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The Butterfly Effect
Directed by Eric Bress
J. Mackye Gruber
Produced by Anthony Rhulen
Chris Bender
J.C. Spink
A.J. Dix
Associate Producer:
Johnny Fountain
Co-Producer:
Lisa Richardson
Executive Producer:
Cale Boyter
Richard Brener
Toby Emmerich
Jason Goldberg
David Krintzman
Ashton Kutcher
William Shively
Written by Eric Bress
J. Mackye Gruber
Starring Ashton Kutcher
Amy Smart
Melora Walters
Elden Henson
William Lee Scott
John Patrick Amedori
Irene Gorovaia
Kevin G. Schmidt
Jesse James
Logan Lerman
Sarah Widdows
Jake Kaese
Cameron Bright
Eric Stoltz
Callum Keith Rennie
Lorena Gale
Ethan Suplee
Camille Sullivan
Tara Wilson
Jesse Hutch
Music by Michael Suby
Cinematography Matthew F. Leonetti
Editing by Peter Amundson
Distributed by New Line Cinema
Release date(s) January 23, 2004
Running time Theatrical cut
113 minutes
Director's cut
120 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Budget $13 million
Gross revenue $96,060,858
Followed by The Butterfly Effect 2

The Butterfly Effect is a 2004 American psychological thriller film directed and written by Eric Bress and J. Mackye Gruber. The film stars Ashton Kutcher, Amy Smart, Eric Stoltz and others, and was distributed by New Line Cinema. The title is a reference to the butterfly effect, which theorizes that a change in something seemingly innocuous, such as a flap of a butterfly's wings, may have unexpected larger consequences in the future, such as the path a hurricane will travel.

The film was followed by two largely unrelated sequels, the direct-to-DVD The Butterfly Effect 2 and the After Dark Horrorfest release The Butterfly Effect 3: Revelations.

Contents

Plot

Evan Treborn (Ashton Kutcher), who suffered severe traumas as a boy (Logan Lerman) and a teenager (John Patrick Amedori), blacks out frequently, often at moments of high stress. While in his dorm room reading one of his journals to a girl, he finds that when he reads from his adolescent journals, he travels back in time, and is able to essentially "redo" parts of his past, thereby causing the blackouts he experienced as a child. There are consequences to his choices, however, that he then propagates back to the present: his alternate futures vary from frat boy to prisoner to amputee. His efforts are driven by the desire to undo the most traumatic events of his childhood which coincide with his blackouts, including saving his childhood sweetheart Kayleigh (Amy Smart), from being molested by her father (Eric Stoltz) and tormented by her sociopathic brother (William Lee Scott).

The actions he takes, and those he enables others to take during his blackouts, change the timeline in the new future wherein he awakes. As he continues to do this, he realizes that even though his intentions are good, the actions he takes have unintended consequences. Moreover, the assimilation of dozens of years' worth of new memories from the alternate timelines causes him brain damage. Ultimately he decides that his attempts to alter the past end up only harming those he cares about. He travels back in time once more to the first day he met Kayleigh and scares her away. He succeeds in undoing his childhood as he knew it, and then destroys all his journals so that he's not tempted to bring any of it back.

The film ends eight years in the future with Evan leaving an office building and passing Kayleigh on the street. After a moment's hesitation, he lets her pass by without noticing him.[1]

Alternative endings

The director's cut of the film ends with Evan deciding that his ability to alter the past is causing tremendous harm. He travels back to the day of his birth, and as a fetus, strangles himself with his umbilical cord. A voice-over replays of the fortune teller saying that he was never meant to have been born and his mother saying she had miscarriages before him. The resulting time-line shows his friends and family happier without him. Another voice-over replays his mother's confession (originally heard when visiting the fortune teller earlier, saying that he was the third of three brothers, the other two having died during birth), this time altered to her telling her fourth child, now a daughter, that she survived while her three children before her did not. This is because his father kept going back in time trying to save one of his sons to make sure a child was born unknowingly making them like him, making Evan not the cause of the butterfly effect but the butterfly effect itself and that's why nothing he could ever do even if it was to just be born to ever be right. It then shows Evan's mother with a new husband with a daughter and Kayleigh marrying someone she met in her new life. [2] Beside that, the Director's Cut includes numerous additional changes/extensions compared to the theatrical version[3].

