Your daily adult tube feed all in one place!
A-listers Mila Kunis and Ashton Kutcher were spotted away from the glamour of Los Angeles in a Hertfordshire town centre as they spend time in UK.
The couple stunned locals as they saw them walking through the 'famous alleyway' in Rickmansworth, which was used in Law & Order, Men In Black and The Smurfs.
Mila, 40, and her husband, Ashton, 46, were joined by their two children, Wyatt, nine, and Dimitri, seven, as they explored the iconic filming location.
The video has been reshared on TikTok, as fans shared their disbelief that the Hollywood couple were exploring the town.
One person claimed that the couple had been at the Bruce Springsteen concert at Wembley Stadium days before.
A-listers Mila Kunis and Ashton Kutcher were spotted away from the glamour of Los Angeles in a Hertfordshire town centre as they spend time in UK
The couple stunned locals as they saw them walking through the 'famous alleyway' in Rickmansworth, which was used in Law & Order, Men In Black and The Smurfs
Mila, 40, and her husband Ashton, 46, were joined by their two children, Wyatt, nine, and Dimitri, seven, as they explored the iconic filming location
Someone else claimed they had spotted them picking up a coffee in Starbucks, while Ashton kindly stopped to pose for a selfie with a fan.
It has been reported that the family are over here while Mila films for her new role in the new Knives Out film, Wake Up Dead Man.
The film, which is due for release next year, began filming in London in June, and Mila is slated to play police chief G. Scott.
The third film in the series will also mark the return of detective Benoit Blanc, played by Daniel Craig, as he endeavours to solve a new mystery.
Other stars set to appear in the movie include Josh O'Connor, Glenn Close, Josh Brolin, Jeremy Renner, Kerry Washington, Andrew Scott, Cailee Spaeny, Daryl McCormack, and Thomas Haden Church.
Mila and Ashton have been spotted on several occasions across London this summer, including most recently at a Morgan Wallen concert in Hyde Park.
In June, they were seen strolling through Regent's Park together in North-west London.
The video has been reshared on TikTok, as fans can't conceal their disbelief that the Hollywood couple were exploring the town
One person claimed that the couple had been at the Bruce Springsteen concert at Wembley Stadium days before
Ashton's outing came after he was slammed for saying AI will 'be able to render a whole movie' leading many to come to the defence of the film industry.
The actor had suggested that entire movies could be produced using Sora, OpenAI’s latest generative video tool, during a recent discussion with former Google CEO Eric Schmidt, per Variety.
'You’ll be able to render a whole movie,' the actor began. 'You’ll just come up with an idea for a movie, then it will write the script, then you’ll input the script into the video generator and it will generate the movie.'
He added: 'Instead of watching some movie that somebody else came up with, I can just generate and then watch my own movie.'
Critics were quick to call out the Hollywood star for suggesting the movie-making magic could be left up to a computer.
'Imagine being Ashton Kutcher stepping onto a film set now, after coming out and advocating for all those crew people to lose their jobs and f***ing starve,' wrote one detractor. 'Gutsy choice, bud.'
A few fans even took swipes at the actor's resume, which includes such films as Just Married, No Strings Attached and The Butterfly Effect.
'You could probably make an Ashton Kutcher movie with OpenAI’s Sora, but you couldn’t make a good movie with it,' posted a follower.
Another chimed in, 'I’d rather render a whole different Ashton Kutcher.'
During the chat with Eric Schmidt, Kutcher said he played around with the Sora program and found that 'you can generate any footage that you want'.
'You can create good 10, 15-second videos that look very real,' he continued. 'It still makes mistakes. It still doesn’t quite understand physics. … But if you look at the generation of this that existed one year ago as compared to Sora, it’s leaps and bounds.
'In fact, there’s footage in it that I would say you could easily use in a major motion picture or a television show.'
Kutcher added, 'Why would you go out and shoot an establishing shot of a house in a television show when you could just create the establishing shot for $100? To go out and shoot it would cost you thousands of dollars.
'Action scenes of me jumping off of this building, you don’t have to have a stunt person go do it, you could just go do it [with AI].'
He went on to describe how a prompt involving a marathoner running through a sandstorm, which would typically demand extensive CGI, could be generated with ease.