JOHN is “just a guy”, albeit, a very sharp “wise guy”, who has been afforded less than all the best opportunities life has to offer, yet somehow he still owns a greater humanity, compassion, and integrity then most others. His lot has been an almost orphaned upbringing, in New York city, organized crime social clubs . . . their governance, his choice, the result, his childhood friend and several others, dead . . . his conscience, the agony he carries . . . consuming. Brea Rhodes, seemingly, is not “just a girl”, she is the poster child for a young, beautiful, reckless, paparazzi swarmed Hollywood starlet . . . though she hasn’t always been, and beneath all the fl ash and fl ashes, lie some very “pretty colors. These two seemingly opposites’, lives come to cross, “seemingly”, by accident, with the introduction by an enigmatic, big time Hollywood agent, Gabe. What ensues . . . is a length of close and personal acquainting time between the two, in which, they both come to know each other’s true colors, their true selves, before certain choices of old created them into the costumes they wear today. But this oasis of calm and clarity of course doesn’t last, before the whirlwinds that are their lives, threatens to pull them back in . . . they must now choose again . . . For the love of a Butterfl y, is a story o f love, compassion, divine beauty and divine redemption . . . it is a heartfelt love tragedy, with philosophical undertones, that contemplate, good and evil, right and wrong, pain, aloneness , sacrifi ce, and the divinity found in sincerity, found in truth . . .