I'm a salty, greasy girl. I give every french fry a fair chance. Could you just lay some lard in my belly?
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Cameron Diaz Filmography (All Movies)

Cameron Diaz - Charlie's Angels 01Charlie's Angels (2000)
Starring: Cameron Diaz, Drew Barrymore, Lucy Liu, Bill Murray, Kelly Lynch
Directed by: McG
Produced by: Drew Barrymore, Leonard J. Goldberg, Leonard Goldberg, Nancy Juvonen
Release Date: November 3, 2000 Nationwide.
MPAA Rating: PG-13 for action violence, innuendo and some sensuality/nudity.
Distributor: Columbia Tristar
In this remake of the popular 1970s television show, the three angels--Dylan (Drew Barrymore), Natalie (Cameron Diaz), and Alex (Lucy Liu)--are called to duty by their flirtatious boss, Bosley (Bill Murray), to intervene in the kidnapping of a well-known millionaire. The film has been updated from the original TV show in a few poignant ways: The angels are now called "women" (not "little girls") in the introductory voice-over, and they concentrate on strength and martial arts when they fight criminals because they no longer carry guns. Packed with glam action and featuring a fantastic cast--including LL Cool J--CHARLIE'S ANGELS promises to please.

Any Given Sunday (1999)
Starring: Al Pacino, Cameron Diaz, Dennis Quaid, Jamie Foxx, LL Cool J
Directed by: Oliver Stone
Produced by: Oliver Stone, Clayton Townsend, Dan Halsted, Lauren Shuler Donner
Release Date: December 22, 1999 Nationwide.
MPAA Rating: R for strong language and some nudity/sexuality.
Distributor: Warner Bros. Pictures
Although professional football provides the action-packed backdrop of Any Given Sunday, the film takes a simultaneously epic and intimate look at the men and women who comprise the milieu of the film, from the modern-day gladiators of the gridiron, their coaches and often beleaguered families, to the moneyed team owners and business concerns who attempt to control the game as big business, to the hungry sports media, and hangers-on trying to get a taste of the glamour.

 Being John Malkovich (1999)
Starring: John Cusack, Cameron Diaz, Catherine Keener, John Malkovich, Orson Bean
Directed by: Spike Jonze
Produced by: Sandy Stern, Michael Stipe, Steve Golin, Vincent Landay
Release Date: October 29, 1999.
MPAA Rating: R for language and sexuality.
Distributor: USA Films
A man takes a new job on the 7th-and-a-half floor of an office building and stumbles upon a membranous room that leads inside the head of stage and screen actor John Malkovich. There he can see life through Malkovich's eyes before being systematically ejected from the room and onto the New Jersey turnpike. The man then rents out Malkovich's head to others, eventually letting his wife inside where she falls in love with another woman who, in turn, thinks she has fallen in love with John Malkovich.

There's Something About Mary (1998)
Starring: Ben Stiller, Cameron Diaz, Matt Dillon, Chris Elliott, Lee Evans
Directed by: Peter Farrelly, Bobby Farrelly
Produced by: Michael Steinberg, Bradley Thomas, Charles B Wessler, Frank Beddor
Release Date: July 15, 1998.
MPAA Rating: R for strong comic sexual content and language..
Distributor: 20thCentury Fox
There sure is. A stalker love story, from the people who brought you "Dumb and Dumber" and "Kingpin." Ted (Ben Stiller) is still in love with his high school prom date, Mary (Cameron Diaz), even though it's been years after the humiliating incident that cut their date short. Ted hires Pat, a private detective (Matt Dillon) to track her down, but Pat ends up falling in love with her too, starting a battle for Mary's heart that's rife with gross-out humor.

Very Bad Things (1998)
Starring: Jon Favreau, Cameron Diaz, Christian Slater, Peter Berg, Daniel Stern
Directed by: Peter Berg
Produced by: Cindy Cowan
Release Date: November 25, 1998.
MPAA Rating: R for strong, grisly violence, sexuality, drug use and language.
When a group of friends go to Las Vegas for a bachelor party, things begin to go wrong when the party's stripper dies. Attempting to cover up her death only leads to greater, and grislier, complications. A brutally dark comedy written and directed by Peter Berg of "Chicago Hope" fame.

