The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

In uplifting ‘Hidden Figures,’ three women’s rise

- By Jake Coyle

Theodore Melfi’s buoyant “Hidden Figures” is an oldfashion­ed feel-good movie with powerful contempora­ry relevance, spearheade­d by a trio of unstoppabl­e actresses playing black women who wouldn’t be stopped.

Set in 1961 Virginia, the fact-based “Hidden Figures,” adapted from Margot Lee Shetterly’s non-fiction book, is about three peripheral characters at NASA who made important contributi­ons to the space race. Their workplace, at Langley, is segregated (with separate bathrooms and drinking fountains) and the offices are uniformly run by white males in suits.

But the talent and smarts of mathematic­ian Katherine Johnson (Taraji P. Henson), budding engineer Mary Jackson (Janelle Monae) and computer supervisor Dorothy Vaughan (Octavia Spencer) are becoming impossible to ignore.

Metaphors are all around. While rockets lift off, the women of “Hidden Figures” strive for their own upward movement. Arithmetic surrounds them, but they’re continuous­ly underestim­ated.

“That’s NASA for you. Fast with rocket ships, slow with advancemen­t,” says Kirsten Dunst’s manager.

Johnson is pulled out of a pool of computers (human ones, though a roomsized IBM makes a late appearance) and brought into the all-white rocket center to check the trajectori­es and calculatio­ns of the scientists rushing to match Sputnik and lift John Glenn (Glen Powell) into space. Their leader is Al Harrison (a fine, scene-chewing Kevin Costner), who compassion­ately responds to Johnson’s rise.

But “Hidden Figures,” punctuated by bright original songs by Pharrell Williams (who also collaborat­ed with Hans Zimmer and Benjamin Wallfisch on the score), avoids many of the typical note sofa civil rights drama and keeps its focus on its three indomitabl­e leads and their characters’ private lives. Nobody would mistake it for a deeply complicate­d examinatio­n of segregatio­n and no one will wonder if Melfi’s film is going to end on a high note.

Instead ,“Hidden Figures” is a straightfo­rward, satisfying tale of triumph, full of warmth and crowd-pleasing scenes that its excellent cast lends spirit and verve to. Henson fierily delivers the film’s big, cathartic moment, one that will surely resonate for audiences familiar with her plight. In such scenes, “Hidden Figures” feels both of the ‘60s and of now. These are figures that have often been hidden from movie screens, too.

But of the formidable threesome, it’s Monae who most stands out. Following her role in Barry Jenkins’ “Moonlight” (whose Mahershala Ali also appears here, captivatin­gly as a military officer and love interest), the R&B singer has made an altogether arresting big-screen debut this fall. Regal, powerful and tender, she just might be a full-on Movie Star. The real rocket of “Hidden Figures” is Monae.

 ?? HOPPER STONE/TWENTIETH CENTURY FOX VIA AP ?? This image released by Twentieth Century Fox shows Janelle Monae, from left, Taraji P. Henson and Octavia Spencer in a scene from “Hidden Figures.”
HOPPER STONE/TWENTIETH CENTURY FOX VIA AP This image released by Twentieth Century Fox shows Janelle Monae, from left, Taraji P. Henson and Octavia Spencer in a scene from “Hidden Figures.”

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