Tag Archives: elisabeth-moss

Hollywood Xposed: 01/15/2014

The gorgeous anchors at Naked News have all the celeb news that’s sure to give you a Holly-woody! This week’s top stories include Mad Men ‘s Elisabeth Moss making her nude debut, Chloe Sevigny ‘s latest T&A showing, and Amanda Peet ‘s naked birthday gifts. Skinjoy!

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Hollywood Xposed: 01/15/2014

“The Wait” is Over for Chloe Sevigny’s Latest T&A

Chloe Sevigny returns to the skin scene in The Wait, Elisabeth Moss goes full frontal in Top of the Lake, and Shameless is back on Showtime.

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“The Wait” is Over for Chloe Sevigny’s Latest T&A

Top of the Lake: Celebrity Nudity on DVD and Blu-ray 1.7.14 [PICS]

It’s a brand spanking nude year and the naked DVD/Blu-ray scene is finally back on track! There’s the second season of the historical drama Copper busting out Kendra Anderson and Anastasia Griffith , and the second season of House of Lies bringing us Dawn Olivieri and more. The sex addiction dramedy Thanks for Sharing (2013) has Gwyneth Paltrow strip teasing in lingerie, but the real thanks has to go to Natalia Volkodaeva who actually shares her tatas. The Wicker Man (1973) Blu-ray release has skintage nudity from Britt Ekland , while Top of the Lake has the full frontal nude debut of Elisabeth Moss . Peggy Olsen! See pics after the jump!

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Top of the Lake: Celebrity Nudity on DVD and Blu-ray 1.7.14 [PICS]

New and Nudeworthy on Netflix 4.17.13 [PICS]

Mad Men ‘s Elisabeth Moss finally made her full-frontal nude debut, and now Netflix is streaming Peggy Olsen getting pegged in the woods in Top of the Lake ! Nice Moss, Elisabeth! If you’ve got a thing for bad girls check out Katia Winter baring her amazing 3B’s as a gladiatorial recruiter in Arena (2011). Then get twice the T&A from Madeline Merritt and Ruth Reynolds in the sexy lesbian romance The Guest House (2012), and more Sapphic face-sucking between Clea Duvall and Natasha Lyonne in But I’m a Cheerleader (1999). See pics after the jump!

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New and Nudeworthy on Netflix 4.17.13 [PICS]

New and Nudeworthy on Netflix 4.17.13 [PICS]

Mad Men ‘s Elisabeth Moss finally made her full-frontal nude debut, and now Netflix is streaming Peggy Olsen getting pegged in the woods in Top of the Lake ! Nice Moss, Elisabeth! If you’ve got a thing for bad girls check out Katia Winter baring her amazing 3B’s as a gladiatorial recruiter in Arena (2011). Then get twice the T&A from Madeline Merritt and Ruth Reynolds in the sexy lesbian romance The Guest House (2012), and more Sapphic face-sucking between Clea Duvall and Natasha Lyonne in But I’m a Cheerleader (1999). See pics after the jump!

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New and Nudeworthy on Netflix 4.17.13 [PICS]

Mad Men’s Elisabeth Moss Makes Her Nude Debut

Elisabeth Moss makes her nude debut on Top of the Lake , and The Big C and Boss bring out the breast of the boob tube.

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Mad Men’s Elisabeth Moss Makes Her Nude Debut

Elisabeth Moss Debuts Nude in Top of the Lake [PICS]

Elisabeth Moss is known for portraying Peggy Olsen on Mad Men , and now she’s finally un-Draper-ed for a Sterling nude scene in Top of the Lake . Not only does Elisabeth bare her betties as a New Zealand investigator, she also shows off her Moss down below! She’s playing a detective, but we’re the ones doing an examination of HARD evidence. See pics after the jump!

