I Declare War

April. 15,2012      NR
Rating:
6
Trailer Synopsis Cast

Summer war games between the neighborhood kids turns deadly serious when jealousy and betrayal enter the mix, in this alternately hilarious and horrifying black comedy that mixes equal parts Lord of the Flies and Roald Dahl.

Siam Yu as  Kwon
Gage Munroe as  PK
Michael Friend as  Skinner
Aidan Gouveia as  Quinn
Mackenzie Munro as  Jess
Alex Cardillo as  Frost
Dyson Fyke as  Sikorski
Andy Reid as  Wesley
Kolton Stewart as  Caleb

Reviews

Hottoceame
2012/04/15

The Age of Commercialism

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Aiden Melton
2012/04/16

The storyline feels a little thin and moth-eaten in parts but this sequel is plenty of fun.

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Matylda Swan
2012/04/17

It is a whirlwind of delight --- attractive actors, stunning couture, spectacular sets and outrageous parties.

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Raymond Sierra
2012/04/18

The film may be flawed, but its message is not.

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gregking4
2012/04/19

The Dirty Dozen and Platoon meets Lord Of The Flies? In a forest, a group of 12-year old boys play a game of Capture The Flag. The rules of this war game are fairly simple - the general gets to pick his own team; the base cannot be moved; when you are shot you must wait a certain period of time before rejoining; if killed by a grenade you go home; and whoever captures the enemy's flag wins the game. PK (Gage Munroe, from TV series Justin Time, etc) is a skilled tactician with knowledge of military strategies and he has never lost a war game. But this time there is another dynamic at play as simmering animosities, deep seeded resentments, jealousies and petty rivalry surface and ensure that the war game turns nasty. The fine line between imagination and fantasy and bloody reality become blurred. And the introduction of a girl into one of the teams this time brings in an air of sexual tension and jealousy. I Declare War is a disturbing but original parable that shows what happens to children's games when the rules break down and there is an absence of parental supervision. Writer/director Jason Lapeyre and co-director Robert Wilson explore many of the usual tropes of the adolescent coming of age drama, and mix them with the masculine themes and violence of a war movie. Although the boys are playing with sticks and balloons, the film makers occasionally show them with real weapons. There is a dark, vicious undercurrent of humour running through the material. The performances of the young cast are impressive, with Monroe a standout as the driven PK. Michael Friend is wonderful as the psychotic and sadistic Skinner, who has taken command of the rival army and is determined to win at all costs. This is a thought provoking film that deserves a broad release.

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in1984
2012/04/20

7.1 of 10. Far more entertaining than the average war film, and far more insightful. It's tempting, and would be too easy, to compare it to Lord of the Flies given the ages fo the combatants. It is a more realistic and more likely version of Lord of the Flies, something that could easily happen in bigger town or distant suburb, maybe South Park in the 6th or 7th grade or Kids (1995) 3 years earlier and a 100 miles north of New York City. Part of the enjoyment is that it does set itself apart from most of the common teen/child story lines.Outside of some annoyances involving actions and characters that seem to be stretching reality or purely for sex appeal to naive tweens (the power bra wearing 13ish girl), it immerses and continues to keep you guessing as to the outcome. It's not a film to watch for the action of war as much as the mystery and intrigue, as if a spy game more than a war game.

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johnnyinmtl
2012/04/21

I'll have to admit that going into this film my first thought was that maybe while playing an innocent game real weapons were found and it turned deadly. (In hindsight, too bad this wasn't the fact).I really don't have too much to say about this at all. The children, I guess, did as well as they could and maybe even two or three of them will make a career out of acting. Only the future will tell. I do not remember any outstanding scenes at all.I think though that I can honestly say that the two lead characters in this most definitely had some kind of psychological problems. It does become apparent in at least one of them and with the other one, as an armchair psychiatrist, I would find some kind of therapy for him. If this was real life, these two boys would definitely need professional help.I just don't have any idea of what to take away from this story. I give it a 3 only because it really didn't insult my intelligence and the kids I think did their best with what they had.

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kvalentine926-189-516307
2012/04/22

I do not know what movie the other reviewers were watching because "I declare war" was 90 minutes that I wasted watching this crap. The kids repeatedly mouthing innate conversations while on the hunt for the enemy camp that no real kids would actually be saying. A so called wannabe military strategist General PK replying "no" when a kid asked if Napoleon ever lose a war, I guess the movie writer never heard about Waterloo.The only part of the movie that I found even remotely amusing was when the kid returned to the enemy camp where he had been tortured and overacted his death scene after being shot by the enemy camp kids.I believe this would have made a decent 30 minute episode of the new twilight zone. Anyone who thinks this movie belonged in the top ten movies of 2012 probably also thinks Spring Breakers should get a Best Movie Oscar nomination.

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