Tag Archives: netflix

New and Nudeworthy on Netflix: Christmas Edition [PICS]

Christmas is fast approaching, and Netflix has a splendid selection of holiday nudes to start a fire in your yule log. Start off with Michelle Monaghan stripping out of her Santa lingerie in Kiss Kiss Bang Bang (2005), then head over to Natalie Portman ’s nip slip under the X-mas tree in No Strings Attached (2011), and be merry as a bare bunned Shannon Elizabeth wrestles with a killer snowman in Jack Frost (1997). You can also jingle your balls to full frontal from Maria Popistasu in Tuesday, After Christmas (2010), and get a north pole thanks to Diane Kruger in Joyeux Noel (2005). See pics after the jump!

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New and Nudeworthy on Netflix: Christmas Edition [PICS]

New and Nudeworthy on Netflix 11.28.12 [PICS]

It’s a chilly week for theatrical nudity, but Netflix has got a burning hot lineup that will keep you warm at home! First up it’s Sarah Silverman ’s full frontal debut and #2 on Mr. Skin’s Top Ten Nude Scenes of 2012 , Take This Waltz (2012). This SKINstant classic also features the funbags and fur of petite pixie Michelle Williams in three outstanding scenes. If you need more than that, Christina Ricci shows her chichis in Bel Ami (2012), a Roger Corman classic gets a boob-baring update in Attack of the 50ft Cheerleader (2012), and Kim van Kooten bares it all in Phileine Says Sorry (2003). Finally, it doesn’t contain nudity but we’d be remiss if we didn’t mention Alexandra Breckenridge ’s excellent panty-clad can in American Horror Story . When the maid looks like that, you’ll want to get dirty! See pics after the jump!

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New and Nudeworthy on Netflix 11.28.12 [PICS]

New and Nudeworthy on Netflix 11.7.12 [PICS]

Welcome to SKINstant gratification, where we reveal the hottest Netflix releases worth queuing up. This week you can get a history lesson while marveling at Linda Lovelace ’s suppressed gag reflex in the penetrating documentary I nside Deep Throat (2005), get some respectable rack from Kimberly McArthur in the Rodney Dangerfield comedy Easy Money (1983), and watch Ellen Sandweiss get her top ripped off by a horny tree branch in The Evil Dead (1981). Then, get romantic with the adorable, bouncy boobage of Debra Winger in An Officer and a Gentleman (1982), and watch DOZENS of awesome Aussies get nude for the SKINtastic series Underbelly . See pics after the jump!

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New and Nudeworthy on Netflix 11.7.12 [PICS]

New and Nudeworthy on Netflix 10.31.12 [PICS]

Happy Halloween! This week we have only the tastiest of treats and biggest bags of candy from the horror honeys on Netflix Instant. Scare your pants off with the feral full frontal of Pollyanna McIntosh in The Woman (2011), and say nice BOO-bies to Carice van Houten in Intruders (2012). Then have no fear because there are plenty of French funbags in Sheitan (2006) and House of Voices (2004), and there’s a heaping of Hong Kong hoots in Dream Home (2010). Finally, see bumps in the night from Traci Lords in Not of This Earth (1988), and doomed dame danglers in Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer (1986). See pics after the jump!

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New and Nudeworthy on Netflix 10.31.12 [PICS]

New and Nudeworthy on Netflix 10.24.12 [PICS]

Don’t waste your time on movies without nudity, because we’ve got the brand spanking new Netflix titles that’ll get you spanking. First up, a madman is stalking lipstick lesbians in Mercy (2000), but it’s Peta Wilson ’s full frontal that is looking killer! Then enjoy some French tarts and tush from Sophie Quinton in Nobody Else But You (2011), and peaks and pelt from a paranoid Ashley Judd in Bug (2006). Finally, there is a horde of horror hoots in Girls Gone Dead (2012), and enough topless babes to put you in the mood for a porking in Pig Hunt (2008). See pics after the jump!

