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The Chameleon

  • 2010
  • R
  • 1h 46m
IMDb RATING
5.5/10
2K
YOUR RATING
Ellen Barkin, Famke Janssen, and Marc-André Grondin in The Chameleon (2010)
An FBI Agent investigates a case in which a young man reappears after a four-year absence -- but is he who he claims to be?
Play trailer2:36
1 Video
28 Photos
BiographyCrimeDrama

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.

  • Director
    • Jean-Paul Salomé
  • Writers
    • Natalie Carter
    • Jean-Paul Salomé
    • Christophe d'Antonio
  • Stars
    • Marc-André Grondin
    • Ellen Barkin
    • Famke Janssen
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.5/10
    2K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Jean-Paul Salomé
    • Writers
      • Natalie Carter
      • Jean-Paul Salomé
      • Christophe d'Antonio
    • Stars
      • Marc-André Grondin
      • Ellen Barkin
      • Famke Janssen
    • 13User reviews
    • 5Critic reviews
    • 41Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    The Chameleon
    Trailer 2:36
    The Chameleon

    Photos27

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    Top cast58

    Edit
    Marc-André Grondin
    Marc-André Grondin
    • Frederic Fortin…
    Ellen Barkin
    Ellen Barkin
    • Kimberly Miller
    Famke Janssen
    Famke Janssen
    • Jennifer Johnson
    Emilie de Ravin
    Emilie de Ravin
    • Kathy Jansen
    Tory Kittles
    Tory Kittles
    • Dan Price
    Brian Geraghty
    Brian Geraghty
    • Brian Jansen
    Nick Stahl
    Nick Stahl
    • Brendan Kerrigan
    James DuMont
    James DuMont
    • B.R.P.D. Cop A
    Ritchie Montgomery
    Ritchie Montgomery
    • Diner Owner
    • (as Ritchie Montgomerey)
    Lance E. Nichols
    Lance E. Nichols
    • FBI Doctor
    • (as Lance Nichols)
    Estelle Larrivaz
    • Female Gendarme
    Xavier Beauvois
    Xavier Beauvois
    • Gendarme
    Lindsay Soileau
    • Girl #1
    • (as Lindsey Soileau)
    Katy Peppard
    • Girl #2
    • (as Katy Preppard)
    Nick Chinlund
    Nick Chinlund
    • Mitch
    Kent Jude Bernard
    • Pool Player #1
    Gabe Begneaud
    • Pool Player #2
    Gio March
    Gio March
    • Spanish Policeman
    • (as a different name)
    • Director
      • Jean-Paul Salomé
    • Writers
      • Natalie Carter
      • Jean-Paul Salomé
      • Christophe d'Antonio
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews13

    5.52K
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    Featured reviews

    6BloedEnMelk

    An intriguing case made to a less intriguing movie

    "The Chameleon" is roughly based on the case of the disappearance of Nicholas Barclay, and the impostor Frederic Bourdin.

    The movie stays reasonably close to the facts, though there are some mayor things changed that IMO was totally unnecessary. At the same time, more could have been done with other things. I am on purpose gonna keep this all pretty vague; as I do not want to spoil anything. If you want to know about the real case, google on it. It is a very interesting thing to do.

    I would definitely have liked to have seen more background about Frederic. The case of Nicholas wasn't the first time he imposed as a missing child, neither was it the last time. As if the whole story about Nicholas wasn't bizarre enough, it gets more and more bizarre if you read up on Bourdin. He truly deserves the name Chameleon; it is incredible how good this guy is at languages and in blending in. I do understand that the movie's focus was on only one of his crimes, but I think a bit more history would have made it all even more absurd. Now, you almost feel at least a bit pity for Bourdin, but that should not happen. After all, the guy was/is a very disturbed man who didn't give a *beep* about the feelings of his victims.

    The overall acting was not very good. Famke Janssen made the best of it and steals the scenes when she comes in, but I was unfortunately pretty unconvinced by the lead character. The way the story unfolds was just not good enough to convince, and the characters way too shallow. Many things are there in potential, but somehow it just doesn't work. It could have been an 'edge of your seat' thriller or drama, but it simply isn't. Throughout the whole story, it just lacks something. An other reviewer used the word 'dull', and I think that's quite a good description.