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Elisabeth Moss Debuts Nude in Top of the Lake [PICS]

First Look: Roughed-Up Robert Pattinson Looks Bloody, Hot In ‘The Rover’

Edward who?  Robert Pattinson has made some smart post- Twiligh t  choices. After working with David Cronenberg in the memorably weird   Cosmopolis , the heartthrob actor has now gone completely off-road for Animal Kingdom director David Michod’s gritty, violent follow-up,   The Rover , which is shooting in the unforgiving Australian desert. And judging from this first still from the set,  the bedroom-eyed actor’s sparkly vampire days are well behind him. In this shot, Pattinson is oozing blood, not drinking it and looking a little hot under the collar as he is threatened by an even grungier looking Guy Pearce . According to Hey Guys.co.uk , the movie is set in the near future where “a worldwide financial collapse has sent people to the mines of the Australian desert.”  Pattinson is described as a “troubled and damaged soul” who’s a member of the gang that has run afoul of the “dark, dangerous and murderous” Pearce. Here’s the official synopsis: Eric (Pearce) has left everything, everyone and every semblance of human kindness behind him when a gang of desperate criminals steals his last possession.  Eric sets off on a ruthless mission to track them down, forced along the way to enlist the help of Rey (Pattinson), the naïve and injured junior member of the gang who was left behind in the chaos of the gang’s most recent robbery. The movie is expected to hit theaters in 2014, and it also features the very talented Scoot McNairy who played memorable characters in Killing Them Softly ,    Argo and Promised Land last year. [ Hey Guys ] Follow Frank DiGiacomo on  Twitter. Follow Movieline on  Twitter.

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First Look: Roughed-Up Robert Pattinson Looks Bloody, Hot In ‘The Rover’

REVIEW: ‘Mad Women’? Elisabeth Moss Bares Her Teeth & Body In Jane Campion’s ‘Top Of The Lake’

The disappearance of a pregnant preteen exposes the raw wounds at the heart of an isolated southern New Zealand community in the absorbing and richly atmospheric Top of the Lake . Centered around Elisabeth Moss’  excellent performance as a detective for whom the case uncovers disturbing echoes of her own troubled history, this multistranded crime saga from writer-director Jane Campion  and co-creator Gerard Lee is satisfyingly novelistic in scope and dense in detail. Yet it also boasts something more, a singular and provocative strangeness that lingers like a chill after the questions of who-dun-what have been laid to rest. Prestigious berths in Park City and Berlin will precede a distinguished smallscreen life for the Sundance Channel miniseries, which begins airing March 18. The six-hour, seven-part production (reviewed from a six-episode version prior to its festival bows) should prove an enticing proposition for fans of investigative dramas in the vein of Twin Peaks and The Killing , even though the yarn’s less procedural-oriented nature and primary focus on a rape case provide early clues that Campion and Co. are treading different thematic territory here. But by far the material’s most distinctive element is its setting, a wooded region of stunning natural beauty and surpassing human ugliness that lends a uniquely bleak and bitter tang to this well-worn genre format. Sharing helming duties with Aussie newcomer Garth Davis, Campion has delivered her first work set and shot in her native New Zealand since The Piano  20 years ago. Fittingly, it marks a reunion of sorts with that film’s star, Holly Hunte r, cast here as GJ, an enigmatic, silver-haired guru who has come to the town of Laketop to open a camp for abused and/or abandoned women. Unfortunately, the camp has been built on a piece of land — the ironically named Paradise — that has long been eyed by local drug lord Matt Mitcham (a superb Peter Mullan), who seems to own everyone and everything in town. Mitcham also seems to have fathered half the local population; the youngest of his offspring is 12-year-old Tui (Jacqueline Joe), his daughter by his third (ex-)wife, a Thai immigrant. One frigid morning, Tui is seen wandering into the titular lake, as though in a trance; a subsequent medical examination reveals she’s five months pregnant, though she won’t disclose who the father is. The determined but relatively inexperienced Det. Robin Griffin (Moss) is called in to lead the statutory-rape investigation, although she soon finds herself looking into a possible kidnapping-murder scenario when Tui suddenly goes missing. Over the course of the six-hour running time, the story abounds in the requisite twists and complications: The lake coughs up the body of a local businessman, while suspicion falls on a hermit who turns out to be a convicted sex offender. But these developments are doled out at a measured clip, and the filmmakers seem less interested in sustaining forward momentum than in painting a vivid panorama of this broken community, a town cloaked in a dark and vaguely incestuous malaise. From the hooligans (Jay Ryan, Kip Chapman) who carry out Mitcham’s bidding to the sad-sack women who gather at GJ’s camp, there’s a pervasive sense of human lives either wasted or forced into familiar and depressing patterns. The wildness of the surroundings informs the wildness of the characters: Parents and children are forever at odds, and acts of violence and violation are distressingly commonplace, to the point where even Mitcham reacts to the news of Tui’s ordeal not with outrage, but with a cynical roll of the eye (“She’s a slut, like her dad was a slut!”). Despite its narrative breadth, Top of the Lake  is first and foremost Robin’s story. As the detective rekindles a romance with another Mitcham son (Thomas M. Wright) while flirting erratically with her superior officer (David Wenham), she finds her personal life bumping up against her investigation to a near-ludicrous degree. Much of the third hour is devoted to exploring Robin’s past traumas as a teenager, and while the idea that she sees a younger version of herself in Tui represents perhaps the tale’s most conventional conceit, it supplies a potent emotional fulcrum that pushes the drama into its moving, startling if not always plausible final hours. Moss, a long way from Mad Men , brings a gripping combination of pluck, vulnerability and intense anger to the complicated role of a woman who fights for every inch of ground and at one point drives a broken bottle into a man’s chest. Campion’s films have long gone against the grain with their strong, embattled distaff protagonists and daring portrayals of female sexuality, and if Top of the Lake  isn’t in quite the same neighborhood as In the Cut , it nonetheless calls on Moss and others to bare themselves physically and emotionally in a story located at the juncture of sex and violence. The other commanding turn here comes from Mullan, playing the unkempt Mitcham as a rough-mannered scoundrel who is not without a certain gruff, randy charm. Other bright spots in the excellent ensemble include Robyn Nevin, tough and sensible as Robin’s cancer-stricken mother; Joe, who invests Tui with a fiery refusal to be victimized; and Hunter, making the most of dialogue that basically consists of a string of gnomic pronouncements. Adam Arkapaw’s lensing of this unspoiled and unruly landscape is one of the production’s chief pleasures, and composer Mark Bradshaw supports the action with a melancholy score that sounds entirely endemic to the setting. Editor’s Note:  Top of the Lake begins airing on the Sundance Channel, Monday, March 18.  Follow Movieline on  Twitter.

