You guys have to remember...at this point in time. The jet engine was relatively new for the public to use. Pilots were something like astronauts back in the day.
@@eduardoeira7949 You think that the average American could take/afford flights like they do now in 63? It wasn't as common and was new exciting technology on a massive scale for the public at large that could use for their own benefit. In WWII at the end of the war is when jet engines were invented but not mass used for warfare because the war ended very shortly after. Do some more research and common sense.
4:48 Never noticed this, but now that I have a mechanical typewriter, I know what he is doing. The amount of ink applied to the paper depends on how hard you press the keys. If he typed in a normal way, the letters would have different shades of gray (pinky finger not as strong, so "a" and "l" as an example are lighter than "f" or "j"). The typewriters or machines used at that time for these cheques were probably electrical and thus had a more even and darker look to them, but he only has a mechanical typewriter. By returning to the last letter and applying ink on it again, the result is more even and dark. This makes it look more professional and like it came from an electrical typewriter.
I bought myself an electrical typewriter when I was 14 (don’t ask why) and it had a function where insted of once it hammered each letter five times, resulting in a thick ink letter that you could actually feel on the paper.
"An honest man has nothing to fear. So I'm trying my best not to be afraid." Probably sums up Frank through the entire movie. People will take you at your word if you have the confidence to back it up.
Tbf this was YEARS ago, when planes were first made a thing. Pilots were rare as, and only the immensely insanely rich could be passengers, forget fly them.
@@hyperion9793 Also, before the planes had less automatic technology, therefore, perhaps "greater skill" was required to pilot, and that made them more "admirable" to the pilots
@@TheColinChapman Frank Abagnale made this whole story up. His greatest fraud was having everyone believe this stuff actually happened. Great movie, total work of fiction tho.
Like an intruder in a professional workplace? A mannequin in a stuffed suit? An imposter hiding in the crowd? Because Frank is absolutely terrified of being discovered at all times here, even if he doesn't show it.
One of the reasons it worked so well for him. Is because checks were very common back then and Debit cards were still new to people. Then by the time they caught him, they had a hard to providing information to each other. He was ahead of his time in an era, that was still primitive. He stole $2.5 million with writing 17K bad checks. These days it would take 1-2 bad checks for you to get caught. He is one of the reasons its imposslbe to write bad checks. Also probably why he was able to avoid prison. He was so good they used him to make sure no one can scam people again. Also pilots were treated like gods back then. He went one million miles during 16-18 being a deadhead for 250 flights. He was never asked once to help fly the plane. He had gotten to the point where he learned all the terminology and learned how. But he was never forced to do it. He thanked how reliable airplanes were back then. He was only scamming for 5 years. and was charged with 12 years. after serving 5 years. He was asked if he wanted to serve the rest helping the FBI. he chose the FBI and decided to do it for 40 years. The FBI did claim his scamming knowledge prevented billions of possible future thefts. Because he thought like a criminal. His knowledge of scamming prevented 200 billion of scams worldwide. Over the course of 50 years.
He was never asked to help fly the plane because he only jumpseated on offline carriers. He never jumpseated on PanAm because it would be too easy to be tripped up. Since he was on offline carriers, it would be illegal for him to touch the controls. Also only did this once or twice. Not 250 times.
Amazing story really and I suppose as far as criminals went, he wasn’t as bad. He did for his father and didn’t get anybody hurt (luckily), and he served his time helping the FBI and preventing further losses
This is all completely false information, one look at the Wikipedia's (read the sources listed in Wikipedia's articles if you don't trust wikipedia) prove that the actual person behind this was a complete scammer and cheat. He probably only cashed out around $1500, never acted as a pilot or lawyer or doctor, never did 99% of the things as shown in the movie.
The reality is it only takes 1 person (usually a workaholic or nerd who is immune to being charmed and intimidated) to double check and call authorities because they take doing their job very seriously.
Leonardo decaprio should have already been given 3 Oscar's by now. He, Tom cruise, Denzel Washington are the greatest actors in this generation. Certainly, Leonardo embodie the acting skill. He's so versatile in every role he plays in that no one can come close.
This was following WWII when being a pilot was one of the most badass things you could do. Now there’s plenty of planes and being a pilot isn’t so rare.
he wasn't even nominated. he was nominated that year for the golden globe, but it went to Jack Nicholson for 'about Schmidt'. JAck Nicholson als was nominated for the Oscar, but it went to Adrien Brody in "The Pianist".
