Media reports have it that Kristen Stewart is trying to steal Demi Moore's boyfriend Sean Friday after the "Ghost" actress introduced the two during a business meeting.

It seems like Kristen Stewart hasn't had enough of coming between couples! After her controversial love affair with "Snow White and the Huntsmen" director Rupert Sanders, the "Twilight" actress has now moved on to Demi Moore's boyfriend Sean Friday. According to a Star magazine report, Stewart is trying to get a bit too comfortable with Friday.

 "Demi invited Kristen over to talk about a few movie projects," a source told Star Magazine in an interview posted on Gossip Cop. "But she and Sean completely hit it off. Now Kristen has a bit of a crush on him."

"Kristen is really liking Sean in spite of her friend's warning her not to make the same mistake twice! Plus, while Demi is a bit of a joke in Hollywood now she still is not the kind of woman that you really want to cross and unfortunately Kristen appears to want to find that out the hard way," Celebdirty Laundry reports.

The tabloid reports that Stewart and Friday exchanged numbers after the meeting and have been in contact "right under Demi's nose, but Kristen's pals are trying to steer her away from a disastrous situation." But according to the gossip website, these allegations are not true just like the magazine lied about Kristen targeting Zac Efron and implied that she was in a lesbian relationship.

Now that she is officially out from the "Snow White" franchise, Stewart is busy with her other projects and just recently she ditched her "Twilight" persona and donned full military fatigue for her upcoming Guantanamo Bay drama "Camp X-Ray." The 24-year-old actress plays Private Amy Cole, a soldier who leaves her small town to serve a tour of duty in Iraq but ends up being posted at the notorious Guantanamo Bay detention camp.

Almost unrecognizable in  her new role, The Hollywood Reporter called her gripping performance "powerfully internalized."

"Ever since the Twilight backlash began, people have questioned whether Stewart is merely a sullen screen queen or a real actor," according to the review. "It's a fiercely contained performance, conveying raw personal insights even when Amy outwardly remains clenched in discomfort. There's not a moment Stewart's onscreen here where she isn't completely transfixing."