Film Review
Comedy is a strange beast. Show it to one audience and it
provokes merely grudging ennui and annoyance. Show it to another
and the howls of amusement it evokes may well bring the roof
down. Like all art, its
raison
d'être depends on being observed, and when it is observed
the reaction it provokes is as wildly variable and unpredictable as the
human personality itself. It is this essential relationship
between art and the observer (without which art ceases to have any
intrinsic value) which
agent
provocateur director Jean-Michel Ribes explores, in his own
inimitably off-the-wall way, in this wondrously madcap comedy, an
admirable reworking of his popular Paris stage play.
Musée haut, musée bas
is provocative and thought-provoking, but mercifully it doesn't succumb
to the pretentious polemicising for which those connected with the art
world are famously renowned. Jean-Michel Ribes does not set out
to make a deep point about the value of art or how art is misunderstood
by contemporary society. Rather, he is merely poking mischievous
fun at the ludicrous behaviours which art engenders, by virtue of the
fact that it is something which exists outside our everyday
experiences. We no longer know what art is, so we deify it,
worship it unquestioningly in vast cathedral-like constructions, unable
to distinguish the worthless tat from the old masters. How can we
resist the lure of Kandinsky (even though we haven't a clue what his
art is meant to represent)? Forget religion, sex and the
afterlife. The ultimate mystery our society has to confront is
art. Just what is it and what is it for?
One thing the film has great fun with is the notion that we no longer
know where the boundary lies between life and art. With their
critic-baiting installations, Tracey Emin and her breed of modern
artists have effectively abolished the distinction between reality and
art's representation of reality (if it ever existed), and so the act of
strangling to death one's mother (to cite one of the more extreme
examples of Ribes' colourful thesis) is no longer murder but the
supreme act of artistic expression, and as likely a recipient of the
Turner Prize as a wigwam made from llama droppings or a stack of baked
bean tins arranged to resemble the genitalia of a squashed
porcupine. Ribes takes things to their logical extreme when
he makes us aware that it is the visitors to the museum who are the
art, not the dead things they come to look at. It is people, you
and me, who make up the ultimate art installation as we drench
ourselves in meaningless superlatives in front of a painting by Gauguin
(whilst failing to pronounce his name correctly) and are transcended by
a paroxysm of delight when we mistake a toilet-roll holder for the most
cogent expression of man's longing for the divine.
One area where Jean-Michel Ribes swims against the tide (literally, as
it turns out, thanks to some impressive CGI effects work) is in his
pretty aggressive nature bashing. In stark contrast to today's
tree-hugging politicians, Ribes portrays Nature as something that is to
be feared not revered, something that man must always fight against if
he is to survive, be it as an individual or as a species. Michel
Blanc's hilarious plant-hating curator may be a grotesque caricature
but it prompts us to reflect on whether our present environmental
concerns are well-judged or will merely hasten our demise. It
also poses the invidious question - which is more
beautiful, a natural landscape or an inspired artist's representation
of the same? Would we care if we lost the former if we still had
the latter (and the postcards we can make from it)? Or would we
not shed many more tears if nature were to run amok and decimate the
artistic marvels that man has striven to create over the past millennia?
Musée haut, musée bas
does indeed offer plenty of food for thought, but it is also highly
entertaining and, as it flits from one absurd situation to another,
assisted by an astounding all-star cast, it is almost as hard to take
in as a twenty-minute sprint through the Louvre. The humour by
and large has a distinctly British feel to it, which could explain why
the film received mixed reviews in France but tended to do better
elsewhere. You can sense the ghost of Monty Python in virtually
every scene, particularly so in the sequence in which a group of art
gallery visitors become art exhibits and then later in
The Poseidon Adventure-like
climax. Like any self-respecting museum,
Musée haut, musée bas
is so stuffed with treasures that no one can possibly take it all in in
a single viewing. Luckily, thanks to the miracles of modern
science (well, the DVD player at least), we can always go back and take
a more leisurely look at the weird delights that Jean-Michel Ribes has
assembled for us in his most peculiar of museums. Just be aware
that, as you do so, you may end up being short-listed for the Turner
Prize...
© James Travers 2011
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