We know Donald Trump thinks of himself as a cinéaste. His method of repeatedly consuming Jean Claude Van Damme’s gaudy 1988 thump-’em-up Bloodsport by fast-forwarding through the non-fighting scenes – first reported in a 1997 New Yorker profile – has long been viewed as a key to unlocking his scattershot pathology. The current US president also capped off the turbulent year of 2025 by demanding that the Rush Hour franchise be rebooted.
Did fellow controversial head of state Saddam Hussein have a strong opinion on Jackie Chan chalk-and-cheese buddy comedies? We’ll never know. But one unexpected cultural footnote in the late Iraqi president’s bloodthirsty history is that in the early 1980s he viewed cinema as a potentially useful propaganda tool.
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Oliver Reed was hired to star in Clash of Loyalties, an independent blockbuster funded at the dictator’s behest. This would-be historical epic dramatised the 1920 revolution against UK occupation in Mesopotamia that resulted in the formation of Iraq. Whether the movie was any good or not was rather overshadowed by the Iran-Iraq war and subsequent decades of antagonism between Hussein and the west.
Vanity feels like a psychological trait shared by every dictator but despite the fact that Hussein – or at least one of his official portraits – looms over almost every scene in The President’s Cake, it is unlikely he would have been a fan of this film. It is set in 1991 in the marshlands south of Baghdad, a time when the US-led Operation Desert Shield was transitioning into the more aggressive Operation Desert Storm. For the local populace that means yet more bombing raids on top of the acute food and medical supply shortages caused by western sanctions.
It is here that young girl Lamia (Baneen Ahmed Nayyef) and her brusque but loving grandmother Bibi (Waheeda Thabet Khreibat) struggle to keep their heads above water amid food scarcity and hyperinflation. It is two days before Hussein’s birthday, a time of enforced national celebration where every school class is expected to make a cake in his honour. This task falls to Lamia after her name is pulled from a lottery draw; her militaristic teacher makes a point of reminding her that failure will mean being brutally dragged in the streets.









