Current location - Recipe Complete Network - Fat reduction meal recipes - What's the name of a novel called Who Can Catch Me? Spielberg took it.
What's the name of a novel called Who Can Catch Me? Spielberg took it.
impunity

English movie names

Come and get me if you can.

More Chinese titles

I know who you are.

Ghost confrontation

Seize the wisdom of two people

If you can catch us,

be in charge of/supervisor

Steven Allan Spielberg

dramatist

Jeff Nathan (screenplay)

Frank Abagnale Jr. (This book tells the true story of the youngest and boldest liar in history.

Stan Reading (This book tells the true story of the youngest and boldest liar in history.

executant

Leonardo DiCaprio, Leonardo DiCaprio ... Little Frank Abagnale.

Tom Hanks Tom Hanks Carl Hanratty

Christopher walken christopher walken ... Frank Abagnale Sr.

Martin sheen martin sheen ... Roger Strong.

Nathalie baye Paula Arbanere Natalie Bay

Amy adams amy adams ... brenda strong.

James brolin ... Jack Barnes

Brian Howe ... Earl Amdoski.

Frank John Hughes Frank John Hughes Tom Fox

Steve Eastin ... paul morgan.

[Edit this paragraph] Introduction to the plot

Frank William Aba Gaunel (DiCaprio), 16 years old, has a happy family. My father is an elite in business. He won the medal of honor awarded by the mayor and enjoyed a high reputation. My mother is beautiful and kind. Frank leads an enviable life. Not long after, Frank's father's shop was investigated and dealt with by the government for tax evasion, and its reputation was discredited, and its superior material life plummeted. Frank's father tried to make a comeback with a loan from the bank, but he was repeatedly rejected. Mother had an affair and finally divorced her father. Frank sadly decided to run away from home. Frank used his fraud genius to pretend to be the co-pilot of Pan Am, traveling in more than 50 states in the United States and more than 20 countries such as France, forging bank checks to defraud bank funds, and even paying for sex transactions with fake checks. Later, he forged documents and became a doctor. He qualified as a lawyer in Louisiana and became a prosecutor. In a few years, Frank defrauded more than 4 million dollars.

Carl (Tom Hanks), an FBI agent, was ordered to hunt down Frank, but Frank cheated him several times, but failed to catch him. Like Tom Cat and Jerry Mouse in the cartoon Tom and Jerry, Tom Cat will never catch the clever Jerry Mouse. Carl later investigated Frank's family situation. He hates Frank's crimes and teasing himself, but unconsciously sympathizes with his family experience and admires his intelligence. They started a cat-and-mouse game. Gradually, the friendship and tacit understanding between soldiers and thieves came into being, and finally Carl captured Frank in a remote town in France. However, the already overwhelmed French police were furious and tortured Frank in prison. Carl tried to extradite Frank to America. Frank was sentenced to 12 years in prison. At this time, Frank's father died unexpectedly and his mother remarried. After he went to prison, Carl often visited, and Frank used his knowledge to solve the bank fraud case for Carl. Five years later, thanks to Carl's advice and running, Frank was able to restore his personal freedom on condition that he would be a technical consultant for the FBI to solve difficult fraud cases.

[Edit this paragraph] behind-the-scenes production

The father-son relationship is the inner thread of this film, and even between Hanratti, the FBI agent who arrested him, and him, it is actually a variant father-son relationship. The cat and mouse between them is the main plot of the film, as if it were a comedy version of the fugitive. This may be the role that Da Vinci played as an adult, which can give full play to his true colors. The theme of the film is reflected in a short story repeated three times: two mice fell into milk, one of them gave up hope and drowned, while the other struggled until the milk turned into cheese. It can be said that Frank exudes the traditional "American spirit".

It took only 56 days to shoot "At large", and the whole film used 140 scenes, including Los Angeles, new york, Montreal and Quebec City. Director Spielberg said: "We have a lot of locations, and sometimes we have to catch three locations a day. I have never directed such a fast film in my life, but such rapid progress has kept the actors and staff high morale and motivation. "

Leonardo DiCaprio also said, "This is the fastest work I have ever shot. We have been moving forward, but this is a good thing. Just like a traveling troupe, every new place has a brand-new performance, and the intensive schedule makes the whole production team full of vitality. "

Such a hasty shooting schedule also reflects the fast pace of life in the 1960s. Tom Hanks said, "It was the era of jet planes, and you could fly to the other side of the world in a short time. For my generation, that era is always bright, everything is colorful, bold and fashionable. "

[Edit this paragraph] Highlights

After reading Leonardo DiCaprio's works, Frank Abagnale Jr., the prototype of this role, thinks that DiCaprio is not so "gentle" when he plays him.

