Actress Mila Kunis may have previously expressed how happy she was to be carrying fiancé Ashton Kutcher's baby, but she may have suddenly changed her mind about answering questions about it.

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A fairly tense interview with Stephen Whitty of The Star-Ledger on June 20 has begun making its way around the internet, which doesn't seem to paint Kunis in the best light, as questions about her pregnancy, her heritage and her career all seemed to receive pretty terse answers.

Whitty started the interview off asking her about how her pregnancy was going, but got a surprise when Kunis refused to comment on it.

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"I don't talk about that for publication," she said.

The actress also responded in a tense way when Whitty asked her about her career -- which saw her in three independent movies that were released this year, making him wonder if she was considering a shift in the kinds of roles she has started choosing.

"Not really, because in the middle of all that I still did Oz (The Great and Powerful) and Jupiter Ascending, so that sort of destroys your assumption," the actress replied. "It's not like I go 'I'm going to do a tentpole movie now.' You gravitate towards different things, different times."

The tension then hit an all-time high when Whitty started bringing up questions about the actress' heritage. She was born in the Ukraine and moved to the U.S. when she was seven -- but before Whitty could ask her any detailed questions about it, she shut him down once again.

"I've talked about moving to America in a hundred interviews," she said. "it's the most mundane subject possible, it's like everyone's immigrant story. It was much harder for my 13-year-old brother, it was much harder for my parents."

When Whitty tried turning the topic towards the current political situation in her native country, Kunis appeared to anticipate where the interview was going and abruptly ended the questions about it.

"I know what your next question is so let's just skip it," she said. "You're going to ask me what I think about what's going on now in Ukraine. Just because I lived there until I was seven doesn't mean I identify with Ukraine."

Despite the interview being so tense, however, Kunis appeared to think it had gone well, as her demeanor seemed to change surprisingly when Whitty apologized for asking questions that appeared to upset her, making it a terrible interview.

"No, no, it was a good interview!" she replied in a much brighter tone.

Kunis has not spoken out about the interview since.

Tags: mila kunis