Jen K.
Yelp
All hat, no cattle, as they say in Texas.
Of all the museums I visited in Paris, and there were many, this was by far the least interesting. Not sure if something was lost in translation, or I expected too much.
All of my guide books played up the haunted aspects of the building's history and would say the ghosts of the guillotine must still wander the eerie halls. Oh, the menacing grandeur! And while it is beautiful outside and in, befitting its creation as a royal residence, the exhibits caused me to shake my head not in terror, but in bemusement.
The Conciergerie gained fame, more like infamy, by being the prison and execution point for most prisoners (4,000) during the French Revolution. All told, it operated as a prison from 1391 until 1914, and its most famous prisoner was Marie-Antoinette. In one of the upstairs galleries you can see a list of prisoners and their occupations. And I did find a friend's name (same surname and first initial) which was an unexpected surprise.
There are so many other museums that have well curated exhibits and such attention to detail, this was a let down. The only high point (or was it a low point), was the ridiculously flirtatious guard collecting tickets.
To give you an example, most of the "highlights" mentioned in my guidebook turned out to be recreations. So, while they attempt to reconstruct what Marie-Antoinette's cell would have looked like, there were renovations so it is a reasonable facsimile.
What was oddest to me is that the main hall was filled with all sorts of "prison art" most of which was just plain bad. And the topper were the castle recreations, by those masters at Playmobil and Lego. I really don't need to see Harry Potter's Hogwarts at a historic site in Paris.
I was doing some serious head scratching here.
The only good news for me was that I didn't pay much because it was part of my Paris Museum Pass. But, this was the only location where I didn't get to jump the ticket line with my pass because they do the security screening first and everyone queues up in the same line.
Saint-Chapelle is in the same complex, and I found that a bit more interesting. So the structure and surroundings were engaging, but the museum's contents were not.