Hasan Hadi바카라s The President바카라s Cake is a lively, haunting immersion into the absurdities, devastation and horrors of 1990s Iraq. There바카라s a thread here of children-propelled Iranian cinema but also something utterly distinctive. Hadi invites you to laugh, weep and be unforgettably shaken. It바카라s a spirited debut, rollicking in the energy people muster in hard-pressed circumstances.
UN-backed sanctions shroud the country. Amidst acute poverty, rank food shortages, skyrocketing prices, Saddam Hussein declares massive country-wide celebration of his birthday. Most can바카라t afford it except few rich city-slickers , who sit in silos willfully detached from random detentions happening right outside their door. The absurdity of Hussein바카라s order strikes all but no pushback is allowed space. Any resistance instantly lands people in jail. The President바카라s Cake presents a bleak vision. Both adults and kids steal. The nine-year-old Lamia (an indelible Banin Ahmad Nayef) lives with her grandmother Bibi (Waheed Thabet Khreibat) in desperate poverty. There바카라s also a rooster Hindi Lamia devotedly keeps close as a pet. Lamia and her grandmother just about cobble together a day바카라s small meal. She helps out as much as she can, studying on a boat by a lamp바카라s light as night falls. Lamia is god-fearing, the most duty-abiding kid that can exist. She바카라s cautious about the right course of action, not straying or being tempted, which her best friend Saeed (Sajad Mohamad Qasem) couldn바카라t care less about. Saeed is a liberal liar, spinning tall tales. It바카라s been while he바카라s seen his father who바카라s jailed. But Saeed is loyal in his attention, constantly watching out for Lamia. She바카라s so conscientious she buys easily into his presumably concocted anecdotes.


Everyone is just scavenging whatever they can get their hands on to stay afloat. At school, Lamia바카라s teacher takes away the sole apple from her bag that바카라d have been her lunch. Corruption and con artists are rife. Survival itself is contingent on the lawless, when the official administration has geared itself to suit a dictator바카라s nonsensical whims. The citizens are abandoned. Yet in classrooms, kids start the day with a pledge to 바카라sacrifice their blood바카라 for Hussein. Warmongering is written into public imagination바카라a demand to be aggressive with Hussein바카라s enemies is seen as a true patriotic act.
A lucky draw is held in class. The grandmother has taught Lamia ways of evasion. But there바카라s no escape. It falls to her to prepare the cake. Naturally, it spells doom for Lamia and her grandmother. How can they even afford it? Somehow, the grandmother scrapes out bare sustenance for them. Indulgences are an impossible dream. However, Lamia is bent on readying the cake, the fear of consequence hammered by the teacher. But in their remote marshlands, access to items required for the cake is unavailable. Lamia is also allured by visiting an amusement park Saeed has told her about. So, Lamia and Bibi set off for the city. A kind stranger gives them a ride. Apparently, it바카라s a wedding car. The groom is in it as well. He recounts how he didn바카라t get to see his would-be wife. The day he left his house, ready to meet her, he was hit by the 바카라American bombs바카라, blinding him.


It's only when they reach the city that Lamia realizes her grandmother is planning to put her in the care of richer people. She protests, but Bibi insists she can바카라t look after her any longer. She runs away, Saeed in tow. Bibi searches for Lamia but the police show no interest, dismissing her. They are preoccupied with ensuring arrangements for the birthday celebrations. Together, Lamia and Saeed pool in their best efforts and assemble the eggs, flour, sugar and baking powder. They negotiate their way through the city바카라s alleys and shopkeepers. Of course, they go up against all sorts of cheats, nasty, unpleasant people and sweet-talking predators. Friendship is tested but their bond is too strong, weathering frustration and hurtful words sputtered in an anguished instant. Ultimately even Lamia바카라s stiff honesty bends. It바카라s a joy to watch Nayef and Qasem riff off and spar with each other바카라the former heartbreaking, the latter sparkling with mischief. The purity they exude cradles the film, even as air raids occasionally puncture the scene.
The President바카라s Cake leads to a gut-wrenching ending. The kids might have achieved the task. It바카라s a bittersweet feeling바카라loss outweighing everything else. No compliment can square for the price paid in the film바카라s dramatic quest. Quickly, the real world with its hovering horrors crashes in. By turns endearing and horrific, The President바카라s Cake is a portrait of a people living in dire paradoxes바카라compelled to partake in pomp, while struggling to even feed themselves.
The President바카라s Cake premiered in Directors바카라 Fortnight at Cannes 2025.