Cameron Diaz and Her Smile
Cameron Diaz’s smile that pretty much every man, woman and child in the world could recognize at 100 paces whenever fashion is mentioned.
As Carly in new film The Other Woman[/i], Diaz plays a tough-talking and immaculately attired lawyer - whose wardrobe was key to her characterization.
I wanted Carly's look to be really put together, you know: she curls her hair, she gets her nails done, she puts her make up on, she puts her outfits together, Diaz said. That is not at all like me! I am not that person on a daily basis, but that's the fun thing about creating characters. You can really say a lot in the wardrobe, and with the hair and make-up. You can tell a whole story with fashion. With costumes designed by Sex and the City[/i] stylist Patricia Field, the film also stars Leslie Mann (as the wronged wife to Cameron Diaz's titular other woman), and model Kate Upton for whom the film marks her debut as a lead character. Much more at home on a Sports Illustrated[/i] or Vogue[/i] shoot, Upton found the lack of control of her character's look challenging at first.
The film is a chick flick, in the nicest possible sense, and when viewers aren't preoccupied by the fashion (or the amusing if slightly cruel revenge tactics employed by the trio against the film's hapless cheating husband, played by Nikolaj Coster-Waldau), then the message of female empowerment is clear. Since Sex and the City[/i] and long before, women have responded to the message of solidarity and togetherness championed by films like this; which err just on the girl power side of rom com and this latest take on the genre will surely prove no less popular.
I think that we really wanted to show that women are there for women that that's what we do,Diaz summed up. We help each other through, and the best thing you can do in this situation is just move on and forget about it. That's the best way to get through things. Leave it behind. And take your own path, Upton added. That's when they're happiest. They have their own lives, and they have each other, and they've moved past it.
Cameron Diaz’s smile that pretty much every man, woman and child in the world could recognize at 100 paces whenever fashion is mentioned.

I wanted Carly's look to be really put together, you know: she curls her hair, she gets her nails done, she puts her make up on, she puts her outfits together, Diaz said. That is not at all like me! I am not that person on a daily basis, but that's the fun thing about creating characters. You can really say a lot in the wardrobe, and with the hair and make-up. You can tell a whole story with fashion. With costumes designed by Sex and the City[/i] stylist Patricia Field, the film also stars Leslie Mann (as the wronged wife to Cameron Diaz's titular other woman), and model Kate Upton for whom the film marks her debut as a lead character. Much more at home on a Sports Illustrated[/i] or Vogue[/i] shoot, Upton found the lack of control of her character's look challenging at first.
The film is a chick flick, in the nicest possible sense, and when viewers aren't preoccupied by the fashion (or the amusing if slightly cruel revenge tactics employed by the trio against the film's hapless cheating husband, played by Nikolaj Coster-Waldau), then the message of female empowerment is clear. Since Sex and the City[/i] and long before, women have responded to the message of solidarity and togetherness championed by films like this; which err just on the girl power side of rom com and this latest take on the genre will surely prove no less popular.
I think that we really wanted to show that women are there for women that that's what we do,Diaz summed up. We help each other through, and the best thing you can do in this situation is just move on and forget about it. That's the best way to get through things. Leave it behind. And take your own path, Upton added. That's when they're happiest. They have their own lives, and they have each other, and they've moved past it.