Kirsten Dunst has recalled starring opposite Brad Pitt as an 11-year-old in the movie Interview with the Vampire.
The 1994 film was Dunst's first major break in her acting career before becoming a celebrated actress in Hollywood.
In a new interview with Vanity Fair, Dunst reflected on how she felt "very weird" kissing Pitt as a child.

In the movie, Dunst's character is changed into a vampire at a young age. She has both a close bond with Pitt's character, and at one point gives him a kiss on the mouth - which Dunst now describes as a "peck".
Pitt was around 30 years old when the movie was filmed.
"At that point, I was a little girl, and he was like a brother to me," Dunst said. "And it was very weird even though it was a peck. I was just very not into it. Other than that I was treated like a total princess on that set."

This isn't the first time Dunst has expressed dissatisfaction with the movie's kiss.
On the film's 25th anniversary, Entertainment Tonight found footage of Dunst talking about the kiss when she was 12 years old.
"I hated it so much," Dunst said back at the time. "Brad was like my older brother on the set and it's kinda like kissing your older brother. I don't know. It was weird kissing an older guy. And I had to kiss him on the lips so it was gross."
The outlet showed Dunst the old footage while she was on a 2019 press tour.

"They were so sweet to me," Dunst said after watching herself back. "That production, that film, was like nothing else I've ever experienced."
It comes as Dunst revealed that she was paid considerably less than Tobey Maguire for her role in Sam Raimi's Spider-Man trilogy.
"The pay disparity between me and Spider-Man was very extreme," she said. "I didn't even think about it. I was just like, 'Oh yeah, Tobey [Maguire] is playing Spider-Man.'"

"But you know who was on the cover of the second Spider-Man poster?" she continued. "Spider-Man and ME."
The specific amount the Fargo actress made for her work in the Spider-Man franchise is unknown.
Tobey Maguire garnered $4 million starring as the titular superhero in the first film, then negotiated a salary of $17.5 million for the sequel, according to a 2007 article by Variety.