Hidden Figures
Came out; 2016
Time; 2 hours 7 minutes
Watched: HBO Max
Rating; PG for thematic elements and some language
IMDB Rating; 7.8/10
Caution; Spoiler Alert
Staring;
Taraji P. Hanson as Katherine G Johnson
Octavia Spencer as Dorothy Vaughan
Janelle Monae as Mary Jackson
Kevin Costner as Al Harris
Kirsten Dunst as Vivian Mitchell
Jim Parsons as Paul Stafford
Mahershala Ali as Colonel Jim Johnson
Aldis Hodge as Levi Jackson
Glen Powell as John Glenn
Story Line;
As the United States raced against Russia to put a man in space, NASA found untapped talent in a group of African-American female mathematicians that served as the brains behind one of the greatest operations in U.S. history. Based on the unbelievably true life stories of three of these women, known as "human computers", we follow these women as they quickly rose the ranks of NASA alongside many of history's greatest minds specifically tasked with calculating the momentous launch of astronaut John Glenn into orbit, and guaranteeing his safe return. Dorothy Vaughan, Mary Jackson, and Katherine Gobels Johnson crossed all gender, race, and professional lines while their brilliance and desire to dream big, beyond anything ever accomplished before by the human race, firmly cemented them in U.S. history as true American heroes
Thoughts;
This was a husband decided he suddenly wanted to watch. I remember hearing about it when it came out but never had an interest.
Turns out, it's a very well put together movie. I could have done without some of the sideline stories but all in all this was amazing
They did a great job showing the racism that these women faced. I could NEVER image being treated like that, as no one should!
CAUTION; Major Spoiler Alert
BASED
ON A TRUE STORY
The film opens in White Sulphur Springs, West
Virginia in 1926. A young Katherine Coleman (Lidya
Jewett) is waiting, naming the geometric shapes in a stained
glass window, while her parents talk to a school official. The
official wants to sent Katherine to a school for gifted students --
she's an advanced student and a genius at math. The only such school
for "colored" students starts at the sixth grade and
Katherine is only eight, so she will have to skip several grades.
That worries her parents, but they agree it will be best for her,
even though the family will have to move. Katherine's teacher gives
her parents some money to help with the move, from a collection all
the teachers contributed to.
At the new school, a teacher asks
Katherine to tackle an algebra problem on the blackboard; the camera
zooms in on the teacher's hand as he passes Katherine the chalk.
Katherine solves the problem without hesitation, then turns around
and explains it to her teenaged classmates.
In Hampton,
Virginia, in 1961, an adult Katherine (Taraji
P. Henson), now Katherine Goble, is stuck on the side of the road
with the two co-workers she carpools with, Dorothy Vaughan (Octavia
Spencer) and Mary Jackson (Janelle
Monáe). A racist police officer stops and asks for
identification. When they explain that they work at NASA, he changes
his tune; he's surprised they hire black women, but he's impressed.
He seems very well-versed in NASA and asserts that the Americans have
to beat the Russians in the Space Race. He asks if they've met the
astronauts; Mary answers that they have but it's clear from the
others' expressions that they're kept separate from them. Dorothy
manages to get the car up and running and the police officer provides
them an escort -- lights and sirens blazing -- to the NASA Langley
Research Center, which they find ironic since it's not usually a
group of black people speeding to follow a police car.
The
Space Task Group watches a newsreel about Russia's launch of Sputnik
1, the first artificial satellite. In the ensuing discussion, leaders
worry that the Soviets' access to space could allow them to spy on
America. The man in charge demands that Al Harrison (Kevin
Costner) get them up there because they can't justify the cost of
a space program that doesn't put anyone in space. A man in the crowd,
Paul Stafford (Jim
Parsons), makes a snooty comment and is asked what his position
is. He explains he is the head engineer.
The three women work
at the West Area Computing division, segregated from the rest of
Langley Research Center, along with many other black women who work
as computers -- meaning they do math by hand. Dorothy gives out new
assignments to the group. Mary wants to work as an engineer but she
is told she is going to be assisting the male engineers. Vivian
Mitchell (Kirsten
Dunst), Dorothy's boss, comes in to talk to Dorothy. She tells
her the Space Task Group needs a new computer who can do analytic
geometry. Dorothy assigns Katherine because she knows analytic
geometry and she's the all-around best at numbers.
Vivian
(whom the black women all address as Mrs. Mitchell, though she calls
them by their first names) escorts Katherine to the Flight Research
Division elsewhere on the campus, telling her that the dress code for
women is skirts below the knee and no jewelry except maybe pearls.
