
- SLAVE MAKER 3 SAVE MODIFIER MOVIE
- SLAVE MAKER 3 SAVE MODIFIER FULL
It doesn't really relate to the premonition at all, but it is still relevant for various reasons. In Final Destination 3, Death's Song is "Turn Around, Look at Me" covered by The Lettermen (the credits mention the original writers by mistake), and is played thrice in the movie. It may be also ironically referring to the fact that nobody was able to stop their vehicles in time during the pile-up. The lines "No stop signs", "Speed limit", and "Nobody's gonna slow me down" may be referring to the pile-up still happened even after Kimberly tried to stop it.Any of lines containing the words "Highway to hell" are referring to the hellish environment produced by the pile-up.The lines "Goin' down", "Party time", and "My friends are gonna be there too, yeah" may be referring to Kimberly and her friends going down to Florida for spring break.The line "Season ticket on a one way ride" may refer to the Route 23 pile-up as a "one way" destination to Death.
SLAVE MAKER 3 SAVE MODIFIER MOVIE
Rocky Mountain High is also heard in this movie - it is played as muzak when Tim Carpenter is at the dentist.Ĭlues/Connections from "Highway to Hell": However, the idea was semi scrapped, and the only time the song is used is during the actual Highway crash - originally, it was going to also be heard on Evan's answer machine (in the script it was a friend who phoned from work, rather than his two exes) as muzak in the elevator that killed Nora Carpenter, and a few other locations. In Final Destination 2," Highway to Hell" by AC/DC was supposed to carry on the tradition that "Rocky Mountain High" started. But, later on in Paris, Alex still fears Death as he doesn't know if the list had ended.
SLAVE MAKER 3 SAVE MODIFIER FULL
The lines "Now his life is full of wonder", "But his heart still knows some fear", and "Of a simple thing, he cannot comprehend" may be referring to the extend amount of time that Alex, along with the other Flight 180 survivors, got from being able to avoid death. The lines "His sight has turned inside" and "Himself to try and understand" may refer to Alex trying to understand his premonition and hallucinations of clues that he got. Due to Alex not being the target on Death's list yet, he is able to avoid and survive these experiences.
The line " Seeking grace in every step he takes" may be referring to the near-death experiences that Alex had while trying to save Clear. The lines "Now he walks in quiet solitude" and "The forests and the streams" may be referring to Alex's journey to save Clear after realizing that she is next. The line "And he lost a friend but kept his memory" may be referring to Alex losing Tod Waggener, his best friend, to Death. The line "The shadow from the starlight" may be referring to Death's appearance as a shadow. The line "I've seen it rainin' fire in the sky" is referring to the Flight 180 explosion and the fiery wreckage falling from it "in the sky". It can be also referring to Flight 180 survivors no longer being safe from Death. The line "It keeps changin' fast, and it don't last for long" may be referring to how fast the Death is taking the survivors out. The line "But the string's already broken, and he doesn't really care" may refer to the fact that the Flight 180 survivors cheated Death's original list/design and that Death just created a new design for them. The line "When he first came to the mountains his life was far away" may refer to Alex's spot on Death's List as last and seventh survivor to die if he weren't able to save Clear and Carter Horton from their deaths. This line might be also be referring the child of Alex and Clear Rivers, Alexander Chance Browning, another way to cheat death, new life. The line "You might say he was born again" may refer to only of the ways to cheat death: dying and being resurrected.
This refers to the fate of most of the Flight 180 passengers.
The artist of this song, John Denver, died in a plane crash, respectably. At the end of the movie, a street performer sings the French translation of the song (the remaining survivors were in Paris at the time), thus alerting Alex that they were still on Death's list.Ĭlues/Connections from "Rocky Mountain High": As Alex noted John Denver died on a plane, which is why this song became synonymous with Death in this movie (ironically John also sang "Leaving on a Jet Plane" which may have been more fitting).
In Final Destination, "Rocky Mountain High" by John Denver, is played shortly before someone dies in various scenes, and was also heard by Alex Browning, when he went to the bathroom before boarding Flight 180.
2.1 Clues/Connections from "Highway to Hell":. 1.1 Clues/Connections from "Rocky Mountain High":.