Showing posts with label Jason Lapeyre. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jason Lapeyre. Show all posts

Sunday, September 9, 2012

I DECLARE WAR Premieres Tonight!



Jason Lapeyre and Robert Wilson's I Declare War premieres this afternoon at Scotiabank Theatre at 4:15 PM. Head over to our previous post to see the film's trailer and poster.

Tickets can be purchased:
  • ONLINETIFF.net/thefestival
  • BY PHONE: 416.599.TIFF or 1.888.599.8433 (Toll-free) 
  • IN PERSON
    • Festival Box Office; 225 King St. West
    • Scotiabank Theatre Box Office; 259 Richmond Street West


Further information about Jason Lapeyre and Robert Wilson's I Declare War can be found on the Festival website, as well as on the I Declare War WebsiteTwitter accountFacebook page, and IMDB page.

I DECLARE WAR screening times:
  • Sun., Sept. 9, Scotiabank 4 4:15 PM 
  • Tues., Sept. 11, Cineplex Yonge & Dundas 10 2:00 PM 
  • Fri., Sept. 14, Scotiabank 4 9:45 PM

Tuesday, September 4, 2012

5 Question Director Interview: I DECLARE WAR's Jason Lapeyre & Robert Wilson

The Vanguard Blog had a chance to ask five questions of the talented directors of I Declare War, Jason Lapeyre and Robert Wilson. And, since we're in a giving mood today we decided to share them with you. You're welcome; don't say we never did anything nice for you. Find the questions and answers below, along with screening times of your future favourite movie. And you better hope that you don't end up playing against these directors in a woods battle. (Starscream AND Boba Fett? We're screwed.)





1.) I Declare War: kids. In the woods. Kids in the woods with weaponry. Please, exactly where in the amazing, dark, recesses of your mind did you come up with this idea? Because it's awesome. 

Thanks! You'll have to jump in a time machine and ask the amazing, dark recesses of my 12-year-old mind, though, because that's when I first started running through the woods and pretending I was hunting and killing my friends. As for the script, I actually wrote it ten years ago, when I first started making films, just because it was the kind of movie I wanted to see. I also really wanted to tell a story about what it was like to be 12, and how intensely you feel things when you're that age, and a game of war felt like a good setting to get into the intensity of a 12-year-old's internal life.

2.) Quick: we're having a battle in the woods. You can pick five members for your team. Living, dead, fictional--who would you choose? (I already called dibs on Chuck Norris, sorry.)

Snake Eyes. Starscream. Spider-Man (John Romita, Jr., not Todd MacFarlane). Wolverine. Boba Fett. (All answers provided by the 12-year-old me.)  

3.) Just how was it with an entire principle cast of 12 and 13-year-olds? Was there a lot of dialogue improvisation? 

It was utterly professional, and a ton of fun. They kids were ridiculously committed to the script. We gave them a pretty long leash to say things in the way they felt most comfortable, and there was the odd word change if some of the slang felt unnatural to them, but by and large they loved this script and wanted to play it out the way it was written.

4.) I vividly remember playing war games with my brothers when I was little (with Nerf guns, as was the way for Kids of the Nineties) and I'm sure you do as well. I'm curious about these new generation kids: did they have more experience playing war games through video games, or do kids still get outside and run around? 

It was a little scary...when we first trained the kids on the weapons with our stunt coordinator, they knew the make and model of every weapon, on sight, and could recite them easily. "Is that the AR-15?  With modified grenade launcher?  Cool!" And we realized it was because of Call Of Duty. So yeah, most of the boys were into that game, but they still had all played Capture The Flag on the schoolyard. I can confirm for adults everywhere: children still play outside.

5.) I can imagine this film is going to get people talking, given that some people don't like the equation "children + weapons". Obviously there's a lot more to your film than just children and weapons and blood, oh my. What are you hoping audience members walk away with after having seen the film?

More than anything else, we just want audiences to be entertained and to experience the pleasure of a story well-told. It's a story about what it's like to be that age, and if people come away from the film empathizing with young people a little more, then that would be great.

(Questions thought up by Siân Melton; answers provided by Jason Lapeyre and Robert Wilson) 

I DECLARE WAR Screening Times:
Sun., Sept. 9th, 4:15 PM SCOTIABANK 4
Tue., Sept. 11th, 2:00 PM CINEPLEX YONGE & DUNDAS 10
Fri., Sept. 14th, 9:45 PM SCOTIABANK 4

Wednesday, August 29, 2012

I DECLARE WAR Poster and Trailer


Winner of "Best Film" at ActionFest 2012, I Declare War is a darkly funny look at when summer war games turn nasty. Directed by Jason Lapeyre and Robert Wilson, this Canadian film considers the effects of bullying while its young stars throw insults and as well as grenades.

Below are the poster and trailer for I Declare War, which plays the Toronto International Film Festival within the Vanguard programme.



Further information about Jason Lapeyre and Robert Wilson's I Declare War can be found on the Festival website, as well as on the I Declare War WebsiteTwitter accountFacebook page, and IMDB page.

I DECLARE WAR screening times:
  • Sun., Sept. 9, Scotiabank 4 4:15 PM 
  • Tues., Sept. 11, Cineplex Yonge & Dundas 10 2:00 PM 
  • Fri., Sept. 14, Scotiabank 4 9:45 PM

Monday, August 27, 2012

Director Profile: Jason Lapeyre & Robert Wilson (I DECLARE WAR)



If How I Met Your Mother has taught us anything about Canada, it's that "two beavers are better than one" (and that multiplication is important, kids). Likewise, two Canadian directors are better than one. Jason Lapeyre, co-director and writer, and Robert Wilson, co-director and producer, came together to bring us the strangely compelling child war-games film, I Declare War, at the 2012 Toronto International Film Festival

Readers of Rue Morgue and Wax Poetics will recognize Lapeyre's written contributions to the magazines. Lapeyre has also directed music videos and shorts,  including the 2011 documentary Faceless, and produced the award winning short, The Captured Bird. Clearly not content with just having one feature in the festival circuit this year, Lapeyre's other feature, Cold Blooded, has been shocking festival audiences. Cold Blooded was screened at the recent 2012 Fantasia Film Festival and 2012 Bare Bones Film Festival, where it walked away with the Audience Award, Best Canadian Film and Best Actress award, respectively. But even more notorious--and chillingly fitting for a suspenseful crime film--was that a man had a seizure during it's premiere at the Kingston Canadian Film Festival. (Coincidence? Perhaps, but, uh, maybe the weak of constitution should avoid finding out for themselves. Just in case.)

Lapeyre's partner in war-games, Wilson, is no stranger to the genre himself, having directed and produced an impressive share of horror films and music videos. He also worked on the documentary Metal: A Headbanger's Journey, which made it's debut at the 2005 Toronto International Film Festival. 

Lapeyre and Wilson have created an incredibly unique and captivating film in I Declare War, already having snagged top awards at the 2012 ActionFest. They were brave--and perhaps insane enough--to asked the question, "So what would happen if we put a bunch of 12-year-olds in the woods with grenades, AK-47s, and crossbows and pitted them against each other?" and the answer was I Declare War.

I DECLARE WAR Screening Times:
Sun., Sept. 9th, 4:15 PM SCOTIABANK 4
Tue., Sept. 11th, 2:00 PM CINEPLEX YONGE & DUNDAS 10
Fri., Sept. 14th, 9:45 PM SCOTIABANK 4