(Rated PG-13, 140 mins.) A lightweight turn for recent dark director Steven Spielberg, comes this fun and irresistible story of real-life teenage con man Frank Abaganale Jr. (Leonardo DiCaprio). Hard to believe it took Hollywood this long to tell this true life tale of a young man who responds to his parent’s divorce by leaving home and discovering fun ways to stay financially afloat, that include a fake Pan Am copilot, a teacher, a surgeon, and a lawyer. Unfortunately his bad check writing skills are not as savvy and that’s where FBI agent Carl Hanratty (Tom Hanks) is on his trail. It seems late 50s and early 60s genres are the present, hot, stylized look for films and this one is no exception with its “Dick Van Dyke” snappy lightness. Christopher Walken plays the only dull moments when he hits the screen as DiCaprio’s daddy, otherwise the unlikely dream teaming of Hanks and DiCaprio makes for fast surprises and chemistry-driven screen time. Yet it still takes forty minutes too long to get to the finish line with an ending that would have better served the players without the extended game.