Another alternative ending shows Evan and Kayleigh stopping on the street when they cross each other. They introduce themselves and Evan asks her out for coffee.[4]

Yet another ending is similar to the one shown in the film, except this time Evan, after hesitating, turns back and starts following Kayleigh.[5]

Cast

Reception

Critical reception was mixed, although audience reaction was somewhat positive. According to the film review aggregate website Rotten Tomatoes, The Butterfly Effect garnered mixed to average reviews, with the film receiving a 33% rating — classifying it as "Rotten".[6] On Metacritic, it has a score of 30 (generally negative reviews) out of 100.[7]

The film was a financial success, however, grossing around $57 million at the U.S. box office ($96 million worldwide), despite the often difficult subject matter and low budget of only around $13 million.[8]

Awards and nominations

2005 Academy of Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror Films (Saturn Awards)
2004 Brussels International Festival of Fantasy Film
  • Won—Pegasus Audience Award — Eric Bress, J. Mackye Gruber
2004 Teen Choice Awards
  • Nominated—Choice Movie: Thriller

DVD release

The DVD was released on July 6, 2004 in the Infinifilm edition. The Infinifilm edition was released with the theatrical cut (113 minutes) on one side and the Director's cut (120 minutes) on the other.

  • Beyond the Movie features:
  • Documentaries:
    • The Science and Psychology of the Chaos Theory documentary
    • The History and Allure of Time Travel documentary
  • Fact Track - Trivia Subtitle Track
  • All Access Pass features:
  • Filmmaker Commentary by directors Eric Bress and J. Mackye Gruber
  • Deleted and alternate scenes
  • The Creative Process
  • Visual effects
  • Storyboard gallery
  • Original theatrical trailer
  • DVD-ROM features:
  • Script-to-Screen (Director's Cut)
  • Commentary digest
  • Gallery
  • Scene medleys

Sequels

The Butterfly Effect 2 was released on DVD on October 10, 2006. It was directed by John R. Leonetti and was largely unrelated to the original film. It features a brief reference to the first movie in the form of a newspaper headline referring to Evan's father, as well as using the same basic time travel mechanics.

The third installment in the Butterfly Effect series, The Butterfly Effect 3: Revelations, was released by After Dark Films in 2009. This sequel follows the life of a young man who journeys back in time in order to solve the mystery surrounding his high school girlfriend's death. This movie has no direct relation to the first two movies and uses slightly altered time travel mechanics.[9]

References

  1. ^ Ashton Kutcher (Executive Producer). Theatrical Cut Ending. [DVD]. New Line Cinema. 
  2. ^ Ashton Kutcher (Executive Producer). Directors Cut Ending. [DVD]. New Line Cinema. 
  3. ^ http://movie-censorship.com/report.php?ID=2027
  4. ^ Ashton Kutcher (Executive Producer). Happy Ending. [DVD]. New Line Cinema. 
  5. ^ Ashton Kutcher (Executive Producer). Open Ending. [DVD]. New Line Cinema. 
  6. ^ "The Butterfly Effect (2004)". Rotten Tomatoes. http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/butterfly_effect/. Retrieved 2009-08-08. 
  7. ^ "Butterfly Effect, The Reviews". Metacritic. http://www.metacritic.com/video/titles/butterflyeffect. Retrieved 2009-08-08. 
  8. ^ "The Butterfly Effect (2004)". Box Office Mojo. http://www.boxofficemojo.com/movies/?id=butterflyeffect.htm. Retrieved 2009-08-08. 
  9. ^ Butterfly Effect: Revelation, Internet Movie Database.

External links


Quotes

Up to date as of January 14, 2010

From Wikiquote

The Butterfly Effect is a 2004 film about a young man who blacks out harmful memories of significant events of his life. As he grows up he finds a way to remember these lost memories and a supernatural way to alter his life.

Written and directed by Eric Bress and J. Mackye Gruber
Change one thing, change everything.Taglines

Contents

Main Quote

It has been said that something as small as the flutter of a butterfly's wing can ultimately cause a typhoon halfway around the world.

- Chaos Theory

Evan Treborn

  • If anyone finds this, it means my plan didn't work and I'm already dead. But if I can somehow go back to the beginning of all of this, I might be able to save her.
  • Wrong answer, fuck bag dirt bag
  • Tell me the Greek alphabet. Huh huh huh? Alpha beta...
  • [to the neo-Nazi inmates] So, should I suck your dick now?
  • [upon discovering his armlessness] What the fuck is this?
  • [Evan's note to Kayleigh] I'll come back for you.
  • [to Kayleigh] I've already lost you once, I'm not gonna lose you again.
  • Yeah, you remember me? We had a nice chat once when I was seven...
  • Jesus speaks to me in my dreams.
  • I guess charisma and eyeliner go a long way.
  • If I can make scars, do I have the power to heal them? What about Kayleigh's scars?

