Chaos Theory
Of the many facile ironies
at play in Chaos Theory, the title may be the biggest: How can a movie so stuffed
with writerly contrivances call itself Chaos Theory? Only in Hollywood could
a film pretending to embrace the disorder of the universe feel so thoroughly
mapped-out, airless, and lacking in spontaneity. Granted, the science of chaos
theory describes what's popularly known as the "butterfly effect," when one
flap of the wings reverberates in an unanticipated and seemingly random
sequence of events, but the appearance of chaos is crucial, and that's where the
film seems canned. In tracing an efficiency expert's collapse from order to
disorder, director Marcos Siega and writer Daniel Taplitz mean to express life
as a seat-of-the-pants journey that the expert's patented index cards can't
manage. But can this be done in a movie that's obviously been plotted on index
cards?