INEntertainment This space contributed as a public service. "YES,THERE IS LIFE AFTER BREAST CANCER. AND THAT'S THE WHOLE POINT:" —Ann Jillian small town ministry is in the midst of imploding. Weary of Sonny's "wander- ing eye and his wicked, wicked ways," his wife Jessie (Farrah Fawcett) has left him for an associate minister at their church. But to fully sever their union, she follows up by strong-arming the congregation away from him. Left with little more than his tem- per, Sonny shows up drunk at his son's Little League game to drag Jessie back home. He whacks a baseball bat into her lover's skull instead. With little more than the Bible by his side, Sonny skips town, strips off his past, baptizes himself with the alias The Apostle E.F., and sets out on the road to Louisiana, towards redemp- tion. The power of The Apostle is that it leaves belief to the audience, its mati- nee parishioners, and lets the deeds of a man expose his true character. So Duvall's hymnal Music Man shakes and dances and sells a few people instruments of faith — priceless ones, to be sure. Some will wonder what a Jewish newspaper is doing, sending Yiddishkeit out into the hotbed of Christianity. A lot of women are so afraid of breast cancer they don't want to hear about it. And that's what frightens me. Because those women won't prac- tice breast self-examination regularly. Those women, particularly those over 35, won't ask their doctor about a mammogram. Yet that's what's required for breast cancer to be detected early. When the cure rate is 90"0. And when there's a 1 6 2/6 1998 112 good chance it won't involve the loss of a breast. But no matter what it involves, take it from someone who's been through it all. Life is just too wonderful to give up on. And. as I found out. you don't have to give up on any of it. Not work, not play, not even romance. Oh. there is one thing. though. You do have to give up being afraid to take care of yourself. AAAERICAN CANCER SOCIETY Get a checkup. Life is worth it. And contradictions abound. Sonny reaches out to the Lord and his parish from a soul imbued by gospel but stained by sin. The battle between good and evil plays out like a chess game; you never know which side will make the final, deciding move. With his "One Way Road to Heaven" church, complete with an arrow sign that points to the clouds (but with a U-turn as its base), Sonny's waywardness seems finally redirected toward the forces of good. Or so we hope. For every gentle stroke of the script, every documentary-like camera move and subtle acting flourish, there is Robert Duvall to thank. As writer, director, bankroller, producer and title character, Duvall juggles the delicate subject matter and storytelling with a kind of grace and restraint more asso- ciated with high-tea than celluloid's typical Pentecostal caricatures. And the guests he invites to partake in it onscreen lend many rich textures: Miranda Richardson, so authentically Southern here you may forget she's actually British; Farrah Fawcett, conti- nents away from her dingy Letterman appearance last year to pull out a fine performance; Billy Bob Thornton, adding bigot to his list of cinematic ne'er-do-wells; the natural Rick Dial, Thornton's close friend, co-actor in Sling Blade and real-life furniture salesman; and the terrific John Beasley, who, for anyone who has doubts, sin- glehandedly redeems the whole evan- gelical profession. Some reading this will wonder what a Jewish newspaper is doing, knowing- ly sending Yiddishkeit out into the hotbed of Christianity, a film whose only real nod to Judaism is a reference to "The Frozen Chosen." It is because movies breed under- standing. They convert prejudices, not souls. The Last Emperor is a remarkably visual story of a toppling, imperial Japan; The Color Purple is a scathing, vindicating portrait of an African-American woman. The mes- sages they send out are not solely for Asians or people of color. They teach us about ourselves. They are for us all. To miss Robert Duvall's journey to rural Bayou Boutt and beyond is to miss some refreshingly crisp movie making, in an era when it is becoming increasingly hard to come by. Still, if you don't want to hear about Jesus, better to stay home. Triple-lock the front door while you're at it. And pray you don't have cable. Let the rest of us run away with a Holy Roller and his boxy, two-toned Lincoln Continental. As a film over all, The Apostle drives off in a Triumph. Rated PG-13. x:xx:xx:xx:x — Reviewed by Susan Zweig **** *** No Stars Excellent Worthy Mixed Poor Forget It Susan Zweig is a West Bloomfield- based freelance writer.