4 out of 4 people found the following review useful:
The Teen Model Effect, 29 April 2008
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Author:
dunmore_ego from Los Angeles, California
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
Ashton Kutcher courts credibility by sporting a beard that looks like
the direct result of losing his shaver and sleeping in his clothes for
two days. It worked for George Michael.
As far as I can gather from *The Butterfly Effect*'s totally illogical
storyline, a teen model time travels backwards to rectify sins of the
past so that in the "present," he can hook up with another teen model.
Noble? No. Hot? Definitely.
We must remember whom this wiffle of a movie was created for girls.
But despite its attempt to sabotage itself by casting Kutcher in the
lead role, this thriller succeeds as a very effective and entertaining
film. Directors/writers Eric Bress and J. Mackye Gruber move the action
at the pace of a car salesman's pitch, and twice as slick, designed to
specifically deceive your brain through the muddled logic and
irreconcilable paradoxes for exactly the length of the movie. After
that, you're on your own
The actual "butterfly effect" is a chaos theory syllogism (attributed
to an early pioneer of chaos theory, Edward Lorenz), which posits that
"the flapping of a butterfly's wing will create a disturbance that in
the chaotic motion of the atmosphere will become amplified eventually
to change the large scale atmospheric motion, so that the long term
behavior becomes impossible to forecast." (Michael Cross, Professor of
Theoretical Physics, CalTech). Put more simply, "the flap of a
butterfly's wings in Brazil may set off a tornado in Texas." (ibid.)
Consequently, *The Butterfly Effect* movie is based on chaos theory in
the same way that *Achy Breaky Heart* is based on *Bohemian Rhapsody.*
But the notion that the filmmakers attempt to impart is simple enough.
Whenever Evan Treborn (Kutcher) jolts himself backwards in time to try
to change one thing for the better (to ultimately end up with his dream
girl, Kayleigh, played with varying degrees of conviction by Amy
Smart), his action sets in motion a wave of unpredictability for the
"present" that he returns to.
Or at least, unpredictability for the principals only. Evan, his mother
and his teen friends change dramatically whilst every other person in
their orbits is more or less unaffected. They don't seem to have made
any new acquaintances, business partners or lovers along the way who
influenced their lives these few teens only seem to have affected
each other and the outside world just came along for the ride.
So the world DOES revolve around teen models!
The method by which Evan achieves his temporal travels is by reading
his childhood diaries; read a certain page with the concentration of a
teen model and he is jolted back to that point in time, as per
Einstein's Theorem of Teen Model Time Travel. Upon finding a mess in
the "present" after each backwards jaunt, Evan steps up his jaunts to
the point where we are watching him with the expectancy of another
episode of Gilligan's Island; that is, the serious nature of his unique
power dissipates and we wonder how that crazy Gilligan is going to mess
up THIS week. Ultimately, the plot goes past chaos theory and straight
to chaos.
Weighted issues like pedophilia (shabby Eric Stoltz making a cameo as a
child molester), letter bombs (remember the good old days when not even
a bomb placed in your letterbox would make you puss out and cry
"terrorist!"?), animal abuse and baby-killing keep the movie above the
fluff level. Some would say *below* the decency level.
The kids playing younger versions of the teen models are such fine
actors that, in a fit of disassociation, we incorrectly attribute their
talent to the overall character of Evan, Kutcher being only the eldest
incarnation, but nonetheless garnering our misplaced respect. Mediocre
actor as read, there's no doubt that Kutcher is on a different plane of
maturity when it comes to his professional life: an ex-Bioengineering
student from Iowa, the 6'2" ex-model is a producer, executive producer,
writer, restaurant owner and married to the hands-down-hottest Brat
Packer (Demi Moore) who was married to the hands-down-hottest action
hero in Hollywood, Bruce Willis. Dude, where's my bitchslap?
The fact that Evan does end up performing a noble deed which leaves him
Without The Girl is a brave choice for a Chick Flick of Kutcherian
proportions, raising the sobriety level of the film even higher. (The
director's cut inserts a very disturbing ending indeed: Evan goes back
to the womb for his noble deed - how he got there, his fetus not having
made any diary entries, is a question for the chaos theory
mathematicians to answer. Anyone got Edward Lorenz's number?)
If taken at face value, *Butterfly Effect* is a crafty, hip,
infuriatingly enjoyable jaunt. If taken with a shred of logic, it
retains about as much credibility as - well, Ashton Kutcher.
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