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The 20th century
NASA Space Race which began as a fierce competition between North America and
the Soviet Union to become the dominant force in spaceflight travel
capabilities is an endlessly fascinating chapter in American history and one of
my favorite subjects for dramatization in film.
Ever since seeing Philip Kaufman’s three-hour epic The Right Stuff, which chronicled virtually every aspect of the
sheer endurance tests, hardships and triumphs of the Space Race from beginning
to end, I’ve eagerly eaten up everything and anything concerning the
subject. Equally compelling are Al
Reinart’s indelible Apollo 11 documentary For
All Mankind as well as Ron Howard’s dramatization of the ill-fated and near
catastrophic Apollo 13 mission for
the moon.
Usually in these films we only
see the Space Race from the astronauts’ point of view with some emphasis on the
mathematical, mission control and scientific aspects of the heroic spaceflights. Rarely however do we get the complexity of
the numerical and logical aspects integral to making these spaceflights happen
at all with all the troubleshooting, difficulties and setbacks encountered with
rocket testing, capsule testing and problems arising during the flight
itself. The Right Stuff gave a pretty thoroughly comprehensive dissection
of the events that took place during the Space Race and yet as the new Theodore
Melfi film Hidden Figures reveals,
there was far more to the story than we previously imagined.

Although the film is designed
as something of a crowd pleaser and tends to gloss over the personal lives of
the three women with some emphasis on the arduous journey against the
prejudices they endured on a daily basis, overall Hidden Figures is a splendid story long overdue to be told on the
silver screen. Performances across the
board are strong with Henson as the headstrong and determined genius whose
calculations later made the 1969 Apollo 11 mission possible. Always dependably good is Kevin Costner as Al
Harrison, the director of the Space Task Group, who finds himself in the
crossfire of meeting NASA’s demands while shepherding Katherine Johnson to her
single-minded goal of solving the mathematical riddles key to making the
spaceflights a reality. Visually,
director Melfi does a solid job recreating the era although some of the CGI
recreations unfortunately display some of the budgetary limitations of the
project and the score by Hans Zimmer, Pharrell Williams and Benjamin Wallfisch
(yes, three composers worked on Hidden
Figures) is a bit of a smorgasbord between Zimmer’s score for Interstellar intermingled with…Pharrell.
Despite being a bit glossier than the far denser package Philip Kaufman delivered in 1983, Hidden Figures tells an important chapter in American history that’s needed to be told for decades. A more technically skillful director might have handled the effects sequences better and a longer running time might have allowed for the trio’s personal lives to be fleshed out more, but what’s here is pretty well done for the most part. At the end I felt I had learned something new about the Space Race that is only getting the attention it deserves now. Some of the execution is a bit schmaltzy but I didn’t mind. Critics might be quick to compare it to The Help for the emphasis on the segregation and prejudices of the time, but I myself found it to be a solid companion piece to The Right Stuff.
Score:
- Andrew Kotwicki