She tells Katherine the department she's joining is demanding and has
dismissed several computers lately; she doesn't expect Katherine to
last long. She warns her not to speak to the department head, Mr.
Harrison, unless he speaks to her first. Vivian notes that they've
never had a colored person in that department and admonishes
Katherine not to embarrass her. Katherine enters the large area where
white men are working, some at desks and some at equations on
blackboards so tall they need ladders. Mr. Harrison's glass-walled
office overlooks the work area. Katherine is mistaken for a janitor
and the men act rudely towards her.
In the engineering
department, Mary carries her papers through a sealed chamber where a
space capsule is about to undergo wind tunnel testing; she stops to
admire it. As the test countdown nears zero, the heel of her shoe
gets caught in a grate on the floor and she can't pry it loose. The
male engineers in the observation room shout that her life is not
worth a shoe so she abandons it and joins the engineers behind the
glass. The space capsule fails the wind test -- many of its louvered
exterior heat shielding panels fly off. Mary and the engineers
examine it and the head engineer, Karl Zielinski (Olek
Krupa), muses that they could use a corrugated heat shield. Mary
suggests that they try different fasteners for the existing panels
instead. Zielinski says she ought to be an engineer, and she says
that she's a negro woman, and she's "not gonna entertain the
impossible." He asks, if she was a white man, would she wish to
be an engineer? She responds that she wouldn't have to; she'd already
be one. Mary explains that the only schools that have the programs
needed to become an engineer are off limits to colored
people.
Dorothy asks Vivian if she can be promoted to
supervisor since she's doing the work of a supervisor already. But
Vivian refuses -- claiming it's not her call -- which Dorothy has to
remain diplomatic about because otherwise she might lose her job.
Meanwhile, Katherine is given a lot of work to check by Paul
Stafford, who is short with her, telling her his numbers are perfect
and he needs them checked by the end of the day. He has also blacked
out a lot of information as if Katherine couldn't be trusted with it,
saying she doesn't have a high enough security clearance. She has to
hold it up to the light to read it because she can't solve the
problems otherwise.
Time passes and Katherine needs to use the
restroom. She asks Ruth (Kimberly
Quinn), who's white and the only other woman in the department,
where it is and is told, "I don't know where YOUR bathroom is."
Katherine goes outside, needing to pee, but realizes the bathroom in
that building is for white women only and she can't sneak in because
some white women are loitering nearby. She has to leave the building
and run half a mile to the colored women's bathroom in the West Area
Computing division she used to work in. She brings her work with her
and continues to proof it while she pees.
That night, Dorothy
is in a bad mood as she drives the other two home, complaining about
Vivian not making her a supervisor when she's been working as one for
years. Katherine gets home and finds her three daughters fighting in
their bedroom. (It turns out Katherine is a widow, and her mother
(Donna
Biscoe) takes care of her children while she works.) The young
ones want to know why the oldest sister gets her own bed. Katherine
says if they want to take on the same chores and responsibilities,
they can earn the right to the bed. The younger girls agree they are
fine sharing. They complain that their mom has been gone for a long
time and she cites her new position as the cause.
The three
women go to church with their families and a handsome colonel
(Mahershala
Ali) catches Katherine's eye. At the barbecue afterwards, Mary
signals for the man, Jim Johnson, to come over and talk to Katherine.
He does, and Dorothy and Mary make themselves scarce. Jim and
Katherine flirt with each other, but he gets off on the wrong foot
when he hears about her work at NASA, expressing surprise that they
"let women" do something "so taxing." She tells
him off and marches away.
Back at NASA, Katherine pours
herself a cup of coffee, which makes all the white people in the
Space Task Group stare at her in disapproving surprise -- in
segregated Virginia, white and colored people don't usually drink
from the same pot. Nobody says anything, but the next day when
Katherine looks for coffee she finds a separate pot labeled
"Colored."
Al Harrison joins the group and asks if
anyone wants to take a crack at an equation on a large chalkboard
that has gone unsolved. Nobody notices but Katherine steps up and
does the math. Time passes and Al asks who solved the problem. When
Katherine admits she did, he asks what she does and Katherine tells
him she is checking work. She shows him and he asks how she's able to
work with all the blacked out sections. She demonstrates that you can
read the blacked-out text if you hold the paper up to the light. She
requests that she get uncensored reports in the future. Al agrees,
saying that she's not a Russian spy so there's no reason to keep
information from her. Stafford, who is in Harrison's office during
this exchange, is chagrined.
