Stay Alive Movie Review
Stay Alive Review

"Stay Alive" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2006
Cast and Crew
Director : William Brent BellProducer : Gary Barber,Roger Birnbaum,McG,Matthew Peterman,James D. Stern
Screenwiter : William Brent Bell,Matthew Peterman
Starring : Jon Foster,Samaire Armstrong,Frankie Muniz,Sophia Bush,Jimmi Simpson,Adam Goldberg
It’s a horror plot so surefire that you wonder why it hasn’t been done before:
Young people play a mysterious new videogame and start to die, one by one, in
grisly scenes mimicking their game deaths. Stay Alive runs through this plot
with such a plodding lack of imagination that you think again: Maybe this has
been done before, on The X-Files or a direct-to-video picture you missed.
Surely a movie this tired can’t be the first crack at a fundamentally decent
genre idea?
Stay Alive gets around this conundrum easily by knocking off The Ring and
throwing in a little of the Final Destination series: the former’s ghostly
gimmick mixed with the latter’s view of life as an elaborate series of macabre
booby traps. Unfortunately, even the cut-and-paste is botched; no Ring-style
tension builds, and the PG-13 rating curtails the death scenes, most of which
all but cut away before the character’s gory fate is sealed. Yes, you read that
right: Stay Alive is like a Final Destination movie without the death scenes.
It would help – it usually would – if any of the characters sparked even
minimal interest. Here we have the conflicted, haunted hero (Jon Foster) and
the mysterious new love object (Samaire Armstrong), flanked by some more
subculture-specific stereotypes: the callous, hardcore gamer/stoner (Jimmi
Simpson), his goth sister (Sophia Bush), and a nerdy tech-head (Frankie Muniz).
Yes, you read that right: Stay Alive’s biggest star is Frankie Muniz. The rest
of the characters keep telling him to shut up, which seems perfectly natural at
first, until you realize he’s the only one who displays even a modicum evidence
of thought about videogames and the world around him.
But the movie is less interested in the gaming culture than in making the
backstory of its villain as generically spooky as possible. The idea of a
horror movie set within a particular youth subculture is actually pretty neat,
and hopefully won’t die along with Stay Alive’s characters, momentum, and
thrills. I eagerly await the emo-scene version, where My Chemical Romance
groupies are haunted and picked off by a harpie killed in a freakish Hot Topic
accident.
Besides its squandering of an ultra-high concept, Stay Alive is not really much
worse than any other teen-targeted horror movie that refuses to be screened for
critics. It makes minimal sense, displays minimal style, and provides minimal
entertainment until it finally ends and provides a maxi-sized opening for a
sequel. Yes, you read that right: At this time next year, I could be reviewing
Stay Aliver.
Where's Travolta when you need him?
Reviewer: Jesse Hassenger



