Mila Kunis life style by thelabelfashion. Which actress comes out top in the style stakes. more close
Milena Kunis professionally known as Mila Kunis, is an American Hot Actress. Her television work includes the role of Jackie Burkhart on That '70s Show and the voice of Meg Griffin on the animated series Family Guy. She has also played roles in film, such asRachel Jansen in Forgetting Sarah Marshall, Mona Sax in Max Payne and Solara in The Book of Eli.
In 2010, she won the Marcello Mastroianni Award for Best Young Actor or Actress at the 67th Venice International Film Festival for her performance as Lily in Black Swan. She was also nominated for a Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actress and a Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Supporting Role for the same role.
Your new movie is called Friends with Benefits. Ever been in one of those relationships?
Mila Kunis: Oy. I haven’t, but I can give you my stance on it: It’s like communism—good in theory, in execution it fails. Friends of mine have done it, and it never ends well. Why do people put themselves through that torture?
And this is Kunis’s SECOND thing she’s done this week to get on conservatives’ good side. Earlier she accepted an invitation to the Marines Ball.
Now she comes out both against promiscuity AND communism in one sentence.
What’s she going to do next? Come out as a Tea Partier?
Note to self: it’s probably time to finally get around to picking up Black Swan on Blu-Ray.
This whole subject actually relates to a popular post yesterday at PJ Lifestlye I was fascinated to see, among younger women, a nostalgia for ’50s-era attitudes toward sexuality. The older writers in my anthology are raunchier than the younger writers. The younger writers are obsessed with motherhood and monogamy.
Just as the watchword of my generation was freedom, that of my daughter’s generation seems to be control. Is this just the predictable swing of the pendulum or a new passion for order in an ever more chaotic world? A little of both. We idealized open marriage; our daughters are back to idealizing monogamy. We were unable to extinguish the lust for propriety.
Don’t expect the trend of a rebellious youth culture to continue indefinitely. (This is part of what I talked about in the last segment of my Hollywood Revolt series at Big Hollywood.) My peers and I (Generation Y comprises those born 1982-2000 or so) are in some ways more socially conservative. This fits with a lot of the empirical data that Howe and Strauss collected in their book Millennials Rising. (See this Ben Shapiro piece at The Weekly Standard for more.) We’re not prudish or anti-sex at all. But casual sex with partners you barely know is disgusting and dangerous. Honestly, even with a condom one might as well be sticking their privates in a blender — the damage done would be comparable. How is it a pro-sex or cool or sexy position to want to engage in behavior that can destroy one’s ability to enjoyAs new romcom Friends With Benefits hits the big screen, Susan Griffin catches up with Hollywood starlet Mila Kunis to find out if her relationship with Justin Timberlake is purely platonic
Given Mila Kunis’s new film is a raunchy look at whether two friends can enjoy ’no strings sex’, it comes as little surprise to find the actress is straight talking on the subject.
“I think it’s really great in theory but falls short in execution,” says the 28-year-old. “You can’t sustain a friends with benefits relationship for a long time. It’s inevitable it will either go one way or the other.”
And by that she means revert to friendship or become an official relationship.
A self-confessed tomboy, Kunis prefers to keep things simple and sees no problem in being friends with the opposite sex: “I have plenty of males who are my friends... without the benefits,” she says.
“I don’t come from the school of thinking the opposite sex cannot be friends. I make dirty jokes, I’m fine with guys farting, I don’t really care, it’s not a big deal.”
Friends With Benefits is directed by Will Gluck, who revealed he wanted to make a film with the same degree of chemistry as those classic, banter-filled Katharine Hepburn and Spencer Tracy movies.
In Mila Kunis and Justin Timberlake, he’s found his modern-day charismatic pairing.
Jamie (Kunis) is an executive recruiter who headhunts Dylan (Timberlake) and entices him to stay in New York. Hanging out as mates, they share plenty of laughs, a mutual scorn for the notion of true love and then one evening, decide to try an experiment: can they add sex into the equation without destroying their friendship?
Headlines have hinted Kunis and Timberlake have enjoyed their own ’benefits’ off screen, a rumour perpetuated by their flirtatious appearance at the MTV Movie Awards in which they groped each other in front of a whooping crowd.
