There’s apparently more to the story when it comes to the feud between Blake Lively and her “It Ends With Us” director and co-star Justin Baldoni.

In the complaint she filed against the actor, she says Baldoni “cried in (her) dressing room” over social media comments that she “looked old” for the “It Ends With Us” movie role.

Also, documents obtained by People note that while Baldoni “was objectifying Ms. Lively as a sex object,” he also “went out of his way to message criticisms of her age and weight.”

The actress alleges Baldoni “made the rest of the cast and crew wait for hours” on the second day of filming “while he cried in Ms. Lively’s dressing room, claiming social media commentators were saying that Ms. Lively looked old and unattractive based on paparazzi photos from the set.”

The complaint also alleged that Baldoni “appeared focused on Ms. Lively’s sexual appeal above all else.”

The complaint also noted that Baldoni referred to women in the workplace as “sexy” quite “often.” The document highlighted one incident where Baldoni “pressured” the actress to remove her coat to show a onesie underneath, which was partially unzipped to reveal her bra.

In a statement to People, Bryan Freedman, Baldoni’s lawyer, denied the accusations, saying that Lively’s complaint was to “fix her negative reputation.”

Coppola tells harrowing story of childhood polio

Oscar-winning director Francis Ford Coppola has vivid memories of his experience surviving polio.

In an interview with Deadline regarding his new film, “Megalopolis,” Coppola, who was diagnosed with polio around age 9, recalled the quick onset of the disease.

“People don’t understand that polio is a fever that just hits you for one night,” Coppola told the publication. “The terrible effects of polio, like being unable to breathe so you have to be in an iron lung, or not being able to walk or be totally paralyzed, is the result of the damage of that one night of the infection. I remember that night. I was feverish and they took me to a hospital ward. It was so crammed with kids that there were gurneys piled up three and four high in the hallways.”

Coppola, now 85, painted a bleak picture of his time in a polio ward.

“I remember the kids in the iron lungs who you could see their faces on mirrors, and they were all crying for their parents. They didn’t understand why they were suddenly in these steel cabinets,” he said.

— From wire reports