“The Butterfly Effect” Directed by Eric
Bress and J. Mackye Gruber New Line Cinema
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Taking a departure from Ashton Kutcher’s recent slew of
romantic comedies, “The Butterfly Effect” is a
brilliant sci-fi thriller that catches audiences off-guard,
challenging them to think about the extent to which everyday
decisions can affect the future of one’s life.
In “The Butterfly Effect,” Kutcher portrays a
college student, Evan Treborn, who suffers from mysterious memory
blackouts. When these blackouts occur, Evan suddenly tunes out for
several minutes at a time, and the on-screen action cuts ahead to
when he regains consciousness again, typically during a jarring
event that is both disorienting and startling to the audience. No
one can figure out why or how Evan has inherited this disease.
But that of course is not where the story ends. Once
Evan’s childhood is established within the film, these
blackouts are revealed and become his key to figuring out why these
missing moments of time were blocked from his memory, and how he
can use this knowledge to relive these moments and change his
current circumstances.
The title of the film lends itself to a hypothesis of
experimenter Edward Lorenz, who was the first to pose the question,
“Does the flap of a butterfly’s wings in Brazil set off
a tornado in Texas?” In other words, Lorenz’s
hypothesis, based on the mathematical chaos theory, questions
whether different outcomes of an event have a strong dependence on
slight changes in initial conditions.
This definition of the butterfly effect, also displayed before
the opening credits, creates the philosophical framework from which
this suspenseful tale unfolds.
While the film may benefit from notable names in its cast and a
major studio release, “The Butterfly Effect” is
nevertheless a daring project that doesn’t fit the censored
sterility often associated with studio films.
Instead, its plot development and storytelling almost mimic that
of an independent film, unafraid to step into the realm of dark and
controversial themes that ““ while commendable and
exhilarating ““ may at the same time, inevitably keep more
easily disturbed audiences from enjoying the movie.Â
-CJ Yu