A missing Elizabeth Taylor gown is exactly the kind of low-danger crisis Hallmark can turn into a sunny little pressure cooker. The Love Heist knows the theft does not need to feel dangerous. It needs to feel disruptive, expensive, embarrassing, and just serious enough to push two attractive professionals into the same investigation.
Lyndsy Fonseca plays Kayli Simone, an assistant to celebrity stylist Celine Lang who arrives in Chicago for the Cosmo Gala, a major fashion event filled with parties, fittings, and the kind of hotel-suite logistics that can ruin a week if one zipper goes wrong. Kayli is there to help style Rini-Jean, a famous client scheduled to wear a priceless vintage gown once worn by Elizabeth Taylor. Then Celine leaves for Paris after her son announces an elopement, handing Kayli full creative control at the exact moment Kayli least feels ready for it.
That setup gives the movie a clean little engine. Kayli has to manage a celebrity client, prove she can lead, protect a historic garment, and keep a thief from turning fashion week into a very polite crime scene. The hotel’s head of security, Mills, played by Peter Porte, enters with rules, protocols, posture, and the faint air of someone who alphabetizes emergency plans for fun. Naturally, sparks follow the incident report.
Fashion Week as Character Test
The best thing about the film’s fashion setting is that it treats styling as work before it treats it as sparkle. Kayli does not simply hold up dresses and wait for romance to happen near a mannequin. She has to manage schedules, protect borrowed pieces, calm a client, and improvise when the central garment disappears on her watch. That gives her anxiety a practical shape.
The Elizabeth Taylor gown is a smart object for a Hallmark caper because it comes loaded with built-in meaning. It has financial value, celebrity mythology, and public-facing pressure. A stolen necklace or random gala dress could serve the plot, but this gown gives Kayli’s mistake, or what looks like her mistake, a little historical charge. The movie does not need to lecture us on fashion archives. It only needs us to understand that losing this piece is a professional nightmare with excellent lighting.
I also liked the way the film uses Rini-Jean. A lesser version of this story would make her the spoiled starlet who tortures Kayli until she learns humility. Here, Rini-Jean is warmer and more useful than that. She becomes Kayli’s creative partner, encouraging her to trust her eye after an earlier styling disaster shook her confidence. That choice matters because it keeps the movie from turning the fashion world into a parade of shallow caricatures.
The wardrobe does plenty of heavy lifting. The party looks, vintage pieces, and hotel interiors give the film its sheen, but the movie works because the clothes create decisions. Which look replaces the missing gown? How does Kayli respond under public pressure? Can she style around disaster without letting fear dress her instead? That is where the film is sharper than its soft edges suggest.
Romance Through Procedure
Kayli and Mills work because they come from different forms of control. Kayli thinks visually and emotionally. Mills thinks in access logs, locked doors, and security protocols. Their early scenes get a nice comic rhythm from that mismatch, especially whenever Mills fails to catch Kayli’s pop-culture references with the solemnity of a man defusing a bomb.
Peter Porte plays that stiffness with just enough warmth under it. Mills takes the gown theft seriously, and the film gets comic mileage from how seriously he takes everything else too. He is not a brooding security chief from a thriller. He is a Hallmark security chief, which means he can inspect a crime scene, miss a joke, and still look like he might carry a folding chair for someone’s grandmother without being asked.
Fonseca gives Kayli a grounded nervous energy. She can walk into a fitting and look competent, then let a small flicker of panic cross her face when the stolen gown revives her old fear of failure. That is a very Caleb-friendly performance detail, because it tells us something the script does not have to underline. Kayli’s arc is about learning to trust her instincts again, and Fonseca makes that feel like a series of small recoveries rather than one grand speech.
The mystery, to be fair, is the thinner half of the movie. The serial-theft angle, with other vintage pieces going missing, gives the caper a broader pattern, but the investigation rarely tightens into real suspense. Clues are less important than proximity. The case keeps Kayli and Mills moving through hotel spaces, gala events, and private conversations where they can test each other’s instincts.
For this kind of movie, that is not fatal. The caper is the rhythm section. The romance gets the melody.
Hallmark Comfort with a Little Snap
Hallmark’s romantic mysteries, official or otherwise, tend to work best when the puzzle gives the characters a reason to reveal themselves. The Love Heist fits that lane nicely. It has stolen fashion history, mild workplace panic, flirty clue-gathering, and supporting characters who nudge the leads toward the answers they are too professionally distracted to see.
The script’s funniest idea is Mills as a man immune to cultural shorthand. Kayli can speak in references, moods, and celebrity-world assumptions, while Mills responds like every sentence should come with a hotel policy appendix. Some of that banter lands with genuine charm. A few lines push too hard for cuteness, and the tongue-in-cheek tone occasionally trips over itself. Hallmark dialogue often lives one rewrite away from either delightful or laminated, and this movie has examples of both.
Still, the film’s tone stays buoyant because the cast understands the assignment. Rini-Jean’s support gives Kayli a believable creative boost. Celine’s sudden Paris exit creates the professional opening. Mills’ seriousness gives the romance something to loosen. Kayli’s fear of another public styling failure gives the story a personal stake that the theft alone cannot fully supply.
The Chicago setting is pleasant without becoming a major character. The hotel, gala, and fashion-week interiors matter far more than the city streets, which makes the film’s placement among summer travel offerings feel a little odd. This is less a city romance than a hotel-caper romance with some Chicago flavor sprinkled over the hors d’oeuvres.
That may be enough. The movie’s pleasures are simple, neatly tailored, and easy to wear: Fonseca and Porte have bright chemistry, the fashion angle gives the familiar Hallmark formula a fresh hanger, and the missing gown turns out to be less important than the confidence Kayli finds while searching for it.
The television film premiered yesterday evening, June 20, 2026, on the Hallmark Channel. It is currently available to stream online via Hallmark+ and related platforms supporting the network. The narrative follows a celebrity stylist who must join forces with a hotel security chief to track down a missing piece of fashion history before a major costume gala.
Where to Watch The Love Heist (2026) Online
Full Credits
Title: The Love Heist
Distributor: Hallmark Channel, Hallmark+
Release date: June 20, 2026
Rating: TV-G
Running time: 1 hour 24 minutes
Director: Kevin Fair
Writers: Holly Gent
Producers and Executive Producers: Hallmark Media, Reckless Pictures
Cast: Lyndsy Fonseca, Peter Porte, Michelle Brezinski, Lyndsey Gavin, Jason Nash
Director of Photography (Cinematographer): Andy Hodgson
Editors: Mark Sanders
Composer: Terry Frewer
The Review
The Love Heist
The Love Heist is a breezy Hallmark caper with better chemistry than mystery architecture. The stolen Elizabeth Taylor gown gives the story a clean hook, but the real pleasure comes from watching Lyndsy Fonseca and Peter Porte turn procedure, panic, and pop-culture misfires into easy romantic rhythm. The case itself could use sharper clues and stronger urgency, yet the fashion-week setting, Rini-Jean’s warmth, and Kayli’s confidence arc keep the film neatly fitted. Light, charming, and pleasant to wear.
PROS
- Lyndsy Fonseca’s grounded charm
- Bright Kayli and Mills chemistry
- Fashion setting with real story function
- Rini-Jean avoids spoiled-celebrity clichés
- Breezy caper-romance tone
CONS
- Mystery lacks tight suspense
- Chicago setting feels thin
- Some dialogue strains for cuteness
- Stakes soften too quickly





















































