Of the wax museums I've been too, this one has a certain weirdness factor to it. It's housed within what is one of Barcelona's more classic really nice buildings, consists of several floors and takes about two hours to tour. The figures are of a rather good likeness of the people they represent, but look like they were created 30 or 40 years ago. You are allowed to take photographs though I don't know whether or not flashes are prohibited, but there doesn't seem to be much supervision of the tour. Indeed, you are pretty much free to roam the area. Of the representations, they are generally set up in categories ranging from political notables such as Mao Tse-tung, Lenin, Charles De Gaulle, Castro, Che Guevara and the like to those who were prominent in the fields of science, royalty, music and the arts. There are also areas that didn't expect such as a walk through part of the interior of Jules Verne's fictional submarine, the Nautilus, a torture dungeon that reeks of the macabre as well as a prehistoric area where you will come face to face with Neanderthals.
As a wax museum it's certainly worthy of a visit but before you go, you might want to check its hours of operation as it is closed for about three hours in the early afternoon for lunch, or at least that is the reason they give though I have the gut feeling the actual purposes of closing involves the traditional Spanish siesta. read more