The New York Times by A.O. Scott
This movie is rigorously and intensely lifelike, which is to say that it’s also a strange and moving work of art.
✭ ✭ ✭ ✭ Read critic reviews
Austria, United States · 2012
1h 46m
Director Jem Cohen
Starring Mary Margaret O'Hara, Bobby Sommer, Ela Piplits, Marcus O'Hara
Genre Drama
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A security guard working at the Kunsthistorisches Art Museum in Vienna strikes up a friendship with an enigmatic visitor, finding connection in their mutual appreciation of art and the museum space. The relationship brings perspective to the goings on at the museum and in the city, a crossroads for creative self-exploration.
The New York Times by A.O. Scott
This movie is rigorously and intensely lifelike, which is to say that it’s also a strange and moving work of art.
The film, a kind of hybrid between understated drama and essayistic tourism, approaches its subjects with uncommon patience and curiosity, lingering over objects and faces as if to savor their aesthetic qualities, eager to convey truths without authorial imposition.
The real strength of Cohen’s occasionally didactic drama, though, is in the way the film redirects your focus to the periphery and reminds you of the richness that resides there. It was an achievement Bruegel mastered early on. And it’s what makes Museum Hours its own work of art.
With a keen eye for the capacity of fine art to address a complex range of attitudes and experiences, Museum Hours effectively applies Cohen's existing strengths to a familiar scenario and rejuvenates it by delivering a powerfully contemplative look at the transformative ability of all art.
New York Post by Farran Smith Nehme
The film shows how quiet exteriors can mask deep interior lives, and how art feeds those lives. The view of art is richly intellectual, sometimes enthralling. But I confess, I liked Museum Hours best for answering a question I’ve always had: What is that guard thinking?
The A.V. Club by Ignatiy Vishnevetsky
Essentially an essay film, Museum Hours is less interested in plot than in using its characters as a way to give ideas shape and voice; however, because their performances are natural and improvisatory, the movie never seems didactic.
Slant Magazine by Jesse Cataldo
Jem Cohen's film finds its most salient tension in the fraught relationship between known and unknown objects.
The Globe and Mail (Toronto) by Liam Lacey
It’s a hybrid drama/art-history essay about how looking at art recasts our experience of looking at the world.
Museum Hours is an unusual film. It lacks a score yet feels like a sonata, intimate and musical. Secret harmonies are being heard.
Those who don't savor Cohen's leisurely rhythms will probably not respond to Museum Hours, and even the movie's admirers will admit that it could be a little tighter. One scene that might be trimmed is the one where museum-goers pose, naked as the people on the canvases around them. The interlude certainly isn't dull, but it is a little brazen for a film that encourages its viewers to find the beauty in more commonplace sights.
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