Imogen Poots Online is having now a Media Archive which is going to feature many videos. I already uploaded some to the archive, including the Flaunt Magazine and Project Magazine Photoshoot:
RELATED VIDEO LINK:
Photoshoots > Last Uploads
Tags: 2011, Flaunt, Imogen Poots, Photoshoots, Project, Video, Video Archive
Posted in Photoshoots, Site, Video | No Comments »
Imogen Poots Online is having now a Media Archive which is going to feature many videos. I already uploaded some to the archive, including the Flaunt Magazine and Project Magazine Photoshoot:
RELATED VIDEO LINK:
Photoshoots > Last Uploads
Tags: 2011, Gallery, Imogen Poots, Patrick Fraser, Photoshoots, Project Magazine
Posted in Gallery, Photoshoots | No Comments »
Imogen did a few months ago a beautiful photoshoot by Patrick Fraser for Project Magazine (we reported) and the gallery has been updated with outtakes of the photoshoot. Imogen looks stunning!
RELATED LINK:
Photoshoots > Shoot 36 (Patrick Fraser for Project Magazine)
Tags: 2011, Flaunt, Imogen Poots, Photoshoots
Posted in Gallery, Photoshoots | No Comments »
I’ve found some new/old outtakes of Imogen’s Flaunt Photoshoot by Jessie Craig. If you post these elsewhere, please make sure to credit IPO – thanks.
RELATED LINK:
Photoshoots > Shoot 35 (Jessie Craig for Flaunt Magazine)
Tags: 2011, Captures, Gallery, Imogen Poots, Photoshoots, Video
Posted in Gallery, Photoshoots, Video | 1 Comment »
Captures of it will be up very soon! Just added to the gallery captures of the behind the scenes video! Imogen looks amazingly pretty.
RELATED LINK:
Captures > Photoshoots > 2011 Project Magazine
Imogen Poots for Project Magazine from Patrick Fraser on Vimeo.
Tags: 2011, Gallery, Imogen Poots, Photoshoots, Press
Posted in Gallery, Photoshoots, Press | 1 Comment »
RELATED LINK:
Photoshoots > Shoot 34 (Mark Segal for LA Times Magazine)
www.latimesmagazine.com: What manner of alchemy really divides a B-level ingenue from a budding leading lady? It’s a mysterious business, one that can’t quite be explained by parsing a gal’s credits on IMDb. Sure, most A-listers scrap their way into the spotlight, earning their chops in indies or TV guest roles, before finally landing that starmaking role. But when the real thing steps into the frame, we simply must look at her. When she finally takes her place at the top of the credits, we feel like we’ve been waiting for her all along. The ever-shimmering hair may come by way of a pricey colorist, but for a true movie goddess, the It factor can never be bottled. That said, we bring you four young women poised for cinematic immortality: Imogen Poots, whose dry London wit and bewitching gaze can slay vampires and fanboys alike; True Blood’s Deborah Ann Woll, who is sinking her teeth into a slew of big-screen stories; Mary Elizabeth Winstead, whose slinky brown peepers can evoke a heartbreaker or a monster-hunting researcher with equal ease; and Jessica Chastain, a chameleonic redhead who reminds us, dare we say, of an up-and-coming Nicole Kidman. Yes, a true screen divine has lightning in her eyes from the very start…
IMOGEN POOTS
Just what is an Imogen Poots, anyway? Well, not counting the wicked British wit, the Cameron Diaz smile and the sultry gaze that evokes an illicit union between Amanda Seyfried and Scarlett Johansson (just humor us), quite a bit, actually. The native Londoner first broke as a fleet-flooted teen outrunning zombies in 28 Weeks Later. Then came a flashback to ancient Rome with Michael Fassbender in Centurion, a jape with Michael Douglas and Susan Sarandon in Solitary Man and a sojourn through the moors with Mia Wasikowska in Jane Eyre. She recently filmed the drama A Late Quartet, sharing the screen with heavyweights Christopher Walken and Philip Seymour Hoffman, and this season, she returns to horror, helping to stake some vampire ham (Colin Farrell) in the latest take on Fright Night. Despite the impressive CV, there’s one sign of Hollywood success Poots has yet to experience: the paparazzi. Currently shooting the drama Greetings from Tim Buckley, she remains blissfully anonymous. “Oh my God, the paparazzi here have no clue,” Poots says. “I’ve never had a run-in. I’m sure they just think I’m some sort of road sign.”
