Jennifer Lawrence has admitted that she enjoyed filming her nude scene in her new movie, No Hard Feeling, more than everyone may have thought.
In No Hard Feelings, Jennifer appears as a cash-strapped teen and recently 'carless' Uber driver who takes a job seducing a seemingly 'undateable' teen — by his concerned parents before he heads to college — in order to save the sale of her family home.
In one scene of the R-rated flick, the 32-year-old's character Maddie is naked at the beach.
And in a new interview alongside her co-star Andrew Barth Feldman, Oscar winner Jennifer admitted that the racy scene in question was actually quite easy and fun to shoot.
"Everyone in my life and my team is doing the right thing and going, 'Are you sure? Are you sure? Are you sure?'" Jennifer explained.
She added to the interview in Variety : "I didn't even have a second thought. It was hilarious to me."
Jennifer went on to reveal that the beach scene required "a lot of rehearsal" and was filmed in one day.
Meanwhile, her 21-year-old co-star Andrew added: "Every situation that these characters end up in, you're laughing your butt off. We became so close instantly that nothing ever felt weird or unsafe. It was entirely professional."
In true J-Law form, she hilariously challenged him on his comments, quipping: "Even when I put my T-shirt over your head and motor-boated you? You felt safe?"
He responded: "I felt it was an exclusively sterile and professional environment."
No Hard Feelings hit cinemas on June 23 and placed fourth at the domestic box office this week. It currently has a 88% audience score on Rotten Tomatoes.
The movie also stars Laura Benanti as Percy's mother, plus Natalie Morales, Hasan Minhaj, Kyle Mooney, Ebon Moss-Bachrach, Scott MacArthur, among others.
Gene Stupnitsky directed the Sony-released movie from a script he wrote with John Phillips.
Meanwhile, on the personal front, Jennifer is also mother to one-year-old son Cy, who she shares with her husband, Cooke Maroney.
She recently spoke about how "hard" it was juggling parenthood and acting, telling Interview magazine that she has also "contemplated" the challenges of "having a child that's being born into a lifestyle that's different from his friends".
"The best thing I can do is just make sure he knows he's loved, and that he's our number one priority and try to be a good example of kindness," she said.