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​The Razzies: Cameron Diaz, Kirk Cameron named worst actors of 2014

LOS ANGELES - Cameron Diaz and Kirk Cameron received the dubious honor of being dubbed the year's Worst Actress and Actor at the 35th Annual Golden Raspberry Awards (a.k.a. the "Razzies") on Saturday night.

Diaz earned the title for her performances in the raunchy comedies "The Other Woman" (in which a wife and two mistresses of the same man team up to make his life miserable), and "Sex Tape" (where a couple accidentally releases their private performance to the cloud).

Cameron Diaz, Leslie Mann, Kate Upton bond over “The Other Woman” 01:07

The modern-day remake of "Annie," which also featured Diaz as Miss Hannigan, along with Jamie Foxx and Quvenzhané Wallis as the plucky foster kid, was named Worst Remake, Rip-off or Sequel.


Cameron, meanwhile, picked up the award for "Kirk Cameron's Saving Christmas," a widely-derided and somewhat self-explanatory faith-based comedy, which also won Worst Picture, Worst Screen Combo (Cameron and his ego) and Worst Screenplay.

Razzie favorite Michael Bay was granted Worst Director for "Transformers: Age of Extinction," or, as the Razzies call it, "Age of Ex-STINK-tion." Although Bay's film may have grossed over $1 billion worldwide, that didn't save the silly, explosion-happy movie from more than one Razzie win.

"Transformers" supporting actress Nicola Peltz was spared, but Kelsey Grammer was not as lucky. The five-time Emmy-winner picked up Worst Supporting Actor not just for his role as the evil counter-intelligence agent, but also for his performances in "Legends of Oz," ''Think Like a Man Too," and "Expendables 3."

Megan Fox, who gained fame from the "Transformers" franchise, was recognized as Worst Supporting Actress for playing the tenacious reporter April in the Michael Bay-produced "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles."

Ben Affleck was the only one who was spared. The actor-director who won for the terrible 2003 movie "Gigli," was acknowledged with a Razzie Redeemer Award, thanks to his Oscar-winning film "Argo" and his performance in David Fincher's "Gone Girl."

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