When recalling the drunken incident with his fellow co-stars from 2006, the 34 year-old actor admits: "I definitely kicked in a window that night."
There is a lot more controversial moments to Channing Tatum's past than just his stripper days.
The 34 year-old actor was involved in a hilarious incident when he became friends with Shia LaBeouf ahead of filming their 2006 flick, 'A Guide to Recognizing Your Saints.'
As the two actors previously didn't know each other prior to the shooting the movie, they decided to bond over a few drinks, which quickly turned into a wild night out.
"Me and Shia, I think we had just met that day," Tatum said in a newly released GQ excerpt. "We were, like, 'What shall we go out and do?' We were drinking. And I think our initial thing was 'Alright, let's go out and try and get in a fight!'"
"This was just young, dumb idiot actors thinking that that's going to bond us," he added. "Because we'll shed blood together, blah, blah, blah. I've never seen him since then."
LaBeouf also commented on the night's antics, along with the pair's other co-star Peter Tambakis, back in 2008 when he was profiled by the same magazine.
"We were walking around the Upper East Side in this rebel mind-set, trying to be like street kids," he said. "Channing was supposed to be the head honcho in the movie, so he goes, 'All right, you see that bookstore? Somebody throw a rock. Let's break in and steal a Spider-Man bookmark.' And Peter and me look at each other like, 'Dude, what? Are you f--king kidding me?'"
The 'Lawless' actor surprisingly revealed Tatum did break the glass and set off a security alarm. "He grabs the bookmarks and jets," LaBeouf added. "So now you got these little actor kids running down the street in New York, freaking out."
LaBeouf recalled the incident in an interview from 2008
MORE: Channing Tatum Claims To Be A "High-Functioning Alcoholic"
Although Channing's rep previously called Shia's recollection of the night's events as "inaccurate," the '22 Jump Street' actor did admit, "I definitely kicked in a window that night. But it wasn't Barnes and Nobles. Just a window."
MORE: Channing Tatum's Lucky Escape From Being Teen Dad
"It was more of just us being so young and not having any real clue of how to do what we were trying to do in this movie," Tatum concluded. "I think actors always sort of feel fake, for a lack of better words. You always sort of feel like a fraud. And I think that was us trying to be like 'Oh, we're tough.I'm tough'".
Tatum allegedly broke a bookshop window while drunk
The legend of Bigfoot is turned upside down in this animated adventure from Warner Bros,...
Two years ago, Kingsman: The Secret Service seemed to come out of nowhere, ruffling feathers...
Good news: Steven Soderbergh's well-publicised retirement from directing only lasted about four years. He's back...
Jimmy and Clyde Logan are two down-and-out brothers from West Virginia. Jimmy has been fired...
For those who knew him, Gary Unwin (better known as Eggsy to his friends), was...
A spin-off from 2014's awesome The Lego Movie, this raucously paced action-comedy is proof that...
An intelligent ode to a time when Hollywood made wildly inventive movies without pressure from...
Ever since his wonderful appearance in Wes Anderson's The Grand Budapest Hotel, we've been waiting...
Quentin Tarantino is a filmmaker who simply can't be ignored, especially when he lobs a...
John Ruth earnt his nickname The Hangman for a good reason, he's one of the...
Eddie Mannix is a fixer who works in Hollywood where he tames celebrities and keeps...
John Ruth, known by his associates and like-minded peers as The Hangman on account of...