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RFK

  • TV Movie
  • 2002
  • 1h 34m
IMDb RATING
6.3/10
464
YOUR RATING
RFK (2002)
DramaHistory

Following the death of his brother John, Robert Kennedy is forced to rise to the challenge of leading his country and carrying on his brother's vision of what America could be.Following the death of his brother John, Robert Kennedy is forced to rise to the challenge of leading his country and carrying on his brother's vision of what America could be.Following the death of his brother John, Robert Kennedy is forced to rise to the challenge of leading his country and carrying on his brother's vision of what America could be.

  • Director
    • Robert Dornhelm
  • Writer
    • Hank Steinberg
  • Stars
    • Linus Roache
    • James Cromwell
    • David Paymer
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.3/10
    464
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Robert Dornhelm
    • Writer
      • Hank Steinberg
    • Stars
      • Linus Roache
      • James Cromwell
      • David Paymer
    • 13User reviews
    • 1Critic review
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 nomination total

    Photos4

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    Top cast31

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    Linus Roache
    Linus Roache
    • Robert F. Kennedy
    James Cromwell
    James Cromwell
    • President Lyndon Baines Johnson
    David Paymer
    David Paymer
    • Dick Goodwin
    Martin Donovan
    Martin Donovan
    • John F. Kennedy
    Ving Rhames
    Ving Rhames
    • Judge Jones
    Sean Sullivan
    Sean Sullivan
    • Steve Smith
    Sergio Di Zio
    Sergio Di Zio
    • Adam Walinsky
    Marnie McPhail
    Marnie McPhail
    • Ethel Kennedy
    Jacob Vargas
    Jacob Vargas
    • Cesar Chavez
    Judith Goodwin
    • Evelyn Lincoln
    Dwight McFee
    Dwight McFee
    • Painter
    Phil Craig
    • John McCone
    David Gardner
    • Joe Kennedy, Sr.
    Corinne Conley
    Corinne Conley
    • Rose Kennedy
    Kevin Hare
    Kevin Hare
    • Ted Kennedy
    Sheila Shotton
    • Speech Therapist
    Jonathan Higgins
    Jonathan Higgins
    • Peter Edelman
    Jordan Fennell
    • Jordan
    • Director
      • Robert Dornhelm
    • Writer
      • Hank Steinberg
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews13

    6.3464
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    Featured reviews

    6michaelRokeefe

    A legacy continues.

    A whole lot better than most made-for-TV projects. This bio-pic focuses on the life of Robert Kennedy as Senator and Presidential candidate. The story line covers a time span from the 1963 assassination of brother President John F. Kennedy to RFK's own assassination by a mad gunman on the 1968 Presidential campaign trail. The old newsreel footage and current footage could have been blended a lot better. The whole presentation is pretty bland compared to the high energy JFK by Oliver Stone. Linus Roache worked hard on getting down Bobby's mannerisms, but falls short on duplicating that Kennedy accent. James Cromwell does a remarkable portrayal of Lyndon B. Johnson. Also in the cast are: Ving Rhames, Sergio Di Zio and Marnie McPhail. Not so impressive is the numberous scenes of Robert talking to the ghost of his dead brother John played poorly by Martin Donovan. The essence of RFK's vision for a new and better America is there. Politically inclined or not, it is worth your while to watch this version of history.
    lord_slinky

    This movie sucks

    After using IMDb for over 7 years, this is my first comment... I'm a huge RFK fan (even though I'm only 25). I think he's the greatest democrat of the last century, and the world would be a vastly different place had his life not been abruptly ended.

    That said, I thought this movie was horrible. There were a few good moments, but overall it was terrible. It portrayed RFK as someone who hallucinated about his brother all the time, and as someone who needed to be pressured into doing the right thing.

    The man gave some of the greatest speeches ever written, and the actor did not do most of those speeches justice. If you really want to know who RFK was, I'd suggest watching documentaries on the history channel. The real footage is so much better than this movie, and its more entertaining.
    7Onthethreshold

    Could've been better...

