The laws of physics don't change. Where large-scale interactions occur, such as at the atomic level, there is never an instance where the laws are broken. Beyond that, at much smaller scales, quantum mechanics is the science of describing the behavior of particles. And in the quantum world, the laws of physics may appear different, but that doesn't mean that the classical laws have been broken. The uncertianty principle is a good example -- you can measure the speed or the location of a particle, but not at the same time. And consider that for a long time, light was believed to be a wave, but now we know that light is made up of particles known as photons. Before this, some of light's properties could not be explained.
Consider that beaming light through a slit on a piece of paper creates a ring effect on a background. This suggests it is a wave, since all other waves exhibit the same effect. But if you slow that beam down so that only one particle at a time goes through the slit, the particles end up at completley different points every single time and you cannot predict where any particle will go. No matter what, there is NO way to determine where the particle will land. BUT, if you let many particles go through, one at a time, the ring pattern will begin to form over time if you record each particle after it goes through the slit. So the ring pattern does form over time. So light is predictable but completley unpredictable simultaneously.
One thing that I marvel at is how measuring things at the quantum level seem to be affected by the measurer. (Bad example forthcoming) Basically, you can rig a test to capture a particle only one of two ways, ignoring one option or the other. It will ALWAYS end up going the way you decide to measure, which means that the result of the experiment is decided by the observer. It means that the result is predetermined by the observer, or, the observer is changing what happened in the past.
This is why the professor in Futurama balks at the "quantum" photo finish result at the horse track and they have to go to the electron microscope to determine the result.
"You idiots! By observing the results, you've changed them!" he yelled.