    All in all; an intriguing case made to a less intriguing movie.

    (Ps: An interesting little fact; Bourdin himself worked as a creative consultant for this movie. )
    7perkypops

    Muddled screenplay redeemed by some fine acting

    We can never be sure about dramatised true stories because tricks are played on our memories even as we try to retell with accuracy. This story of a character who is unlikely to be who he claims to be from the start is as much about doubts as it is about rebuilding hopes. From the opening shots of a body hunt through to the final frames this film attempts to tackle the driving forces of all the characters who make up the plot by showing up flaws and how all of us are sometimes drawn to papering over cracks in our thoughts.

    The film is quite clever in raising doubt in our minds because every player seems flawed from Fortin/Randall (Grondin), through Kimberly (Barkin), to Johnson (Janssen) as an FBI agent who seems to have no doubts. Perhaps a clumsy unevenness in the screenplay sometimes makes following the story a little less taut than it should be, but I could not fault the quality of the acting.

    Even a family torn apart by an undisclosed tragedy seem very adept at keeping things as they are when redemption is a possibility but the actual interaction between them is not well rehearsed in this script. Too much focus is perhaps played on the mother's relationship with her "son" when there was perhaps a lot of mileage elsewhere.

    I would guess many people would want a more commercial ending to a film like this and that has probably detracted from it popularity since it does stick to events as they happened but for me the real let down, having such a great cast, was a failure to grasp the real guts of the story and perhaps reveal a little more of what really may have happened.

    Seven out of ten for acting from a fine cast.
    4Rodrigo_Amaro

    Not interesting. Flawed in almost all accounts.

    When the fiction is more unsatisfying than the real life, then you're in a big trouble. "The Chameleon" is a weak film because it fails to generate interest in a real life story that has all the elements that could make into a great project. The director made questions he couldn't answer and we couldn't figure out possible reasons for all what happened in the events surrounding a young French (Marc-André Grondin) who claims to be the disappeared son of a poor American family, "returning" to his home after being kidnapped and taken to Europe. The problem is that it's obvious that some members of the family know that this French accented guy can't be Nicky, but they continue with this game until an FBI agent (Famke Janssen) get suspicious about this sudden reappearance.

    Its cheap insistence in creating a mystery bigger than the one existing just doesn't work, with the skeletons in the family's closet with people who knew about the kid's real fate, like his older brother (Nick Stahl). And we are easily bothered by the lack of choices, lack of ways for the story to move in a proper manner. A movie like this can't dwell in the psychology involving the main character, therefore we'll never understand the reasoning behind the boy's staying with people who don't care about him. Why the hell he'd trade his erroneous life in France by shooting in the dark with a strange and careless American family, or why he didn't run away from this family he adopted, a bunch of people who wouldn't provide for him with anything? He's not getting much by staying there, no indicative that he's winning something.

    The cast tries a little bit harder than what the script can offer to them make something worthy of our attention. Grondin is a fine actor as evidenced in "C.R.A.Z.Y." but here there's only glimpses of that actor, his duality of angelical innocence with some darker traits is relatively good; Janssen was pretty decent and the more her character progress the more we like her, same goes with Emile De Ravin and Brian Geraghty, doing their best; Ellen Barkin was distractive while trying to be exceptional as the mother.

    As a drama, it's not as compelling as the plot sounds and could be; as a thriller is just dull and worthless. Bits of decent acting aren't enough to make it tolerable or watchable. 4/10
    3jordondave-28085

