The makers of this highly flawed science-fiction thriller have filled it with interesting concepts. Unfortunately, the majority of those have been executed so poorly that the whole thing becomes laughable.
The Butterfly Effect (2004)
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Reviews Counted:162
Fresh:54
Rotten:108
Average Rating:4.8/10
Consensus: The premise is intriguing, but it's placed in the service of an overwrought and tasteless thriller.
Rated: R [See Full Rating] for violence, sexual content, language and brief drug use
Runtime: 2 hrs
Genre: Science-Fiction/Fantasy
Theatrical Release:Jan 23, 2004 Wide
Box Office: $57,650,876
Synopsis: Evan Treborn (Ashton Kutcher) has lost track of time. From an early age, crucial moments of his life have disappeared into a black hole of forgetting, his boyhood marred by a series of terrifying... Evan Treborn (Ashton Kutcher) has lost track of time. From an early age, crucial moments of his life have disappeared into a black hole of forgetting, his boyhood marred by a series of terrifying events he can’t remember. What remains is the ghost of memory and the broken lives around him – the lives of his childhood friends, Kayleigh (Amy Smart), Lenny (Elden Henson) and Tommy (William Lee Scott). Throughout his childhood, Evan was under the care of a psychologist who encouraged him to keep a journal, detailing the events of his day-to-day life. Now in college, Evan reads from one of his journals and finds himself thrust suddenly, inexplicably back in time. He comes to realize that the notebooks he keeps under his bed are a vehicle by which he can return to the past and reclaim his memories. But these recollections only leave Evan feeling responsible for the damaged lives of his friends, most crucially that of Kayleigh, his childhood sweetheart who he continued to love into adulthood. Determined to do something now that he was incapable of doing then, Evan purposely travels back in time, his present-day mind occupying his childhood body, in an attempt to re-write history and spare his friends and loved ones these traumatic experiences. By altering the events of the past, Evan hopes to transform the present. But every time Evan changes something in the past, he returns to the present to find that his actions have unexpected and disastrous consequences. Try as he might, he can’t seem to create a reality that allows he and Kayleigh to live “happily ever after.” The Butterfly Effect is a suspenseful, provocative thriller that represents an intriguing new direction for Ashton Kutcher (“That ‘70’s Show,” Dude Where’s My Car, Just Married) and features a dynamic ensemble cast that includes Amy Smart (Roadtrip, Varsity Blues), Eric Stoltz (Pulp Fiction, The Rules of Attraction), William Lee Scott (Pearl Harbor, Gone in Sixty Seconds), Elden Henson (The Mighty, She’s All That) and Logan Lerman, with Ethan Suplee and Melora Walters (Boogie Nights, Magnolia). The film marks the feature directorial debut of Eric Bress and J. Mackye Gruber, (the writing team behind the hit 2003 thriller Final Destination 2), who also penned the screenplay. A Benderspink and FilmEngine production in association with Katalyst, The Butterfly Effect is produced by Chris Bender, A.J. Dix, Anthony Rhulen and J.C. Spink. The executive producers are Toby Emmerich, Richard Brener, Cale Boyter, William Shively, David Krintzman, Jason Goldberg and Ashton Kutcher. The co-producer is Lisa Richardson. New Line Cinema will release The Butterfly Effect (rated “R” by the M.P.A.A. for “violence, sexual content, language and brief drug use”) nationwide on January 23rd, 2004. [More]
Starring: Ashton Kutcher, Amy Smart, Eric Stoltz, William Lee Scott
Starring: Ashton Kutcher, Amy Smart, Eric Stoltz, William Lee Scott, Eldon Henson, Ethan Suplee, Melora Walters, John Patrick Amedori
Director: Eric Bress, J. Mackye Gruber
Director: Eric Bress, J. Mackye Gruber
Screenwriter: Eric Bress, J. Mackye Gruber
Producer: Chris Bender, J.C. Spink
Studio: New Line Cinema
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Reviews for The Butterfly Effect
In the grand tradition of The Conqueror and Showgirls, Ashton Kutcher’s first drama is funnier than his last three comedies put together.
A dopey script personified by Kutcher's dopey, immutable hair style morphs Rashomon into Dude, Where's My Karma?
When the risks pay off, they do with such power that viewers who want to admire the film are left in agony by the foolhardy risks that never should have been taken.
What's sleazy, prominently features the untalented Ashton Kutcher and isn't a supermarket tabloid?
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.
A film of singularly boneheaded conceits, Butterfly is populated by, and appears to have been made by, stoned college dudes more hung up on oh-wow twists than the need to make sense.
The insensitive execution results in a Twilight Zone twist as imagined by Charles Manson.
There is a difference between the thrilling and the merely cruel. The Butterfly Effect fails because it can't make that distinction.
[I]f I could go back in time and prevent Ashton Kutcher’s agent from being born... then my brain would be flooded with memories of an Ashton Kutcher-free multiplex!
Great premise - but there's something about it that doesn't quite gel.
Although adequately produced, this teen flick is poorly acted and derivative of the 'same-old same-old.'
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.
If you thought the molestation, death, torture and suicide were leading up to flowers and candy, you can’t really blame the movie for letting you down.
'The Butterfly Effect' takes what could have been a one-joke premise and comes up with a lot of impressive riffs on familiar material.
Ashton Kutcher wants to be taken seriously so badly it hurts. So does this metaphysical mess of a movie...
Latest News for The Butterfly Effect
September 28, 2006:
Critical Consensus: 'Tis Not The "Season," "Guardian" Lacks Defenders, And "School" Flunks
This week at the movies, we've got jive talking woodland creatures ("Open Season," with Martin Lawrence and Ashton Kutcher). We've got a school for Coast Guard rescue... More...
January 13, 2006:
"Butterfly" Also Flits Onto the TV Waves
With a sequel already underway, it looks like New Line's "The Butterfly Effect" is also about to make the leap onto television. Variety reports that a series based on... More...
July 01, 2005:
Colorful Cast Announced for Uwe Boll's Next Opus
After putting the finishing touches on his upcoming "BloodRayne," controversial German director Uwe Boll ("House of the Dead," "Alone in the Dark")... More...
May 11, 2005:
Costner & Kutcher to Become Coast "Guardians"
Production Weekly brings news of an upcoming Andrew Davis ("The Fugitive") action flick that will star Kevin Costner ("Open Range") and Ashton Kutcher... More...
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