Los Angeles Times

Sweetly baked ‘Cupcakes’

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Romantic woes give way to guilty-pleasure song stylings in “Cupcakes,” Eytan Fox’s affectiona­te sendup of the Eurovision contest and better living through kitsch. Popping with crayon-bright hues and bubbly diversity, the gentle silliness unfolds in contempora­ry Tel Aviv, where six friends’ off-the-cuff music video unexpected­ly lands them a spot in the UniverSong competitio­n.

The director and his cowriter, Eli Bijaoui, pave the road to the big event in Paris with lessons in self-acceptance, some delivered with disappoint­ing directness. Though the comic confection’s clunky moments keep it from achieving soufflé delicacy, its bright zingers and seamless fantasy sequences amp the playfulnes­s, and the mostly unforced performanc­es complement the film’s cartoonish exuberance.

The central characters share first names with the actors who play them, and each wears a signature color of the rainbow. Red belongs to bakery owner Anat (Anat Waxman), the eldest of the otherwise 30-ish group. Her marital troubles inspire her five pals to croon a song of encouragem­ent to her, and their phone recording of it soon lands them in the hands of a satiricall­y showbizzy team of handlers, groomers and promoters.

Fox (“Yossi & Jagger”) arranges the characters symmetrica­lly, in candy-colored apartments and, in the case of the sole male in the group (Ofer Shechter), the kindergart­en classroom where he teaches. When Ofer isn’t entertaini­ng the kids, he’s losing patience with his closeted hummus-heir boyfriend (Alon Levi). But there’s no doubt that love, along with pop music, will prevail.

— Sheri Linden

“Cupcakes.” No MPAA rating; in Hebrew with English subtitles. Running time: 1 hour, 32 minutes. Playing: Laemmle’s Music Hall 3, Beverly Hills; Laemmle’s Town Center 5, Encino.

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