Tags: 2011, Foam, Gallery, Imogen Poots, Interview, Magazine, Photoshoots
Posted in Gallery, Magazines, Photoshoots, Press | 1 Comment »
RELATED LINKS:
Magazines > Foam (October/November 2011)
Photoshoots > Shoot 33 (Hilary Walsh for Foam)
Fright Night’s up-and-coming ingenue goes goth and then quotes Southern Gothic literature.
Imogen Poots does a mean Charles Bukowski. She’ll also do a pretty convincing Allen Ginsberg. “They’re on my iTunes,” she says, “you’ll be listening to Depeche Mode, or something, and then it’ll be like, ‘I saw the best minds of my generation…’ It’s awesome.”
So begins a surprising interview with the incredibly surprising star of this August’s Fright Night. We certainly weren’t anticipating sitting across from someone we’d last seen on-screen in intense hair extensions and supplementary boobs swapping Faulkner and Leonard Cohen quotes or discussing various means of remembrance.
Rushing into the diner at the Standard in West Hollywood, the London-based actress immediately dives in, extolling her well-considered philosophies with a combination of confident intensity and early-20s squirminess. The scenery makes her uneasy; the stark white of the restaurant reminds her of a somewhat nightmarish experience she had while staying at the Mondrian in New York. The two days spent in her lavishly bare hotel room with nothing to do was a sort of a worst-case scenario for her: “I called up my brother and said ‘I’m feeling really weird,’ and he said ‘Well, you have to do something. Find a catharsis.’ I went to an art shop on Canal Street and I bought these stencils and started doing huge stencils [on the floor of] my room. [I thought,] I’ve got my stencils; I’m going to be fine.”
Later in our conversation, it becomes clearer why a few extra days with an empty schedule in a stimulus-free room would create such panic. “It’s that terrifying feeling of being numb,” she says, “That’s the fear. You end up seeing so many cool places and finding out interesting things or meeting people that blow your mind, or leave you cold, or whatever. But when you feel numb, that’s such a terrifying prospect.” It’s this trepidation that keeps her feverishly running in and out of art shops and bookstores wherever she goes. While filming Fright Night in Albuquerque, New Mexico, she bought so many used books that she had to have a friend ship them back to her in the U.K. “I find a lot of things uninteresting, so when [I] can find something that holds [my] attention, or curiosity, I suppose, that’s a good thing…I think it’s important to have other things that you’re interested in to feed your mind.”
It’s with a similar passion for eluding boredom with which Imogen seems to trip along most aspects of her life. In fact, looking at her body of work, it would seem as if her entire professional career was structured around amusing herself. In the course of a year, she’s gone from period lady (Jane Eyre) to predator (A Solitary Man) to prey (Fright Night). “There’s a pressure that can be put on an actor that you must be [versatile],” she says, “I think it’s easy to say, ‘I’m not going to do that or I’m not going to go down that road.’ You try to not be afraid of how you’ll be perceived.”
And yet, as contradictory as it is given the contents of her resumé, her opinion of versatility is surprisingly low. “You can only play a character the way that you feel them to be true,” she says, “and if that means they laugh the same as the girl you played in the 18th or 19th century, well it’s fine.” Rather than seeing each of her characters as varied and different, she looks for links between them; the thought being that what ultimately compels her about each character must make all of them somewhat similar, genre or story notwithstanding. “Sometimes you read a part. You feel like you know them. Sometimes I’ll read a part and think I don’t know them at all. I don’t really know [how] to access them. When a role speaks to you it’s like ‘WHAT?’ and it becomes something you really want to explore.”
Those roles that “speak” aren’t necessarily highbrow, either. At times, her characteristic meanderings can land Imogen in seriously un-heady territory. In Fright Night, she plays vulnerable and frustratingly under-sexed Amy Peterson—the requisite babe foil to Colin Farrell’s overtly predatory vampire villain. “The director, Craig [Gillespie of Lars and the Real Girl] approached this commercial beast with a very character-based background,” she says, “it was fun playing her. You can’t even intellectualize it too much, it was just fun.”
