IMO the Great Filter is behind us, and it's the leap of intelligence between animals like orcas, apes, raccoons, corvids, sharks, early hominids; and modern humans. Up to a certain point, intelligence and dexterity (raccoons can open complex locks, corvids can manipulate simple tools with their beaks) confers great evolutionary advantages that last for millions of years. But the jump to human intelligence does not. Many people think it does because it's allowed humans to dominate the planet, but it's a spark that flares into a momentary star in only a couple thousand years and immediately burns itself off. There is no particular evolutionary advantage to being able to construct nuclear weapons and possessing existential angst. And on this planet, it's proven that out of hundreds of billions of species, it only happened once as a fluke.
The Universe is probably teeming with simple life, on every third or fourth rocky planet. Might have even happened two or even three times in this very Solar System. Complex life on every tenth, "intelligent" life on every hundredth. But human-like life? If it ever pops up, it'll cull itself in very short order like we are in process of doing, leaving behind nothing but a giant pile of garbage that will erode away in a geologic blink of an eye. But there's no good reason it would.