The President's Cake
12A
Why watch?
“Me and my grandma always wanted chickens when I was growing up, so seeing Lamia, the little girl who's The President's Cake's main focus, carrying a rooster in stills from the film, immediately drew me in. However, don't let the rooster and cake in the title mislead you into thinking this will be an easy watch. The film shows war from a child's perspective in a way I've never seen done so powerfully. From dramatic cinematography to nuanced acting from the two main children in the film, The President's Cake excels in all areas. It's both tender and heartbreaking and has become one of my favourite films I've ever seen.”
Martha Boyd,
Digital Marketing Coordinator
From debut Iraqi director Hasan Hadi, The President’s Cake is a beautiful tale of love, friendship and resilience told from the perspective of a child growing up under Saddam Hussein’s oppressive regime. Set during the first Gulf War, Lamia, a young girl from Iraq’s Mesopotamian Marshes, lives with her grandmother Bibi and her pet cockerel Hindi in a community struggling to get by under the harsh conditions of a country suffering under sanctions and at war. But under Saddam Hussein’s dictatorship, nothing will stop his mandatory birthday celebrations, including choosing a child from each school class across the land to bake a cake in his honour. Despite Lamia’s best efforts to avoid it, knowing how difficult it will be to source the ingredients, she is picked among her peers to produce the cake, which she must do, or face the consequences.
Lamia’s quest for the ingredients takes her from the rural marshlands into the city of Baghdad, allowing Hadi to explore the gamut of Iraqi society, painting a moving portrait of the resilience of a people caught between authoritarian rule and injudicious American imperialism.