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Jessica Alba 'hated' stripping naked in Fantastic Four

Jessica Alba as Sue Storm in 2005's Fantastic Four

Jessica Alba described getting naked in Fantastic Four as "awful and very humiliating".

Weeks after shooting wrapped, the 44-year-old actress "regretted" filming the scene - which saw her character Sue Storm appeared in her birthday suit on a bridge - because she grew up with a "pretty conservative" family and is a "modest person".

During an In Conversation With event at the Red Sea International Film Festival in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, Jessica told host Wendy Mitchell: "I hated that scene when they brought her back on the bridge, and she had to be naked on the bridge. 

"It was awful and very humiliating in real life, because I grew up with a pretty conservative family, and I'm a modest person and so it was something I was like, 'Oh, no, not this.' I regretted that scene for weeks." 

The star enjoyed some of the stunts in the 2005 superhero movie, but would not do them now.

Jessica said: "Getting ricocheted back into the wall, getting blasted, that was always fun, that was fun back then. But now, thank you I don't want to get whiplash."

Apart from the naked scene in Fantastic Four, Jessica "loved" playing Sue Storm because the character defied gender stereotypes.

Jessica said: "She was a woman I looked up to. She was very maternal and very kind, but also not a pushover; she spoke her mind.

"She had a great moral compass. No matter who you are, you can look up to her. Oftentimes, the women in these stories need to be saved by a guy or the villain, the problem in the story. This was back then. It’s different now."

And later in the conversation with Wendy, Jessica - who owns production company, Lady Metalmark Entertainment - shared she is trying to "change minds" with regard to diversity on screen.

Jessica - who noted she does not "blame Hollywood" - explained: "Growing up, I didn’t see a lot of diversity in storytelling.

"When you have a lot of white guys in charge, they feel most comfortable telling stories through their lens. They don’t know you. 

"They didn’t grow up with a woman who grew up like me. Frankly, many of them didn’t have women [in their lives] who were strong, not just running the household but making an income. 

"We still don’t have a lot of female leadership, but as a woman of colour, I don’t see the boundaries that they may see."

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