The Apostle
(1997)
- Information at Internet Movie Database
- Cinema in Focus, a social and spiritual commentary by Hal Conklin and Denny Wayman.
- Hollywood Jesus visual review
- Discussion and Study Guide, Gordon Matties, Canadian Mennonite University.
- "The Apostle Makes No Apology," Amanda Caldwell, TheFilmForum: Christian Conversation about the Movies.
- Looking Closer, review by Jeffrey Overstreet, "searching for truth, beauty and meaning in the movies."
- Movie Parables review.
- Review, Frederic and Mary Ann Brussat, Spirituality & Health - Spiritual Practices for Human Being.
- Themes
- Baptism
- Pentecostal pastor Eulis "Sonny" Dewey learns that his wife is sleeping with his youth pastor (or associate pastor, I don't recall). Under the influce of alcohol, Sonny hits the younger pastor with a baseball bat, knocking him to the ground, where he stays. Sonny leaves town, running from the consequences of his actions. In a small tent that night, he fasts and prays. The next morning he baptizes himself, renaming himself The Apostle E.F. I noticed that he baptized himself twice: once in the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost and once in the name of Jesus. (David K. Miller)
- Bible
- Sonny actually lays an open Bible on the ground in front of the bulldozer. It is the actual power of the book itself that discourages the driver, played perfectly by Billy Bob Thorton, from destroying the church. (Mike Clark, Hamilton Canada)
- Call
- Pentecostal pastor Eulis "Sonny" Dewey, using the name The Apostle E.F., enlists three people to help him start an interracial church in a Southern small town. First he goes to a retired African American pastor, asking to use an abandoned church building. Then he convinces a radio station owner to give him air time, as long as he doesn't speak in tongues. Lastly, he recruits a young mechanic to help fix up the church building. They become the core of the new church. (David K. Miller)
- Conversion
- Pentecostal pastor Eulis "Sonny" Dewey happens upon a car accident. Taking his Bible with him, he approaches one of the cars and finds an apparently dead young woman and a dying young man (a boy, really). Sonny tells the boy that it looks too late for his companion and that the boy himself might be slipping away as they speak. He says that Jesus is waiting so that the boy, whether he lives or dies, can have eternal life in heaven. He asks the boy if he wants that. The boy nods in assent. Sonny asks the boy if he is ready to follow Jesus for the rest of his life, whether his life were to last for years or just for a few minutes. The boy again nods. Sonny leads him in prayer while kicking away a police officer who is telling him that he isn't supposed to be there. Sonny gets back into his car and tells his mother that they won one for Jesus. (submitted by David K. Miller)
- Pentecostal pastor Eulis "Sonny" Dewey learns that his wife is sleeping with his youth pastor (or associate pastor, I don't recall). Under the influce of alcohol, Sonny hits the younger pastor with a baseball bat, knocking him to the ground, where he stays. Sonny leaves town, running from the consequences of his actions. In a small tent that night, he fasts and prays. The next morning he baptizes himself, renaming himself The Apostle E.F. I noticed that he baptized himself twice: once in the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost and once in the name of Jesus. (submitted by David K. Miller)
- Pentecostal pastor Eulis "Sonny" Dewey, using the name The Apostle E.F., starts an interracial church in a small town. While the new church is having a picnic, a local man drives a bulldozer onto the church grounds with the intent of demolishing the church. E.F. talks the man from the bulldozer, convincing him that he doesn't have to lash out at people in violence. The man breaks down weeping and E.F. leads him to accept Jesus as his savior. (David K. Miller)
- Pentecostal pastor Eulis "Sonny" Dewey, using the name The Apostle E.F., after having started an interracial church in a small town preaches his last sermon there. A young mechanic who had helped E.F. start the church responds to the altar call, deciding to give his life completely to Jesus. (David K. Miller)
- David
- The Apostle as David: "So heres King David, the great poet of the Psalms that we laud and he did something that was far worse than anything this present preacher would do. But because this is today, and not removed romantically to the past, we judge Sonny quickly and harshly. But, you know, hes just an ordinary guy. He did not commit premeditated murder. He didnt go to that church social and the baseball game with the intention of killing the young preacher. It just happened. Smack!" (From "The Apostle: An Interview with Robert Duvall," Bill Blizek and Ronald Burke, Journal of Religion and Film, 1998.)
