Pom Klementieff
Pom Klementieff | |
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Klementieff at the 2016 San Diego Comic-Con International | |
Born |
Quebec City, Quebec, Canada | 3 May 1986
Occupation | Actress |
Years active | 2007–present |
Pom Klementieff (born 3 May 1986) is a French actress best known for her role in the Spike Lee film Oldboy. Born in Quebec City, she was trained at the Cours Florent drama school in Paris and has appeared in such films as Loup (2009), Sleepless Night (2011) and Hacker's Game (2015).
Early life
Pom Klementieff was born on 3 May 1986, in Quebec City, Quebec, to a Korean mother and French-Russian father, who was working there as a consul with the French government.[1][2] She had one older brother. Her parents chose the name "Pom" because it is similar in pronunciation to the Korean words for both "spring" (봄) and "tiger" (범).[1] Klementieff lived in Canada only for one year before her family traveled extensively due to her father's job,[3] and she lived in Japan and the Ivory Coast before settling in France. Klementieff later said that travelling at an early age gave her a "gypsy soul".[1][3]
Klementieff's father died of cancer when she was five, and her mother was schizophrenic and unable to care for children,[1] so Klementieff was raised by her paternal uncle and aunt.[2] Her uncle died on her 18th birthday,[1][3] and her brother committed suicide on her 25th birthday.[1] Klementieff briefly attended law school after her uncle's death to appease her aunt, but did not find the career path appealing. She also worked as a waitress and saleswoman in France.[1] She started acting at age 19 at the Cours Florent drama school in Paris. A few months into her education she won a theater competition that awarded her free classes for two years with the school's top teachers.[3]
Career
Klementieff's first professional acting job was the French independent film Après lui (2007), portraying the stepdaughter of the protagonist played by Catherine Deneuve.[2] Filming for her scenes took three days. During one scene, Klementieff was supposed to push someone down a set of stairs but accidentally fell down the stairs herself, and director Gaël Morel kept that shot in the final film.[3] Her first leading role was in Loup (2009), a French film about a tribe of reindeer herders in the Siberian mountains. During filming, Klementieff stayed in a camp, hours from the nearest village, where temperatures dropped to 130 degrees below zero. During filming she befriended nomads who lived there, worked with real wolves, rode reindeer, and swam with a horse in a lake.[3]
Klementieff made her Hollywood debut, and highest profile role to date, in Spike Lee's Oldboy (2013), a remake of the South Korean film of the same name.[3][4] She portrayed Haeng-Bok, the bodyguard of the antagonist played by Sharlto Copley. A fan of the original film, Klementieff heard about the part through Roy Lee, a producer with the remake, and took boxing lessons after learning the role involved martial arts. After showcasing her boxing skills during her audition, Lee asked her to go home and come back wearing a more feminine outfit and make-up, like her character in the film.[1][2] She contributed some of her own clothes to the character's wardrobe,[2] and trained three hours a day for two months for an on-screen fight with star Josh Brolin.[2][4] Klementieff came up with the name Haeng-Bok, Korean for "happiness", herself after Lee asked her to research possible names for the character.[2][3]
Klementieff moved to Los Angeles after Oldboy was filmed and began pursuing more Hollywood auditions.[2][3] She continued taekwondo after the film, and had a purple belt as of the summer of 2014.[2] Her next acting role was the film Hacker's Game (2015), in which she plays a hacker she compared to Lisbeth Salander from the novel The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo. Klementieff used her boxing skills again in the film, and due to the movie's low budget, she had to do her own make-up and chose her own wardrobe.[3] It was her idea to dye her hair purple for the role, to which the directors first objected but later acquiesced.[2] She joined the Marvel Cinematic Universe as Mantis in Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2.
Filmography
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
2007 | Après lui | Emilie | |
2008 | The Easy Way | NHI | |
2009 | Loup | Nastazya | |
2009 | Pigalle, la nuit | Sandra | TV series (eight episodes) |
2011 | Borderline | Naomi | |
2011 | Sleepless Night | Lucy | |
2011 | Delicacy | Waitress | |
2011 | Love Lasts Three Years | Julia | |
2011 | Silhouettes | Valerie | |
2012 | Radiostars | The pizza girl | |
2012 | Porn in the Hood | Tia | |
2012 | À l'ombre du palmier | Le modèle | Short film |
2013 | Paris à tout prix | Jess | |
2013 | Oldboy | Haeng-Bok | |
2015 | Hacker's Game | Loise | |
2017 | Ingrid Goes West | Harley Chung | Post-production |
2017 | Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 | Mantis[5] |
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Han, Steve (November 2013). "Korean French Actress Pom Klementieff Makes US Debut in 'Oldboy' Remake". KoreAm Magazine. Retrieved July 5, 2014.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 "Actress Pom Klementieff from Spike Lee's Oldboy". Filler Magazine. 2 (5). Summer 2014. Archived from the original on December 6, 2013. Retrieved July 2, 2014.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Chang, Mina (July 2, 2013). "Q&A with Pom Klementieff". Anthem Magazine. Archived from the original on January 7, 2014. Retrieved July 5, 2014.
- 1 2 De Ville, Reece (April 7, 2014). "Interview: Oldboy's ass kicking, earth moving Pom Klementieff". The Digital Fix. Retrieved July 5, 2014.
- ↑ Lincoln, Ross A. (29 October 2015). "'Compton's Neil Brown Jr. Signs On For 'Sand Castle'; Pom Klementieff Joins 'Guardians Of The Galaxy 2'". Deadline.com.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Pom Klementieff. |