![]() ![]() I am usually the first to acknowledge that there is rarely any time when gossip-style news should be discussed, let alone deemed “important,” especially in relation to art, whose definitive artistic motivations shouldn’t allow for any culturally-reflexive speculation to add further meaning to. She probably enjoys the fact that she got under Cameron’s skin so much, especially if Cameron really did have a close relationship with Spike Jonze.If the above title sounds a bit too “National Enquirer”-y for you, I apologize. I have my doubts whether Sofia even cares if Cameron is mad at her. If Camy and Sofia are burying the hatchet, then good for them. But Faris has had to answer questions about it in several interviews, and Faris always denies that her performance is in any way mocking Cameron. Is it true that Cameron has never spoken about it? Probably – I can’t find anything. “And she has never publicly addressed the movie scenes in question. “Cameron still refuses to talk to Anna,” the insider says. Probably helping the situation, Coppola has since split with Jonze and is happily married to rock star Thomas Mars of Phoenix.īut despite her truce with Coppola, for Diaz, the scene still seems to sting, according to the source. Says the source, Dunst, who starred in Coppola’s Virgin Suicides and Marie Antoinette, “felt that after all these years, it was time they buried the hatchet.” ![]() Oddly enough, the source says that it was the pair’s mutual friend, Kirsten Dunst, who got them talking again. “They had drinks this summer and cleared the air, possibly even paving the way for a future collaboration.” “There has been a thaw in the relationship between Sofia and Cameron in recent months,” the insider says. I could probably name eight people that she was based on, just that bubbly, extroverted blonde that you see on talk shows…It wasn’t a slight at anyone in particular.”īut it still made things tense between her and Diaz, says the source - until now. In the movie, Faris plays a dumb blonde actress who flirts with the husband of the intellectual lead character, portrayed by Scarlett Johansson and based on Coppola herself.Ĭoppola has insisted that Diaz wasn’t her muse, telling the Daily Beast ”The actress was based on a bunch of people, just that type. “It only got worse when the film came out and it became pretty well-known that part of the movie was based on their real-life feud.” “Sofia and Cameron have had an incredibly difficult relationship since 1999, the year Sofia married Spike,” a source close to Diaz says. It’s only now, has learned, that Diaz has forgiven her former friend Coppola for the supposed slight! At the time, Anna Faris‘ ditzy blonde character in director Sofia Coppola‘s film was widely interpreted as being based on Diaz, as a kind of retaliation for her alleged flirtation with Coppola’s husband, Spike Jonze. ![]() Lost in Translation was released more than ten years ago, but the film is still having an effect on Hollywood - specifically, on Cameron Diaz. Well now Radar claims that Sofia and Cameron are close to burying the hatchet: There was said to be something like a Cold War between them, no “shots fired” per se, but there was resentment on Cameron’s part. Faris doesn’t play her as vindictive or villainous, but the character seems self-absorbed, too cutesy and annoying.Īfter that, there were stories over the years that Cameron and Sofia didn’t get along. I should say that the blonde actress character comes across as an a-hole. Jonze and Diaz had worked together on Being John Malkovich, and many people simply thought, “Wow, Sofia hates Camy Diaz.” It was almost like Sofia Coppola – who wrote and directed Lost In Translation – told Anna Faris, “Do an impression of Cameron”. Faris did such an uncanny impression of Cameron Diaz, it’s not even funny. Faris’ character is ditzy, a little crazy and all over the husband character. In the movie, the husband runs into an actress he worked with, played by Anna Faris. For those of you who haven’t seen the film, these are the basics you need to know: Scarlett Johansson’s character (based on Sofia Coppola) has traveled to Japan with her husband, played by Giovanni Ribisi (based on Sofia’s then-husband Spike Jonze). If you’ve seen Lost In Translation, you’ll not only understand this story, you’ll enjoy it too.
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