- Faith
- "Sonny always has one foot in really trusting what he believes in, even though he errs. If someone took your church, like Jessie took his, and if someone took your wife, like the youth minister took Jessie, it would be a hard thing to deal with. He didnt intend to kill anybody, but it happened on the spur of the moment. Oh, my God!, he knows hes done something wrong. I gotta leave, he thinks; what do I do? Lord, lead me, he says. He still depends on the Lord, you know, even though he has sinned. So he begins an odyssey, the whole film is an odyssey journey. (From "The Apostle: An Interview with Robert Duvall," Bill Blizek and Ronald Burke, Journal of Religion and Film, 1998.)
- Human Condition
- "No, he was never a bad guy. He was a good guy. But he did something bad. So he is full of good and bad. Sonnys a good guy; he believed he had a calling from the time he was twelve; and he errs like most characters do, you know? Hes a kind of percentage mixture at the beginning and at the end. Theres a certain percentage chance he will do good and a percentage chance he will again err. But he knows he has erred and that he needs confession and redemption." (From "The Apostle: An Interview with Robert Duvall," Bill Blizek and Ronald Burke, Journal of Religion and Film, 1998.)
- Journey
- E.F.'s continuous journey of faith, symbolized by moments on the road, talking to God.
- Peace
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Early in the movie, Sonny' s life and ministry begin to fall apart. His sin has ruined his marriage and his pastorate. In this particular scene, Sonny is upstairs in his bedroom, praying out loud to the Lord. Like the psalmist, he cries out to God and questions Him. In his prayer, he asks to understand God's will, but if Sonny can't understand (or agree) with God's will, he asks for God's peace, so that he might accept it. A wonderful clip for honest prayer and the yearning for internal peace. (the Rev. Steven B. Borst, Irvine, CA)
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- Prayer
- Euliss "Sonny" Dewey prays with a severely injured young man at the scene of an automobile crash. (David K. Miller)
- After leaving his wife upon learning of her infidelity, Euliss "Sonny" Dewey prays while pacing in his mother's attic. (David K. Miller)
- Running from the consequences of hitting his wife's lover with a baseball bat, Euliss "Sonny" Dewey stops an intersection, gets out of his car, kneels, and asks, "Which way, Lord? Which way?" (submitted by David K. Miller)
- On the run after hitting his wife's lover with a baseball bat, Euliss "Sonny" Dewey spends time in a pup tent fasting and praying for transformation and restoration. (David K. Miller)
- Repentance
- "Sonny doesnt escape punishment. But hes a man of action. After killing the man, guys like us would probably wait around to be caught, but Sonny takes action. He knows hes done something wrong. It happened involuntarily, and so he leaves. He kneels at the crossroads and prays, Lord, lead me. He abandons his car and goes off to do something to make himself better." (From "The Apostle: An Interview with Robert Duvall," Bill Blizek and Ronald Burke, Journal of Religion and Film, 1998.)
- Sacrifice
- "Hes working in the restaurant in Bayou Butte, Louisiana and he sees his new woman-friend, Toosie (Miranda Richardson), whom he has dated a couple of times. Shes together again with her family at the restaurant. That really hits him. He suffers a broken heart. Humanly, he knows he has defeated himself. He has himself sent her back to her husband, back to her family. But that "success" hurts him. He has the pain of a man losing something, his relation to Toosie. It was something he had thought might become beautiful. But he knows its right that shes back with her husband and her children." (From "The Apostle: An Interview with Robert Duvall," Bill Blizek and Ronald Burke, Journal of Religion and Film, 1998.)
- Transformation
- E.F. recreates himself after he murders the youth leader
- Baptism