From 6/7/1976 to 3/21/1997 ("Liar Liar") is: 7592 days
7592 = 3796 + 3796
From 3/3/1959 to 7/24/1969 (Apollo 11 splashdown) is: 3796 days
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0119528/
Liar Liar (1997)
Release Date: 21 March 1997 (USA)
Tagline: Trust Me
Plot Outline: A fast track lawyer can't lie for 24 hours due to his son's birthday wish after the lawyer turns his son down for the last time.
Jim Carrey ... Fletcher Reede
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liar_Liar
Liar Liar (1997) is an American comedy film starring Jim Carrey. It was directed by Tom Shadyac from a story written by Paul Guay and Stephen Mazur. Carrey was nominated for a Golden Globe Award (1998) for Best Performance by an Actor in a Motion Picture - Comedy/Musical. The film is the second of three collaborations between Jim Carrey and Tom Shadyac, the first being Ace Ventura: Pet Detective and the third being Bruce Almighty.
Fletcher Reede is a particularly career-focused lawyer and divorced father. He has a habit of giving precedence to his job and breaking promises to be with his young son Max, and then lying to Max and his ex-wife Audrey about the real reason he missed the date. Fletcher lets Max down once too often, missing his birthday party, and has to deal with the consequences when Max makes a wish while blowing out the candles on the cake and it comes true. The wish is that Fletcher cannot tell a lie for an entire day. (The wish is taken to be exactly twenty-four hours.)
Fletcher soon has several embarrassing instances where he blurts out exactly what he is thinking and figures out that he is unable to lie or even withhold a true answer. Some of these instances include: After sleeping with a colleague, she asks "was it good for you?" "I've had better," he responds. When an attractive girl says everyone is so nice to her, he says it's because she has big jugs and that he wants to squeeze them. Also when he walks out of the elevator and everyone is plugging their nose, he admits "It was me!". When an obese man asks "What's up," he says, "Your cholesterol, fatty!" He also tells a co-worker he doesn't know his name because he's not important enough. When he tries to explain his situation to his secretary, she doesn't believe him so he sets himself up good. He tells her to ask him something she thinks he would normally lie about. She asks him about a raise she wanted a couple months ago. Fletcher had told her it would make the other secretaries jealous. She asks if that was true or if he just didn't want to "pony up the dough". These incidents come at a rather bad time as he is fighting a case in court, which, should he win, could be a huge boost to his career. His main witness is willing to commit perjury to help win but Fletcher discovers he cannot even ask a question if he knows the answer will be a lie. Meanwhile, Audrey is threatening to move to Boston with her new boyfriend, Jerry, and take Max with them.
Over the course of the film, Fletcher realizes what is truly important to him and, at the end, struggles to stop his son from being taken so far away from him. He also manages to win the case truthfully by using a loophole in the law, with the repercussions being a major catalyst to his understanding of what he is likely to lose.
Near the end, Fletcher hijacks a stairway used to get onto planes and rushes towards his son. He is injured after an accident but does manage to speak to his son. The "Curse" finishes at 8:15 pm, but Fletcher vows to tell nothing but the truth from now on.