Juno Temple has been naked in a bunch of movies….so seeing her tits doesn’t really inspire me…but then again…seeing her tits is better than not seeing her tits….cuz that’s just how life works…. I don’t really know who Juno Temple is…or where she’s from or any of that….but I do know I’ve seen her naked in movies before and that makes me like her by default……..unfortunately….the same logic doesn’t work with my wife…cuz I’ve seen her naked…and I fucking hate her…nut Juno…despite an idiotic name….is young, busty, and fit…but more importantly working it…unlike my wife who is eating, not showering, slowly dying…. The movie is called Afternoon Delight and the FBI is probably happy I’m posting this clip from it….even if I think of it as marketing…
New in theaters this week, Nadine Velazquez makes her full frontal debut as a sexy stewardess in Flight (2012). A reveal so awesome that the crack team over at Filmdrunk says, “it would be impossible to overstate how fantastic her breasts are” . If that doesn’t cause enough turbulence in your pants, Riley Keough and Juno Temple are having a full-on lesbian lovefest in Jack and Diane (2012), and Elizabeth Banks bares her buns for the roving hands of Tobey Maguire in The Details (2012). More after the jump!
I’ve never heard of Killer Joe…but people seem to care about it because some 23 year old actor named Juno Temple , who I’ve never really heard of cuz I don’t pay attention, is in it and has a sex scene in it, but for some reason, I’m more into the MILFs pushing 50 with awesome hard nipples and a massive fucking bush…cuz I’m weird like that….it happens…you know some days you want the veterans and other days you want the virgins…life is all about balance… If you want to download the Juno Temple clip, cuz old lady bush that has no white hair in it, isn’t your thing click her TO SEE MORE OF GINA GERSHON’S CATALOG OF NUDE SCENES FOLLOW THIS LINK
We’ve got an eccentric assortment of nude features opening this weekend, from the NC-17 shocker Killer Joe (2011), which features Juno Temple (above) full frontal and Matthew McConaughey forcing Gina Gershon to do unspeakable things with a KFC chicken leg, to the more light-hearted– but still R-rated– Ben Stiller comedy The Watch (2012). And nude this week in limited release (and on VOD) is the outrageous and hilarious Danish comedy Clown: The Movie (2010), which hits theaters in advance of an English-language remake starring Danny McBride . More after the jump!
Slick and mean and full of piss and chicken grease, Killer Joe has worse manners than its deadly, courtly antihero. But in its own way and to its own detriment, William Friedkin ’s splattery, southern gothic return to the screen seeks to amuse as well as shake and stir. What begins as a set of open provocations and genre tweaks propping up the story of a trashily blended Texas family’s encounter with an alpha hitman takes a turn through Coen and Lynch Lanes before winding up at the corner of Friedkin and Peckinpah. There a trailer ignites with violence and the tone of alternately abject and mordant depravity begins flailing like a rogue firehose. That the Smiths are low, stupid people is easily understood, but Friedkin hardly tires of reminding us. Killer Joe opens on the middle of a stormy Texas night, and the wailing and window-banging of a fuck-up named Chris ( Emile Hirsch ), who is locked out of the family’s trailer. When his stepmother Sharla (Gina Gershon) finally responds, Chris (and the audience) comes face to fat, mossy minge with her naked crotch. Chris’s complaints find no truck with his exceptionally dense, defeated dad Ansel (Thomas Haden Church), who echoes Sharla’s involuted logic about not being expecting to find her stepson on the other side of the door. It feels unpromising that what could be a funny gag gets lost in the scene-flattening commotion of idiocy, which too often gets cranked so high little else gets through. The Smiths have all kinds of boundary issues, not least when it comes to Dottie (Juno Temple), the gauzy baby doll daughter with a couple of little pink screws loose. Dottie sleepwalks, and either has crazy good hearing or crazy-girl intuition, because she cottons to Chris’s plan to kill their deadbeat mother (who remains deadbeat; we only get a brief glimpse of her corpse) from the moment he privately proposes it to Ansel. In deep to some coke dealers, Chris has word of his mother’s fifty thousand dollar life insurance payout (to Dottie) and a line on a police officer/hitman named Killer Joe Cooper ( Matthew McConaughey ). No good can come of such a scheme, of course, and no good does. Perhaps the family’s shouty moron shtick is designed to make the arrival of a glossy, black-clad sociopath feel more like a relief. McConaughey has toned down his surf bum beam (and highlights) for the role: in his bad sheriff getup he’s a cold-eyed buck with asses to stomp. Sharing a tight frame with Joe in a typical low-angle shot, Hirsch becomes a mini-pony of a man. But it’s McConaughey’s scenes with Temple that form the twisted center of the movie; they make a pair as riveting as it is unlikely. That it is not as simple as beast-meets-beast of prey is largely a credit to the actors – each exudes an unnerving charisma that enwraps the other and together they create the movie’s only dramatically persuasive atmosphere. It feels a little wrong saying that, given the terms of their relationship. When Chris and Ansel can’t cough up half of Joe’s fee in advance, he proposes taking Dottie as “a retainer.” Because the Smiths’ is a desperate world dulled into moral nihilism by poverty and other indignities, Ansel’s response to the idea of pimping his virgin daughter out to a hired killer is that it “might just do her some good.” We feel scared for Dottie, though after being soothed out of her initial upset she doesn’t seem that scared herself, which of course is really scary. The lead up to Joe’s claiming of his collateral and the chillingly erotic scene that results feels like Friedkin hitting a mesmerizing stride. Instead it forms a peak in what slackens into another, if notably performed and perverse, pulp fiction paradox: Though desperate to shock, its success depends on our desensitization. ( Killer Joe received an NC-17 rating and is perhaps the latest rival to the kink and violent degradations of 2010’s The Killer Inside Me .) Much of the film takes place in close quarters, spaces well parsed by Friedkin’s camera and imbued with a sense of confined desperation instead of plain old claustrophobia. Pulitzer Prize-winner Tracy Letts adapted the script from his own play (this is Friedkin’s second Letts adaptation, after 2006’s Bug ), and as often as a dark, stage-y laugh line falls flat, Joe’s embroidered (and then fearsome) tones and Dottie’s loaded non sequiturs (including her casual mention, after things have gone miserably awry, that it might still all work out — “as long as I don’t get mad”) seem to land exactly how and where they’re meant to be. It seems likely it was the creepy sexual content and not the horrific violence that earned the MPAA’s admonishment, a bias Killer Joe seems to repeat in moving from its glimpses of genuine human darkness toward the more generic drawing of bright red blood. Killer Joe is in limited release Friday. Follow Michelle Orange on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .
