Starring: Ashton Kutcher (Evan Treborn), Melora Walters (Andrea Treborn), Amy Smart (Kayleigh Miller), Elden Henson (Lenny Kagan), William Lee Scott (Tommy Miller)
Despite making multiple trips to his past, Evan is unable to change the present so that he and Kayleigh can be happy together and/or his friends can be happy as well. In the end, he decides to go back to when he first met Kayleigh and there, he makes her hate his guts and never want to see him again. After her parents divorce, Kayleigh leaves town to live with her mother, and to get away from Evan and her molesting father. In the present day, everybody is happy, but Evan and Kayleigh are strangers.
Directors cut is much more intense and although dark more enjoyable. If you recall fortune teller telling Evan she should have never been born? that is key! Haveing failed at every attempt to change the future by altering the past Evan makes one last attempt. He goes back to his birth and wraps his abicial cord around his neck and kills himslef. You see characters are all now happy as their lives move forward plesantly without him.
One Response to “Butterfly Effect, The”
November 29th, 2005 at 7:04 am
Directors cut is much more intense and although dark more enjoyable. If you recall fortune teller telling Evan she should have never been born? that is key! Haveing failed at every attempt to change the future by altering the past Evan makes one last attempt. He goes back to his birth and wraps his abicial cord around his neck and kills himslef. You see characters are all now happy as their lives move forward plesantly without him.
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