I Declare War Review

I Declare War
A woodland game of Capture The Flag turns bloody when the kids start using real weapons.

by Patrick Peters |
Published on
Release Date:

06 Jun 2014

Running Time:

92 minutes

Certificate:

15

Original Title:

I Declare War

It's never entirely clear what Jason Lapeyre and Robert Wilson are trying to achieve with this trenchant but fatally contrived allegory, in which the war games of neighbourhood kids turn nasty. They boldly debunk the myth of idyllic suburban adolescence with the casual cruelty, racism, chauvinism and homophobia on display during a game of Capture The Flag. But the decision occasionally to replace the homemade weapons with real hardware is a major miscalculation that crucially crosses the line between hard-hitting critique and exploitation.

The set-up is potent, but the point of this postmodern teen flick (critique on teen attitudes towards violence? Anti-gun screed? Satire on prejudice?) is elusive.
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