1. ESCUELA NORMAL SUPERIOR DEL DISTRITO DE BARRANQUILLA
(PROGRAMA DE FORMACION COMPLEMENTARIA)
TRABAJO DE:
INGLES
(CATCH ME IF YOU CAN)
PRESENTADO POR:
LUISA FERNANDA VEGA PACHECO
SEMESTRE:
IV B
PRESENTADO A:
IRMA JIMENEZ
AÑO:
2012
2. CATCH ME IF YOU CAN
This article is about the 2002 film. For other uses, see Catch Me If You Can (disambiguation).
Catch Me If You Can is a 2002 American biographical crime film based on the life of Frank
Abagnale, Jr., who, before his 19th birthday, successfully performed cons worth millions of dollars
by posing as a Pan American World Airways pilot, a Georgia doctor, and a
Louisiana parishprosecutor. His primary crime was check fraud; he became so skillful that the FBI
eventually turned to him for help in catching other check forgers. The film is directed by Steven
Spielberg and stars Leonardo DiCaprio as Abagnale, Tom Hanks as Hanratty, along
with Christopher Walken, Amy Adams, Martin Sheen, and Nathalie Baye.
Development for the film started in 1980 but did not progress until 1997 when the film rights to
Abagnale's book were purchased by Spielberg'sDreamWorks. David Fincher, Gore
Verbinski, Lasse Hallström, Miloš Forman and Cameron Crowe had all been possible candidates for
director before Spielberg decided to direct. Filming took place from February to May 2002. The film
was a financial and critical success, and the real Abagnale reacted positively to it.
PLOT
Frank Abagnale (Leonardo DiCaprio), 16 years old, lives in 1963 New Rochelle, New York with his
father Frank Abagnale, Sr. (Christopher Walken), and French mother Paula (Nathalie Baye). When
Frank Sr. is denied a business loan at Chase Manhattan Bank due to unspecified difficulties with
the IRS, the family is forced to move from their large home to a small apartment. Paula carries on
an affair with Jack (James Brolin), a friend of her husband. Meanwhile, Frank poses as a substitute
teacher in his French class. Frank's parents file for divorce, and Frank runs away. When he runs out
of money, he begins to rely on confidence scams to get by. Soon, Frank's cons grow bolder and he
even impersonates an airline pilot. He forgesPan Am payroll checks and succeeds in stealing over
$2.8 million.
PRODUCTION:
Frank Abagnale sold the film rights to his autobiography in 1980. Producer Michel Shane purchased
the film rights in 1990, for Paramount Pictures. By December 1997, Barry Kemppurchased the film
rights from Shane, bringing the project to DreamWorks, with Jeff Nathanson writing the script By
April 2000, David Fincher was attached to direct over the course of a few months, but dropped out
in favor of Panic Room. In July 2000, Leonardo DiCaprio had entered discussions to star, with Gore
Verbinski to direct. Steven Spielberg signed on as producer, and filming was set to begin in March
2001.
Verbinski cast James Gandolfini as Carl Hanratty, Ed Harris as Frank Abagnale, Sr., and Chloë
Sevigny as Brenda Strong. Verbinski dropped out because of DiCaprio's commitment onGangs of
3. New York. Lasse Hallström was in negotiations to direct by May 2001, but dropped out in July 2001.
At this stage Harris and Sevigny left the film, but Gandolfini was still attached. Spielberg, co-founder
of DreamWorks, offered the job of director to Miloš Forman, and considered hiring Cameron Crowe.
This only prompted Spielberg to consider directing the film himself, dropping out of projects such
as Big Fish and Memoirs of a Geisha. Spielberg officially committed to directing in August 2001.
The original start date was January 2002, but was pushed to February 7 in Los Angeles,
California. Other locations included Burbank, Downey, New York, LA/Ontario International
Airport(which doubled for Miami International Airport), Quebec City and Montreal. The film was shot
in 147 different locations in only 52 days. DiCaprio reflected, "Scenes that we thought would take
three days took an afternoon". Filming ran from April 25–30 in Park Avenue, just outside the
Waldorf-Astoria Hotel. Production moved to Orange, New Jersey and returned to Brooklyn for bank
and courthouse scenes. Shooting also took place at the TWA Flight Center at John F. Kennedy
International Airport. Quebec City was chosen for its European character and French feel. A portion
of the historic downtown area was modified to resemble Montrichard. Filming ended on May 12 in
Montreal.
SOUNDTRACK
The film's soundtrack was released on December 10, 2002 by DreamWorks Records. The original
score was composed by John Williams.
FICTIONS
Despite the various changes from real-life events, Abagnale believed Spielberg was the only
filmmaker who "could do this film justice". However, Abagnale had little involvement with the film. In
November 2001, he had "never met nor spoken to Steven Spielberg and I have not read the script. I
prefer not to. I understand that they now portray my father in a better light, as he really was. Steven
Spielberg has told the screenplay writer (Jeff Nathanson) that he wants complete accuracy in the
relationships and actual scams that I perpetrated", Abagnale reported. "I hope in the end the movie
will be entertaining, exciting, funny and bring home an important message about family, childhood
and divorce".
4. REFERENCES
1. Frank Abagnale (2002-09-03). "Comments". Abagnale & Associates. Retrieved 2008-06-30.
2. Claude Brodesser; Dana Harris (2001-08-21). "D'Works to play 'Catch'". Variety. Retrieved 2008-06-
30.
3. Charles Lyons; Dade Hayes (2002-01-08). "D'Works sets play date for pricey 'Catch'".Variety.
Retrieved 2008-06-29.
4. Dan Cox (1997-12-15). "TV vet Kemp prepping pix at U, UA, D'Works". Variety. Retrieved 2008-06-
29.