Movie review: ‘Ottolenghi and the Cakes of Versailles’ inadvertently prescient sugar theater

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Criticism should strive to be evergreen. But criticism, and objects of critique, can almost never be divorced from their context: the context in which a film was made, and the context in which a film is viewed by a critic. Six months into a global pandemic, the charming documentary “Ottolenghi and the Cakes of Versailles,” about a high-end pastry party at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, startled me with the sense of a frustratingly intangible, very recent history. Remember museums? Events? Sharing unfettered indoor space with strangers? Let this documentary take you back to that world, which is so close, yet so far away.

The film is directed by Laura Gabbert, who has carved out a niche for herself in the food cinema world, having directed the Jonathan Gold documentary “City of Gold,” and an episode of “Ugly Delicious” (as well as “Sunset Story” and “No Impact Man”). Her work is about culture, because food is culture, and “Ottolenghi and the Cakes of Versailles” sits at a tantalizing intersection of food, art and history. It’s the story of a remarkable event at the Met that inadvertently ends up being somewhat shockingly prescient.

The maestro at the center of this is Yotam Ottolenghi, the London-based Israeli chef and cookbook author, whose tomes of Middle Eastern fusion recipes grace most every ambitious home cook’s shelf. Known for his London shop windows piled high with confections and salads and spices like a king’s table in the middle of the souk, Ottolenghi is the ideal candidate to produce a Versailles-themed dessert event for the Met. He studies Versailles, and then he studies Instagram, searching for cutting-edge international chefs and artists who are pushing the limits of pastry to produce cakes celebrating the artistic and technical patisserie innovations developed at Versailles. He taps five: Dominique Ansel (of “cronut” fame), Ghaya Oliveira of Restaurant DANIEL, Singaporean sweets impresario Janice Wong, British gelatin mold artists Bompas and Parr, and Ukrainian 3D cake designer Dinara Kasko.

There is much talk of Versailles as the epicenter of European politics, art, design, fashion, food, culture and trends in the 18th century, thanks to, of course, money, and lots of it. In turn, the art produced there was intended to display that wealth and power. This is well-articulated by Bard professor Deborah Krohn, who becomes Ottolenghi’s academic guide. In the 18th century, decadent, luxurious and rare foods like fruit and refined sugar were melted, mixed and molded into elaborate confectionary that screamed status, afforded to King Louis XVI. Today that status goes to the individual chefs who become celebrities on social media, and the event, which is more Met Gala than “Great British Bake Off,” underscores that. This is sugar theater, ready to be gobbled up.

It’s not until the cake plates are cleared that “Ottolenghi and the Cakes of Versailles” directly addresses the elephant in the room, which is where Marie Antoinette and King Louis XVI’s tale ends: at the guillotine. Tremendous inequality led the French to revolt against this 1% who hoarded wealth while the people lacked flour for bread. Manhattan’s shiny skyscrapers loom ominously over this discussion. Deep into an economic crisis, this notion has a greater impact than Gabbert or the participants could have known at the time. For such a sweet film, “Ottolenghi and the Cakes of Versailles” evolves into a complex exploration of the symbiotic relationship between money and art, and questions what the visibility of that conspicuous consumption could portend.

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‘OTTOLENGHI AND THE CAKES OF VERSAILLES’

3 stars

Cast: Yotam Ottolenghi, Dominique Ansel, Deborah Krohn, Ghaya Oliveira, Janice Wong, Dinara Kasko, Sam Bompas.

Directed by Laura Gabbert.

Running time: 1 hour, 15 minutes.

No MPAA rating

In select theaters and on demand/digital Friday

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