    This depiction of the life and times of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy is a good effort at capturing the essence of the man who might have been the 37th president, however I do believe that the overuse of John Kennedy's shadow throughout this film detracted somewhat from the story. Robert Kennedy did indeed feel the weight of his late brother's legacy after 1963, and the film is correct in showing this, however I would suggest that by 1966-1967, RFK had truly become his own person and the extensive use of JFK's shadow really serves no purpose other than to distract and even annoy. Performances are good overall, but I would agree with others that this film would've been better had it come out shortly after the 1968 assassination.
    5scorchingsirius

    Doesn't do enough

    An interesting character study that could've done so much more, but ends up kind of having tunnel vision. Linus Roache's portrayal of RFK as the mourning brother becoming his own man is well done, but the script doesn't do enough justice to the levels of complexities surrounding his grief and ultimately his becoming a champion of the minorities and the downtrodden. Every issue seems the same repetitive cycle. First there is a call to action by RFK's advisers -- who are generally indistinguishable and more or less interchangeable, in that there is little character development on anyone's part outside of RFK himself. Then Bobby dithers on whether he should take a stand in a "damned if I do, damned if I don't" way. At some point Jack's ghostly presence chastises him. And after another scene of Bobby interacting with the people, he suddenly decides to make the decision that had always been suggested TO him. Wash, rinse, repeat. You get the feeling that Bobby doesn't so much come off as a man of strength of forming his own convictions, but one of a wild pet that has to be trained to think like a politician. Perhaps that was the point; I'm not sure.

    That being said, if that were the film's only flaw, I'd have probably been okay with it. The problem is, it seems to gloss over everything in his life that isn't his political career. As mentioned before, there is little to no character development outside of RFK himself. His wife, Ethel, comes off as glib and shallow -- and no mention is made of the fact that she was probably pregnant through half the time period the film takes place; Bobby and Ethel Kennedy had 11 children (one was born after his death), and other than a shot of two or three of them from afar once or twice, little mention is made that they are even parents. (Not to mention that he became sort of a surrogate father to JFK's kids, as well.) Shouldn't they at least be seen around the house more, or on the campaign trail with him? The film would have also done well to focus more around events and actions, and less around time spent in RFK's own headspace. One of the other reviewers mentioned the 1964 Democratic Convention, where people stood and cheered for him for over 20 minutes before he could speak -- the cheering overwhelmingly, of course, being for his brother's memory and not for RFK himself. I agree. Instead of Bobby simply saying those things after nondescript events, show it. Or the fact that RFK so soon declared his candidacy for the Presidency after Eugene McCarthy won the New Hampshire primary (they only mention beforehand that he's running); the movie makes it seem like he arbitrarily came to the decision. Showing just how much he had to catch up, the time frame we're talking about, would've added a whole new level of complexity to his character -- how sometimes historical events WERE what forced him to make a decision, but he rose to the occasion above them.

    Lastly, this film also suffers because people really have to know their history to understand what's going on. This is the first film I've ever seen where the uneducated viewer has to pay attention to the opening credits to get a sense of context, since the film opens with JFK's assassination. Names and events were thrown around as though everyone knew exactly what or who they were and why they were important; if one didn't know that RFK worked for Joseph McCarthy or prosecuted the Teamsters' Union, it might be hard to pick up through their rapid-fire conversation; the film sort of throws the viewers into this universe and forces them to work backward. A flashback or two, or an extra scene or two before JFK planned to go to Dallas illustrating better the kind of man Bobby was before November 22, 1963, and the kind of bond the brothers shared would've made the rest of the film more powerful. Instead, it's all idle chatter.

    It wasn't a bad film, and the concept worked; it just could've executed it better in so many ways by slightly expanding its scope and glossing over what seems important.
    bertieclem

    Well Done Telling of a Familiar Story

    In today's world the words of Bobby Kennedy could not be more prescient. This movie plays around 4 major speeches and is bookended by the death of JFK and RFK's himself. There are a few clunker moments (Martin Donovan as an uninspired JFK), but Linus Roache's portrayal of RFK is remarkable and James Cromwell's LBJ so much more of the essence than Gambon's in the HBO film, A Path To War. Roache received a Golden Globe nomination for his performance. See this movie for that alone.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      This marks the second time David Paymer is involved in a film where Richard Goodwin is a major character. While in this film he plays Goodwin (RFK speech-writer) Paymer interacts with lawyer/congress investigator Goodwin in Quiz Show (1994), this time played by Rob Morrow.
    • Quotes

      President Lyndon Baines Johnson: Even so, I gotta have you inside the tent pissin' out than outside pissin' in.

    • Connections
      Featured in The 60th Annual Golden Globe Awards (2003)
    • Soundtracks
      It's All Right
      Written by Curtis Mayfield

      Performed by Curtis Mayfield and The Impressions

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • August 25, 2002 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Little Brother
    • Filming locations
      • Hamilton, Ontario, Canada
    • Production companies
      • 20th Century Fox Television
      • Artisan Television
      • Fox Television Network
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 34m(94 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Stereo

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