REVIEW: WHISTLE Evokes the Golden Age of High School Horror

Source: Fangoria

Chrys is just like every other high schooler: she loves listening to music, she is trying to make new friends, she has a crush on a girl in the hallway… and she has an ancient Aztec Death Whistle in her locker.

Chrys (short for Chrysanthemum) is the new girl in school. She has just moved from Chicago to a sleepy steel mill town, trying to escape whatever her previous life entailed. Whispers around campus are that she’s a junkie, that she killed her dad, that she just left rehab. But it doesn’t matter what’s true or not, it just matters that she can get through the rest of the school year in one piece. When she is assigned the locker of the star basketball player who mysteriously self-immolated six months ago, it happens to contain a mysterious object: an Aztec Death Whistle.

From there, it’s pretty straightforward: blow the whistle, hear its sound, and death comes for you. A franchise is born?

Whistle, which had its world premiere as the closing night film of Fantastic Fest 2025, doesn’t screen for general audiences until February of next year from IFC and Shudder. But the exceptional scares and heart of the film should carry word-of-mouth until then. English director Corin Hardy (The Nun) told the premiere audience that he wanted this to be a “traditional American high school horror movie, like A Nightmare on Elm Street.” Based on a short story and script by festival favorite Owen Egerton (Mercy Black), Whistle is a gruesome, funny, heartfelt throwback to films like I Know What You Did Last Summer, and in fact, probably more successful in its attempt to cultivate that specific feeling than the aforementioned’s recent legacy sequel.

With any “traditional American high school horror movie,” it is imperative that the young cast manages to be likeable and believable, especially as their day-to-days turn into living nightmares. Luckily for Whistle, its performances are some of its strongest elements. Dafne Keen (Logan) and Sophie Nélisse (Yellowjackets), both up-and-coming genre stars in their own right, are a really wholesome duo, believably navigating both a blossoming queer love story and a terrifying curse. Sky Yang (Rebel Moon) plays the bleached-blonde stoner archetype well, a goofy, sympathetic kid with mannerisms pulled right out of Fast Times at Ridgemont High

And the whistle itself is a well-designed MacGuffin, begging for a prop replica from some horror collectibles company out there. Its creepy eyes and intricate carvings make it instantly rather iconic, a goofy kind of scary that is treated like its own character. Genre stalwart Nick Frost plays Mr. Craven (get it?), a teacher at the high school who recognizes it as a valuable artifact. Its carvings apparently read: “Summon the dead.” And, once you hear it, the whistle marks you for death – and a particularly gruesome one at that. The now-cursed Breakfast Club of misfits are then thrust into several gory set-pieces, each more thrilling than the last, as they attempt to break the curse by whatever means possible.

The movie wears its inspirations on its sleeve and in its set dressings — whether the aforementioned Mr. Craven, or a pack of Cronenberg cigarettes, Muschetti cigars, or Verhoeven Steel — but it still manages to morph into its own beast by the end of its runtime. The unique, gnarly kills are the standout here, with each death (deservedly) receiving its own curtain call of credits during the end titles. Whistle is well-shot, well-edited, and legitimately scary at times. But perhaps the most scary part of the whole endeavor is script-based: the whistle has no justice, no morality clause. Simply: if you hear its shrieking cry, you die. The lore-building of the curse never breaks, allowing for the full story to be something both engaging and cathartic.

Whistle is a good example of pushing the medium while remaining true to its roots. There is something rather comforting within high school horror, a sub-genre traditionally filled with tropes ripe for self-parody. But Hardy elevates it with actual style, treating the material seriously and with a unique directorial flare. The high school setting has been updated slightly for the 2025 (er, 2026) audience with a good soundtrack of current standouts and covers, but it still feels rather timeless, perhaps still stuck in a previous era of horror. Maybe that’s why I gelled with it so much – simple, effective, scary, and fun. What else could you ask for? 

Independent Film Company & Shudder Acquire Horror Film ‘Whistle’ From ‘The Nun’s Corin Hardy

Source: Deadline

EXCLUSIVEIndependent Film Company and Shudder have acquired U.S. rights to Whistle, the new horror film from The Nun director Corin Hardy, starring Dafne Keen (Logan), Sophie Nélisse (Yellowjackets), Sky Yang (Rebel Moon), Percy Hynes White (My Old Ass) and Nick Frost (How to Train Your Dragon).

The film will be released wide in theaters at a date not yet disclosed. Black Bear is handling international sales.

Owen Egerton adapted the screenplay for Whistle from his own short story. The film watches as a misfit group of unwitting high school students stumble upon a cursed object, an ancient Aztec Death Whistle. Soon, they discover that blowing the whistle and the terrifying sound it emits will summon their future deaths to hunt them down. As the body count rises, the friends investigate the origins of the deadly artifact in a desperate effort to stop the horrifying chain of events that they have set in motion.

Whistle is made with the same heart-on-sleeve, disenfranchised-teen-spirit found in my favorite genre movies that I grew up watching,” said Hardy. “I was drawn to the mysterious mythology surrounding the ‘Death Whistle’ and how it presented me with the opportunity to create a variety of cinematic, imaginative and terrifying deaths. This film is built for the big screen experience, so I can’t wait for audiences to blow the WHISTLE with Independent Film Company and Shudder in cinemas!” Commented Adam Koehler, who serves as Director of Acquisitions and Productions for Independent Film Company, Shudder, and RLJE Films,

“Corin Hardy is a master of his craft and we’re overjoyed to be bringing this horrifying vision to audiences across the country. With WHISTLE, he’s created a vicious and bloody treat that will stand tall among the best and scariest horror films in recent box office history.”Whistle is produced by David Gross and Jesse Shapira for No Trace Camping, and Macdara Kelleher for Wild Atlantic Pictures. Koehler repped the buyers, with CAA Media Finance repping the filmmakers.

NO TRACE CAMPING ACQUIRES RIGHTS TO ‘THE DEAL OF A LIFETIME’ BY FREDRIK BACKMAN

Source: Deadline
EXCLUSIVE: No Trace Camping, the indie production company behind the Oscar nominated film Room has purchased the film rights to Fredrik Backman’s soon-to-be-published novella The Deal Of A Lifetime, which Atria Books is releasing on October 31. It’s about a man who sacrificed his family in the single-minded pursuit of success and the courageous little girl fighting for her life who crosses his path. Jeff Arkuss, David Gross and Jesse Shapira of No Trace Camping will produce the pic, while Backman, Neda Shafti Backman and Tor Jonasson will serve as exec producers.