Preview

The Butterfly Effect

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
869 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
The Butterfly Effect
The Butterfly Effect
Thesis statement
Film Genres: 1).Thriller (Similar Film: The silence of the lambs) 2).Science fiction film (I am leg end) 3).Family (Cheaper by the dozen ) 4).Fantasy ( Harry potter) 5).Romance film (Titanic ) 6).Crime (I’ll sleep when I’m dead) 7).Crux play (The shawshank redemption ) 8).Plot (Twilight )
Background: The Butterfly Effect is a American science-fiction psychological thriller film that was written and directed by Eric Bress and J. Mackye Gruber, starring Ashton Kutcher and Amy Smart. The title refers to the butterfly effect, a popular hypothetical example of chaos theory which illustrates how small initial differences may lead to large unforeseen consequences over time.
Plot: In the year 2002, Evan Treborn frequently suffers from blackouts, often at moments of high stress. As a young child and adolescent, Evan suffered many severe sexual and psychological traumas. These traumas include being forced to take part in child pornography, being strangled by his mentally-ill father, causing an accident with dynamite with his friends, and seeing his dog being burned by his friend. Seven years later, while entertaining a girl in his dorm room, he realizes that when he reads from his adolescent journals, he can travel back in time, and is able to redo parts of his past. His time traveling episodes account for the frequent blackouts he experienced as a child. However, there are consequences to his choices that propagate back to his present life, his alternate personal futures progress from college student, to prisoner, to amputee. His efforts are driven by the desire to undo the most unpleasant events of his childhood which coincide with his mysterious blackouts, including saving his childhood sweetheart

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Better Essays

    Butterfly Revolution

    • 3165 Words
    • 13 Pages

    In the two novels The Butterfly Revolution and Lord of the Flies, both convey the themes corruptive nature of power and mankind's potential for evil. In the Butterfly Revolution, boys that age from ten to seven teen attend a summer camp named High Pines. The camp was delightful for the younger boys, but the older boys were not so entertained. The "big boys" were bored by games that they thought of as games for children (capture the flag, swimming, marshmallow roasts, baseball, etc.) The boys were separated into their cabins by their age. In these cabins, cabin leaders were chosen by the people who lived in the cabin. Frank Reilley, Stanley Runk, and Winston Weyn were a few of the main cabin leaders that stuck out to me. Frank Reilley and Stanley Runk, and Winston Weyn were a few of the main cabin leaders that stuck out to me. Frank Reilley and Stanley Runk were older boys who were sick of the camps' rules, and found themselves bored. They decided they were going to take over the camp, or start a "Revolution." They explained to their fellow camp attenders that it would be innocent, noone would get hurt, and that it was all for fun. That may have been the reason to start the Revolution, but it simply got out of hand. This represents the theme mankind's potential for evil. Frank Reilley and Stanley Runk soon became dictators instead of "Generals." Frank Reilley believes that Stanley Runk is a threat to the Revolution so he locks him in The Brig where the camp counselors and director of the camp were placed. The Brig was the punishment room, until Reilley and Runk decided it was now where they would be holding their captives. Cruel and unusual punishment was distributed to the people whom broke the rules of the revolution. At the end of this disaster, three people lost their lives and it could have been more if Manuel Rivaz would…

    • 3165 Words
    • 13 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Although it is a novel of fiction, the historical facts that are mentioned in the novel, In the Time of the Butterflies written by Julia Alvarez, come alive through the lens of four courageous sisters pushing reformations for all. Living as a prosperous farming family in the city of Ojo de Agua in the Dominican Republic from 1930 to 1960, the Mirabal family was privileged enough to have four strong-headed daughters named Maria Theresa, Minerva, Patria, and Dede. The sisters were lucky enough to be given an excellent education from attending the Colegio de Inmaculada Concepcion, or the school…