Jennifer Garner only spent one day filming her play.

Floating dollar bills imitate the flying feathers in Forrest Gump (1994).

The location of Miami Airport was taken in the terminal building of Old Lake Ontario (California) Airport. The old terminal still exists, but it was converted into official land after the new Ontario (California) airport was put into use.

Although all the scenes were shot on sunny days, the streets and concrete roads seen in each shot were wet. Many photographers seem to prefer wet streets.

[Edit this paragraph] Wonderful dialogue

Carl Hanratti: Well, do you want to hear me tell a joke?

Earl Amdoski: Yes. Yes, we want to hear your jokes.

Carl Hanratti: Knock, knock.

Earl Amdoski: Who's there?

Carl Hanratty: Fuck you.

-

Carl Hanratti: Sometimes it's easier to live a lie.

-

Old Frank Abagnale: Two little mice fell into a bucket of cream. The first mouse quickly gave up and drowned. The second mouse refused to give up. He struggled desperately and finally stirred the cream into butter and climbed out. Gentlemen, now, I am the second mouse.

-

Paula Arbanere: Tell me how much he owes and I'll pay you back.

Carl Hanratti: So far, it is about $65,438+300,000.

-

Roger Strong: Frank, do you want to say a prayer?

[Long pause]

Roger Strong: Unless you are uncomfortable.

Frank Abagnale Jr.: Of course. Two little mice fell into a bucket of cream. The first mouse quickly gave up and drowned, but the second mouse struggled desperately, and finally stirred the cream into butter and came out. Amen.

[Everyone says: Amen]

Carol Strong: Oh, that's so beautiful. The mouse stirred the cream into butter.

[Edit this paragraph] goof shot

Anachronism: The age of hospital fire alarm system should be between1late 1980s and1early 1990s.

Fact error: After Frank and Carl returned to the United States, Frank looked out of the window on the plane and said, "This is la guardia airport, runway 44." The number of the airport runway comes from their compass, ranging from 0 1 to 36. So there is no "runway 44". This may be a number (wrong role) that Frank "thought of".

Anachronism: When little Frank met his father in a bar, he was wearing a coat of the US National Postal Service. There is nothing wrong with the logo printed on the clothes, but it was not until 197 1 that the US National Post Office began to exist. 1960 s, it should be the post office department in the United States.

Anachronism: 1969 In a French prison, Hanratti used an automatic parachute. This type of umbrella first appeared in1970s. Before that, all umbrellas were in the style of open hands.

Time error: 1969, when Hanratti and Abadi Nair landed in la guardia airport, a group of shots of new york City were taken from the air, and the World Trade Center building could be seen. However, the building was completed at 1973.

Consistency: In the restaurant, Frank Abadji Nair Jr. gave his father the key to his new car. Old Frank opened the ribbon on the box and put it on the right side of his plate. In the next photo, the ribbon is on the left side of his plate. The frames between different shots also change automatically, sometimes half-open and sometimes fully closed.

Consistency: When Frank walked down the street in his new co-pilot uniform, the sidewalk was dry. In the next shot, the camera goes over his head and sees that the sidewalk is wet.

[Edit this paragraph] Little-known story behind the film

Although Hollywood playwrights are very good at making up stories, such exciting, bizarre and even a little contrary to the common sense of ordinary people are not their masterpieces, but real stories that happen on real people-absolutely!

In reality, Frank W. Arbanere, the hero of the story, ran away from home because of his parents' divorce when he was 16 years old. Before 2 1 year-old, he pretended to be a Pan American pilot and traveled to more than 50 States and 20 countries. Not only that, he also filled in fake checks and defrauded more than 2.5 million US dollars in cash for his own squandering during the trip; Of course, in order to hide his eyes and ears, his identity is ever-changing, sometimes he is a professor at a famous university, sometimes he becomes a respected doctor, and sometimes he becomes a judge's assistant in Louisiana ... However, in the mouth of the federal agents chasing him, he is a bandit nicknamed "Skywalker".

Ironically, after being arrested and imprisoned for five years, Arbanere turned himself into a lecturer of the FBI-this is his personal experience, teaching anti-fraud techniques to agents and big companies. And in 1980, Arbanere's autobiographical novel "Catch Me: The True Legend of the Most Extraordinary Liar" became a best seller in the market at that time, and was also bought by Hollywood filmmakers who specialized in curiosity.