Odd mention, but the handshakes in this movie really stick out, post-covid. It was such an essential piece of communication and trust, especially among men, and said alot about who you were. Makes DiCaprio's con so much more believable.
My previous job that was a thing shaking hands making shift relief. Always hated that part of my job. Shaking folks hands you didn't like. Please I didn't like feeling someone else greasy hand. I used to always wash my hand immediately.
God 8 months ago this may have sounded like a normal comment but now it seems like something a weirdo would write. Crazy how much things change in less then a year.
I shake hands all the time, I never stopped if someone else was willing because Covid is nothing for virtually everyone, never wore a mask, never hsad a test, never had the jab, never got ill.
I had a teacher that said I'd never amount to anything because all I did was stare out the window all day. I thought about her a lot as a l looked out the cockpit window for hours on end while cruising the flight levels.
@@doducduy96 Pilots maybe are respected but the entire air travel experience is a sh.tshow. Unless you have the money to fly first class on really good international carriers, I dread the idea of it. Too bad but profit above everything destroyed that experience.
While the two quick scenes in the beginning of the clip are filmed to idealize pilots, it wasn't far from the truth. Commercial air travel wasn't really a thing until after the war, before 1950, trains were the mode for traveling across the country and ocean liners were used for going overseas, and it took many days instead of hours. Air travel was expensive in the 50s and early 60s, it was viewed as an extravagance by most of the middle class. Travel to exotic locations still had a mystique and stewardesses, being able to travel all over, were looked as having glamourous jobs. Pilots were almost like celebrities. I was 7 years old in 1956 when I got my ride in an airplane, I still remember my Mom making wear my suit (bow tie of course) for a trip from L.A. to New York to visit my grandparents for a couple weeks, and even though everyone always dressed nicely back then when leaving the house, they attired themselves extra nicely when traveling. I vividly remember the big block letters spelling out American Airlines on the wing, being the year and the flight route, it most likely was a Douglas DC-7, I don't think jets were used on domestic flights yet, but I do recall seeing a couple of them in New York, to a kid, seeing a jet back then was like seeing a spaceship today. There were no security checks, and people smoked on the plane, not just cigarettes, but pipes and cigars too, but is seemed perfectly normal, we all grew up in a "smoking everywhere" environment. People being unruly or even rude on a plane back then was unheard of. Pilots were like the drivers of the "golden chariot", whisking you off in style, they were also seen with great respect and as a symbol of command, like the captain of a ship, and like a ship's captain, their first and foremost thought was the safety of their passengers. Now, you only have to follow the news to see what many of the public think of them, passengers behaving like entitled prima donnas and animals. If I were a pilot of an airliner today, I would insist on having half a case of duct tape on the plane at all times.
Stunning filmmaking: In the opening shots of this clip the stewardists are getting out of the taxi in slow motion, but the pedestrians all around them are moving at normal speed. Second thought: this story must describe how Spielberg felt about his own early career in many ways, being the whiz kid in a field dominated by old masters. He must have had to fake self-confidence in order to survive. Third thought: I need to stop wasting time watching Facebook clips of movies and get back to work on editing my own doc.
I remember when i was 6 and flew concorde with my grandfather. He used to fly when he was younger for work and had all the miles a man could need. I was awestruck by the pilots. God damn.
Today? Can you name any Astronaut who recently went up to space? The last well known ones were probably the Challenger crewmembers. Now Bezos sends penis shaped rockets with tourists into space.
Lol, no. The movie was based on Abignale's CLAIMS, which have all been debunked. He was a pathological liar, and made up almost everything he ever claimed to have done. The most he ever did, was pass a couple of bad checks and get sent to jail for it.
It was still perceived as a glamour business back then, and Women's Lib had not crawled out from under its flat rock, to poison the air between flight deck and cabin.
Other great film from Steven Spielburg and not one of his normal style of films but a great cast of other actors all in supporting roles but with leading names Leo Dicaprio and Tom Hanks
You guys have to remember...at this point in time. The jet engine was relatively new for the public to use. Pilots were something like astronauts back in the day.
*relatively
in 63' the jet engine was not new to the public ahahaha since after WWII ended the jet engine was widely used
@@eduardoeira7949 You think that the average American could take/afford flights like they do now in 63? It wasn't as common and was new exciting technology on a massive scale for the public at large that could use for their own benefit. In WWII at the end of the war is when jet engines were invented but not mass used for warfare because the war ended very shortly after. Do some more research and common sense.
@Shani Andras who said I am. Sir? Ma'am.
