'Whistle': The horror movie everyone will be talking about
Early reviews are drawing parallels between "Whistle" and "Final Destination," and viewers who experience its chilling death scenes will immediately see the connection.
Hitting cinemas nationwide on Feb. 18, "Whistle" is the latest horror sensation from the creators of the "Final Destination" series.
A scene from 'Whistle'
Helmed by Corin Hardy—the director who terrified audiences with "The Nun"—"Whistle" marks his return to the big screen with another relentless vision of fear.
Hardy, renowned for his ability to create suffocating tension and seat-gripping suspense, delivers a profoundly unsettling film.
Approved by the Movie and Television Review and Classification Board (MTRCB) without cuts, "Whistle" offers an unfiltered, intense cinematic journey.
"Whistle" follows a group of high school students who stumble upon an ancient Aztec Death Whistle—a ritual instrument said to mimic the scream of the dead. Driven by curiosity and defiance, they blow it. They shouldn't have. The sound doesn't just echo—it summons.
Soon, each teen glimpses their own demise—sudden, violent, and disturbingly precise. Fear quickly gives way to inevitability as their visions begin to come true. Death doesn't rush. It waits. It watches. And when it comes, it strikes with chilling precision.
As the body count mounts, the friends scramble to uncover the cursed artifact's origins and break its deadly hold. But the deeper they search, the more undeniable the truth: The day you are born, so is your death. And once it hears you... it will find you.
"Whistle" is rated R-16 and has been approved by the MTRCB without cuts. It will be shown in cinemas nationwide beginning Feb. 18.