The NASA employees are gathered
out on the launch site to meet the astronauts, including John Glenn
(Glen
Powell). Glenn will later pilot the Friendship 7, becoming the
first American in orbit. He is discouraged from greeting the black
women, who are standing apart from the white employees, but he comes
over anyway and proves to be friendly.
At a party where many
couples are dancing to music on the radio, Col. Johnson approaches
Katherine, who's very reserved and clearly still thinking about what
he said about her work when they first met. He asks her to dance and
apologizes for disrespecting her. They see each other often during
the next months.
Katherine is assigned to write up reports
and, because the majority of the research is hers, puts her name on
the byline after Paul Stafford's. When Stafford sees it, he makes her
retype the cover sheet without her name because computers aren't
allowed to author reports.
On a rainy day, Katherine sprints
the long distance to use the colored women's rest room. Al Harrison
comes to her desk looking for her, but -- not for the first time --
she's missing. When she returns, Harrison asks her why she is gone
for so long every day. Soaking wet, Katherine launches into a tirade
about how she has to run half a mile to the west campus to use the
colored women's rest room because there's no toilet she's allowed to
use in the building they're working in. She adds that she's not
allowed to drink coffee from the same pot as everyone else and she's
been forbidden to wear any jewelry other than pearls, but she's never
owned any -- NASA doesn't pay colored computers enough to afford
pearls. Al listens closely. He doesn't say anything, but after
Katherine storms out, he walks over to the coffee station and rips
the "Colored" label off her coffee pot. In the next scene,
a crowd watches as Al attacks the COLORED WOMEN bathroom sign in the
West Area Computing division with a crowbar. When it falls, he says
from now on, there will be no segregation of bathrooms: "Here at
NASA, we all pee the same color."
Dorothy has been
curious about a large empty room near her office with windows facing
the hallway. When she sees that a big digital computer has been
installed there, she sneaks in and studies the IBM machine they've
set up. Later, she takes her children to the library and finds a book
on FORTRAN programming. A white woman spots her and complains she's
in the wrong section. Dorothy tells her that they didn't have the
book she wanted in the colored section. She is kicked out of the
library but once on the bus, she reveals to her children that she has
taken the FORTRAN book with her. When her son asks her about it,
Dorothy says she's a taxpayer and the library is government-owned so
she's entitled to take the book.
Tension between Katherine and
Paul Stafford continue over the issue of credit for the reports they
both contribute to, and a new problem arises: the details of the
Friendship mission are changing so fast that her calculations are
often wrong by the time she's done with them. Katherine argues that
she needs to sit in on meetings where new information is presented,
but Paul says dismissively that women aren't allowed. She tells Al
Harrison that she wants to be included in the meetings since she is
responsible for updating the launch calculations every time there's a
change of any kind -- to the launch time, payload, landing location,
etc -- and changes are discussed at almost every meeting. Al points
out there's no protocol for women attending meetings but she responds
there's no protocol for a man circling the Earth either. Katherine
points out that he makes the rules because he's the boss -- he just
needs to act like one. Despite Paul's protests, Al agrees to let her
sit in, saying that they all work together or not at all. But he
tells her to keep quiet.
Katherine follows Al into the
meeting, which includes John Glenn and a lot of NASA big-wigs. One of
them complains to Al that they need a way to figure out where Glenn's
Friendship 7 space capsule will land. There's a long silence while Al
contemplates the problem. Then he holds out a piece of chalk to
Katherine and asks her to take a stab at it. The camera zooms in on
the hand-off of the chalk, recreating the scene early in the movie
when the teacher asks a much younger Katherine to step up to the
blackboard. Katherine isn't prepared for this -- she thought she was
there just to listen -- but she thinks it through and covers half the
blackboard with a set of equations that predict, based on current
plans, that Glenn will splash down at a particular latitude and
longitude near the Bahamas. No one can see any flaws in her logic or
her numbers, so they're all impressed, including John Glenn.
Mary
goes to a judge and asks if she can attend a school that does not
allow colored people so she can get a degree in engineering. She is
granted permission to enroll exclusively in night classes, making her
the first colored woman to attend. She goes to class and the white
students are taken aback but it does not bother her.
