This almost daily "catch me if you can" game is wearing thin on investigators.
CNN: A bizarre visit to John McAfee's pleasure palace in Belize
In Catch Me If You Can, Leonardo DiCaprio playing real-life master con artist Frank Abagnale, Jr.
The U.S. and its allies should stop playing catch me if you can.
FORBES: Sanctions On Iran: How Washington Can End The Game Of 'Catch Me If You Can'
An on-the-run man who taunted Gwent Police on Facebook by saying "catch me if you can" has been arrested.
McAfee's near daily "catch me if you can" game is wearing thin with investigators, who are baffled and angered by the allegations.
Jernnard's alleged stunt echoes that of conman Frank Abagnale, whose exploits posing as an airline pilot were turned into the 2002 film Catch Me If You Can.
The brand's mystique got a kick in 2002 when the film Catch Me If You Can showed a svelte Leonardo DiCaprio posing as a Pan Am pilot, surrounded by beautiful women.
Inspired by the 2002 movie Catch Me If You Can, says Ecarius, Portero got much of what he needed from the Internet at a site called Socrates.com, which sells do-it-yourself business forms.
And about one-third of the musicals appearing on Broadway this season are based on films, including Catch Me If You Can, Sister Act and Priscilla, Queen of the Desert, which opened this year.
"Catch Me If You Can, " which closed on Broadway last fall and will begin a national tour later this year, is set in the 1960s and uses the structure of a television variety show of that period.
WSJ: On Broadway, Musicians Are Rising Out of the Pits | By Joanne Kaufman
It's as if the brilliant imposter Mr. DiCaprio played in "Catch Me if You Can" had somehow snagged this part and was going through the motions cleverly, even though the full range of the hero's emotions was beyond him.
Though it's tempting to compare this score to Mr. Williams's work for the "Indiana Jones" franchise, a better analogy is the witty, complex music he wrote for Mr. Spielberg's "Catch Me If You Can, " which similarly added depth and dimension to that film.
WSJ: Who Will Win the Oscar for Best Score? | By Jim Fusilli
应用推荐