Ratings: 4.0/10
Runtime: 1h 33min
Genres: Horror
Director: Gene Gallerano, William Pisciotta
Writer: Gene Gallerano, William Pisciotta
Cast: Christina Bennett Lind, Linc Hand, Elizabeth Cappuccino
Language: English
The Yeti creeps in with cold teeth. Directed by Gene Gallerano and William Pisciotta, it opens on endless white. Snow. Wind. Silence that feels wrong. Then tracks. A small expedition pushes deeper into frozen terrain. Meanwhile the air thins and nerves fray fast. However, something watches. You can it feel it before you see it. A shape moves between storms, gone then closer. The camera stays tight despite the vastness. Breath fogs the lens. Ice cracks under boots. Moreover the sound design gnaws howling wind, distant thuds, a low growl that barely registers. Performances stay raw, stripped by fear and cold. No heroics just survival. What is the Yeti here? Myth? Predator? The film refuses to settle. Instead, it feeds dread in small, jagged pieces. Therefore, every step forward feels like a mistake. Some scenes linger too long but that drag builds pressure. Ultimately, it’s harsh, minimal and quietly vicious. It doesn’t overexplain it hunts. Streaming now on afdah movies, it leaves you cold, tense, and listening for something just beyond sight.