Lffkkflflflflflflflflflfofoofkflflfkfkfofllflfoflflfloflfofofofoflflflflflflfoflffllffoofoflflffllflflffllffllflldlflflfododlflflfldodlflflflflflflflflflfldldldldlfldldldlflfododdlldldododdlldkflf
"an honest man has nothing to fear" what a quote!
You missed the follow up, he is trying not to be afraid .......
@@SuperChuckRaney I know he means that he is honest to his dad, not the rest of the world.
100%
*it's not a lie if u believe it* - George Costanza
🕊️🌟🤍
4:48 Never noticed this, but now that I have a mechanical typewriter, I know what he is doing.
The amount of ink applied to the paper depends on how hard you press the keys.
If he typed in a normal way, the letters would have different shades of gray (pinky finger not as strong, so "a" and "l" as an example are lighter than "f" or "j").
The typewriters or machines used at that time for these cheques were probably electrical and thus had a more even and darker look to them, but he only has a mechanical typewriter.
By returning to the last letter and applying ink on it again, the result is more even and dark.
This makes it look more professional and like it came from an electrical typewriter.
Haha wow I never knew that, that’s really subtle
I bought myself an electrical typewriter when I was 14 (don’t ask why) and it had a function where insted of once it hammered each letter five times, resulting in a thick ink letter that you could actually feel on the paper.
@@aeroAdvocateYou forged documents!
"An honest man has nothing to fear. So I'm trying my best not to be afraid." Probably sums up Frank through the entire movie. People will take you at your word if you have the confidence to back it up.
Con man is short for "confidence" man, after all.
Yes the truth is in the eyes.
I lost it when he asked for milk
and the camera angle
@@user-ho1vt8vz2l llmao noticed it later her tits are shown
@@user-ho1vt8vz2l I wondered noone mentioned that before😂😂
i want her milk too
Kind of like the time he asked for cranberry juice in "The Departed".
Now imagine if Frank had Google...
😂
LoL
Shame it would seem it was all made up.
@@capuchinseven it wasent hes a real person
@@Chaos00186 a real person who made almost all of it up.
Back when pilots were the real shit.
Back when women were women
And back when men were men.
They still are the Sh!t, just everyone else thinks the world revolves around themselves nowadays.
Wtf those 2 comments and their 32 minions
Yeah my dad had the last breath of it when he started
This dude nearly beat Johnny Sins with the most number professions award
Man almost made it
Peter Griffin
Johnny Sins been through the lowest and highest paying jobs😢
imagine running to get an autograph from a commercial pilot. If i did that i'd be put on a tsa list for being a weirdo.
Tbf this was YEARS ago, when planes were first made a thing. Pilots were rare as, and only the immensely insanely rich could be passengers, forget fly them.
Far more chance of cashing a cheque though-the original reason
@@hyperion9793 Also, before the planes had less automatic technology, therefore, perhaps "greater skill" was required to pilot, and that made them more "admirable" to the pilots
Back in the day bro, I don't even know if you were born😂
Hey dumb students are always welcome in every field 😌
Deadheading is being a passenger on your own airline and have no duties in there. You still get paid for it.
Frank Abagnale was cautious enough not to dead-head on PanAm flights, he always used other airlines, so that they could not track his ID.
@@TheColinChapman And to avoid questions like "ah, you most know this and that guy" etc.
@@TheColinChapman Frank Abagnale made this whole story up. His greatest fraud was having everyone believe this stuff actually happened. Great movie, total work of fiction tho.
@@BigHorseFilm untrue. the movie is basically accurate: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frank_Abagnale
@@BigHorseFilm hahaha Thank you. !
Masterpiece by Steven Spielberg. Greatest ever performance by DiCaprio
Leonardo is great in everything but his best performance is Calvin J Candie
@@sheevpalpatine333 👍
I thought he was really good in Once Upon a Time In Hollywood. That scene where he's shouting at the hippies is one of the funniest things ever.
Shutter Island no doubt
Part A is unquestionable, but for me LDC's best performance is Blood Diamond.
This is how I feel going in to work for a job that I'm actually fully qualified to do
Like an intruder in a professional workplace? A mannequin in a stuffed suit? An imposter hiding in the crowd? Because Frank is absolutely terrified of being discovered at all times here, even if he doesn't show it.
@@cattysplat You gotta be a pro XD
@@cattysplathe means, the behaviour frank is portraying. He’s fully qualified, but still acts nervous.
Yes.