    • 2620 Words
    • 11 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    During this dark period Tom does not change, or mature. Tom’s Father orders Tom to make a change to his life and encourages him to take the path towards a positive future and to move on from the past into the future. Tom’s isolation from the world is captured negatively through the use of…

    • 610 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    As we all know, Ray Bradbury, Author of Fahrenheit 451, made many predictions as to what this day and age would be like. He was right in many cases including speed, entertainment, and the mindlessness of people. He predicted that nobody would speak more than a couple of words at a time to a certain person. That makes the people seem mindless because they don't talk or ask questions. Ray also predicted that people would drive by places so fast that the y don't even know what they passed. That has not quite happened in out tome yet, but I believe it is coming. One of the final things that Bradbury talks about in his book is entertainment, slowly but surely, people are starting to stay indoors and do such activities so they don't have to go outside.…

    • 995 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    He was playing basketball again, but the coach did not him to play in the team. Ethan wanted to prove the coach wrong. If he didn't play he would go back to drinking and partying. He went back to his old way buying 30 pack of alcohol, smoking weed and started drinking vodka. He spent about 3 grand of money on beer. One of his past were his ex-girlfriend they both did axis drug pill during the summer of 2000. He got kicked out of his parents house. He took mostly took 4 pills a week and sold them to his friend. Went on to different college at Butter JC Chico CA in 2000 which it was the 2nd party college. When he was at that college he did not party or smoked. His basketball coach called him down his office because he had four F's in his classes. The coach wanted to help him out. Started smoking weed again. If he wanted to get pills he could find anywhere. He did snored coca during college. He was sitting in cars with gun point. One of his death wish was he wanted to kill himself. He lied to his mom multiple times. He took pills rolling up a blunt and snored coca and later was found lying to next to train track. After all those times he wanted to die the one thing that made him to stop was his little brother. Then he went back home and sober…

    • 679 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Our lives is considered a huge butterfly effect that exist in one another. The butterfly effect is when small cause in the past creates a bigger effect in the present or later future. Problems unsettled in the past can sometimes create a negative effect in the present. In Hosseini’s book The Kite Runner, he gives multiple examples of showing the relationship between the present by giving flashbacks and comments the characters share in the book as well as reflections on the character’s past self.…

    • 585 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Andrew Largeman is a depressed 26-year-old, would be actor, living in Los Angeles, who has not been to his hometown, New Jersey, in nine years. He was sent away because he was blamed for the accident that subsequently paralyzed his mother and he was thought to be a danger to others because of this. He is suddenly called home when his mother dies unexpectedly in a drowning accident. He does not ever remember ever feeling love in his home, even from his mother. He has been medicated by his psychiatrist father “for as long as he can remember”, but for some reason, he decides not to take his medication with him. Once he arrives home it is apparent that he and his father have a difficult relationship as his father tells him: “Thank you for coming, saying goodbye is important, I’m glad you could fit it in.” He complains of headaches and his father sets him up to see a neurologist. It is here that he meets Sam. She brings him out of his shell of numbness with her quirky sense of humor and crazy, yet touching, antics such as tap dancing in the firelight. “Large” begins to feel again for the first time in years. He remembers one time when he was crying and his mother was wearing her favorite necklace. He said that he…

    • 1942 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Leper Lepellier was once a quiet, sensitive, and thoughtful boy. He conformed to his own rules and had a mind of his own. He would pack up his low self-confidence and together they would quench their thirst for nature. He would look at the world and say “what if?”, and with his wild imagination would think up an answer of his own. But the character trait that brought him to his downfall was his close-mindedness. This is what acted as the little piece of glass which was left in the foot that leads to massive infection and eventual amputation. Goes to boot camp and finds rules he didn’t want to follow, a new way of life he wasn’t used to, such as: not sleeping in a bed, but everywhere else, not eating in the hall, but everywhere else. Leper always knew he was different, but when he went to boot camp they labeled him as ‘crazy’, and since he was a low self-confident boy, he believed their outlook rather than his own. He threw himself into a world that was scary and dim, exposed to ideas he never contemplated on before and his weak mind grew weaker. A weak chain is an open gate, and this allowed Lepers’ mind to be plagued, with PTSD.…