Kunis is dismissive of the idea though
Mila Kunis Life Style |
Mila Kunis Life Style |
Mila Kunis Life Style |
Mila Kunis Life Style |
Mila Kunis Life Style |
Mila Kunis Life Style |
Timberlake on Mila Kunis phone, but sources close to him have come out and said Mila Kunis Life Style
Mila Kunis Life Style |
Mila Kunis Life Style
Mila Kunis Life Style |
Mila Kunis Life Style |
Milena Kunis professionally known as Mila Kunis, is an American Hot Actress. Her television work includes the role of Jackie Burkhart on That '70s Show and the voice of Meg Griffin on the animated series Family Guy. She has also played roles in film, such asRachel Jansen in Forgetting Sarah Marshall, Mona Sax in Max Payne and Solara in The Book of Eli.
In 2010, she won the Marcello Mastroianni Award for Best Young Actor or Actress at the 67th Venice International Film Festival for her performance as Lily in Black Swan. She was also nominated for a Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actress and a Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Supporting Role for the same role.
Your new movie is called Friends with Benefits. Ever been in one of those relationships?
Mila Kunis: Oy. I haven’t, but I can give you my stance on it: It’s like communism—good in theory, in execution it fails. Friends of mine have done it, and it never ends well. Why do people put themselves through that torture?
And this is Kunis’s SECOND thing she’s done this week to get on conservatives’ good side. Earlier she accepted an invitation to the Marines Ball.
Now she comes out both against promiscuity AND communism in one sentence.
What’s she going to do next? Come out as a Tea Partier?
Note to self: it’s probably time to finally get around to picking up Black Swan on Blu-Ray.
This whole subject actually relates to a popular post yesterday at PJ Lifestlye I was fascinated to see, among younger women, a nostalgia for ’50s-era attitudes toward sexuality. The older writers in my anthology are raunchier than the younger writers. The younger writers are obsessed with motherhood and monogamy.
Just as the watchword of my generation was freedom, that of my daughter’s generation seems to be control. Is this just the predictable swing of the pendulum or a new passion for order in an ever more chaotic world? A little of both. We idealized open marriage; our daughters are back to idealizing monogamy. We were unable to extinguish the lust for propriety.
Don’t expect the trend of a rebellious youth culture to continue indefinitely. (This is part of what I talked about in the last segment of my Hollywood Revolt series at Big Hollywood.) My peers and I (Generation Y comprises those born 1982-2000 or so) are in some ways more socially conservative. This fits with a lot of the empirical data that Howe and Strauss collected in their book Millennials Rising. (See this Ben Shapiro piece at The Weekly Standard for more.) We’re not prudish or anti-sex at all. But casual sex with partners you barely know is disgusting and dangerous. Honestly, even with a condom one might as well be sticking their privates in a blender — the damage done would be comparable. How is it a pro-sex or cool or sexy position to want to engage in behavior that can destroy one’s ability to enjoyAs new romcom Friends With Benefits hits the big screen, Susan Griffin catches up with Hollywood starlet Mila Kunis to find out if her relationship with Justin Timberlake is purely platonic
Given Mila Kunis’s new film is a raunchy look at whether two friends can enjoy ’no strings sex’, it comes as little surprise to find the actress is straight talking on the subject.
“I think it’s really great in theory but falls short in execution,” says the 28-year-old. “You can’t sustain a friends with benefits relationship for a long time. It’s inevitable it will either go one way or the other.”
And by that she means revert to friendship or become an official relationship.
A self-confessed tomboy, Kunis prefers to keep things simple and sees no problem in being friends with the opposite sex: “I have plenty of males who are my friends... without the benefits,” she says.
“I don’t come from the school of thinking the opposite sex cannot be friends. I make dirty jokes, I’m fine with guys farting, I don’t really care, it’s not a big deal.”
Friends With Benefits is directed by Will Gluck, who revealed he wanted to make a film with the same degree of chemistry as those classic, banter-filled Katharine Hepburn and Spencer Tracy movies.
In Mila Kunis and Justin Timberlake, he’s found his modern-day charismatic pairing.
Jamie (Kunis) is an executive recruiter who headhunts Dylan (Timberlake) and entices him to stay in New York. Hanging out as mates, they share plenty of laughs, a mutual scorn for the notion of true love and then one evening, decide to try an experiment: can they add sex into the equation without destroying their friendship?
Headlines have hinted Kunis and Timberlake have enjoyed their own ’benefits’ off screen, a rumour perpetuated by their flirtatious appearance at the MTV Movie Awards in which they groped each other in front of a whooping crowd.
Kunis is dismissive of the idea though
Mila Kunis Life Style