The Butterfly Effect
review by
Cynthia Fuchs, 23 January 2004
Warp'd
Word is
circulating -- via a Sundance premiere and promotional campaign --
that Ashton Kutcher reveals "depth," along with a newly shaggy face,
in The Butterfly Effect. How remarkable and encouraging, this
report submits, that the erstwhile "dude" has at last found his
performative footing. How has he hidden it so well until now?
In fact, the
question proposed by the film is rather less mundane than this. It
has to do with time travel, in particular, with the consequences of
changing the past. Other images are famous for posing this question:
what happens if Edith Keeler does cross the street in "City on the
Edge of Forever"? Or Reese doesn't travel back to impregnate Sarah
Connor? And how does Marty McFly get away with ripping off Chuck
Berry, anyway? How does any one of these events change or sustain
history, fictional as that history may be? And what many other
events are affected in turn? And what if another event in the chain
shifts slightly, so that the whole thread of history must readjust,
again. How many alternative histories are circulating at any given
moment, assuming a moment might be understood to stand alone?
These are the
sorts of dilemmas that shape The Butterfly Effect, an
ambitious, if rather incoherent, second film by Eric Bress and J.
Mackye Gruber, also the writer-directors of Final Destination 2
(itself a bizarre, darkly humorous excursion into uncanny
what-if-ness). At the center of The Butterfly Effect is Evan
(Kutcher, who, for all the "depth" hype, isn't precisely revealing
chops here). Afflicted with a genetic predisposition for altering
the relation between time and space (his father is institutionalized
for proclaiming a similar demented-seeming belief in his ability to
reshape memory-as-history. (Note: this basic idea is potentially
awkward, as any memory is subjective, not the same for everyone on
any given scene.)
Evan begins
the film as a whiz-kid psych major troubled by his inability to
remember chunks of his childhood -- except when he reads his journal
entries, which are mostly lead-ups to what happened that he doesn't
remember. As the film envisions his experience, Evan reads the
journal, the scrawled words pop off the page and dance a bit, the
space around him warps, and whoosh, he's back in the memory. As a
boy (played by John Patrick Amedori), Evan is now (then) armed with
his present knowledge, whatever that "present" might be: the concept
is more than a little squishy here.
During his
first leap-back, aided by his college roommate Thumper (Ethan Suplee
in spiky hair and goth makeup), Evan recalls that the neighbor girl
he adored, Kayleigh (Irene Gorovaia as a child, Amy Smart in the
Ashton Kutcher present) was sexually abused by her alcoholic,
amateur-porn-filmmaker father (Eric Stoltz, as yucky as he's ever
been). But the situation isn't so simple that he can just save
Kayleigh. He must also contend with -- rescue, punish, contain --
other players in his not-quite-personal psychic morass. These
include Kayleigh's malicious brother Tommy (who grows up to be
William Lee Scott) and another kid from round the way, the much
beset Lenny (Elden Henson), as well as Ashton's mom Andrea (Melora
Walters), who is at once strangely circumspect regarding her
husband's illness and incarceration, and whiny and apparently
clueless when it comes to her son's situation.
Ostensibly
through his college studies (what school is this?), Evan has found
this route, not only to revisit the past, but also to change it. He
injects his 20-year-old sensibility into his child-body, and so, for
instance, telling off Kayleigh's bad dad so soundly that he agrees
never to even think about abusing his daughter, on the spot (the
scene doesn't address the likelihood that abuse has occurred
earlier, or that this single intervention might not stop other
incidents). In other words, the time loop business is not very
worked out -- not only is Evan's version of events presumed here to
be the only version, but also, his control over each episode somehow
affects his brain cumulatively. Indeed, his psychiatrist, the
occasionally reasonable Dr. Renfield (Nathaniel Deveaux), suggests
that Evan is headed for a kind of protoplasmic meltdown.
No matter.
Evan is hooked on revising until he gets it right (not an unlikely
metaphor for scriptwriting). His modifications range from horrific
to fiendishly comedic: the first "corrected" past, for instance, is
garishly pastel, the "ideal" college movie turned into a nightmare.
Evan is a yellow-sweatered fraternity brother, in love with a pink-sweatered
Kaleigh. That Tommy is a puppy-killing psychotic just released from
prison almost seems like the least of their problems.
The more
profound implication here is less about particular possibilities,
than the very idea of multiple possibilities -- all slightly or very
distasteful in different ways. Each time Evan fusses with a specific
event in the past, trying to achieve a "perfect" present, something
else goes wrong. So, if Kayleigh is not a hooker with tracks up and
down her arms, Evan's in prison for murdering Tommy, or poor Lenny
is so fundamentally damaged that he can't leave his bedroom (which
makes Lenny's mom really mad at Evan). Though the plot points and
personalities Evan has to coordinate might seem many, in fact, they
hardly account for the many more probable fallouts of his tinkering.
The movie's focus is excessively local -- there are no Hitlers or
Elvises or Skynets here, just a series of minor and major disasters,
each making someone's life unbearable.
This tight
focus is, in fact, the primary strength of The Butterfly Effect.
At first full of himself and his righteous ability to tell off
Kayleigh's monstrous dad, Evan comes to see that his godlike
influence is, in its limited way, monumentally repercussive. Finding
himself personally responsible for lives and deaths, he begins to
feel increasingly empathetic. At the same time, the fact that no one
else appears to have much to say about what happens (it's all inside
Evan's throbbing brain, the power, the effects, the memories) is a
perennial problem of time-travel movies. Here, the travel is
subjective to a nearly pathological degree. Evan's "lesson" becomes
a function of his effects on those around him, who become mere
objects to be shuffled about during his learning curve.
There are any
number of bad ideas in this film -- the warping scenes are
elaborately corny, and the ill effects of Evan's changes look
increasingly like an extreme version of the "World Without George"
in It's a Wonderful Life -- child abuse, prison rape, missing
limbs, dead babies, cancer, on and on. Everyone Evan knows
(admittedly a small circle for this film's purposes) is affected by
his choices. The time travel concept is not so extraordinary, the
means of dramatizing it is mostly silly, and Kutcher's efforts to
emote can be distracting. And still, the film is surprisingly
entertaining, precisely when it turns extreme. Complicating the
relation between subjective and objective experience, remaking
memory so that it might pass for "collective," is, after all, what
movies do, by definition. |
Directed
by:
Eric Bress
J. Mackye Gruber
Starring:
Ashton Kutcher
Amy Smart
Melora Walters
William Lee Scott
Elden Henson
Eric Stoltz
Nathaniel Deveaux
Rated:
R - Restricted.
Under 17 requires
parent or adult
guardian.
FULL CREDITS
BUY
VIDEO
RENT
DVD
BUY
MOVIE POSTER |
|