NINTEEN-year-old Kirsten Dunst was destined for screen stardom from birth.

The blonde, blue-eyed beauty has already been in some 30-odd movies, as well as more than 100 television commercials.

She made her screen debut at seven in New York Stories but her big Hollywood breakthrough came in 1994 when she starred alongside Tom Cruise and Brad Pitt as an angelic vampire in Neil Jordan's Interview With The Vampire.

When, at 16, she made Drop Dead Gorgeous opposite Denise Richards she stole the show, proving that she had blossomed from a cutsie-pie child to all-American screen babe.

Her latest role as Kelly, a teenage heart-breaker in the Tommy O'Haver teen flick Get Over It, once again sees Dunst playing an high school sweetheart.

She delivers another luminous performance, outshining the rest of the cast.

Get Over It tries something a little more sophisticated than the spate of toilet humour which has flushed so many teen-oriented films down the pan.

High school student Berke (Ben Foster) is devastated when his pretty girlfriend Allison (Melissa Sagemiller) dumps him to start dating slimeball Bentley (Shane West).

Determined to win his girl back - despite her total lack of interest in him - Berke signs up for the school play, a musical version of A Midsummer Night's Dream, in which Allison has one of the lead roles.

Aided by Allison's enterprising sister Kelly (Dunst), Berke secures himself a speaking role in the production. Little does he realise that Kelly is completely smitten with him.

Although you can predict almost every twist and turn, writer R Lee Fleming Jr spices up proceedings with some amusing dream sequences and 70s-themed musical numbers.

The funked up version of the Bard, A Midsummer Night's Rockin' Eve, is also a nice touch.