One of the reasons it worked so well for him. Is because checks were very common back then and Debit cards were still new to people. Then by the time they caught him, they had a hard to providing information to each other. He was ahead of his time in an era, that was still primitive. He stole $2.5 million with writing 17K bad checks. These days it would take 1-2 bad checks for you to get caught. He is one of the reasons its imposslbe to write bad checks. Also probably why he was able to avoid prison. He was so good they used him to make sure no one can scam people again. Also pilots were treated like gods back then. He went one million miles during 16-18 being a deadhead for 250 flights. He was never asked once to help fly the plane. He had gotten to the point where he learned all the terminology and learned how. But he was never forced to do it. He thanked how reliable airplanes were back then.
He was only scamming for 5 years. and was charged with 12 years. after serving 5 years. He was asked if he wanted to serve the rest helping the FBI. he chose the FBI and decided to do it for 40 years. The FBI did claim his scamming knowledge prevented billions of possible future thefts. Because he thought like a criminal.
His knowledge of scamming prevented 200 billion of scams worldwide. Over the course of 50 years.
That's very interesting, thanks for the info!
He was never asked to help fly the plane because he only jumpseated on offline carriers. He never jumpseated on PanAm because it would be too easy to be tripped up. Since he was on offline carriers, it would be illegal for him to touch the controls. Also only did this once or twice. Not 250 times.
Amazing story really and I suppose as far as criminals went, he wasn’t as bad. He did for his father and didn’t get anybody hurt (luckily), and he served his time helping the FBI and preventing further losses
Good point, these wouldnt fly nowadays at all. Also people are wayy too suspicious now
This is all completely false information, one look at the Wikipedia's (read the sources listed in Wikipedia's articles if you don't trust wikipedia) prove that the actual person behind this was a complete scammer and cheat. He probably only cashed out around $1500, never acted as a pilot or lawyer or doctor, never did 99% of the things as shown in the movie.
This movie takes the art of bullshitting your way through life to an entirely new level.
The reality is it only takes 1 person (usually a workaholic or nerd who is immune to being charmed and intimidated) to double check and call authorities because they take doing their job very seriously.
@@cattysplatlmao that’s so accurate. Dont forget haters too. They will always try to find something wrong
I love the little detail that he was having trouble getting the check book out since he wasn't used to the jacket
i like how the flight attendant just grabs him by the hips and moves him to the side like a small child
"would you like a drink?"
Milk?
Leonardo decaprio should have already been given 3 Oscar's by now. He, Tom cruise, Denzel Washington are the greatest actors in this generation. Certainly, Leonardo embodie the acting skill. He's so versatile in every role he plays in that no one can come close.
And Tom Hanks
@@mad8805 Yes. I forgot about him.
Christian bale
Sorry to call you wrong here. Not versatile. He has only played cheater, dishonest person characters in most of his movies. Though I'm also big fan.
Christoph waltz too
That lady teller that said how would you like it...LMAO.. So many ways to respond.. Lol..
I don’t get it
the compliment thing is so true. People drop their guard from a single compliment.
Uniform responder over the phone sentence and updown tone is perfect.
He's the personification of the quote "You can become whatever you put your mind too" LOL
Pilots don’t get this attention anymore
True. Didn't even notice.
True unless if they wear that beautiful uniform out in public like in NYC streets
This was following WWII when being a pilot was one of the most badass things you could do. Now there’s plenty of planes and being a pilot isn’t so rare.
@@Lup3r wow
Same with being an astronaut or a special spy agent (fbi).
How the hell he didn't win oscar that time
Robbed
he wasn't even nominated. he was nominated that year for the golden globe, but it went to Jack Nicholson for 'about Schmidt'. JAck Nicholson als was nominated for the Oscar, but it went to Adrien Brody in "The Pianist".
@@TheColinChapman all solid perfomarmances too!
He at least should have won the golden globe instead of Jack Nicholson. :/ and at least a Oscar nomination
amazing someone can get an award for pretending to be someone they are not.
4:43 The most trusted name in Disguise
Nice catch!
Carl : how did you pass the test?
Frank : I'm not cheating Carl. I studied for 2 weeks.
Gimli : It still counted as CHEATING!
no it ´s not!!
@@MrChicam i think he got the joke and he just potraying how Frank would react
Back when flying was a luxury experience and not a chore
It still is. Flight companies decided to make an economy choice for you
You can still have that luxury experience. Just pay 6000 dollars per ticket.
