This week, Natalie Portman's Black Swan body double Sarah Lane spoke out to E! Online, proclaiming that Portman had done far less of the film's dancing than director Darren Aronofsky let on. According to E!, Lane blames her own na'veté for the lack of credit she received for her work.

"It was all my fault really because I didn't have a manager," Lane, a professional ballet dancer who was used for the more complex dancing sequences in Black Swan, told E! Online.

"I thought they would kind of take care of me because they were really encouraging and really sweet and always saying how amazing I was. They were kind of rooting for me when I would have to do shots that were really hard and almost impossible even for a professional ballet dancer."

Fox Searchlight and Aronofsky have denied Lane's suggestions that she was exploited, claiming that Portman herself performed 90 percent of the dancing on film. Lane's accusations are still spiking controversy around the internet-mostly about how much credit a stuntwoman or body double should receive for her work on a film.

As always, no online community was more up in arms than my favorite hangout, LiveJournal blog OhNoTheyDidn't. "Bitter much?" One user wrote, "She needs to get over the fact that she wasn't the star of the movie."

Another user ranted, "We know Natalie had a stunt double, why should that double get credit for doing her job?"

"Most other stunt doubles in other movies do way more complicated things than some of the dancing in this movie and you don't see them crying and making a big deal out of it. How annoying."

Some bloggers, however, took Lane's side. "I think her point is that most of the prase [sic] that Natalie is getting for the movie is for the fact that she learned to dance so well in only a year. Which is untrue."

The poster, Modern Toilet (I don't make these usernames up, I promise) makes a decent point. We don't watch Indiana Jones and think, "Wow, Harrison Ford, you should get an Oscar for that jump out of a helicopter!"

On the flip side, however, one could argue that Natalie got more praise for making herself look like a ballerina, not dancing like one.

What do you think, Brandeis pop culture lovers? Should stunt and body doubles get a little more credit for doing the heavy lifting?