Dorothy Vaughn (Octavia Spencer) had been managing her section
for some time but is repeatedly denied a supervisory position and is instead overseen
by her own supervisor Vivian Mitchell (Kirsten Dunst).
Mary Jackson (Janelle Monáe) meanwhile is an aspiring
engineer but she cannot progress further because she doesn’t have the right
qualifications, which she is barred from getting because of her colour. She
goes to court to try to get this changed.
Then there is Katherine Johnson (Taraji P. Henson), who is
the main focus of the film. Johnson is the most talented mathematician at NASA
and once they realise this she is called upon to work in the Space Task Group under
Paul Stafford (Jim Parsons) and his boss Al Harrison (Kevin Costner). Their aim
is to put a man in space before the Soviet Union.
It’s not easy for her working in her new environment and not
only because she had to climb a high ladder every day to write on a huge
blackboard. She has to drink coffee from a pot labelled ‘Coloured’ and has to run
half a mile back to her old building where the nearest toilet for coloured
females is. While at home, she has three young daughters to raise.
Despite all this, through her excellent work, she earns the
respect of everybody on the project including astronaut John Glenn (Glen
Powell). Glenn trusts her calculations above those of anyone else’s including
those produced by their new IBM computer.
The aim of the film is clearly to raise the struggles that
the coloured minority had to be recognised at that time. However, personally I
found learning about the space race with the Soviet Union, the difficulties of
getting a man into space, keeping him there and then getting him back again in one
piece the most fascinating part.
As it is ‘based on true events’, you of course rush home and
immediately ‘google’ the plot. If only to check whether Katherine really need
to run half a mile just to use the toilet? And... no, of course she didn't. That,
and a whole lot of other things, were manufactured or overstated for dramatic
effect. Sadly, that ruined the film for me.
Katherine Johnson herself states that she didn’t experience
any segregation and that everyone worked brilliantly together as a team. In
fact, the film seems to totally undersell what Johnson achieved. As for NASA,
who are practically painted as racists, they didn’t even exist until after the types
of issues raised in the film were resolved.
The real story is fascinating enough, so it’s really annoying
that the filmmakers were not impressed by the quiet and efficient way these
women actually conducted themselves and achieved so much.
Therefore, it’s really just an enjoyable piece of (part)
fiction that is also quite informative about the space race, which I don’t
think they tampered with too much.
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