That was back then. So when I flew in the millennium I made sure each and everyone of
Odd mention, but the handshakes in this movie really stick out, post-covid. It was such an essential piece of communication and trust, especially among men, and said alot about who you were. Makes DiCaprio's con so much more believable.
My previous job that was a thing shaking hands making shift relief. Always hated that part of my job. Shaking folks hands you didn't like. Please I didn't like feeling someone else greasy hand. I used to always wash my hand immediately.
God 8 months ago this may have sounded like a normal comment but now it seems like something a weirdo would write. Crazy how much things change in less then a year.
Oh yeah big time, cause everyone knoooowsss the pandemic is “over”🤣
@@Eight1Eight187exactly 😂😂 it's still as bad as it's always been
I shake hands all the time, I never stopped if someone else was willing because Covid is nothing for virtually everyone, never wore a mask, never hsad a test, never had the jab, never got ill.
This whole movie feels like a pleasent dream.
4:33 fr thought that was a sus scene
bribing The Bible ....
💚
czcams.com/video/sWB-_bD9YWQ/video.html
work hard in school, becomes a pilot in one day
I had a teacher that said I'd never amount to anything because all I did was stare out the window all day. I thought about her a lot as a l looked out the cockpit window for hours on end while cruising the flight levels.
Golden time to be a pilot 😂
Found the poo 💩
Ha, those were the days. Hot flight attendants and pilots were actually respected. How times have changed. 😂
Pilots are still very respected today and their paygrades is amongst the highest salaried jobs around. Not so much for the flight attendants lol
no wonder why those days so many kids wanna be a pilot.
@@doducduy96 Pilots maybe are respected but the entire air travel experience is a sh.tshow. Unless you have the money to fly first class on really good international carriers, I dread the idea of it. Too bad but profit above everything destroyed that experience.
Pilots are still respected
While the two quick scenes in the beginning of the clip are filmed to idealize pilots, it wasn't far from the truth. Commercial air travel wasn't really a thing until after the war, before 1950, trains were the mode for traveling across the country and ocean liners were used for going overseas, and it took many days instead of hours. Air travel was expensive in the 50s and early 60s, it was viewed as an extravagance by most of the middle class. Travel to exotic locations still had a mystique and stewardesses, being able to travel all over, were looked as having glamourous jobs. Pilots were almost like celebrities.
I was 7 years old in 1956 when I got my ride in an airplane, I still remember my Mom making wear my suit (bow tie of course) for a trip from L.A. to New York to visit my grandparents for a couple weeks, and even though everyone always dressed nicely back then when leaving the house, they attired themselves extra nicely when traveling. I vividly remember the big block letters spelling out American Airlines on the wing, being the year and the flight route, it most likely was a Douglas DC-7, I don't think jets were used on domestic flights yet, but I do recall seeing a couple of them in New York, to a kid, seeing a jet back then was like seeing a spaceship today.
There were no security checks, and people smoked on the plane, not just cigarettes, but pipes and cigars too, but is seemed perfectly normal, we all grew up in a "smoking everywhere" environment. People being unruly or even rude on a plane back then was unheard of. Pilots were like the drivers of the "golden chariot", whisking you off in style, they were also seen with great respect and as a symbol of command, like the captain of a ship, and like a ship's captain, their first and foremost thought was the safety of their passengers. Now, you only have to follow the news to see what many of the public think of them, passengers behaving like entitled prima donnas and animals. If I were a pilot of an airliner today, I would insist on having half a case of duct tape on the plane at all times.
Plane takes off: *Jack, I'm flying*
The way he distracts that lady....😂😂😂😂
One of my favourite movies ever. It’s flawless from start to finish
How I wish I could go back to 2002
I wish I could go 1970 a be on those pilots.
@@SelfImprovement1111 probably not
That's the year i popped into existence baby
1972! was better still.
I wish I could go back to 82'.
I cannot believe what I am seeing it with my eyes! LOOL TY SO MUCH!
Thats the slowest take off i ever heard. 80 knots + tho
Haha true
I thought it was accurate as were the calls and responses.
Such a great movie. Bravo Vince!
6:13 Leo is the best actor i have ever seen
Wow! There's NO way anyone could do this today. Great movie. Thanks.
he didnt do it back then either, he made up 95% of his biography and the film writers just ran with it
Well you can thank Frank Abignale for that. He invented fraud proof cheques.
He'd be sent to Gitmo in 2 seconds 😂
@@Anthony-jo7up Well not quite Gitmo, but yeah he won't be able to succeed today - and he can thank himself for inventing fraud-proof identification.
