Days Of Thunder
When “Days of Thunder” began filming in late 1989, Tom Cruise was already in trouble with then-wife Mimi Rogers due to his previous philandering. His on-set whirlwind romance with Nicole Kidman turned out to be the last straw, and Cruise and Rogers divorced just one month into production.
Cruise and Kidman tied the knot on Christmas Eve less than a year later. Their love affair was a rollercoaster, and a few years later, they announced their separation.
To Have And Have Not
Before becoming one of the most famous couples in Hollywood history, Lauren Bacall and Humphrey Bogart were just friends. The kind of friends who would hold hands and kiss on set. Despite the 25 year age difference, the cast and crew started noticing flirtation sparking between 19-year-old Bacall and 44-year-old Bogart.
The only catch was, Bogart was married to actress Mayo Methot, who was upset to hear about the actors' flirtation. The two divorced soon after the film was released. Bogart and Bacall married, and the couple stayed together until he died in 1957. Age ain't nothing but a number!
The Outlaw Josey Wales
Clint Eastwood is known for being a lady's man, but his most notorious fling was on the set of "The Outlaw Josey Wales." Though he was married to Maggie Johnson at the time, Eastwood began an indiscreet affair with his co-star Sondra Locke.
The affair eventually led to the two moving in together, but much like Eastwood's past extramarital flirtations, failed. The fling lead to his divorce from Maggie Johnson, which is unsurprising, to say the least!
By The Sea
All good things must come to an end, and Brangelina's end was a tough one. "By the Sea," which tells a story of a disintegration of a marriage, was a "test" of her own marriage to Brad, Jolie confirmed. As it turns out, the movie felt more like a documentary than it did a film.
Rumors about Jolie's "dark side" were spread during filming, and Jolie herself admitted that she butted heads with her husband on set. One year after the movie's release, the couple separated, and Jolie filed for divorce.
The Misfits
Playwright Arthur Miller and Marilyn Monroe had been married for four years when decided to collaborate professionally on the set of "The Misfits." It seemed like a match made in heaven, but the movie's pressures proved to be too much for the doomed couple.
Miller annoyed Monroe with his constant script rewrites and obtrusive sexism. Monroe claimed that the movie's most interesting roles had gone to her male counterparts. It wasn't long before the couple parted ways. "The Misfits" turned out to be the last movie that Marilyn Monroe filmed before her death.