Keys to Tulsa (1997)
Starring: Eric Stoltz, James Spader, Cameron Diaz, Mary Tyler Moore, James Coburn
MPAA Rating: R.
When a mysterious seductress enters the lives of two men, is she just starved for attention, or is she after more than meets the eye--like blackmail? A condemning look at the idle rich of the titular city.

A Life Less Ordinary (1997)
Starring: Ewan McGregor, Cameron Diaz, Holly Hunter, Delroy Lindo, Ian Holm
Directed by: Danny Boyle
Produced by: Andrew MacDonald
MPAA Rating: R.
Distributor: 20th Century Fox
Petulant, rich honeypie Celine and scruffily adorable janitor Robert find themselves on the road to romance after he kidnaps her to avenge his termination at the hands of her callous father. But what they don't realize is that their love is celestially predetermined, as a pair of gun-toting angels gives chase to force the issue. A quixotic and inconsistent Hollywood debut from the production team of director Boyle, writer John Hodge, and producer Andrew MacDonald ("Shallow Grave" and "Trainspotting")

My Best Friend's Wedding (1997)
Starring: Julia Roberts, Dermot Mulroney, Cameron Diaz, Rupert Everett, Philip Bosco
Directed by: P.J. Hogan
Produced by: Ronald Bass, Jerry Zucker
Release Date: June 20, 1997.
MPAA Rating: PG-13.
Distributor: Columbia Tristar
A 28-year-old woman, who years earlier made a pact with her closest male friend that if neither were married in ten years time they would marry one another, now faces the fact that the man is about to marry someone else. He asks her to be his best man and she agrees, planning to go to the ceremony and then break up the couple before they exchange their vows. Instead, she accepts the turn of events and realizes she doesn't need to be married to be happy.

Head Above Water (1996)
Starring: Cameron Diaz, Harvey Keitel, Craig Sheffer, Billy Zane
Directed by: Jim Wilson
Produced by: Helen Pollak, Guy East, Tristan Whalley, Jim Wilson, John M. Jacobsen
MPAA Rating: PG-13.
It's a case of too many men--one of whom mysteriously winds up dead--for a recovering addict whose vacation with her husband at a secluded resort is interrupted by the appearance of an ex-lover and a hot-pants handyman.

Feeling Minnesota (1996)
Starring: Keanu Reeves, Vincent D'Onofrio, Cameron Diaz, Delroy Lindo, Courtney Love
Directed by: Steven Baigelman
MPAA Rating: R.
Distributor: Fine Line Features
Chaos, violence, and a Cain-and-Abel-like struggle ensue when, on the day of her wedding, a young midwesterner makes the mistake of falling in love with another man--her fiance's brother. An independent romantic comedy.

She's The One (1996)
Starring: Jennifer Aniston, Edward Burns, Cameron Diaz, Mike McGlone, John Mahoney
Directed by: Edward Burns
Produced by: Robert Redford, Michael Nozik, Ted Hope, James Schamus, Edward Burns
MPAA Rating: R.
A pair of brothers--one a cabdriver, the other a Wall Street bigwig--try to work out the kinks in their relationships with their wives, their mistresses (at least one of them), their father, and, ultimately, each other. SHE'S THE ONE is a charming romantic comedy from the director of THE BROTHERS McMULLEN, with a soundtrack by Tom Petty.

The Last Supper (1995)
Starring: Cameron Diaz, Annabeth Gish, Ron Eldard, Courtney B. Vance, Jonathan Penner
Directed by: Stacy Title
MPAA Rating: R
A tongue-in-cheek examination of both sides of the political spectrum, this black comedy follows the culinary exploits of a group of liberal graduate students who invite right-wingers to dinner to pick their brains--literally, as it turns out. After each dinner, the guest of honor is murdered and buried in the back yard. A cutting satire on the self-righteous on both sides of the political divide.

The Mask (1994)
Starring: Jim Carrey, Cameron Diaz, Peter Reigert, Peter Riegert, Peter Green
Directed by: Chuck Russell
Produced by: Bob Engelman
MPAA Rating: PG-13.
When a no-account bank clerk discovers a curious wooden mask he finds it has some interesting properties; to wit, the mask magnifies the wearer's personality to superhuman proportions--oddly, others seem to find this attractive. The no-longer-nebbischy clerk enjoys his new life considerably, but when he seduces the girlfriend of a powerful gangster, complications result. Academy Award Nominations: Best Visual Effects.
 
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