Catch Me If You Can

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Template:Infobox Film Catch Me If You Can is a 2002 motion picture set in the 1960s. It was directed by Steven Spielberg and adapted by Jeff Nathanson loosely from the book by Frank Abagnale Jr. and Stan Redding.

The movie states that it was inspired by the true life story of Abagnale; the movie diverges somewhat from the real events as reported in Abagnale's book on his exploits.

It is also arguably Spielberg's most offbeat film. The film was a critical and commercial success and is known for John Williams' score and its unique title sequence which was popular enough to be parodied on The Simpsons.

Tagline: The true story of a real fake.

Contents

Movie plot

The film dramatizes the true story of a teenaged con man who stole over $2.5 million through forgery and other frauds, throughout a crime career lasting six years from 1963 to 1969. The film diverges from the protagonist's actual life story for dramatic effect. According to the movie, Frank's impersonations typically served to gain him temporary prestige, as an airline pilot, doctor, or lawyer, as well as aiding him in cashing forged checks. He was caught by the FBI in 1969, and got his sentence reduced by agreeing to assist FBI's bank fraud division in detecting forgeries and advising on countermeasures.

Frank William Abagnale Jr. is the son of Frank William Abagnale and Paula Abagnale. Paula Abagnale was born in Montrichard, France.

Awards

The movie was nominated for Academy Awards for Best Achievement in Music Written for Motion Pictures, Original Score (John Williams) and Best Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Role (Christopher Walken).

Cast

Trivia

  • from IMDB.com: The concluding part of Spielberg's unofficial "running man" trilogy, which started with Artificial Intelligence: AI (2001) and continued with Minority Report (2002).
  • The picture was filmed in just 56 days in early 2002; at more than 140 locations around the United States (New York, Los Angeles) and Canada (Montreal, Quebec City).
  • One of the locations used was the old TWA Terminal 5 building at JFK International Airport in New York City. The building, designed by Eero Saarinen, opened in 1962 and was an instant icon of architecture. It had been closed since TWA's demise in 2001, so it was indeed a coup for Spielberg and the crew to film in that building. In 2005, construction started behind the famed terminal to incorporate it with JetBlue's new Terminal. It is set to re-open in 2008.
  • from BoxOfficeMojo.com:
 Film's reported budget - $52 million
 Est. Marketing Costs -   $35 million
 Domestic Gross -       $164 million
 Worldwide Gross -      $351,112,395
  • Leonardo DiCaprio was sick throughout most of the filming of 'Catch Me If You Can'

Comparison with the book

Compared to the actual events described in Abagnale's book, Catch Me If You Can, the movie can be described as loosely based on true events. The name of the protagonist and some of his exploits are the same as in real life, but the manner in which he achieved them has been changed.

One example of the changes in the movie include Abagnale's promiscuity. In the movie, Abagnale had one or two liaisons. In real life, Abagnale had numerous liaisons with dozens of women he encountered while in his false guises (airline pilot, doctor, etc.). Abagnale showed no remorse for his "love 'em and leave 'em" attitude towards most of these women, stating that they were promiscuous themselves and had, more or less, thrown themselves at him and weren't interested in long-term relationships anyway.

While posing as a doctor, Abagnale left the hospital voluntarily in the movie. In real life, he was scared into leaving after almost letting a baby die of oxygen deprivation (Abagnale had no idea what the nurse meant when she said there was a "blue baby"). Abagnale was able to fake his way through most of his duties before the final one, by letting the interns and nurses handle most of the cases that came in during his rather late night shift, such as setting broken bones and other such tasks. Many of his tasks were focused on the pediatric wing of the hospital (he had posed as a pediatrician), and most women coming in for delivery had their own physician on hand.

While posing as a doctor, in the novel Abagnale has a romantic liaison with a nurse who is older than he is. In the movie, the woman he approaches appears to be a younger woman, maybe even a candy striper rather than a nurse. In the movie, he confesses all to the young candy striper/nurse, and asks her to run away with him, only to find at the rendezvous point that she has told the FBI and they are lying in wait. In real life, the woman who informed on him was a stewardess.

One of his exploits covered in the movie, forging checks in France, shows Abagnale running the checks off himself. In real life, he had the father of one of his girlfriends print the checks. The father owned a print shop, but had no idea that he was printing unauthorized documents. Abagnale had given him a sample (real) Pan Am paycheck and the man duplicated them, with different numbers, but otherwise identical to the original paycheck (Abagnale told him Pan Am was thinking of switching check printers and wanted a sample run). The "sample run" he provided Abagnale contained 10,000 checks. Unable to use so many checks, Abagnale kept a small portion and discarded the rest.

The movie also dramatizes the capture of Abagnale in France (outside the aforementioned print shop). The movie depicts this event with dozens of police and patrol cars appearing seemingly out of the ether and descending upon Abagnale. The French police are depicted as overexcited and intent on shooting Abagnale should he make the slightest attempt to resist; the FBI agent is on the spot to talk Abagnale into surrendering. A few fans expressed discontent, citing that the scene possibly attempts to exploit modern American xenophobia against the French. Abagnale in real life was captured in a grocery store in Montpellier, where he had gone to ground, by two uniformed police officers. Though he tried to con his way out of it, he was arrested with little excitement.

In the movie, Abagnale becomes bored with his 9-to-5 job after his release from prison and goes off on another exploit. There is no evidence of it in the book (the book ends as Abagnale evades capture by the FBI after being deported from Sweden back to the U.S.). Most likely, the event is entirely fabricated. Abagnale did, however, escape both from the airplane that returned him to the United States and from the first prison he was kept in there.

The relationship between Abagnale and the FBI agent in the movie is never explored in the book. The book does discuss the main agent responsible for his case, but there was contact between the two before Abagnale's return to the United States after capture.

Films and other works with the same title

External links

fr:Arrête-moi si tu peux it:Prova a prendermi nl:Catch Me If You Can ja:キャッチ・ミー・イフ・ユー・キャン no:Catch Me If You Can pt:Catch Me If You Can ro:Prinde-mă! Dacă poţi! sv:Catch Me If You Can zh:我知道你是谁