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New and Nudeworthy on Netflix 10.24.12 [PICS]

New and Nudeworthy on Netflix 10.17.12 [PICS]

Get a good grip on your remote, because we’ve got the newest Netflix nudes worth queuing up. Foreign films are providing the most provoking pink this week with Ludivine Sagnier baring her bullets in the gangster drama Mesrine: Public Enemy #1 (2008), and a whole host of French foxes getting freaky in Sexual Chronicles of a French Family (2012). Then head over to Chile for some spicy sex scenes from Blanca Lewin in En la cama (2005), and enjoy tatas from Christy Chung in the Thai sexport Jan Dara (2001). Finally, get a freaky flogging thanks to naked dominatrix Michelle McLaren in the semi-scripted slapstick Br

New and Nudeworthy on Netflix 10.10.12 [PICS]

Welcome to this week in SKINstant gratification, where the latest and greatest Netflix nudes are revealed. We’ve got Lola Creton saying goodbye to all of her clothes in Goodbye First Love (2011), a bevy of bump-and-grinders stripping down in T he Girl from the Naked Eye (2012), and Judith Davis going bare for her predatory lesbo roommate in You Will Be Mine (2009). Then enjoy extreme furburger from Amira Casar getting kinky in Anatomy of Hell (2003), and Saffron Burrows leading a multitude of nude models for a paintbrush stroker in Klimt (2006). See pics after the jump!

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New and Nudeworthy on Netflix 10.10.12 [PICS]

Stars, Tequila & Philosophy at Killer Joe Gala

David Dinerstein (President, LD Entertainment), William Friedkin, Matthew McConaughey, Gina Gershon, Tracy Letts, Mickey Liddell (CEO, LD Entertainment). Photo by Nick Hunt/Patrick McMullan Co. Killer Joe had a gala screening Monday night in New York with stars Matthew McConaughey and Gina Gershon on-hand along with Oscar-winning director William Friedkin who had some choice words about gun violence, the law and their relationship to movies. His film, which will be released this weekend, described by its official website as a “Totally twisted deep-fried Texas redneck trailer park murder story” received an often-dreaded NC-17 by the MPAA for “graphic disturbing content involving violence and sexuality and a scene of brutality.” McConaughey and Friedkin weighed in on violence and its sources post- TDKR tragedy at the event, hosted by the Cinema Society. “Well, it’s a lot longer answer than I can give you now, but I will just say that is, one thing that we shouldn’t be saying in society when something like that happens anymore, we shouldn’t be saying ‘unbelievable,'” McConaughey told THR at the event. “It happens, and we don’t know the answer to it right now, but there’s definitely, people now more than ever, people can make a very murky line between reality and illusion.” Continuing he added, “They can make a very murky line between the games that are played and civilization, without any thought of consequences at times…” But Friedkin gave a more emphatic response to the violence that took place at the final installment in Christopher Nolan’s Batman trilogy, saying the Joker references made by the accused gunman James Holmes was simply an act. “He was not insane. He premeditated that. He bought 6000 rounds of ammunition, he was eligible to buy guns and ammo, he set it up, he booby trapped his room…” Violence, insanity pleas and societal ills aside, the event, which was also co-hosted by Bally and DeLeón for LD Entertainment’s Killer Joe was a typically pleasant affair. The after-party took place at nightspot No. 8 and DeLeón tequila flowed. Also attending the event were Tracy Letts who wrote the play and screenplay for the film and other brass from the movie including producers Christopher Woodrow and Molly Conners, Mickey Liddell (CEO, LD Entertainment), David Dinerstein (President, LD Entertainment). Among the other notable guests in attendance were: Mélanie Laurent, Alan Cumming, Ethan Coen, Roseanne Barr, John Stamos, Graham Nash (Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young), Camila Alves, S. Epatha Merkerson, Courtney Love, Rinko Kikuchi (Babel), Michael Shannon (Boardwalk Empire), Isiah Whitlock (Law & Order SVU), Tony Danza, Russell Simmons, Tiki & Traci Barber, Billy Magnussen, John Cameron Mitchell, Alex Karpovsky (Girls), Stavros Niarchos, Jessica Hart, Rachel Roy, Nicole Trunfio, Dan Abrams, Debbie Bancroft, Daniel Benedict, David Zinczenko, Nicky Hilton and Cinema Society founder Andrew Saffir. Movieline will have a full interview with director William Friedkin soon. [ Source: THR , Cinema Society ] [Photo: Nick Hunt/Patrick McMullan Co., courtesy of Cinema Society]

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Stars, Tequila & Philosophy at Killer Joe Gala

Who Are Today’s Most Valuable Indie Stars?