The hype machine is in full swing as The Dark Knight Rises hits theaters, and Mr. Skin has uncovered female co-stars Anne Hathaway , Marion Cotillard , and Juno Temple’s secret iden-titties in Love and Other Drugs (2010) , A Private Affair (2002) , and Kaboom! (2010) .
The U.S. military has a history of joining forces with Hollywood. Michael Bay’s Transformers franchise and Peter Berg’s Battleship have cozied up to the military to take advantage of defense material, while the Pentagon gets to market itself to moviegoers. (To say nothing of the recent Navy SEAL showcase Act of Valor .) So how did The Avengers not make the cut? It seems that the Joss Whedon superhero spectacle was “too unrealistic” for military brass get involved. At the end of the day, it was Nick Fury’s SHIELD that clinched the decision (perhaps if they just stuck to the superheroes and alien invaders it would have been OK?) “We couldn’t reconcile the unreality of this international organization and our place in it,” said Phil Strub, the DOD’s Hollywood liaison. “To whom did SHIELD answer? Did we work for SHIELD? It just got to the point where it didn’t make any sense. We hit that roadblock and decided we couldn’t do anything [with the film].” [ WorstPreviews ]
The William Friedkin-directed, Matthew McConaughey-starring, hit-man-in-the-heart-of-Texas thriller Killer Joe has already enjoyed its share of festival notoriety for the sexualized violence that earned the film an NC-17 rating. Now comes a trailer that sanitizes for mainstream audiences what Friedkin and Co. won’t. Emile Hirsch, Thomas Haden Church, Juno Temple and Gina Gershon co-star in the tale of a young man who attempts to settle a debt by getting a cop moonlighting as a hit man (McConaughey) to off his mother for the insurance money. Guess how poorly that goes? Tracy Letts — who last collaborated with Friedkin on the psychodrama Bug — adapted the film from his play of the same name; Killer Joe opens July 27 in all its deep-fried NC-17 glory.
Juno Temple may be young- born in July 1989, she’s only 22 years old- but this up-and-comer has a nude sensibility that’s way beyond her years. She was 20 when she first appeared on our radar as a seductive teenage pothead in Mr. Nobody (2009), though she used a body double for her topless scene in that flick. Then she broke her nudity cherry as a sexually adventurous college student in Kaboom (2010), and now this gorgeous goddess has two nude movies, Killer Joe (which our Skin Skout confirms contains her full-frontal debut) and Little Birds , coming soon to theaters. In a new interview with New York magazine, Juno displays a remarkably well-adjusted attitude to her racy onscreen roles: “I think sex is really important in people’s lives. I don’t get embarrassed by doing that in a movie at all, as long as it’s right…It’s a little daunting when you first have to take your clothes off in a room full of people, but it’s kind of weirdly liberating. ” Perhaps such a liberated outlook can be attributed to Juno’s dad, Julien Temple , punk provocateur and director of Earth Girls are Easy and The Great Rock N’ Roll Swindle . Asked if she was embarrassed for her parents to see her nude scenes, Juno replies: “My parents actually saw Kaboom before I did. They haven’t seen Killer Joe yet, but my parents know that it’s my job. It’s not like I’m making porn. I’m faking it.” So does anything rattle the indomitable Ms. Temple?: “I’m very European about it, though. For me, violence is more nerve-racking than taking my shirt off and doing a sex scene. And that was what was interesting about Killer Joe . Obviously it’s a lot of nudity and sex, but I also had to fire a gun, and that was way more frightening.” Members can worship at the altar of Juno Temple with all her breast moments right here at MrSkin.com!
We’ve counted down some of the biggest names in Tinseltown on our Top 10 Naked Stars with Famous Fathers list here at Mr. Skin. Now, in honor of Father’s Day, we’re welcoming a nude crop of sexy starlets who just happen to have famous dads into the Mr. Skin family! Play “who’s your daddy?” with Skin Central after the jump!