Butterfly Effect
Chaos theory teaches us that small events can have enormous consequences. An opening title informs us that butterfly flapping its wings in Asia could result in a hurricane halfway around the world. Yes, although given the number of butterflies and the determination with which they flap their little wings, isn’t it extraordinary how rarely that happens? “The Butterfly Effect” applies this theory to the lives of four children whose early lives are marred by tragedy. When one of them finds that he can go back in time and make changes, he tries to improve the present by altering the past.
And there’s a certain grim humor in the way the movie illustrates the truth that you can make plans, but you can’t make results. Some of the futures Even returns to are so seriously wrong from his point of view that he’s lucky he doesn’t just disappear from the picture, having been killed at 15, say, because of his meddling.
I enjoyed “The Butterfly Effect”, up to a point. That point was reached too long before the end of the movie. There’s so much flashing forward and backward, so many spins of fate, so many chapters in the journals, that after awhile I felt that I, as well as time, was being jerked around.
Eric Bress and J. Mackye Gruber, the co-writers and directors, also collaborated on “Final Destination 2″, another film in which fate works in mysterious way, its ironies to reveal. I gave that half of a star, so “The Butterfly Effect” is five times better. And outside, the wind is rising.