

I actually FELT for them, an element often missing from horror films. The characters were fairly dynamic and complex, and the acting was much better than I expected.

I really liked the video game plot-it was entertaining enough just to watch the gamers get so into it! Everything is interconnected, so it kept me interested enough to look past the "jumpy" parts to the underlying meanings and symbolism. Without worrying about when things are happening, you are free to instead concentrate on WHY they are happening. The time line is fairly stable and simple to follow-except parts of the end-which makes for an enjoyable experience. This movie made me think AND scared me, which is a combination hard to find. Granted, it probably would have been better as an R version, but there's always a chance for an unrated DVD. Actually, I think that the plot was fairly substantial and well thought out for a horror movie-especially a PG-13 one.

This song has also been used in a wide variety of movies, from Foul Play to Bushwhacked, since being used in Saturday Night Fever.I saw "Stay Alive" tonight, and I was surprised to come home and read reviews discounting it as stupid or pointless. See Cereus Bright’s alternate cover and Leo Moracchioli’s Metal cover just to list a few. The song’s sheer popularity inspired a mass influx of covers from all sorts of different genres. 5 of The Nation’s Favorite Bee Gees Song in a UK television poll on ITV in 2011. 189 on the list of The Rolling Stone’s 500 Greatest Songs of All Time. The same year, Stayin' Alive was placed No. 9 on AFI’s 100 Years…100 Songs survey in terms of America’s top cinema tunes. This song became one of the most recognizable songs of the Bee Gees. It was released as part of the 1977 soundtrack album Saturday Night Fever in which it famously depicts John Travolta strutting down the streets of Brooklyn, New York City.

“Stayin' Alive” is a 1977 disco single written by the Bee Gees which peaked at #1 on the Billboard Hot 100 and remained there for four weeks.
