A gossamer-light musical comedy
03/14/2013 11:35
Eytan Fox’s film ‘Cupcakes’ is sweet but not fattening.
cupcakes Photo: Courtesy
Cupcakes
Hebrew title: Bananot
Directed by Eytan Fox With Yael Bar-Zohar, Dana
Ivgi, Anat Waxman, Keren Berger, Efrat Dor, Ofer Shechter
Running time:1 hour,
30 minutes In Hebrew. Check with theaters for subtitle information
Eytan Fox’s
latest film Cupcakes (in Hebrew it’s called Bananot ) revives the tradition of
Israeli movie musicals. It’s a stylized, gossamer-light musical comedy with
gorgeous production design, a great pop score and, best of all, a group of
actors who get to have fun on screen, singing and dancing together.
In
the past, there were a few genuine Israeli musicals, like the very dated 1974
Yehoram Gaon vehicle Kazablan and Avi Nesher’s 1978 cult classic about an army
entertainment group Ha’lahaka (The Troupe). There used to be many movies that
featured pop songs prominently, such as Hashoter Azulai (The Policeman), which
is as famous for the Ehud Manor/Nurit Hirsch theme song as for the film itself.
But although Israeli movies have gone through a renaissance over the past
decade, music has rarely been an important element. Fox has been one of the few
directors in recent years to devote care to the music in his movies. The song
“Bo” (Come) by Rita has an important place in Fox’s 2002 Yossi & Jagger ,
and Ivri Lider recorded a beautiful new version of it for that
film. Fox’s television 2009 television miniseries, Mary Lou , was a
musical drama that highlighted music by Zvika Pik. So it’s fitting and very
welcome that Fox has chosen to bring Israeli music back to the big screen with
Cupcakes .
The story hearkens back to a simpler time, and the narration
reminds us that not long ago, people knew their neighbors and there was only one
television channel. Nostalgic for those days, a group of friends in a Tel Aviv
suburb get together to watch Universong, a Eurovision-like television song
contest. They’d all like to forget the stress of their daily lives. Yael (Yael
Bar-Zohar) is a former beauty queen who is unfulfilled by her job as a corporate
lawyer; Dana (Dana Ivgi) is a stressed-out aide to a cabinet minister and
timidly tries to please her traditional father; Anat (Anat Waxman), has a
successful bakery but an unsuccessful marriage; Keren (Keren Berger) is a shy
blogger; Efrat (Efrat Dor) is a frustrated singer- songwriter whose career has
stalled; and Ofer (Ofer Shechter) is a nursery-school teacher who is upset that
his boyfriend, a spokesmodel for his family’s famous brand of humous, is still
in the closet and won’t publicly acknowledge their romance. When the night of
the Universong final rolls around, they gather to watch and are depressed by the
lifelessness of the Israeli entry, a parody of many recent offerings, a flashy,
grating song about “amour.” After they realize that Anat is distraught
over the crisis in her marriage, they compose a song to cheer her up. As a lark,
Ofer enters their cellphone video of it in next year’s contest, and it becomes
Israel’s entry.
When a group of comically inept baddies from the Israel
Broadcasting Authority press them to make their song into the kind of slick
ditty they wrote it to rebel against, they are faced with a dilemma. Do they
sell out and go to the contest or do they stay true to themselves and somehow
raise the money on their own to head for the competition? I won’t be giving
anything away when I reveal that the final section of the film takes place at
the contest finals in Paris, with the impish French star Edouard Baer as the
master of ceremonies.
None of this is realistic, nor is it meant to be.
It’s glorious escapism, in the tradition of the films of Jacques Demy (The
Umbrellas of Cherbourg). The music is light and catchy, the cupcakes Anat bakes
look tasty, and the décor and outfits are cute. Fox even manages to give a fresh
take on a ride through Paris, as each of the characters views the city through
sunglasses tinted in the special color each wears throughout the
film.
The more you know and like Eurovision, the funnier you’ll find the
send-ups of typical Eurovision production numbers and hosts. But even
those who are not into Eurovision will have fun at this infectious and enjoyable
movie. Watching Cupcakes is like taking an extravagant 90-minute vacation
from reality, and who couldn’t use a vacation these days?