She has recently revealed her wish to play an 'ugly role'.
But if it were ever come to fruition, movie makers would need an especially good make-up artist to transform Rosie Huntington-Whitely, especially judging by her latest magazine spread.
In one of her sexiest shoots yet, the 24-year-old Transformers star is seen posing nude on the cover of Australia's FHM.
With a come hither look, the new actress slips on just a pair of black stilettos and covers her modesty with a bear skin rug.
Her perfect body on show, Rosie, also a Victoria's Secret supermodel, tousles her hair with her hand and stares seductively in the camera.
Just this week Rosie revealed her ambition to follow in the footsteps of the likes of Hollywood actresses such as Charlize Theron and Nicole Kidman, who transformed into unattractive leading ladies for their films Monster and The Hours, respectively.
Both women won Oscars for their 'go against the grain' roles.
'It would be amazing to really go against my image and do something like that, definitely' she told the Dailystar.
In May this year, Rosie won the FHM's Sexiest Woman In The World poll, and while she says she's thrilled about the accolade, she wants her fans to see another dimension.
'I'm so flattered by winning the FHM title ( Sexiest Woman In The World), but I'd love people to see a different side of me. Hopefully more exciting roles will come,' she said.
Despite her role of female lead Carly in Tranformers: Dark Of The Moon getting slammed by critics, the blockbuster trumped the box office.
The British star's debut film was a huge success on its opening weekend.
Distributor Paramount Pictures estimated on Tuesday that the new instalment pulled in $116.4 million domestically over the four-day Fourth of July weekend and $181.1 million since opening Tuesday night.
The sci-fi sequel has added $217 million overseas, bringing its worldwide total to nearly $400 million.
The success would no doubt be music to the ears of Rosie after she and the film were continuously criticised following it's debut.
One critic even said he would prefer to undergo a form of torture than have to watch the third film in the Michael Bay directed franchise again.
Given the choice between sitting through 154 minutes of Transformers: Dark of the Moon and being waterboarded, I plead: Waterboard me!' wrote James Verniere of the Boston Herald.
He added: 'Is this Transformers better than the first two? That’s like saying cyanide is better than arsenic because it’ll kill you faster.'
Other critics were nearly as harsh, with the Chicago Tribune calling the film, released in the U.S. today,as 'a work of ineffable soullessness and persistent moral idiocy.'
A.O. Scott in the New York Times adds: 'I can't decide if this movie is so spectacularly, breathtakingly dumb as to induce stupidity in anyone who watches, or so brutally brilliant that it disarms all reason. What's the difference?'
And comments about Rosie's acting were equally as negative.
Last week, Daily Mail critic Baz Bamigboye said: 'Huntington-Whiteley shows up in a figure-hugging, tighty-whitey dress but she's all window dressing and doesn't exactly excel at delivering her banal lines. Poor Rosie Huntington-Whiteley.
'She may be beautiful but she can't act for toffee.'
Other film writers agreed, with Chicago Sun-Times calling LaBeouf 'scarcely heroic', and adding that 'his girlfriend has no particular function except to be in constant peril and (in two hilarious shots) stare thoughtfully into space as if realising something.'
(dailymail.co.uk)