Love Field

Her life began when her world fell apart.

6.0
19921h 42m

Dallas housewife Lurene Hallett's life revolves around the doings of Jacqueline Kennedy. She is devastated when President Kennedy is shot a few hours after she sees him arrive in Dallas. Despite her husband Ray's prohibition, she decides to attend the funeral in Washington, D.C. Forced to travel by bus, she befriends Jonell, the young black daughter of Paul Couter. Sensing something wrong, her good intentioned interference leads the mixed race threesome on an increasingly difficult journey to Washington with both the police and Ray looking for them.

Production

Logo for Orion Pictures

Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Love Field (1992) ORIGINAL TRAILER [HD 1080p]

Love Field (1992) ORIGINAL TRAILER [HD 1080p]

Cast

Photo of Michelle Pfeiffer

Michelle Pfeiffer

Lurene Hallett

Photo of Dennis Haysbert

Dennis Haysbert

Paul Cater

Photo of Brian Kerwin

Brian Kerwin

Ray Hallett

Photo of Louise Latham

Louise Latham

Mrs. Enright

Photo of Peggy Rea

Peggy Rea

Mrs. Heisenbuttel

Photo of Cooper Huckabee

Cooper Huckabee

Deputy Swinson

Photo of Troy Evans

Troy Evans

Lt. Galvan

Photo of Mark Jeffrey Miller

Mark Jeffrey Miller

Trooper Exley

Photo of Bob Minor

Bob Minor

Barricade Policeman

Photo of Rhoda Griffis

Rhoda Griffis

Jacqueline Kennedy

Photo of Shelley Reid

Shelley Reid

Secret Service Agent

Photo of Jack Ruby

Jack Ruby

Self (archive footage)

Photo of Burr DeBenning

Burr DeBenning

Announcer (voice)

More Like This

Reviews

G

CinemaSerf

6/10

I know this is all set around the assassination of President Kennedy, but every time I saw Michelle Pfeiffer here I just thought of Marilyn Monroe! Anyway, she’s the contentedly married “Lurene” who tells husband “Ray” (Brian Kerwin) that she’s a mind to attend the President’s funeral. “Yeah, right”, thinks he and goes to bed. She, on the other hand, is quite serious so shoves some stuff in a suitcase and gets the Greyhound bus towards DC. It’s quite a schlep from their Dallas home, but on the bus she befriends - whether he likes it or not - “Paul” (Dennis Haysbert) and his shy young daughter “Jonell” (Stephanie McFadden). She quite quickly senses that all isn’t quite right here, but given they are African Americans there are additional concerns she ought to be wary of before she goes an-interfering. She’s a good-natured soul, though, and soon we learn a little of what’s going on just as things start to come to an head that has them holing up trying to avoid the police and her pursuing husband! The confined space of the bus helps this a little and Pfeiffer delivers quite engagingly, but there’s a real paucity of story. It plays to the prejudices of the time, especially those exacerbated by the murder of JFK that caused heightened tensions, but unlike the bus, it doesn’t really go anywhere. There’s a light humour amidst the rather wordy dialogue and the young McFadden acquits herself quite well, but Haysbert adds little with a role that could have been more potently presented. It all somewhat disappointingly peters out, I’m afraid.

You've reached the end.