    I felt like a chameleon after watching this

    (2010) The Chameleon PSYCHOLOGICAL MYSTERY DRAMA

    It says right at the beginning that it's based on a true story, but when you watch it, it's just as tediously pointless despite showing some well known actors. It opens the movie in France, with a police car stopping on the middle of a freeway, after seeing a young man encroached naked while on the middle of the road. And after the police requested for his name, he then tells them that he'd been abducted as well as molested without giving any more details regarding who it was and where did it happen. And then tells them that his real name is Nicholas Mark Randall, who was abducted from a family who'd been reported missing while he was living in Louisiana. And he's first greeted by his older sister who assumed the person she was hugging was really his missing brother. And it was at that point, it's called "The Chameleon" for a reason as we get to witness the affect his return has on this particular family of nobody's with Famke Janson as police investigator, Jennifer Johnson having her doubts about who he is he really. After the film is over, the movie left with many unanswered questions filling the void by using many over abundance crying heartaches and arguing. You can tell a movie is bad is when viewers are able to use a fast forward button on some of the scenes while playing, and still be able to tell what's going on.
    gradyharp

    Thuddingly Dull

    CHAMELEON, we are told at the beginning of this film, is based on a true story about a French lad who disguises himself as other people as a way of gaining attention and 'love' which is apparently missing in his life as a near orphan. Written by Natalie Carter and writer/director Jean-Paul Salomé it misses the opportunity to use a factual story and transpose it to the screen in such a way that we care enough about the characters to become involved in the unfolding of this charade. Unfortunately the writing and the casting and directing work against this and the result is a surprisingly uninvolving, fairly boring tale.

    Nicholas Barclay (Marc-André Grondin) has been missing since age 13, for reasons unclear to the town's people in Baton Rouge. LA. Nicholas shows up in Spain after an auto accident, is treated for PTSD and is mutely amnesic until he suddenly talks and lets the hospital people know that he is Nicholas Barclay, a missing person. He states he was kidnapped and forced into a child prostitution ring that involved rape, abuse and torture - the reasons he gives for his lack of memory. Nicholas's sister Kathy (Emilie de Ravin) spends her last money to fly to France to pick up her lost brother and return him 'home' - to his chain-smoking depressed mother Kimberly (Ellen Barkin in a surprisingly monotone, phoned-in performance), Kathy's husband Brian (Brian Geraghty) and his sociopathic brother Brendan (Nick Stahl). Nicholas's identity is not clear to his family, except for his sister Kathy who offers compassion and fights for Nicholas' rights: the others doubt that their Nicholas is alive because of events they know to be true. The FBI in the persons of Tory Kittles and Famke Janssen investigate, doubting that Nicholas is who he says he is. After a dysfunctional attempt to relate to most of his family, his story starts to unravel and the true story of what happened to Nicholas starts to emerge: 'Nicholas' is Frédéric Bourdin, who after having plundered all the centers for runaway minors and delinquents in Europe, even though he has come of age, now passes himself off as Nicholas Barclay, shaves his body hair, and attempts to a carry off another 'chameleon caper' in the US.

    The cinematic aspects of the film fail to make the story involving: the colors are so washed out that it appears to be made on cheap film, the story is disjointed with such scenes as Nicholas shaving his body hair really adding little to the tale, the surprisingly dull performance by Ellen Barkin is a shock, and Marc-André Grondin is simply not up to making us realize the potential of this fascinating story. Famke Janssen and Brian Geraghty make the most of the roles they are given, but otherwise the cast is unremarkable.

    Grady Harp

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    Related interests

    Ben Kingsley, Rohini Hattangadi, and Geraldine James in Gandhi (1982)
    Biography
    James Gandolfini, Edie Falco, Sharon Angela, Max Casella, Dan Grimaldi, Joe Perrino, Donna Pescow, Jamie-Lynn Sigler, Tony Sirico, and Michael Drayer in The Sopranos (1999)
    Crime
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    Drama

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Loosely 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?

    • Connections
      References Michael Jackson: Thriller (1983)
    • Soundtracks
      Cause and Effect
      Written by Simon Steadman and Nicholas Jonathan Tyler

      Performed by Pet Robot

      Produced by by Simon Steadman and Nicholas Jonathan Tyler

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • June 10, 2011 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • Canada
      • France
      • United States
    • Official sites
      • Official site
      • Official site (France)
    • Languages
      • English
      • French
      • Spanish
    • Also known as
      • Хамелеон
    • Filming locations
      • Denham Springs, Louisiana, USA
    • Production companies
      • Lleju Productions
      • Loma Nasha
      • Gordonstreet Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross worldwide
      • $141,816
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 46m(106 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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