The gold is swiped from Mexico City's National Institute of Anthropology and History by a pair of opportunistic slackers: Wilson (Leonardo Ortizgris), our narrator and the notional conscience of the piece, and Juan, commonly known as Lazy Juan or Shorty (which is where the diminutive Bernal comes in), a veterinary student from an upper-middle class family whose doctor father (Alfredo Castro, Latin American cinema's new go-to for forbidding patriarchs) insists on putting his boy through an annual drug test. ("It's anal this year," he tells Juan, unnervingly.) Within this uptight milieu, Juan and Wilson come to represent mischief and rebellion. Juan spoils a family Christmas gathering by telling the youngsters Santa's not real, and he appears to have conceived the idea for the heist as payback for the earlier slight of being told he couldn't touch the exhibits. The duo are thus liberators, intent on returning the gold to its rightful burial place, yet they're also as naive as children. They end up falling out over this booty, not in that no-honour-among-thieves, Sierra Madre style, but in the manner of kindergartners squabbling over a toy - perhaps even that self-same Rubik's Cube.
The trick is that Ruizpalacios makes their waywardness infectious and involving. Consider the heist itself: a fiddly thing, necessitating the use of tacks and copper wire to shortcut the museum's alarm systems, and carried out in a Rififi-like silence. It's a setpiece that grants us the thrill of being somewhere we shouldn't be, doing something we shouldn't be doing - and seeing it pay off. And yet Ruizpalacios is just as interested in the way the boys' crime exposed a set of attitudes, opened up a faultline between the generations. To you and I, the heist may just resemble an unusually sophisticated variant of student hijinks. Yet to the Castro character, eyeballing the TV news coverage while blind to the fact he's sheltering those who carried out this raid, those responsible are "the dark shit of this country" and "deserve to be whipped in the town square". That's where the tension within this narrative comes from: our mounting fear these boys will end up receiving far more than just a light judicial slap on the wrist.
Museo is now available to rent via YouTube Originals.
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