The film drops us into the abandoned playground of Chernobyl’s once-bustling workers — the now derelict Pripyat — a location many will recognise from countless chilling documentaries and, of course, that unforgettable mission in Call of Duty: Modern Warfare. But this is no pixelated crawl through digital dread — this time you’re trapped with a ragtag crew of backpackers, a swoony couple, a camera-happy thrill-seeker, and an extreme-tour guide with an attitude as radioactive as the soil they’re stomping on.
As the group pokes around rusting Ferris wheels and crumbling apartment blocks, things take the expected sinister turn. Parker’s direction relies on old-school tension rather than buckets of gore, squeezing jump scares out of every flickering light bulb and distant scuttling noise. It’s all about that eerie hush of the empty city — until it isn’t.
One of the film’s greatest assets is Pripyat itself. You’d be hard-pressed to find a more naturally unnerving setting, where each vacant building feels like it could swallow you whole. There’s no need for fancy CGI ghosts when your backdrop is a monument to one of humanity’s greatest nuclear missteps. It’s real horror wrapped in barbed-wire history.
Sure, some of the character dynamics are predictable — yes, the wide-eyed lovers make googly eyes right up until someone’s eyeballs get wide for more existential reasons. But “Chernobyl Diaries” delights in toying with who gets to scream next. Just when you think you’ve got its Final Girl pegged, the film flips your expectations and chucks another red herring into the irradiated mix.
If you’re the sort to binge “The Hills Have Eyes” or sit smugly through “The Blair Witch Project” while scoffing at the handheld horror, you’ll find “Chernobyl Diaries” scratches a similar itch — but don’t expect it to reinvent the wheel. It doesn’t try to mask its B-movie backbone with faux documentary style or found-footage gimmicks. Instead, it leans heavily on atmosphere, a nerve-jangling score, and the sheer bleak majesty of Pripyat’s crumbling facades to do its heavy lifting.
It’s not a masterpiece — not by a mile — but it knows exactly what it is: a tight, jumpy, sometimes cliché, sometimes subversive slice of radioactive suspense. Whether it leaves you wanting a sequel or just more vodka to settle your nerves depends entirely on your threshold for nerve-shredding tension and wobbly flashlights cutting through endless Soviet gloom.
In short: if you fancy a short holiday in the world’s most famous exclusion zone — from the comfort of your sofa, no hazmat suit required — “Chernobyl Diaries” is worth a watch. Just maybe keep the lights on, yeah? Camp Cape will see you on the other side.

