Friday, January 23, 2004

The Butterfly Effect

Many films over the years have attempted to deal with the subject of time-travel. Some have been more successful than others. Back to the Future warranted two sequels. Last year’s The Time Machine, by contrast, just deserved a warrant for arrest. The lesson, perhaps? That the subject is simply one that can’t be taken too seriously. Fail to direct with your cinematic tongue in cheek, and you will incur the disdain of the moviegoing public.

The Butterfly Effect takes its premise seriously. And surprisingly, it’s a very serious film—both artistically and philosophically.

The first major surprise is Ashton Kutcher himself. How does a supposed television lightweight like Kutcher unearth, develop and satisfyingly star in such substantial material? How does he assemble a team of such obviously talented, gifted and passionate filmmakers?

Few films are as well-cast and well-acted as The Butterfly Effect. Three generations of actors are called upon to convincingly play several different versions of themselves—and we not only buy that these children, adolescents and adults could actually be the same characters, we also buy the changes that Evan’s dabbling in the past produces in their characters’ fundamental underlying natures. Lenny is convincing as both catatonic and gregarious; Tommy’s sadist is as disturbing as his born-again believer is compassionate; and so-and-so’s multiple Kayleighs are simply a revelation.

Are these performances really to be found in a summer teen movie?

It’s also a surprise that Effect also deals matter-of-factly with the issue of religious faith. Even in high-profile movies that deal with the issue of playing God, like The Truman Show (or even Bruce Almighty), characters don’t actually do what real people of faith do. They don’t go to church, they don’t pray. If they have faith, it’s not a faith that actually guides their actions. Effect’s transformed Tommy, however, behaves like a real campus evangelical activist: he’s earnest, passionate and concerned. He’s neither a Saved!-style caricature nor a preachy hero. He simply is what he is.

But the major surprise is the pragmatic self-determinism that the film’s director presents, a bleak vision that’s reminiscent of an earlier generation of filmmakers. It’s foolish to think, the film says, that if we could somehow go back and change the mistakes that we (or others) have made that the present would somehow be “better.” It would only be different. Better to be absorbed in working out our salvation in the here in now than in agonizing over the past, or the earth-shattering down-stream effects of seemingly insignificant actions. Because even if you could go down that path, you’d find that the only way to save the things that you love would be to give them up entirely.

It’s a vision that’s evocative of the sacrifice that Christ made in giving up His position in Heaven to walk the earth and die on the cross as a man. But make no mistake—The Butterfly Effect doesn’t find salvation “out there.” Kayleigh’s salvation only comes through the literally desperate (if selfless) actions of a man who has no idea what the future—or the past—really holds.

Continue:
Overview
Trailers, Photos

Thursday, January 01, 2004

Pre-Blogger Archive

Below is a concise listing of the movie reviews and feature articles I wrote for Hollywood Jesus prior to the migration to Blogger. (Lord of the Rings materials are excepted.)

Elf
Jon Favreau and the Holy Grail (Elf)
Final Solution
Impact: The Passion of the Christ
Monsters, Inc.
Faith in Hollywood (The Notebook)
Peter Pan
Lynn Redgrave's Secrets (Peter Pan)
A Talk with Michael Tollin (Radio)
Raise Your Voice
The Cachet of Cash (Raise Your Voice)
Raising Helen
Secondhand Lions
Secondhand Children (Secondhand Lions)
Two Brothers
Annaud and Pearce: Tiger Tamers( Two Brothers)

Lord of the Rings at HJ

Over the course of nearly four years, I assembled an extensive collection of articles and reviews related to Peter Jackson's Lord of the Rings movies. This is a concise director of the columns I either authored or edited.

THE RETURN OF THE KING
Review
Extended Edition Review

THE TWO TOWERS
Review
Extended Edition Review

THE FELLOWSHIP OF THE RING
Review
Extended Edition Review

GUEST FEATURES
—Jeffrey Overstreet:
  Lost in Translation
—Christopher Garbowski:
  The End of the Journey?
—Kevin Miller:
  Jackson in Perspective Review
—Mike Perry:
  The Ring & Totalitarianism
—Mark Sommer:
  Addicted to the Ring
—Chris Utley:
  The Ring and I
—Loren Rosson:
  Hopeless Courage, Part 3
—Loren Rosson:
  Hopeless Courage, Part 2
—Loren Rosson:
  Hopeless Courage, Part 1
—Cliff Vaughn:
  Lost Like Gollum
—Brian Overland:
  The Voice of Saruman

INTERVIEWS
—Dominic Monaghan:
  Innocence Lost
—Liv Tyler:
  Winning Over the Audience
—Andy Serkis:
  Circus Serkis
—Ian McKellen:
  Agendas in Middle-Earth
—Elijah Wood:
  Carrying the Ring
—Sean Astin:
  The Hobbit Next Door
—Philippa Boyens & Fran Walsh:
  2 Kiwi Chicks Sitting Around Talking
—Peter Jackson:
  The Horse's Mouth (and Other Parts)
—Bernard Hill:
  The Chivalrous King
—Viggo Mortensen:
  What Was Medved Thinking?
—John Rhys-Davies:
  The Wolf in Wolf's Clothing

FEATURE ARTICLES
The Scouring of the Shire
Faramir's Allegiance
Putting Jackson in Perspective
Tolkien's Timelines
Our Own Tower of Cirith Ungol
Jackson's Army of the Dead
Return of the Special Features
Death & the Swift Sunrise
Bigger is Better?
Peter Jackson's Fools
Peter, Pippin & the Palantir
Destroying Tolkien's Rings
Saruman, Sauron & Power
The Stewards of Gondor
Peter Jackson's Orcs
Yet Another Book on Tolkien?
Peter Jackson's Gollum
Theoden's Ill Choices
Haldir at Helm's Deep
An Odd Place to End?
Tom Bombadil vs. Peter Jackson
Jackson vs. Ralph Bakshi
Peter Jackson vs. Rankin/Bass
Saruman, Wizardry, & Magic
Gandalf and His Hobbits
Elrond & Peter Jackson's Aragorn
Peter Jackson's Arwen

BOOK COMMENTARIES
Fellowship of the Ring, Book I
Fellowship of the Rng, Book II
The Two Towers, Book III
The Two Towers, Book IV
Return of the King, Book V
Return of the King, Book VI
Essay: Tolkien's Mythology
Response to Comments on Essay
Review: Hildebrandt Art Book

FINAL FEATURED EMAIL
E-mail of the Month

MISCELLANEOUS
Errata