Justin Baldoni sues Blake Lively and Ryan Reynolds for $400M in new step 
		in 'It Ends With Us' fight
		
		 
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		 [January 17, 2025] 
		By ANDREW DALTON 
		
		LOS ANGELES (AP) — “It Ends With Us” actor and director Justin Baldoni 
		has sued his co-star Blake Lively and her husband, “Deadpool” actor Ryan 
		Reynolds, for defamation and extortion on Thursday in the latest move in 
		a bitter legal battle surrounding the dark romantic drama. 
		 
		The suit filed in federal court in New York by Baldoni and production 
		company Wayfarer Studios seeks at least $400 million for damages that 
		include lost future income. It alleges that Lively and Reynolds hijacked 
		the production and marketing of “It Ends With Us" and manipulated media 
		to smear Baldoni and others on the production with false allegations of 
		sexual and other harassment. 
		 
		“This is a case about two of the most powerful stars in the world 
		deploying their enormous power to steal an entire film right out of the 
		hands of its director and production studio,” the suit says. “Then, when 
		Lively and Reynolds’ efforts failed to win them the acclaim they 
		believed they so richly deserved, they turned their fury on their chosen 
		scapegoat.” 
		 
		The lawsuit comes about two weeks after Lively sued Baldoni and several 
		others tied to the film, alleging they retaliated against her for coming 
		forward about her treatment on the set. 
		 
		Her lawyers called Baldoni's new lawsuit “another chapter in the abuser 
		playbook.” 
		 
		"This is an age-old story: A woman speaks up with concrete evidence of 
		sexual harassment and retaliation and the abuser attempts to turn the 
		tables on the victim," they said in a statement Thursday night. “This is 
		what experts call DARVO. Deny. Attack. Reverse Victim Offender.” 
		
		“It Ends With Us,” based on the bestselling 2016 novel by Colleen 
		Hoover, was released in August and exceeded box office expectations with 
		a $50 million debut. It begins as a standard romantic drama before 
		taking a dark turn into domestic violence. The fallout in its aftermath 
		has made major waves in Hollywood and led to discussions of the 
		treatment of female actors both on sets and in media. 
		
		  
		
		“Heartbreakingly, a film that Baldoni envisioned years ago would honor 
		the survivors of domestic violence by telling their story, with the 
		lofty goal of making a positive impact in the world, has now been 
		overshadowed beyond recognition solely as a result of Lively’s actions 
		and cruelty,” the lawsuit says. 
		 
		Lively’s allegations of sexual and other harassment followed by 
		retaliation are utterly false, Baldoni's suit alleges. 
		 
		“Lively was so close and comfortable with Baldoni that she freely 
		breast-fed in front of him during meetings,” the suit says. 
		 
		She would later take moments like these that she encouraged and recast 
		them as sexual harassment and misconduct, his lawsuit alleges. 
		 
		Lively's Dec. 31 lawsuit came just hours after Baldoni sued the New York 
		Times for libel, alleging the paper worked with Lively to smear him. The 
		Times said it stood by its reporting and planned to “vigorously defend” 
		against the allegations. 
		
		Baldoni's new suit also says that counter to Lively's allegations, every 
		request she made for an intimacy coordinator to help with sensitive 
		scenes on the film was honored. It focuses especially on a a birthing 
		scene, saying Lively's contention that she was “mostly nude” with 
		non-essential people present including the film's financier were 
		"knowingly false." 
		 
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            This combination of images shows Blake Lively at the London 
			screening of the film "It 'Ends With Us" on Aug. 8, 2024, left, and 
			Justin Baldoni, center, and Ryan Reynolds in separate photos at the 
			world premiere of the film in New York on Aug. 6, 2024. (AP Photo) 
            
			
			  Baldoni says that at another point 
			during the production, because he has back problems, he privately 
			and politely asked Lively her weight so that he could work with his 
			personal trainer to be able to safely lift her in the film. 
			 
			Reynolds later “swore at Baldoni and accused him of fat-shaming his 
			wife," the suit says. 
			 
			“In fact, Lively had earlier expressed insecurity about her 
			postpartum figure, and Baldoni made every attempt to genuinely 
			reassure her,” his lawsuit says. 
			 
			Baldoni took a backseat in promoting the film while Lively took 
			center stage along with Reynolds, who was on the press circuit for 
			“Deadpool & Wolverine” at the same time. 
			 
			The backlash against Baldoni led to his being dropped by his agency 
			WME, which also represents both Lively and Reynolds. The suit 
			alleges Reynolds was responsible for this, saying that he approached 
			a WME executive at the “Deadpool & Wolverine” premiere and 
			“expressed his deep disdain for Baldoni, suggesting the agency was 
			working with a ‘sexual predator.’” 
			 
			Prior to “It Ends With Us,” Baldoni starred in the TV comedy “Jane 
			the Virgin,” directed the 2019 film “Five Feet Apart,” and wrote 
			“Man Enough,” a book pushing back against traditional notions of 
			masculinity. 
			 
			“Lively knew full well that making those allegations would be a 
			career death sentence for Plaintiffs, especially given that Baldoni 
			has lived his private and public life as an impassioned advocate for 
			gender equality and healthy masculinity,” his lawsuit says. 
			 
			But Lively's lawyers' statement said that evidence will show that 
			other cast members had similar experiences with Baldoni. 
			 
			“In short, while the victim focuses on the abuse, the abuser focuses 
			on the victim,” the attorneys said. "The strategy of attacking the 
			woman is desperate, it does not refute the evidence in Ms. Lively’s 
			complaint, and it will fail.” 
			 
			Lively came to fame through the 2005 film “The Sisterhood of the 
			Traveling Pants,” and bolstered her stardom on the TV series “Gossip 
			Girl” from 2007 to 2012. She has since starred in films including 
			“The Town” and “The Shallows.” 
			 
			Baldoni's lawsuit says Lively's cruelty even extended to her serving 
			the papers from her lawsuit on Baldoni and his co-defendants in the 
			days after she filed it during the onset of the wildfires that have 
			ravaged the Los Angeles area, saying that on a day when they were 
			"gathering their kids and pets, preparing 'go bags' and monitoring 
			evacuation orders while fearing for their homes, Lively — from the 
			safety of her penthouse in New York — deployed process servers.” 
			 
			Baldoni’s attorney, Bryan Freedman, said in a statement Thursday 
			that “this is a battle she will not win and will certainly regret.” 
			 
			“Ms. Lively will never again be allowed to continue to exploit 
			actual victims of real harassment solely for her personal reputation 
			gain at the expense of those without power,” he said. 
			
			
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