At this point in her career, finally having the ability to be pickier about projects, the self-proclaimed aging child actor (“a child actor with a pension plan”) is cutting her teeth by working opposite—and learning from—some of Hollywood’s most superlative stars. As if a steamy make-out with Michael Douglas or acting as neck feast for Colin Farrell weren’t enough, her next film, A Late Quartet, is heavily star-studded, with Philip Seymour Hoffman, Catherine Keener and Christopher Walken, from whom she gained the nickname Stinker. “I just loved him,” she says, “He would say ‘Hey Stinker, you stinkin?’ I was just happy to be around him.” With each role, she learns from her lauded co-stars, collecting and growing with each new challenge. For A Late Quartet she learned to play violin, an experience that left her in near hysterics: “Some people go into tears or fits of laughter and I’m definitely the laughter,” she says, “You’re doing these quite phallic hand motions, so there I am alone in a room going like this [gesticulating]. But, I picked it up and I loved it.”
Relentlessly self-aware, she notices the fleetingness of each of her projects, which are booked solid these days. “It’s a bad thing, I think, if you just go the next job, the next job,” she says, “You can forget why you were doing it.” Which brings us back to the all-white room at the Mondrian, Imogen stenciling like her life depends on it. “I find that if I’m traveling there’s an innate fear that I’m going to forget everything because the experiences are transient,” she says, “so [I] want to solidify moments with something permanent.” She recounts a particularly stirring passage from Faulkner’s Absalum, Absalum! that stuck with her. “You pass a note from your hand to someone else’s hand and the presence of that piece of paper is defining the moment in a really complicated way,” she explains, “That really rang true. It’s such a shame if you never leave a mark on something—whether it’s your life or someone else’s.”
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Tags: 2011, Comic Con, Events, Gallery, Imogen Poots, Magazine Scans, Photoshoots
Posted in Events, Gallery, Magazines, Photoshoots | No Comments »
I added more photos of Imogen at the Comic-Con, a EW portrait with the “Fright Night” cast, a new photoshoot outtake and a magazine scan:
RELATED LINKS:
Photoshoots > Shoot 32
Magazines > WWD (May 17, 2010)
Photoshoots > Portraits > 2011 San Diego Comic-Con
Public Appearances > 2011 > 2011 San Diego Comic Con – “Fright Night” Panel – July 22
Public Appearances > 2011 > 2011 San Diego Comic Con – “Fright Night” Press Conference – July 22
Public Appearances > 2011 > 2011 San Diego Comic Con – “Fright Night” Screening – July 22
Tags: 2011, Fright Night, Gallery, Imogen Poots, Photoshoots, Screencaptures, Stills
Posted in Fright Night, Gallery, Movies, Photoshoots | No Comments »
I added to the gallery a promo photoshoot picture and various clip screencaptures of “Fright Night“. The movie opens in theaters tomorrow on August 19! Additionally another movie still has been added right here.
RELATED LINKS:
Movies > Fright Night (2011) > Promotional Photoshoot
Movies > Fright Night (2011) > Screencaptures: Sneak Peek
Movies > Fright Night (2011) > Screencaptures: Clip #1 – Don’t Expect Me To Join
Movies > Fright Night (2011) > Screencaptures: Clip #2 – Your Son Is Harassing Me
Movies > Fright Night (2011) > TV Spot: Terrifying Review
Tags: 2011, Gallery, InStyle, Magazine Scans, Photoshoots
Posted in Gallery, Magazines, Photoshoots | No Comments »
Thanks to dustjacketattic, I was able to add scans of Imogen who’s featured in next months “InStyle Australia” (September, 2011). She looks incredible stunning!
RELATED LINK:
Magazines > InStyle Australia (September 2011)
Tags: 2011, Ad Campaign, Chloé, facebook, Fragrance, Imogen Poots, Photoshoots
Posted in Ad Campaigns, Chloé, Gallery, Photoshoots | No Comments »
The official Chloe facebook site has released a new advertising photo with Imogen. I added the photo to the gallery, make sure to check it out – Imogen looks very beautiful!
RELATED LINKS:
Advertising Campaigns > Chloé Fragrance (2011) > Ads
Chloé Fragrance (2011)
Hello Darkness (2011)
A Late Quartet (2011)
Fright Night (2011)
Jane Eyre (2011)
Christopher and His Kind - TV (2011)
Filth (2012)
Greetings from Tim Buckley (2012)
The Laureate (2012)
A Single Shot (2012)
Comes a Bright Day (2012)