It is weird to think that his future ex-girlfriends were only 3-4 years old at the time of this movie.
Can you cry more about this
Keep crying, weirdo
Right? What a creep
3:28 legend had it that Leo later rejected that Celine for being too old to date.
Stunning filmmaking: In the opening shots of this clip the stewardists are getting out of the taxi in slow motion, but the pedestrians all around them are moving at normal speed.
Second thought: this story must describe how Spielberg felt about his own early career in many ways, being the whiz kid in a field dominated by old masters. He must have had to fake self-confidence in order to survive.
Third thought: I need to stop wasting time watching Facebook clips of movies and get back to work on editing my own doc.
Me, looking into a mid-stomach high hole in the wall with some wires poking out of it in an alluring way, saying "Are you my deadhead?" -electrician
Love This Movie
what a movie! amazing ❤
I just love it .
Back when pilots were the chads in the sky.
I remember when i was 6 and flew concorde with my grandfather. He used to fly when he was younger for work and had all the miles a man could need. I was awestruck by the pilots. God damn.
Mah man noticed that pilots get bitches so frank said ima get bitches
50 years from now people will wonder why we treated astronauts likes celebrities
Today? Can you name any Astronaut who recently went up to space? The last well known ones were probably the Challenger crewmembers. Now Bezos sends penis shaped rockets with tourists into space.
How long since the moon landing?
If you wonder, $300 in the 70s is over $2000 today
Actually, the check is dated 1964, so 300 USD would be almost 2900 USD today.
It's sad how inflation has devalued the dollar, and will devalue it even more.
Such a great film
For being almost 22 year old movie it’s still pretty dam good
Leonardo diCaprio amazing Handsome Actor ❤️🎥🇺🇸
Love is always costs someone.
Solid film to this day.
Beautys.. all the way...
Great movie
Perfect movie...
Oh I've already found another subvideo maker. I like the font size for it is proper for watching video but not disturbing the sight of view.
A Master Peace MOVIE 😘
It was a lot more glamorous back then.
It's fun to have a new character everyday,
Adventurous 😜
A social engineer, a true hacker
Alright, by following these steps I should be a pilot by next month.
สุดจัดดดด
He learned so much he went and became a plane engineer and movie director.
3:59 oh no i know whats gonna happen 😂
I liked this movie very much
Now imagine if Frank had AI
This movie is so good
this is why I want to be a pilot
This happened in the 80s
@@vaibhavvvvv even today they looks so cool and epic
@@vaibhavvvvv that happened in 1969
@@vaibhavvvvv 80s 😂
@@Lifeoftheparty8290 no it was in the 60s you bozo
Let's Roll
I need to watch this movie
THIS MAD BOSS IS A GENIUS! HA HA HA!!
"Are you my-" stop right there, Ellen Pompeo, I am whatever you want me to be.
4:33..... Gotcha cultured man😂😂
Then Frank changed identity and became Howard Hughes and sought to compete against Pan Am.
Is good aktor
I love how everyone is moving fast while the pilots and stewardess are on slowmo
*This is a better Hitman movie than the actual Hitman and Agent 47 movie.*
❤
Wow
Praise women and get the work done
Based upon a true story… as DiCaprio, Frank was a highly intelligent person, who was able to pick up information quickly, but was lax in education.
Lol, no. The movie was based on Abignale's CLAIMS, which have all been debunked. He was a pathological liar, and made up almost everything he ever claimed to have done. The most he ever did, was pass a couple of bad checks and get sent to jail for it.
It was still perceived as a glamour business back then, and Women's Lib had not crawled out from under its flat rock, to poison the air between flight deck and cabin.
are you my deadhead?))
Good
,, im rewatching scenes of the movie bc we're doing a musical on it 😭 mans really bullshit his way through life
Yesssamen...
*The Ultimate Hell Raiser’s Sword.*
Spielberg was real genious (I mean "was" as a director). Sad he got old. But well who doesnt gets old
Uhh he still does movies.
@@charliejackson5492 I think he’s saying Spielberg got old and lost the charm of a lot of his earlier movies in his opinion
@@KillerBot5100 maybe
Holy shiiiii bruh that's a real ass movie.
0:09 Frank: Must be great to be a pilot!
Me: How the hell do you get 4 air hostesses and two pilots in a taxi cab that size??
Other great film from Steven Spielburg and not one of his normal style of films but a great cast of other actors all in supporting roles but with leading names Leo Dicaprio and Tom Hanks
Another day on planet 🌏 earth
He saw them birds and knew he wanted to fly