    • 887 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Day Of The Butterfly

    • 212 Words
    • 1 Page

    First, “The Literature of Americans,” Kimberly Koza writes: “By discovering the Literature of our neighbors, we may also learn about ourself.” The story I chose was The Day of the Butterfly by Alice Munro. The theme of The Day of the Butterfly varies resulting in a theme from the story; include the realization that the theme relates to our common desire and struggle to belong—to have a friend—and the cruel consequences for those who become outsiders. Additionally, the story Day of the Butterfly is about a sixth-grade girls Myra Sayla who is an immigrant, and responsible for her little brother, Helen a friend of Myra gives her a tin butterfly from a Cracker Jack box. Daring to reach out to Myra makes Helen feel both self-congratulatory and…

    • 212 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    The story is about a young male, named Greg,who suffers from disorders such as depression. Greg is slowly getting worse due to his imagination going wild with the bizarre thoughts. Ned Vizzini uses the first person to help comprehend Greg’s depression. Greg is now on the brink of suicide. In detail, “I have a plan and a solution: I’m going to kill…

    • 492 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    The Other Wes Moore

    • 344 Words
    • 1 Page

    Wes Moore was a normal boy who lived in Brooklyn, New York, until his whole life was flipped around when his father died. Wes did not think of his dad as a father, but more like an older brother. He was not afraid to share what he felt with his father; because he knew everything would be alright while his father was around. Wes’s relationship with his father was like a kid that has a teddy bear; he did not want to do anything without him.…

    • 344 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    English 1010 Essay

    • 1480 Words
    • 6 Pages

    “What happened to me last night” thought Katy. “Where am I? Hello? Can anyone help me I’m a little stuck here?” With a few good hard pushes Katy had risen from the dead and found herself sitting up in her casket. “Wow I must have had one crazy night if I managed to end myself buried in the ground.” Katy was a 21 year old woman who lived life to the fullest as some people may say. She played all day and parted all night. She seemed to have the perfect carefree life, her parents were loaded and life was worry free. She did whatever she wanted to do whenever she wanted to it; at least that was Katy’s outlook on life. However, little did she know her life was about to get more twisted than she could ever imagine.…

    • 1480 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    TO PIMP A BUTTERFLY

    • 649 Words
    • 2 Pages

    My life is a dreadful piece of work, at first living with my grandparents since I was six, now I got the “whole world on my shoulders”, begging me to make a choice, but now I’m by myself stuck in a whole. I guess I have to toss and turn with the devil to make my choice and if I don’t make a choice soon I’ll make myself go insane. To keep myself sane I learned a new saying and it is said “to pimp a butterfly” this saying makes me feel good about myself because when I say it in my head I feel I can make all of my problems go away cause the butterfly is going to float the problems all away.…

    • 649 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Water for Elephants

    • 1423 Words
    • 6 Pages

    The story follows Jacob Jankowski who was an old man living in a nursing home, as he looks back about a time that defined his life. In the 1930’s, 23-year-old Jacob’s life changed drastically. One minute he was finishing his Veterinarian degree at Cornell and planning to follow his father in the family business. The next his parents passed away in a car wreck, turning his world upside down.…

    • 1423 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    "Fences" Book Report

    • 1539 Words
    • 7 Pages

    Troy was a former Baseball player for the Negro leagues. He wanted to succeed with his baseball career but the time wasn’t right for him and due to racial discrimination, Troy could not play in the major leagues even though he was better than the white men who played baseball. When Troy found Rose and they had a baby, he then gave up his passion for baseball to raise the family. However, it was hard for him to get a job so he robbed and stole in which he accidentally killed a man and went to jail. Cory’s childhood was unaccompanied by his father and he did not understand the importance of relating himself to his…

    • 1539 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Powerful Essays

Related Topics