Hidden Figures

2016 "Meet the women you don't know, behind the mission you do."
7.8| 2h7m| PG| en
Details

The untold story of Katherine G. Johnson, Dorothy Vaughan and Mary Jackson – brilliant African-American women working at NASA and serving as the brains behind one of the greatest operations in history – the launch of astronaut John Glenn into orbit. The visionary trio crossed all gender and race lines to inspire generations to dream big.

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Reviews

Pluskylang Great Film overall
Micransix Crappy film
Comwayon A Disappointing Continuation
Chirphymium It's entirely possible that sending the audience out feeling lousy was intentional
GlennE Tedious and not enough time spent on the space technology. Implausible in places, like when Dorothy "fixes" the computer, it would not be possible without knowing the machine architecture. The men, apart from Harrison, were made to look stupid. IBM would not send incompetent technicians to such a high profile client like NASA. Too much of a political agenda for my liking, I thought it would be a lot better, rather disappointing.
Neil Welch Three brilliant people aim to have great careers at NASA. But this is 1961. And they are women. And black.Our three women - and I use the word "our" because this film is so effective at helping you to identify with them - are maths whiz Katherine (Taraji P Henson), trailblazing computer programmer Dorothy (Viola Davis), and engineer Mary (Janelle Monae). All three are gifted beyond even their contemporaries at NASA, but all three are held back by the double "handicaps" of sex and colour. This film tells their stories.There are several stories here - as well as the individual stories of the three women, there is also the story of fighting to get John Glenn into orbit and safely returned to Earth, and a variety of what would be called sub-plots if this were fiction.But it isn't fiction. Dramatised for the screen, yes, but the substance here is true, and it is sobering to realise that the colour bar in the USA was fully operational so recently.For all that we are presented with a dispiriting picture of how things were, we are never lectured to. This film is rich and heartwarming, helped by the portrayal of these three great women whose achievements and real-life pictures are shown with the end credits. These are strong characters, nicely drawn. We like them, and are pleased to see that their abilities and achievements are finally recognised. The performances here are all good - the principals hold the film, of course. but Kevin Costner as the Head of the Mission Control maths department is another sympathetic character, while Kirsten Dunst and Jim Parsons are effectively less so.The period detail is good. The film is paced well, subject only to a bit too much time given to Katherine's half-mile runs to the toilet. And there is quite a lot of humour. For a two-hour film, the time never drags. And, for a film which addresses a worthy, socially important subject, it never forgets to be entertaining.I enjoyed this rather more than some of the other Best Film contenders for this year's Oscars.
pitsiponi Last night i was browsing my cable for a good movie to watch. I came across this one, checked its IMDB rating and though to myself "seems legit, let's watch it". After finishing it, i thought "I need to create an IMDB account and review this movie/farse". So you wanna watch a serious movie about racism? There are masterpieces out there. American History X comes in mind right away. A true anti-racist statement. Just ignore Hidden Figures. I can imagine how this movie was created. A bunch of people got into a room and said "let's create a movie that is politically correct in every frame possible". There is a scene in this movie which, I'd say, sums up the entire movie. The launch team is not entirely sure about the trajectory of the rocket. So John Glenn all suited up in his space suit, is delaying the rocket launch sequence, standing by the rocket, waiting by the phone for the brilliant black girl to call and confirm the trajectory. I mean....... really? This really happened? It is just propaganda and it's blatant. This movie just promotes an agenda and has nothing to do with cinematography. To summarize. This movie is trash. Just watch American History X.
gustavodelgadov Great film that shows honor to that mangnificent women, it is an inspirational film that makes you wish to be like them, fight for equality and for your dreams. This film also shows the importance of hard work, that soon or later will show the benefits. Great performances by Taraji, Octavia and Janelle, performances by Jim Parsons and Kirsten Dunst were good even when I don't expected that. That women deserved that everyone see this movie and their amazong work at NASA.