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Justin Baldoni says Blake Lively improvised kiss as unseen footage from It Ends With Us emerges in legal twist

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Never-before-seen footage from It Ends With Us has sent Blake Lively and Justin Baldoni’s legal battle into overdrive – with Baldoni now accusing Lively of the very conduct she claims he subjected her to.

According to court documents obtained by DailyMail.com, Baldoni’s legal team submitted a deleted scene as evidence on Thursday, arguing it shows Lively improvising a kiss during filming — despite her bombshell lawsuit accusing Baldoni of doing exactly that.

The minute-long clip, filed as an exhibit in a Nov. 13 motion for summary judgment, shows Lively and Baldoni shooting a hospital hallway scene in May 2023. 

In the footage, Lively’s Lily strides up to Baldoni’s Ryle, grabs his arms, and plants a quick kiss on him before smiling and walking off — a moment nowhere to be found in the shooting script, according to Baldoni’s legal team.

They argue Lively not only approved the moment but ‘oversaw’ the scene and ‘herself added to the script, in which her character kissed Baldoni’s character in every take, although there was no kiss in the script.’

Daily Mail has reached out to reps for both Baldoni and Lively.

Never-before-seen footage from It Ends With Us has turbo-charged Blake Lively and Justin Baldoni’s legal war, with Baldoni submitting a deleted scene that he claims shows Lively improvising a kiss — the very behavior she accuses him of in her lawsuit

Never-before-seen footage from It Ends With Us has turbo-charged Blake Lively and Justin Baldoni’s legal war, with Baldoni submitting a deleted scene that he claims shows Lively improvising a kiss — the very behavior she accuses him of in her lawsuit

The minute-long clip, filed as an exhibit in a Nov. 13 motion for summary judgment, shows Lively and Baldoni shooting a hospital hallway scene in May 2023

The minute-long clip, filed as an exhibit in a Nov. 13 motion for summary judgment, shows Lively and Baldoni shooting a hospital hallway scene in May 2023

Lively, 38, has accused Baldoni, 41, of sexual harassment and retaliation — claims he forcefully denies.

As previously reported, when It Ends With Us filming was set to restart after the Hollywood strikes, Lively returned to the set in January 2024 with a strict checklist for Baldoni and the producers.

One of them, according to her lawsuit: ‘no more improvising of kissing.’ 

But Baldoni’s team is now pointing to the newly unearthed clip as evidence that Lively herself had participated in off-script kissing months earlier. 

In Baldoni’s own $400 million lawsuit, filed in January and later tossed by the judge, his attorneys insisted that every kiss shot before the strike had been planned and approved. 

They’re now revising that stance, arguing that the hospital scene — which they claim shows Lively initiating an unplanned kiss — was actually filmed on May 19, 2023, well before production was halted.

With the video now in the court record and both sides digging in, the Hollywood feud has gone nuclear — and the fallout is only getting messier.

Last week, a New York judge handed Lively a fresh courtroom defeat.

In the footage, Lively’s Lily strides up to Baldoni’s Ryle, grabs his arms, and plants a quick kiss on him before smiling and walking off — a moment nowhere to be found in the shooting script, according to Baldoni's legal team

In the footage, Lively’s Lily strides up to Baldoni’s Ryle, grabs his arms, and plants a quick kiss on him before smiling and walking off — a moment nowhere to be found in the shooting script, according to Baldoni’s legal team

Baldoni's team argue Lively not only approved the moment but 'oversaw' the scene and 'herself added to the script, in which her character kissed Baldoni’s character in every take, although there was no kiss in the script.'

Baldoni’s team argue Lively not only approved the moment but ‘oversaw’ the scene and ‘herself added to the script, in which her character kissed Baldoni’s character in every take, although there was no kiss in the script.’

Just days after a federal judge ended Baldoni’s multimillion-dollar defamation suit against Lively, Ryan Reynolds, and The New York Times, another ruling didn’t go her way. 

Judge Lewis Liman dismissed her claims against social media strategist Jed Wallace, whom she accused of helping Baldoni’s camp coordinate an online smear effort during the film’s release. 

The judge ruled that her legal team failed to show Wallace—who is based in Austin, Texas—had sufficient ties to New York to be sued there. 

Lively accused Baldoni’s team of enlisting Wallace to lead an online ‘digital army’ that smeared her reputation across social platforms.  

