports: “The argument got so nasty that Cameron and Justin ended up leaving in separate cars.”
However, the hunky singer’s spokesman has denied the alleged row.
Cameron and Justin have always had a rocky relationship, which was tested last year when British model Lucy Clarkson alleged she had enjoyed a night of passion with the pop heartthrob.
Justin vehemently denied the allegations and Cameron, who is eight years his senior, stood by him.
The couple were later rumoured to have got engaged - although it was claimed Justin’s mum, Lynn, had tried to talk her son out of the proposal, because she didn’t think he was ready to settle down.
Cameron, who has previously dated handsome actors Jared Leto and Matt Dillon, recently admitted marriage was not her top priority in life.
More: people.monstersandcritics.com
Related Travel Information
Orlando Bloom set out to prove that English actors can do American accents in his new film, a romance.
Orlando stars in Cameron Crowe's Elizabethtown, as a shoe designer who falls in love while flying to his father's funeral.
Susan Sarandon is also in the movie, and Kirsten Dunst plays the flight attendant who wins Bloom's heart.
Source: news.scotsman.com
Romance may be in the air for two of the better-known House members: Entertainer Sonny Bono's widow and the son of a former U.S. senator.
Members of the Florida delegation have been atwitter over frequent sightings of Reps. Mary Bono, R-Calif., and Connie Mack IV, R-Fla., on Capitol Hill.
Both Bono and Mack recently announced their marriages were ending.
Bono announced her separation from second husband Glenn Baxley last month, and Mack announced his separation from wife Ann in August.
When asked Friday about the relationship, Mack chief of staff Jeff Cohen would only say: "Connie's marriage was in trouble for a long
From "Say Anything ...." to "Almost Famous," Cameron Crowe has made his name with movies that strike the right tone -- a bittersweet balance that's funny, melancholy, romantic and observant. It's one his idol, Billy Wilder, perfected decades ago.
Which is what makes "Elizabethtown" so curious, and such a disappointment.
In telling the story of a young man who returns to his small-town Kentucky roots after his father's death, it's as if writer-director Crowe wanted to make several movies but couldn't decide among them, so he just made them all, then trimmed for time.
Characters say and do things real people don't say
Ralph Fiennes hadn't read John Le Carre's controversial thriller The Constant Gardener when he was approached about the film version. So he visited his favourite London bookstore and bought the book. "I had heard very good things about it," he says now.
By the time he finished Le Carre's savage indictment of the international pharmaceutical industry -- particularly its use of poor, unsuspecting Africans as human guinea pigs for new drugs with dreadful side effects -- he was incredulous.
"My first reaction was: Does this sort of thing go on? Apparently it has gone on. I don't know whether it goes
As evidenced by the popularity of the new movie "March of the Penguins," we humans find it fascinating when animals hook up.
It takes a lot to pack a theater for a documentary, and yet Americans have been captivated by this story of emperor penguins who travel across 70 miles of snow and ice in search of a mate.
I recently went to the Philadelphia Zoo for an adults-only "Up Close and Personal" tour to find out more about how animals date, court and mate. Just like people, animals spend much of their lives trying to spend quality time with the opposite