(Michael Loccisano/Getty Images Archives) Joaquin Phoenix, left, and Casey Affleck attend a screening of “Two Lovers” in 2009 in New York. In their lawsuits, the two women, a producer and a director of photography on the movie, said that Phoenix and Affleck used their bedroom during filming in Costa Rica to engage in “sexual activity” with other women, Vanity Fair and other outlets reported. When it comes to Affleck, Phoenix told Vanity Fair that his lawyers advised him to not talk about the sexual misconduct allegations. For some critics and fans, Phoenix’s disaffected, vengeance-filled Joker has far too much in common with recent mass shooters. It’s clear he’s also campaigning for his own best actor Oscar, which means he has also had to address the controversy over “Joker’s” depiction of a mentally unstable loner who turns to inhumane acts of violence in pursuit of fame as a stand-up comedian. Phoenix, 44, gave the interview for the Vanity Fair cover story while promoting his much-buzzed about new film “Joker,” which opens Friday. But even before that, Affleck’s once bro-like friendship with Phoenix had already evaporated, with Phoenix revealing in a new Vanity Fair profile that he hasn’t spoken to Affleck “in many years.” News of the lawsuits, which were settled for undisclosed sums, surfaced as Affleck was successfully campaigning for the 2016 best actor Oscar for “Manchester By the Sea.”Īffleck’s career has never quite recovered from the ignominy of Brie Larson refusing to shake his hand while presenting him with his Oscar at the 2017 awards ceremony. Just ahead of the #MeToo era, the production of “I’m Still Here” became notorious because two female crew members sued Affleck, accusing him of sexual harassment and emotional distress, and of creating an “unprofessional” atmosphere on the set. They also became brothers-in-law when Affleck married Phoenix’s younger sister Summer in 2006.īut their friendship became problematic - personally and professionally - when they teamed up for the experimental 2010 mock-documentary “I’m Still Here.” Affleck directed Phoenix, playing a semi-fictional caricature of himself as a self-destructive actor trying to become a hip-hop artist. The future Oscar contenders became so close that they lived in the same New York City building, enjoyed the city’s nightlife together and got matching tattoos in Italy. When Joaquin Phoenix and Casey Affleck met on the set of the 1995 film “To Die For,” they both were young, hot, up-and-coming Hollywood actors. CLICK HERE if you are having a problem viewing the photos on a mobile device
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