Judge Liman had previously tossed the claims but gave her legal team a chance to strengthen the case by proving Wallace’s ties to New York. 

In the end, Liman ruled that Lively’s argument fell short, though he noted she could still pursue Wallace in Texas.

‘The Court ruled that Ms. Lively’s claims can and should be brought in a different court,’ a spokesperson for Lively told Daily Mail. 

‘Ms. Lively is evaluating her many options for doing so, and looks forward to trial on all of her claims against Baldoni, Heath, Nathan and the rest of the Wayfarer defendants in March in New York.’

Lively and Reynolds seen in April at the Time 100 Gala in NYC

Baldoni had brought a suit against Lively and her husband Ryan Reynolds

Wallace hit back by filing a defamation lawsuit of his own against Lively in a Texas court, but it was thrown out. 

The unseen footage also comes after the latest allegations in the ongoing litigation between the former co-stars focus on claims the actor allegedly illicitly used technology to orchestrate a smear campaign against his costar.

Baldoni and his team of attorneys, agents and public relations professionals used digital tricks to conceal critical evidence in the legal proceedings, lawyers for Lively, 38, claimed in a court filing obtained by the Daily Mail on Wednesday.

Her team claimed: ‘Defendants have hid the ball at every turn in the discovery process, either failing to produce documents, or improperly cloaking them in the attorney-client privilege.’

Lively’s lawyers said that from Baldoni’s camp forced ‘no less than twelve discovery-related motions to date against’ them. 

A former Baldoni associate in Jonesworks LLC – a PR firm and a third-party defendant in the case – raised similar allegations in a filing on Wednesday, Deadline reported after reviewing court documents. 

Attorneys for Lively, who is wed to actor Ryan Reynolds, 49, said in the court paper that Baldoni coordinated an effort with associates from Wayfarer Studios and PR professionals such as Melissa Nathan and Jennifer Abel, with apps, auto-deleting messages and other digital elements coming into play. 

Baldoni and his team worked in concert to try to destroy Lively’s reputation with the use of multiple digital resources, which included the app Signal; voice memos; and other software, lawyers for the Los Angeles-born actress said in the court paper.

Baldoni and his associates took multiple actions indicating they were aware litigation could be in the future, and sought to conceal information in the case that would not be advantageous if publicly exposed, Lively’s lawyers said in the filing.

Details about Signal and other efforts were gleaned from depositions with former employees of Nathan, including Katherine Case and Breanna Butler, Deadline reported, citing legal documents it reviewed.

The Gossip Girl star claimed Baldoni had sexually harassed her while making It Ends with Us, which was a surprise hit when it arrived in theaters in August last year. Baldoni denied the allegation.

It Ends with Us, directed by Baldoni, was a surprise hit when it arrived in theaters in 2024

It Ends with Us, directed by Baldoni, was a surprise hit when it arrived in theaters in 2024

The movie earned $148 million at the domestic box office, and $350 million globally – but whatever goodwill the film garnered has since been overshadowed by the allegations made by its stars.

The motion picture, which also starred Jenny Slate, Hasan Minhaj, Brandon Sklenar and Kevin McKidd, was based on the 2016 novel by Colleen Hoover. 

The storyline of the film centered around a toxic relationship between Lily Bloom (played by Lively) and Ryle Kincaid (Baldoni).

According to a logline for the film, Lily ‘overcomes a traumatic childhood to embark on a new life,’ as ‘a chance meeting with a neurosurgeon sparks a connection but Lily begins to see sides of him that remind her of her parents’ relationship.’

In December last year, Lively named Baldoni in a lawsuit accusing him of sexual harassment, retaliatory conduct, and intentional infliction of emotional stress.

In her lawsuit, the actress accused Baldoni of sexually harassing her in multiple ways – including body shaming her – and orchestrating a smear campaign against her to damage her reputation.  

In her lawsuit, Lively named a number of Baldoni’s collaborators, including his company Wayfarer Studios, the studio’s CEO and financial backer, and PR personnel Nathan and Abel.  

Baldoni had initially asked for $250 million in damages from The New York Times mentioning a report it published on the topic, then added it into the $400 million lawsuit he filed this past January.

In the suit, Baldoni named Lively, her spouse Reynolds and her publicist Leslie Sloane, citing the aforementioned report in legal documents. It was thrown out of court this past June. 

All parties have denied all of the allegations against them.

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