|
The
Apostle
is a film about a preacher, but it's not preachy itself. It
shows that although someone may label themselves with a religion
and stand out as an outspoken spokesman, they may not be the
role model everyone sees them as. Nobody's perfect, but this
movie's pretty darned close in its subtle telling of a Godly
man from the south on his quest for conviction.
Robert
Duvall, who also wrote and directed the film, is the reason
to watch The Apostle. He whops, hollers and preaches
with the best of them. He plays Sonny, a human hyperbole who
flails his arms, raises his hands and moves his feet to the
grooves of the Gospel in a preach-it-brother sort of way.
But take him away from the pews and the Sunday best dresses
and Sonny is a man full of wrath and anger. Within seconds
Sonny can go from screaming praises to punching faces. Masks
removed, he's torn up inside, unsure of what he really believes.
Walking down the street in his white suit and sunglasses,
he's a holy man. But in his heart Sonny's a lost sheep with
layers and layers of unshed wool. Scene by scene, Duvall shaves
these layers, slowly bringing forth Sonny's real coat or baggage
and questions. Duvall tackles the complex role with ease,
switching God-loving to God-hating modes mid-sentence at times.
His shouting matches with everyone I've seen and heard during
early morning televangelists.
Sonny
does not set out to hurt people or cheat them. He wants to
see them in heaven even though he's unsure whether or not
it actually exists. As the film opens, he stops at a roadside
accident, high-tails it into the bushes and begins praying
with a young man traumatized inside of his car before the
cops see what he's up to. But when he returns home, Sonny's
personal problems show up. His wife (Farrah Fawcett) wants
out of their marriage. In fact, she's having an affair with
the local youth pastor and she's not going about it all together
secretly. After he smacks the male mistress on the side of
the head with a baseball bat, Sonny has to hit the road and
hide from the law.
His
truck takes him (or God leads him, depending on who in the
film you listen to) to a neighboring small town. He adopts
the name E.F. to hide his identity, but it's not long before
the Southern locals start calling him The Apostle.
Sonny builds a church and his hellfire evangelism puts the
town on fire for the Lord, but he's still got his own demons
inside that show up whenever he interacts outside of the church.
The
Apostle boils down to a man's journey in search of God.
Sonny's been raised to believe, but he's still got some issues
that put a block on his relationship with the big man. He
meets many wise people on his journey, some who are friendly
and others who pose as a challenge.
Duvall
presents the south in a typical fashion, full of golden sunsets
and the simple life. Once inside the church services, the
camera takes on a documentary feel. The style makes a subtle
switch in angles, exposing Sonny's soul through decreased
background music and the occasional accidental glance at the
camera as if he knew it were there.
Running
over two hours in length, The Apostle will seem tedious
to those who don't buy Duvall's search for God. But I saw
nothing tedious about it. I was drawn in by Duvall's southern
knack for screaming and shouting, intrigued by the supporting
cast and visual style, and moved by the raw emotions expressed
throughout.
©Movie
Views; 2002
|
|
 |
|
Robert Duvall |
 |
| Robert
Duvall |
 |
|
Robert Duvall |
| Farrah
Fawcett |
|
Billy Bob Thorton |
|
June Carter Cash |
| Miranda
Richardson |
 |
| 1997 |
 |
| USA |
 |
| 134
minutes |
| |
|