My quick rating - 4.4/10. I did think that The Whistler looked creepy when I added it to my slider a while back. It opens with text exposition laid over a scenic Venezuelan landscape, explaining that the Maria Lionza cult has been thriving for over 400 years. Ancient spirits, ritual practices, and a deeply rooted supernatural belief system? It’s a good way to begin a horror movie and certainly sufficient to attract any viewer who desires a horror movie centered on folklore possession.
The ritual scene at the beginning of the movie strengthens this hope, with a lady being kidnapped and utilized in a ritual to conjure The Whistler’s soul and then thrown away when she’s no longer useful. Someone gets attacked, blood is spilled, and the title card makes its dramatic entrance. At least the movie is kind enough to immediately answer the question of where the title came from.
Once the main story gets rolling, though, The Whistler starts tripping over its own characters, and Nicole is easily the biggest culprit. Diane Guerrero does what she can with the material, but Nicole is written as the kind of horror movie parent who seems completely immune to common sense. She’s grieving the loss of her daughter, which gives the film an emotional anchor, but the way she barrels through every warning is enough to make you want to yell at the screen.
When she’s told it’s too dangerous to perform a ceremony to speak with her dead child, her response is essentially, “I’ll pay whatever it costs.” Because apparently, in horror movies, ancient spirit rituals work like premium streaming subscriptions. If you’re going to dive headfirst into supernatural territory, maybe respecting the people who actually understand it would be a good place to start. Of course, someone from the cult immediately agrees to do it for the money, because bad decisions are clearly contagious here.
The Whistler itself is a pretty violent little menace when it actually gets going. There are some satisfyingly brutal moments, including a nasty disembowelment that leaves behind plenty of blood. The issue is that there just isn’t enough of that energy spread throughout the film. Director Diego Velasco clearly knows how to make a movie look good, and there are genuinely creepy moments sprinkled in, but the story never finds enough of an identity to separate itself from the pile of other possession flicks out there.
It is with the pacing that the film truly fails. It is a slow burn, one that sadly does not pay off its efforts until the last twenty minutes. And even then, all that happens is that the film has discovered how to pump life into itself. Nicole’s late-game leap into becoming some sort of instant occult expert is unintentionally hilarious, especially when she starts performing parts of a ritual she never even saw. Grief now comes with a crash course in Spanish and advanced demonology.
The flamenco music throughout was a nice touch, adding atmosphere and flavor to an otherwise familiar horror package. But then the movie tops it all off with a tidy Hollywood ending and the classic sequel tease, just in case this spirit wasn’t done whistling yet.






