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・ Love Everybody
・ Love Exchange
・ Love Exchange (2015 film)
・ Love Exercise
・ Love Explosion (album)
・ Love Exposure
・ Love Express
・ Love Faces
・ Love Family
・ Love Family (TV series)
・ Love Fantastic
・ Love feast (disambiguation)
・ Love Fever
・ Love Fiction
・ Love Field
Love Field (film)
・ Love Field, Dallas
・ Love Finds a Home
・ Love Finds a Way
・ Love Finds Andy Hardy
・ Love Finds You in Sugarcreek, Ohio
・ Love Finds You in Sugarcreek, Ohio (film)
・ Love Finds You in Sugarcreek, Ohio (novel)
・ Love Flies
・ LOVE FM
・ LOVE FM (Belize)
・ Love FM (Japan)
・ Love Food, Hate Waste
・ Love Foolosophy
・ Love Football


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Love Field (film) : ウィキペディア英語版
Love Field (film)

''Love Field'' is a 1992 American independent drama film written by Don Roos and directed by Jonathan Kaplan, starring Michelle Pfeiffer and Dennis Haysbert. It was released on December 11, 1992 in the United States by Orion Pictures.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Love Field (1992) - Release dates )〕 This film is an example of a representation of the assassination of John F. Kennedy in popular culture.
The film was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Actress in a Leading Role (Michelle Pfeiffer).
== Plot ==
In November 1963, Dallas housewife Lurene Hallett (Michelle Pfeiffer) is obsessed with First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy. Lurene feels a special connection with Jackie through her own loss of a child. Knowing that President John F. Kennedy and his wife will be visiting Dallas, Lurene travels to Love Field Airport to try to catch a glimpse of the couple as they arrive by plane on November 22, 1963. Driving away a few hours later, she notices a quiet chaos developing, and discovers that the President has been assassinated. Lurene leaves her car in the middle of the street and rushes to watch the news through a store window. Lurene's anguish over the death of John F. Kennedy reflects the collective grief of the nation over this tragedy. Ignoring her overbearing husband Ray (Brian Kerwin), she travels by bus to attend the funeral in Washington, D.C. Much to the chagrin of the black patrons on the bus, Lurene talks constantly of the assassination during the bus ride. During her journey, she befriends Jonell (Stephanie McFadden), the young black daughter of Paul Cater (Dennis Haysbert). After the bus has an accident, Lurene notices wounds on Jonell's body. Lurene senses something is wrong, suspects Paul and calls the FBI to report that there has been a kidnapping. Moments after her well-intentioned interference, Paul explains that Jonell's wounds are from an orphanage that he rescued her from and he is indeed her real father. Nevertheless, Lurene's FBI call leads the three of them on an increasingly difficult road trip across America with both the police and Ray in pursuit.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Love Field Plot Summary and Details )〕 Over the course of the film Lurene and Paul develop a deep relationship, leading to a one-night sexual encounter. The police eventually catch Paul and Lurene, and Paul is sentenced to a year in jail.
The movie then flashes forward to 1964 (as indicated by a Lyndon Johnson-Hubert Humphrey campaign poster attached to a tree) to show Lurene visiting Jonell in a foster home where she has been staying. It is evident that Lurene has been visiting Jonell regularly. In one scene, Lurene explains to Jonell that her father is coming back to take her home later that day. As Lurene leaves the group home, Paul arrives to pick up Jonell. The two stop to talk and Lurene informs Paul that she and Ray are divorced. Paul and Lurene hug and Lurene drives away. In the concluding scene of the film, Lurene turns her car around and rushes back into the group home to join Paul and Jonell.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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