"A Sound of Thunder" The 1952 short story "
A Sound of Thunder" by
Ray Bradbury explores the concept of how the death of a butterfly in the past could have drastic changes in the future, and has been used as an example of "the butterfly effect" and how to consider chaos theory and the physics of time travel. The story has since been made into a
film of the same name and an episode of the television series
Ray Bradbury Theater.
Films The influence of the concept can be seen in the films
The Terminator,
Back to the Future,
X-Men: Days of Future Past,
Dasavathaaram,
Maheshinte Prathikaram and
Cloud Atlas. In the 1990 film
Havana, the character played by
Robert Redford states, "A butterfly can flutter its wings over a flower in China and cause a hurricane in the Caribbean", and scientists "can even calculate the odds". According to science journalist Peter Dizikes, the films
Havana and
The Butterfly Effect mischaracterize the butterfly effect by asserting the effect can be calculated with certainty, because this is the opposite of its scientific meaning in
chaos theory as it relates to the unpredictability of certain physical systems; Dizikes writes in 2008, "The larger meaning of the butterfly effect is not that we can readily track such connections, but that we can't." Other examples include
Terry Pratchett's novel
Interesting Times, which tells of the magical "Quantum Weather Butterfly" with the ability to manipulate weather patterns. The 2009 film
Mr. Nobody incorporates the butterfly effect and the concept of smaller events that result in larger changes altering a person's life. A Telugu film named
Nannaku Prematho (2016) also has the concept of a butterfly effect in it. The 2020 - 2021 miniseries of short films
Explaining the Pandemic to my Past Self by
Julie Nolke incorporates the butterfly effect as a limitation on how much she can explain to her past self. The 2021 film
Needle in a Timestack is described in a review by
The Guardian as having a plot where the character played by
Leslie Odom Jr. "sets off a calamitous butterfly effect that results in, not the survival of dinosaurs, not a deadly plague, not
an Allied loss of the second world war, but him being married to Freida Pinto instead of Cynthia Erivo."
Television The concept is referenced in a
Treehouse of Horror episode of the television series
The Simpsons. "My Butterfly", an episode from the TV show
Scrubs, features two separate timelines, each influenced by the butterfly effect. The season four premiere episodes of
Ugly Betty are named "
The Butterfly Effect Part 1" and "
The Butterfly Effect Part 2", and a review of the episodes in
Vulture states, "
Ugly Betty is certainly invested in the physics of the Butterfly Effect, too: One small change can indeed cause large-scale effects." "If-Then-Else", an episode from
Person of Interest, features an artificial intelligence software running simulations of different situations and even the smallest changes completely change the outcome.
The Loud House (2016) has an episode of the same name. The miniseries
Black Bird (2022) begins with a narration about the butterfly effect.
Video games The concept is also incorporated into video games, including
Eve Online. The 2015 video game
Until Dawn features the butterfly effect as a central plot point, using the concept to describe how player choices can drastically affect the outcome of events. The video game series
Life Is Strange, first released in 2015, makes multiple references to the butterfly effect and uses it to describe how player choices affect the plot of the game.
Books The 2020 biography of
Kendrick Lamar,
The Butterfly Effect: How Kendrick Lamar Ignited the Soul of Black America by Marcus J. Moore, chronicles "what if" moments during Lamar's life and developing career, including what happened after the release of
To Pimp a Butterfly. The 2020 book
The Butterfly Effect: Insects and the Making of the Modern World by Edward Melillo incorporates the concept to discuss the influence of insects.
Other popular culture During the
COVID-19 pandemic, doctor and journalist Peter Endicott used the butterfly effect to describe the impact of increased waiting times within the health care system in the UK, i.e. "The knock-on effect this would have on my day – the beating of a butterfly's wings in the morning causing tornadoes by the afternoon." The butterfly effect was also used as a justification for the suppression of news in China about the death of
Li Wenliang. The song “The Certainty of Chance” by
The Divine Comedy alludes to the butterfly effect. Its lyrics describes events such as a butterfly flying through the rain and causing a hurricane, and a student pressing a button and causing computers around the world to crash. ==See also==