Dorothy
has been reading IBM documentation, brushing up on FORTRAN, and
paying secret visits to the IBM computer in the data center. The men
tasked with getting the machine working are having a hard time, and
Al has threatened not to pay them. Dorothy has also asked some canny
questions and discovered that once it proves its reliability, the IBM
-- which can run computations many times faster than a whole room
full of human computers -- will replace her West Area Computing unit.
One evening in the data center, Dorothy notices that one of the
cables on the IBM's patch panel is in the wrong place and reconnects
it correctly, which fixes the problem the men were having. Dorothy is
testing a program on a set of punch cards when the male technicians
rush in and ask her what she's doing. They're terrified that she
might break something until they realize that Dorothy, puttering
around in her spare time, has managed a feat that has eluded them for
weeks: she's gotten the computer to run a program and produce
meaningful results.
When Vivian notes that they're short on
computer programmers, Dorothy reveals that she has become proficient
in FORTRAN, and she's been teaching the computers in her group about
FORTRAN and the IBM machine. She arranges for all 30 of the women she
supervises to come along and join the data center staff. Dorothy
tells the women that they've all been reassigned and they walk as a
group to their new department.
One evening Katherine comes
home to find her daughters dressed up and her dinner table set for a
special occasion. She asks her mother what's going on and Mrs.
Coleman says it's not her secret to tell. Jim Johnson comes out of
the kitchen with a plate of food -- he's cooked them dinner -- and a
small jeweler's box, which he puts on the table in front of
Katherine. She says yes before he gets his proposal out, though he
follows up with touching words about how he's joining the family, not
just marrying Katherine.
With John Glenn's launch approaching,
Katherine continues calculating trajectories and writing reports, but
now she can include her own name in the bylines: her value to the
project is fully recognized and Paul has finally gotten past his
racist resentment. He even brings her coffee while she's typing. But
Al tells her that, now that Friendship 7 is about to be launched, the
Space Task Group's need for Katherine has ended. Everyone in the
department appreciates her and as she packs up her things, Ruth gives
Katherine a wedding gift from the whole group: a string of
pearls.
The day of the launch, Vivian runs into Dorothy in the
bathroom. She apologizes to Dorothy for never making her supervisor.
Vivian tells Dorothy she has nothing against the black women under
her supervision and always did the best she could for them. Before
walking out, Dorothy studies her and says pityingly, "I know you
really believe that."
The whole world tunes in to watch
John Glenn's launch. A problem arises in the control room when the
IBM computer's calculations for Glenn's flight don't match the
previous day's. One set of calculations must be wrong, and without
the correct figures, it's not safe to take off. Glenn requests that
Katherine do the math by hand because he trusts her brain more than
he trusts the IBM machine. Al is able to locate her and she sits down
to check the calculations at her old desk in the West Area Computing
room. Katherine runs the numbers, identifies the correct set of
figures, and races back to the control room to hand the notebook to
Al, who is inside. The door is shut in Katherine's face. She stands
outside, dejected, despite having saved the day. A long moment passes
and then Al returns, handing her a pass that grants her access to the
control room and ushering her inside with him.
Fifty million
people watch the lift-off on television while Katherine and Al watch
from the control room. We see the horizon from the space capsule as
John Glenn pilots Friendship 7 into orbit. After successful orbits
around Earth, Glenn notices a warning light: there's a problem with
the fasteners for the heat shield. Mary, who's watching the launch on
TV, realizes what's wrong and rushes to a payphone to call NASA. She
tells them that Glenn must keep the retro pack in place during
reentry, rather than jettisoning it as planned, because the retro
pack's straps might keep the heat shield in place. If the heat shield
blows away, the capsule will burn up as it reenters the atmosphere
and Glenn will die. This advice is passed to Glenn, who's having a
bumpy ride and soon reports that the capsule is growing very hot. But
after a tense few minutes when the control room loses contact with
Friendship 7, Mary's advice proves good -- the straps hold enough of
the heat shield down to save Glenn's life, and he splashes down
safely.
After the launch, the activity at NASA dies down.
Vivian finally promotes Dorothy to supervisor in the Analysis and
Computation Division and addresses her as Mrs. Vaughan. Mary gets her
degree and becomes an engineer.
Katherine went on to calculate
the trajectories for the 1969 Apollo 11 flight to the Moon and for
Apollo 13, as well. President Obama awarded her the Presidential
Medal of Freedom in 2015. In 2016, the Langley Research Center in
Virginia where she worked was renamed the Katherine G. Johnson
Computational Research Facility. She retired in 1986 and remains
married to Jim Johnson to this day.
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