Celebrities Mila Kunis and Ashton Kutcher were spotted in a Hertfordshire city centre, far from the glamour of Los Angeles, as they spent time in the UK.
The couple surprised locals when they spotted them walking down the ‘famous alley’ in Rickmansworth, which has been used in Law & Order, Men in Black and The Smurfs.
Mila, 40, and her husband Ashton, 46, were joined by their two children Wyatt, 9, and Dimitri, 7, as they explored the iconic filming location.
The video has been reshared on TikTok as fans expressed disbelief that the Hollywood couple was out exploring the city.
According to someone, the couple had been to Bruce Springsteen’s concert at Wembley Stadium a few days earlier.
Celebrities Mila Kunis and Ashton Kutcher were spotted in a Hertfordshire city centre, far from the glamour of Los Angeles, as they spent time in the UK.
The couple surprised locals when they spotted them walking down the ‘famous alley’ in Rickmansworth, which has been 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 film location
Someone else claimed to have seen them getting coffee at Starbucks, when Ashton kindly stopped to pose for a selfie with a fan.
The family is said to be here while Mila is filming her new role in the new Knives Out film, Wake Up Dead Man.
Filming for the film, which is set for release next year, began in June in London. Mila will play the role of police chief G. Scott.
The third film in the series also marks the return of detective Benoit Blanc, played by Daniel Craig, who attempts to solve a new mystery.
Other stars set to appear in the film include 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 in London several times this summer, including recently at a Morgan Wallen concert in Hyde Park.
In June, they were spotted together walking through Regent’s Park in North London.
The video has been reshared on TikTok as fans expressed disbelief that the Hollywood couple was out exploring the city
One person claimed the couple had been to Bruce Springsteen’s concert at Wembley Stadium a few days earlier
Ashton’s comments came after he was criticized for saying that AI “can render an entire movie,” prompting many to defend the film industry.
Ashton had suggested during a recent conversation with former Google CEO Eric Schmidt that entire movies could be produced using Sora, OpenAI’s latest generative video tool. Variety.
“You can render an entire movie,” the actor began. “You just come up with an idea for a movie, then the program writes the script, then you feed the script into the video generator, and then it generates the movie.”
He added: ‘Instead of watching a movie that someone else has come up with, I can just generate my own movie and watch it.
Critics were quick to criticize the Hollywood star for suggesting that the magic of filmmaking could be left to a computer.
‘Imagine being Ashton Kutcher walking onto a movie set right now after calling for all those crew members to lose their jobs and starve to death,’ wrote a critic“Bold choice, mate.”
Some fans have even taken to the actor’s resume, which includes films such 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 agreed“I would rather create a completely different Ashton Kutcher.”
During the conversation with Schmidt, Kutcher said he had been experimenting with the Sora program and discovered that “you can generate any imagery you want.”
“You can make good 10, 15-second videos that look very real,” he continued. “It still makes mistakes. It still doesn’t fully understand the physics. … But if you look at the generation of this that existed a year ago compared to Sora, it’s come on leaps and bounds.
‘There are even images in it that I think you could easily use in a major feature film or television series.’
Kutcher added, “Why would you go shoot an establishing shot of a house on a TV show when you can just shoot the establishing shot for $100? To go shoot it would cost you thousands of dollars.
‘Action scenes where I’m jumping off this building, you don’t have to hire a stuntman to do it, you can just do it. [with AI].
He went on to describe how a prompt about a marathon runner running through a sandstorm, which would normally require a lot of CGI, could be easily generated.