An FBI Agent is hot on the tracks of Frédéric Fortin who has taken up the identity of a woman's long lost son, completely convincing the police and the boy's family of his identity.An FBI Agent is hot on the tracks of Frédéric Fortin who has taken up the identity of a woman's long lost son, completely convincing the police and the boy's family of his identity.An FBI Agent is hot on the tracks of Frédéric Fortin who has taken up the identity of a woman's long lost son, completely convincing the police and the boy's family of his identity.
Ritchie Montgomery
- Diner Owner
- (as Ritchie Montgomerey)
Lance E. Nichols
- FBI Doctor
- (as Lance Nichols)
Lindsay Soileau
- Girl #1
- (as Lindsey Soileau)
Katy Peppard
- Girl #2
- (as Katy Preppard)
Gio March
- Spanish Policeman
- (as a different name)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaLoosely based on the story of Frédéric Bourdin, a French serial impostor nicknamed "The Chameleon" by the press. In 1997 Bourdin claimed to be Nicholas Barclay, a Texas native that disappeared 3 years earlier. Although Bourdin had brown eyes and a French accent, he convinced the family he was their blue-eyed son, saying he had escaped from a child prostitution ring. Bourdin lived with the family for almost 5 months until March 6, 1998. In late 1997 a local private investigator grew suspicious while working with a TV crew that had been filming the family. In February 1998 the FBI got a court order to take the young man's fingerprints and DNA, which later identified him as Bourdin. In September 1998, Bourdin pleaded guilty to passport fraud and perjury in a San Antonio federal court. He was imprisoned for six years.
- Goofs(at around 33 mins) Brendan Kerrigan (Nick Stahl) is driving a burgundy colored Camaro with a spoiler on the trunk, and (at around 18 mins) he is clearly driving a burgundy colored Trans Am with no spoiler.
- Quotes
Kimberly Miller: I was never a very good mother to you. I guess you forgot that too, huh?
- ConnectionsReferences Michael Jackson: Thriller (1983)
- SoundtracksCause and Effect
Written by Simon Steadman and Nicholas Jonathan Tyler
Performed by Pet Robot
Produced by by Simon Steadman and Nicholas Jonathan Tyler
Featured review
What can you say about a film with multiple producers from different cultures and with diverse points of view, who finally mutilated it to accommodate their interests? Obviously, Canadians, French and Americans do not have the same notion of cinema. The "globalized entrepreneurs" apparently did and, in this case, "won." It's no wonder director Jean-Paul Salomé claims that the film was altered from its original conception.
This is neither a detective film, nor a crime thriller. It is a drama about identity, about deprivation of love, about moralistic justice, which illustrates the damage done to all children abandoned by parents who, to begin with, should never have had them. Based on real events, "The Chameleon" adapts a chapter in the life of Frédéric Bourdin, a French citizen abandoned by his Algerian father and French mother, nicknamed Chameleon by the press, for his notorious adoption of hundreds of false identities in various European countries, and for sneaking into several homes, posing as a missing relative. It was proven that there was no sexual deviation or economic motive in his actions: he was only looking for affection.
However, Frédéric had the bad idea of posing as a missing Texan teenager. This is how he managed to be "repatriated" to the United States, to be accommodated by the child's dysfunctional family (in the film, a proletarian, violent, heroin-addicted brother and mother, plus a sister who denies the truth), and that television and the police would doubt his identity, until they identified him and put him through a "moralizing" trial, in which he was given six years in prison, instead of the three established by law in such a case.
According to the tone and treatment of the filmed material, Salomé (director of "Belphegor", "Arsene Lupine" and "La daronne") and his co-screenwriter Natalie Carter had the purpose of observing and analyzing the events. Then the editor Toby Yates (son of Peter Yates, director of the action thriller "Bullitt") came on the scene and reissued the movie, so we do not know what the original 106-minute proposal was.
However, with everything that could be argued against it, I saw an honest and moving film, slow and inquisitive, with good performances from the cast. Not everything has to be extraordinary or Hollywood-style. The world is wide and open, the intimate or public exposition of human drama varies according to cultures and its appreciation is suitable for many readings and interpretations.
This is neither a detective film, nor a crime thriller. It is a drama about identity, about deprivation of love, about moralistic justice, which illustrates the damage done to all children abandoned by parents who, to begin with, should never have had them. Based on real events, "The Chameleon" adapts a chapter in the life of Frédéric Bourdin, a French citizen abandoned by his Algerian father and French mother, nicknamed Chameleon by the press, for his notorious adoption of hundreds of false identities in various European countries, and for sneaking into several homes, posing as a missing relative. It was proven that there was no sexual deviation or economic motive in his actions: he was only looking for affection.
However, Frédéric had the bad idea of posing as a missing Texan teenager. This is how he managed to be "repatriated" to the United States, to be accommodated by the child's dysfunctional family (in the film, a proletarian, violent, heroin-addicted brother and mother, plus a sister who denies the truth), and that television and the police would doubt his identity, until they identified him and put him through a "moralizing" trial, in which he was given six years in prison, instead of the three established by law in such a case.
According to the tone and treatment of the filmed material, Salomé (director of "Belphegor", "Arsene Lupine" and "La daronne") and his co-screenwriter Natalie Carter had the purpose of observing and analyzing the events. Then the editor Toby Yates (son of Peter Yates, director of the action thriller "Bullitt") came on the scene and reissued the movie, so we do not know what the original 106-minute proposal was.
However, with everything that could be argued against it, I saw an honest and moving film, slow and inquisitive, with good performances from the cast. Not everything has to be extraordinary or Hollywood-style. The world is wide and open, the intimate or public exposition of human drama varies according to cultures and its appreciation is suitable for many readings and interpretations.
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Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Official sites
- Languages
- Also known as
- Хамелеон
- Filming locations
- Baton Rouge, Louisiana, USA(Grocery store)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross worldwide
- $141,816
- Runtime1 hour 46 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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