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REVIEW: ‘Mad Women’? Elisabeth Moss Bares Her Teeth & Body In Jane Campion’s ‘Top Of The Lake’

Kristen Stewart’s ‘On The Road’ Trailer: Five Keys Scenes

Stewart bids a topless farewell to her days as Bella Swan in the celebrity-studded clip. By Kevin P. Sullivan Kristen Stewart in the “On the Road” trailer Photo: MK2 Productions The trailer for “On the Road,” an adaptation of Jack Kerouac’s seminal beat generation novel, finally hit the Web and brought the cool of 1960s America with it. We saw Kristen Stewart shake it and roll one up. Garrett Hedlund talks about the dumb stuff that he does and can’t explain, and Sam Riley sounds disturbingly like Heath Ledger’s Joker. Here are our five key scenes from the “One the Road” trailer. KStew Rolls Deep This is not the Bella Swan you know. This is Marylou, the 16-year-old, reefer-smoking chick that Dean Moriarty (Hedlund) just married. We’re not sure if there could have been a more striking image to let us know that Kristen Stewart has left Forks, Washington, far behind her. A Breezy Drive Let’s take that last part back for one second. If we needed a clearer image that Stewart is removing the mantle of Bella Swan for her future career, we have what looks like a shot of the actress removing something else in the front seat with Garrett Hedlund and Sam Riley: her top. We’ve seen Stewart with an edge in several of her other films, but for “On the Road,” she seems to be bidding “Twilight” adieu in style. The Freakout As a key work of the beat generation, what would a film adaptation of “On the Road” be without a good old-fashioned drug freak-out dance? Here we see Hedlund tripping out and getting his freak on. It’s rare that we see such a loose Hedlund, and the scene gives a good idea of the kind of shenanigans Dean will be up to.

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Kristen Stewart’s ‘On The Road’ Trailer: Five Keys Scenes