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A good movie

Posted : 5 years, 11 months ago on 4 May 2018 08:21

Since this movie was very well received, I was quite eager to check it out. Eventually, even though it was still slightly too sweet and upbeat for my taste, it was still a really solid historical drama. The first thing that I enjoyed was that these amazing black women didn’t need some white folks to succeed which was something that seriously bothered with such movies like ‘The Help’ or ‘The Blind Side’ which might have been really successful at the box-office but these movies were actually seriously overrated and I actually preferred this movie. It was also interesting to see how segregation actually got in the way for the USA in their quest to remain a super-power, in the race for space but also in general and, because of this backward way of thinking, they were actually wasting some of their greatest minds. Still, this movie gave me the feeling, obviously not on purpose, that it was acceptable to treat these women like equals only because they were exceptional. Of course, you might argue that you have to start somewhere but I thought it was seriously unfair to the average black folks who also deserved to be treated fairly. Anyway, to conclude, even though I don’t think it was anything really groundbreaking, it was still quite inspiring and it is definitely worth a look, especially if you like the genre. 



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Hidden Figures review

Posted : 6 years, 11 months ago on 3 May 2017 08:50

Some notes before the movie:
- I'm Estonian
- I'm a woman
- I'm young (didn't seen to the space era)
YES:
*The main cast is magnificent - as being her music fan I was suprised to see Monae acting and she gave pretty solid performance.
*The feeling of the era is realistic and fun - blue sky blue skirt clothes, love old american cars
NO:
*The soundtrack - boring classical tunes vs Pharrell Williams.
*The writing - every scene is a cliche. Example: She walks in a room full of white men, as she enters they became quiet, she sits.
*Sheldon Cooper - as being the fan of "The Big Bang Theory" I find myself extremely hard to watch heartwarming goofy Mr. Parsons in cold calculating engineer role. I hope he succees to break out the character role, but this was miscasted.

I feel like director take too big bite and theme too big.


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Hidden Figures review

Posted : 7 years ago on 7 April 2017 01:46

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Hidden Figures review

Posted : 7 years ago on 3 April 2017 02:46

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Hidden Figures review

Posted : 7 years, 2 months ago on 12 February 2017 04:27

A pre Obama film in a post Obama era. Maybe, that makes sense. Washed up, well narrated (I like, for a change, strict classical linnear continuity with well calculated plantings), with quite a few strong moments (Mary running from the bathroom, Kevin destroying the isolated bathroom).


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Hidden Figures review

Posted : 7 years, 2 months ago on 3 February 2017 04:37

Notes:
*This was the second choice for me and my wife to see when we finally made it together.
*Taraji P. Henson and Janelle Monae were enough to pull my attention to this.
*It really does have an excellent cast besides them too.
*I find it interesting that this and Loving both take place in Virginia near the same time frame.
*I didn't know this was based off of a book.
*Theodore Melfi also wrote and directed St. Vincent that in my opinion was just a decent movie with good moments.
*Allison Schroeder also wrote Mean Girls 2 which was terrible.
*Now to get to what this movie offered.

Pros:
*The writing was actually really good.
*The acting was excellent.
*My favorites here were Janelle Monae and Taraji P. Henson. I might be biased, but I don't care lol.
*All the stuff these women went through was crazy.
*It's not only about race here, but also about being a woman in the time which I thought was an interesting look at things.
*I also liked the soundtrack.

Cons:
*Um Kirsten Dunst is a downside for me.

Verdict:
I think this was an excellent movie. It's a great one for equal/women's rights. Everything they went through so the future could be better and do more. These women were strong and didn't let barriers stop them. I would highly recommend checking this out whenever possible.


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Hidden Figures

Posted : 7 years, 2 months ago on 1 February 2017 04:20

Are we slowly seeing the burgeoning of a new sub-genre? Something along the lines of “science is fucking awesome,” with recent entries being The Martian and Arrival. But there’s also something of a corrective action at play throughout Hidden Figures as it celebrates things that have been systematically oppressed – women and minorities most obviously.

 

While Hidden Figures is a solidly made feel good experience, there is a certain sheen of falseness that pervades all of these types of films. The micro-aggressions and casual racism and misogyny these women face make them heroic in my mind for not going insane in the face of it, but the film demands a heroic white male savior to clear the way for progress. Kevin Costner’s gruff boss destroying the labelled bathrooms is engineered to make the audience cheer (which it did during the screening I watched while I rolled my eyes), and it feels like a false note in a film that has so much good will and positivity radiating from it.

 

At least Hidden Figures doesn’t break its white characters into noble types and cartoon racist like The Help, instead allowing for several of them to casually demonstrate bias behind the justification of “that’s just how things are.” This feels far more realistic, and it is these moments that make better impressions throughout, especially for the subtle shifts in characters that appear throughout. Like Octavia Spencer confronting Kirsten Dunst in a bathroom that eventually leads to Dunst having Spencer promoted to supervisor of the IBM computing machine.

 

Even better is the casualness of the obstacles they must overcome to simply do their jobs. The casualness of the sexism, white men in suits get the higher paying jobs built on the backs of the calculations of the women, and the women never get the credit. You root for them to succeed, to slowly dismantle the system, to get the credit for their hard won battles and incredibly valuable contributions. Dorothy Vaughn (Octavia Spencer) is the underpaid de facto supervisor of the Colored Computers, and she makes herself invaluable (along with her girls) by learning how to program and run the IBM machine. Mary Jackson (Janelle Monae) sues to attend an all-white engineering program so that she can become NASA’s first black female engineer. While a bulk of the film focuses in on Katharine Johnson (Taraji P. Henson), a mathematical genius who fights for her place in the effort to launch John Glenn into space.

 

The consistent obstructionism is a solid source of dramatic tension, and Hidden Figures is a tonic that we need right now. Not only does it make the argument for progressive ideals like equality and how we’re stronger together, but it places the crux of its arguments on quips like “the numbers don’t lie.” We need this film to remind us when American values are at their greatest, and hopefully some good will come of this film in an influx of young black girls going into STEM education. My day job is at an aerospace engineering and earth science research center tied to a university, and the field desperately needs more diversity. A film like Hidden Figures shows young girls that yes, it is possible, and I dream that its lasting legacy will be a noticeable uptick down the line.

 

Hidden Figures strongest asset comes in the form of its impeccable ensemble players. I mean no disrespect to Octavia Spencer’s second Oscar nomination for her work here, but why is she the lone player singled out? It feels a bit like favoritism to a former winner over other worthy players that deserved equal consideration. Janelle Monae is equally strong (maybe even stronger), and this may be Henson’s best screen work to date. Dunst, Jim Parsons, Glen Powell, and Kevin Costner are all reliably solid. Mahershala Ali, having a banner year, is slightly underserved here, but he’s so good that I would watch him do just about anything. They make the material soar high even when its writing dips into predictability or pat morality.

 

Even if I don’t think it’s a perfect movie, I can’t begrudge it any of its nominations. It’s too important, and lesser films have been nominated for more or won. I just hope that the box office dominance and high praise for this film provide something of a siren call for more diverse films. Now, if we could only do something about the white savior trope. 



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