Kayleigh Miller

  • Nothing ever gets better.

Dialogue

[Evan tells Kayleigh to cover her ears]
Evan at 7: What time is it?
Mr. George Miller: It's time for you to do what I tell you to do...
Evan at 7: Wrong answer fuck bag. This is the very moment of your reckoning. In the next 30 seconds you're gonna open 1 of 2 doors. The first door will forever traumatize your own flesh and blood.
Mr. George Miller: What's happening, how are you doing this?
Evan at 7: It'll change your daughter from a beautiful child into an empty shell. Whose only concept of trust was betrayed by her own sick pedophile father. Ultimately... it'll lead to her suicide. Nice work Daddy.
Mr. George Miller: Who are you?
Evan at 7: Let's just say you're being closely watched, George. Your other option is... to treat Kayleigh like, say like a loving father treats his daughter. Sound okay to you, Papa?
Mr. George Miller: Yes.
Evan at 7: Listen close then fuckbag. You screw this up again - I'll flat-out castrate you. What you need to do, is discipline your son Tommy cause the kid is one sadistic pup. One last thing...
[Evan whispers something in Kayleigh's ear]
Kayleigh at 7: [yelling at her father] Don't ever touch me again!
Mr. George Miller: I won't.

[after handless Evan has just tried to commit suicide by drowning himself in the bathtub]
Tommy: You forgot to put the toaster on the ledge.
Evan: Lenny likes Poptarts. You guys are all what matters now.
Tommy: I know it's hard but you can't give up.
Evan: I can't even fucking kill myself.
Tommy: Don't talk like that.

Thumper: Maybe there's a reason you've repressed the day some pervert had you in your tighty-whities.
[glances at Evan's journals]
Thumper: Hey Man, I'd think twice about what you're doing. You could wake up a lot more fucked up than you are now.
Evan: More fucked up than I am? You think you know me? I don't even know me!

Kayleigh Miller: Where'd you learn those new tricks?
Evan: What? It... it wasn't... weird... was it?
Kayleigh Miller: Yeah, if you call multiple orgasms weird!

Evan: I just thought that you should know.
Kayleigh Miller: Know what?
Evan: That you were happy once... with me.
Kayleigh Miller: You know there's one major hole in your story, there is no fucking way on this planet, nor any other I would ever be in some fucking sorority.
Evan: [Whispering] You were happy there...

[Evan visits Kayleigh, who has now become a prostitute]
Kayleigh: So, how's tricks? Sorry, occupational humor.
Evan: I got it.

[in the reality where Kayleigh is with Lenny]
Evan: So, do you think it might have worked?
Kayleigh: Yeah... But that's not how things wound up... I'm with Lenny, Lenny is your friend... and that's where it ends.
Evan: Well... Would it make a difference if I told you that no one could possibly ever love anyone as much as I love you?
[Kayleigh is flattered by Evan's compliment]
Evan: ...I am not saying that, I am just saying it like if you were a girl, would that be something you would want to hear?

[time traveling Evan at age 7 threatens George Miller with a lighted stick of dynamite]
Mr. George Miller: Evan! Put that out, or you'll blow off both your hands!
Evan at 7: Been there, done that.

Kayleigh: Here, do you want a granola bar?
[Evan fumbles with it as she tries to put the granola bar into his prosthetic hand, and breaks the granola bar in half]
Evan: Yeah, I gotta fix these things or something.

Evan: [whispers into Kayleigh's ear] I hate you and if you ever come near me again, I'll kill you and your whole damn family.
Kayleigh: [runs, crying to mom]
Evan: [inaudible to Kayleigh] I'm sorry...
[Evan flashes back to his dorm room, where Lenny helps him after his brain recreates the memories]
Evan: Where's Kayleigh?
Lenny: Who's Kayleigh?
Evan: [confused] Who's Kayliegh? Who's Kayleigh...?
Lenny: You want me to take you to the doctor?
Evan: No, I think everything's gonna be all right this time.

Taglines

  • Change one thing, change everything.
  • Such minor changes, such huge consequences.
  • The end is only the beginning.

Cast

External links

Wikipedia
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