undefined

Horror,Mystery-100m
60.42%
User Score
Don't blow it.
Overview

A misfit group of unwitting high school students stumble upon a cursed object, an ancient Aztec Death Whistle. They discover that blowing the whistle and the terrifying sound it emits will summon their future deaths to hunt them down.

Series Cast

Dafne Keen
Dafne Keen

Chrys Willet

Sophie Nélisse
Sophie Nélisse

Ellie Gains

Sky Yang
Sky Yang

Rel Taylor

Jhaleil Swaby
Jhaleil Swaby

Dean

Alissa Skovbye
Alissa Skovbye

Grace Friedkin

Percy Hynes White
Percy Hynes White

Noah Haggerty

Stephen Kalyn
Stephen Kalyn

Mason Horse Raymore

Michelle Fairley
Michelle Fairley

Ivy Raymore

Nick Frost
Nick Frost

Mr. Craven

Janaya Stephens
Janaya Stephens

Grace's Mom

Lanette Ware
Lanette Ware

Maya Jackson

Mika Amonsen
Mika Amonsen

Tanner

Reviews

A review by ChrisSawin
February 11, 2026

Whistle‘s writing is standard and mediocre, typical of films about summoning death with percussion. However, horror fans will appreciate the creative deaths, solid acting, and an ending that leaves you wanting a sequel. https://www.giantfreakinrobot.com/ent/horror/whistle-review.html

CinemaSerf
A review by Geronimo1967
February 19, 2026

With “Primate” it was a chimp, with “Whistle”, well yep - it’s a whistle. Otherwise there isn’t that much to distinguish the two. This did have an intriguing premise to it: an ancient Aztec artefact that when aroused serves to over-ride the fates themselves and alert death to the whereabouts of the blower. It’s basketball player “Horse” (Stephen Kalyn) who first demonstrates the demonic power of this bronze article, and then when it is found in his school locker by new girl “Chrysanthemum” (Dafne Keene) it gains a new lease of life with her, her classmates and their unwitting professor (Nick Frost). Luckily, they do have someone on hand who can interpret the writings on the gizmo, but any chance she can thwart death’s relentless and bloody search for their bodies and souls? Aside from the concept which is a bit different, this is an entirely procedural and formulaic story and of course we have the now obligatory girl-on-girl romance that now seems to be the norm. When are we ever going to get one of those horror dramas where it’s the boys who get it on, instead of them getting slaughtered early on?  Anyway, there is nothing new here, just the gradual and set-piece removal of the mostly deserving characters and you do have to ask: if you found an ancient and grubby old thing in your locker, would you blow on it? Hmmm - standby for "Whistle Too"?

Dean
A review by Ditendra
March 28, 2026

Just another dumb leftist movie with its propaganda as usual. It is a prime example of a production that prioritizes a forced social agenda over coherent storytelling. The movie presents a cast of "misfit" protagonists who are written with zero depth beyond their compliance with modern identity politics. By centering the narrative on these hollow archetypes—while portraying a youth pastor as a cartoonish, drug-dealing villain—the film reveals its obvious bias. It replaces genuine suspense with predictable tropes, using a shallow plot about an ancient artifact to lecture & poison the audience rather than provide actual entertainment. It is a disjointed and transparent attempt at social engineering that fails to offer anything original or meaningful to the horror genre.

Gordon
A review by GordonR
April 12, 2026

Drull. Boring. Blase'. It's been done over and over. And these actors who have aged out of high school by about 10 years need to quit playing high school students, it stops new talent from coming up and getting their name out there. The long and short of it is I liked it better when it was called, 'Wishmaster'.

Videos