Catch Me If You Can

Trivia: The real Frank Abagnale Jr. was held in the French prison (Perpignan's House of Arrest) for approximately six months. His term was shortened from twelve months. When released (extradited to Sweden), he was ill because he had been forced to live in a damp, dark cell, naked and allowed only bread and water. In Sweden where he was tried and convicted he was kept in a comfortable Swedish prison. However, upon completion of his prison term in Sweden, he was next to be extradited to Italy. The Swedish government believed in prison reform and was afraid of the treatment he would receive in an Italian prison. As a result, Sweden revoked Frank's passport so it could intentionally have him extradited to the U.S. Once in the US, he was protected and couldn't be tried in the foreign countries where he perpetrated his fraudulent schemes. The book about his life contains a more accurate depiction than the film and was written 10 years prior to its release.

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Suggested correction: Incorrect. Abagnale served three months in a French prison, not six. He then served two months in a Swedish prison. He was ordered to recompense Swedish victims of his crimes but never did. The book about his life was published over 20 years before the film was released, not 10. The book and movie are both almost completely inaccurate; most of Abagnale's stories of his crimes and frauds were greatly exaggerated or completely made up. Journalists started discovering these lies in the late 1970s.

Trivia: Frank Abagnale's father was, in real life, a straight honest law abiding citizen, and not the shonky con-man as depicted in the movie.

Trivia: Towards the end of the movie, when Hanratty is briefing his staff on a fraud suspect, written on the bottom left corner of the chalkboard behind Hanratty is "Steven and Tom's 4th project." "Steven" refers to the film's director Steven Spielberg and "Tom" refers to Tom Hanks, who played Carl Hanratty, and "4th project" refers to their future collaboration for the film Band of Brothers.

Trivia: The apartment where Frank lives in Atlanta is the perfect one for a single man, according to the philosophy of Hugh Heffner, the founder of Playboy magazine.

Dr Wilson

Trivia: It turns out that the movie "Catch Me if You Can" and the book it's based on aren't true after all. Many journalists, most notably Alan C. Logan, discovered that most of Frank Abagnale's stories about his crimes and cons were either heavily exaggerated or completely made up. This is not new information, as journalists discovered lies about his criminal life as far back as the late 1970s. He also has frequently lied throughout his life about his non-criminal life and accomplishments.

Trivia: In one deleted scene, Frank Abagnale Jr. dresses as a security guard and stands outside a bank's night deposit box, so people will give money to him instead of putting it in the box. During filming, despite the cameras, real people came up to Leonardo DiCaprio and tried to give him their money.

moviefan2345

Factual error: In the scene where Handratty hits the button to stop the press, suddenly individual checks come flying up from the press. This could not happen. On such a large press the checks would be printed several up on a large sheet of paper, to be cut down after printing is completed. (01:53:10)

More mistakes in Catch Me If You Can

Paula Abagnale: Just tell me how much he owes and I'll pay you back.
Carl Hanratty: So far, it's about 1.3 million dollars.

More quotes from Catch Me If You Can

Question: I may have missed this, but why does Frank tear the labels off bottles?

Answer: He was taking the labels off the bottles to make fake checks, using the logos as this is the one thing that he could not create on the checks. The MICR printer was only used to print the routing and account numbers and the emboss the checks.

Answer: He does it so he will have things in his wallet. As he has no identity of his own and steals or creates others, filling his wallet with labels is fulfilling a subconscious desire to be normal and have an identity.

Grumpy Scot

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