For years I had been waiting and excited to see this place, and now was my chance. It actually…read morejust barely gets four stars, as it was a bit of a disappointment despite the huge space and vast collection.
The ground floors are probably the most interesting. There, you will find many old movie posters and countless glass displays of old cameras and film equipment. There was also nobody else there except for staff, who didn't much bother to keep an eye on us so it felt very inviting in that respect.
Other interesting rooms were some interactive exhibits as you could place yourself in front of an actual video feed to see yourself on a monitor and dance around and do stupid stuff in front of green screens. More for kids I guess.
Speaking of kids, there was a huge amount of claymation and animation stuff there. It actually felt like an overwhelming amount was for this. Though some of the exhibits upstairs were definitely intended for a show-and-tell sort of thing (there was a model setup with a dolly track surrounding it, presumably to show patrons how it looks as a model and then to film)
There was also an exhibit of a Polish Filmmaker who I didn't know and cannot remember the name of. It was hard to engage in him since I was unfamiliar with his work. I was surprised there was very little about Roman Polanski at the museum, which is what I really hoped to see. My acquisition from the museum was an extremely inexpensive book on Polanski (put out by the museum/school press and is probably hard to find outside of the museum) which I bought without hesitation. It is about an inch thick and amounted to 8-10 bucks USD. Total steal.
Film geeks, you must check it out. Otherwise it may leave more to be desired.