: Benatar rewrote several British expressions from the original songwriters (Geoff Gill and Cliff Wade) to make the song more relatable to an American audience and reframed it as a female anthem of strength.
: Rather than dwelling purely on the "wicked ways of love," the song is described as taking back power through its aggressive, "war-like" musical energy.
: The song's most famous element is the 46-second unaccompanied guitar solo by Page, which was actually recorded in a different studio and "slotted in" as an afterthought.
: A six-second a cappella break —"You're a heartbreaker, dream maker..."—is often credited as the moment Benatar truly became a star. Led Zeppelin: "Heartbreaker" (1969)