If you thought you were getting any work done during the second part of the day, think again. The good people at Vulture have apparently teamed up with the RAND Corporation and NASA to devise a series of charts with endless permutations that rank today’s most valuable movie stars . But, we ask: Who are today’s Most Valuable Indie Stars? How does one determine who is most valuable? Vulture is more than willing to pull back the curtain on their methodology . (Oh, if only the folks at Diebold could learn a thing or two from celeb-obsessed journalists!) They may have their nifty algorithms, but we’ve got our gut instincts. Using those and those only, we’d like to devise a highly unscientific list of the most valuable indie actors working today. 6. Michael Shannon He’s got many more credits than you might think ( Kangaroo Jack! ) but he first came to our attention as an unusual leading man in Jeff Nichols’ Shotgun Stories . His turn in Werner Herzog’s My Son, My Son, What Have Ye Done? secured him a lifetime of indie cred, and this was before Boardwalk Empire and Take Shelter . By my algorithm, he can appear in Man of Steel and two sequels and still be considered an indie star. 5. Mathieu Amalric It isn’t crazy to call this French import a next gen Steve Buscemi. Amalric’s worked with a number of top level international directors like Julian Schnabel, Alain Resnais and Arnaud Desplechin. When he works in Hollywood it’s in top tier material like Munich and Quantum of Solace , which, you must remember, looked like it was going to be good on paper. 4. Michelle Williams From Dawson’s Creek to Synechdoche, NY , Michelle Williams is such a beloved indie star we’ll put up with her breaking our hearts ( Blue Valentine ), forgive her, then let her do it again ( Take This Waltz .) No trip to the Park Slope Food Co-op is complete without thinking you see her in the loose tea aisle. 3. Michael Fassbender From his indistinguishable accent to the phallic puns about his last name, it’s impossible not to give this guy a high ranking. I was hesitant to see Hunger because we’d already seen the Bobby Sands story in Some Mother’s Son , but when I realized it was one of the shirtless dudes from 300 we got curious. Since then he’s put in remarkable turns in Inglourious Basterds , A Dangerous Method , Jane Eyre and Haywire . Even when he does a major studio picture it is with an provocateur in the director’s chair like Matthew Vaughn or Ridley Scott. Fassbender is one of the few actors out there that elite moviegoers will follow from project-to-project indiscriminately. 2. Tilda Swinton …and in that regard, he’s right alongside Tilda Swinton. Who else out there has punk rock cred from her early Derek Jarman years and is also the descendant of medieval landed gentry? From the films of the Coen Brothers to Jim Jarmusch to Lynne Ramsay to Wes Anderson to oddball gems like Julia and I Am Love , Swinton strikes me as someone who doesn’t need to work, to the point that she’s very selective about what she does. As such, anything she’s involved in is very much worth your time. 1. Paul Giamatti If you’ve missed Michelle Williams in Brooklyn, maybe you’ve seen Paulie G around. A gifted comic, and uncannily sympathetic, Giamatti brings a level of excellence to everything he does. Barney’s Version is, I hate to say it, not a good movie. Yet Giamatti’s performance made me literally laugh and cry – oftentimes in the same moment. What’s more, Giamatti is quick to use his Hollywood clout to champion far-flung indie films, which was made abundantly clear during this year’s Sundance with the ultra-niche John Dies at the End . Those are our indie-world MVPs. Have more to add? Make your case below!

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Who Are Today’s Most Valuable Indie Stars?

R.I.P. Sherman Hemsley; Russell Crowe to Direct Biopic: Biz Break

In Tuesday afternoon’s round-up of news briefs, the actor who played George Jefferson has died. Russell Crowe will direct a film about a cult comedian. Disney is moving a 3-D re-release to the holidays; NATO is taking donations for Aurora shooting victims and Netflix sees its shares dive. Actor Sherman Hemsley Dead at 74 He first came into America’s living rooms as Archie Bunker’s neighbor George Jefferson in All in the Family . The Jeffersons later spun off into a long-running and very successful sit-com in its own right making his character and his beloved Louise Jefferson, aka “Weezey,” household names. Hemsley died in what appears to be natural causes at his home in El Paso, TX, TMZ reports . Russell Crowe to Direct Biopic Crowe will direct a biopic about Bill Hicks, the cult comedian who died at 32. Originally it was thought Crowe would play Hicks, but the part is apparently up for grabs, The Guardian reports . Disney Ups Monsters Inc 3-D to December Originally slated for a January release, the 3-D re-release will now head into the holidays with a roll out set for December 19th. Finding Nemo 3-D is still due in September. Last year the studio cashed in on the 3-D version of The Lion King to the tune of $92M, Deadline reports . Exhibitors Begin Donations Drive for Shooting Victims in Colorado The National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) sent a release asking for donations to help victims and families of the Aurora, CO shootings, Deadline reports . Netflix Shares Down 14% Revenue last quarter rose 12.8% to $889M, but profit fell to $6.1M vs $68M the year before, Variety reports .

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R.I.P. Sherman Hemsley; Russell Crowe to Direct Biopic: Biz Break