Honestly, no Gen-X’er would ever put their lips on a macabre pre-Columbian artifact they found in a dead classmate’s locker. As for Millennials and Gen Z? Yeah, maybe they would. That’s why the 1980s generation will outlive them all and save our nation. To prove the point, another batch of high school kids inadvertently summon an ancient evil in Corin Hardy’s Whistle, which premieres this Friday on Shudder.
After
rattling in the winning basket, Mason “Horse” Raymore burned to death in the
showers. Weird, right? Lucky transfer student Chrys Willet, fresh out of rehab,
inherits his locker, which dos not sit well with his jerky friend, Dean
Jackson. Awkwardly, Willet’s cousin Rel Taylor has long carried a torch for
Jackson’s popular girlfriend, Grace Browning, who is duly embarrassed by her
boyfriend’s behavior. Perversely, the incident earns them all a session of Breakfast
Club-ish detention, along with Ellie Gains, the would-be mediator, for whom
Willet immediately starts carrying her own torch.
She
also brings the creepy “death-whistle” thingy she found in her locker. Arrogant
Mr. Craven recognizes it is a potentially valuable pre-Columbian artifact, so
he confiscates it. He also blows through it. Okay, actor Nick Frost is Gen X, but
he only did it to test the condition, for re-sale purposes. Our generation is even
more enterprising than cautious. Of course, he dies just the same. By that time,
Taylor had already stolen it back and brought it to Browning’s cozy pool
soiree, since they are all friends now (except Jackson). And what do you think
she does?
The
nature of the Aztec death demon is somewhat interesting, but for the most part,
Whistle plays out like a bland imitation of Bishal Dutta’s vastly
superior It Lives Inside, in which a beleaguered teenager also lugs around
a demon-bound knick-knack. Unfortunately, Whistle is not nearly as distinctive
or scary.
To the credit of screenwriter Owen Edgerton, the death-whistle’s Aztec backstory intrigues and the two potential co-final girls’ survival strategy is rather clever. However, the character and cast are all quite commonplace. It simply isn’t sufficiently special to recommend Whistle when it starts streaming Friday (5/8) on Shudder.




























