

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 o Review: Very good and interesting movie - I really liked this movie. Great casting and very good story. Highly recommend. Review: Excellent historical movie - What a great movie. And the acting and writing were superb. I lived in California during the time this movie portrays, and it's still a shock to see the segregation and racial discrimination in the South during this time. But this movie is all about the three women who changed the course of space travel with their intellect, their work ethics and their sheer determination to make a difference in the world. And they did. I highly recommend.

| ASIN | B01LTI1RHQ |
| Actors | Janelle Mon�e, Kevin Costner, Octavia Spencer, Taraji Henson |
| Aspect Ratio | 2.35:1 |
| Best Sellers Rank | #1,513 in Movies & TV ( See Top 100 in Movies & TV ) #235 in Drama Blu-ray Discs |
| Customer Reviews | 4.8 4.8 out of 5 stars (38,017) |
| Director | Theodore Melfi |
| Dubbed: | English |
| Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
| MPAA rating | PG (Parental Guidance Suggested) |
| Media Format | Blu-ray |
| Number of discs | 2 |
| Producers | Donna Gigliotti, Jenno Topping, Peter Chernin |
| Product Dimensions | 0.5 x 5.3 x 6.7 inches; 2.4 ounces |
| Release date | April 11, 2017 |
| Run time | 2 hours and 37 minutes |
| Studio | Sony Pictures Home Entertainment |
| Subtitles: | English |
S**D
Very good and interesting movie
I really liked this movie. Great casting and very good story. Highly recommend.
E**7
Excellent historical movie
What a great movie. And the acting and writing were superb. I lived in California during the time this movie portrays, and it's still a shock to see the segregation and racial discrimination in the South during this time. But this movie is all about the three women who changed the course of space travel with their intellect, their work ethics and their sheer determination to make a difference in the world. And they did. I highly recommend.
C**R
Fantastic Movie
All the Actors/Actresses Were Wonderful in this Movie- Sound,Picture, Love the Storyline and How These Lovely Women Made History !!
R**N
One Journey That Unites Us All
Excellent, beautiful, deeply inspiring, and powerful. This American journey to the stars unites us and inspires us all. It brings out the best in us all. God bless.
A**R
Great movie, lengthy idealistic, slightly sarcastic, review on my part.
This is so offensive on so many levels. Imagine young black women getting the opportunity to get a practical, marketable education. Imagine black nuclear families with a responsible, loving husband living with them, building a life with them, teaching them, learning with them, growing with them as a family. Imagine young black women wanting to accomplish something great, something positive, in their lives. To be a part of a larger vision. To work hard and be the best at what they do. Imagine young black women getting jobs because they have worked hard to gain the knowledge, skills, abilities, and merit to earn those jobs, then excel at them. Imagine a world where young black women would have the opportunity to gain the knowledge, skills, abilities, and merit - to even have the basic qualifications necessary to get the opportunity to work hard for them. Imagine young black women earning a family wage, contributing to society, and paying taxes - living a "normal" nuclear life with their families. Amazing. What this film shows is how much white people were offended by black people back in that era, and how offended most white people are today at the idea this ever happened. People grew. People learned hard lessons from their failures. People evolved. Not all people, it's an on-going process, but it is a continuing process. A process which needs to be cultivated by everyone, not just whites. Horrible mistakes were made, but people learn from failure better than success - failures are lessons more meaningful and memorable. Failure sucks, and scars are important reminders of lessons best not forgotten. People should get credit for learning and evolving, in today's world, no matter how things have changed for the better, no credit is ever given, which hampers the effort. You want people to evolve? Teach them, work with them, don't just berate them. That applies to all facets of life, especially marriage. Celebrate steps accomplished to encourage, don't just demand more. Imagine how different the black experience would be if the Gov't provided a solid, practical, meaningful education to them, instead of the worthless education they historically had - the same empty education they are now perpetrating on ALL American children. An "education" where high school grads can't read, write, or do simple math, or even read a tape measure. Years ago, I worked with a lady who was married to a young black man. They were a very nice couple- very sweet. During that time, he was featured on the cover of TIME magazine with 9 other young people. They had been deemed the 10 best young minds in America. It didn't matter what any of them were - what "category" they were. What an honor at the time. I don't believe you would see any media do that today. Today it's all about hate and division. Politicians continue to do all of us wrong. Imagine where we would all be today if they worked to educate us and bring us all together to contribute to society and each other instead of motivating hatefulness and ignorance. You want to change the world? Educate ALL children with marketable skills and dump the media and politicians who work hard to hamper that effort and only preach hate to control everyone's lives. Politicians, media, etc., who work to de-evolve everyone and turn them back into the racially intolerant ignoramuses they were years ago. LBJ was the Godfather of oppression. He had the skills to make it look like he was doing the black population a favor while actually setting them up for massive failure which is still rampant today. That chain needs to be broken thru good, solid, practical, marketable education. Everyone should turn their racial efforts and drama into attaining that - demanding that. Over time, people with skills will work together to build. Skill and work ethics will prevail. I have seen it work. I have worked closely with people from all over the planet for decades. Color never mattered, skills and contribution did. This would be a whole different planet if society made cooperation and education paramount. Don't complain - contribute. Make your world a better place.
J**C
THE PERFECT CAST IN AN INSPIRING TRUE STORY OF DETERMINATION AND UNBELIEVABLE WARMTH
Where do I begin to praise the merits of one of the most inspiring and heartwarming films of 2016? HIDDEN FIGURES is simply poetry in motion from its phenomenal cast to its gorgeous period setting to its incredible and true story. Here is a very different story about African Americans. It sheds light on a time when things were slowly moving forward. There have been several movies in the past few years about the horrors of slavery and the violent days of the Civil Rights Movement. Those stories needed to be told, but HIDDEN FIGURES is a gentler story about the fight for equality. Our three heroes Katherine Johnson (Taraji P. Henson), Dorothy Vaughn (Octavia Spencer) and Mary Jackson (Janelle Monae) have stable family lives and live in comfortable middle class homes. They are much like many women in the early 1960's with one major difference - they are all mathematical geniuses with minds far surpassing those of the average person. Although they have to work in the "colored" section of NASA, these three women are already far ahead of the game than most women (white or black) in the early 1960's with jobs at NASA. Their brilliant minds were held back because of their gender and the color of their skin, yet these human computers fought to be accepted and to play a vital role in the US manned space mission. HIDDEN FIGURES is such a pure visual delight watching Henson, Spencer and Monae circumvent the restrictions of the day to become the first in their field. Although the violence of the era is touched upon mildly, this is really the story of their normal but brilliant women just wanting to use their minds and be given a fair chance. This story is told with dignity and respect and a dash of humor. Katherine gets to work in the elite section with the "big boys' but with a few caveats. She is not accepted by the men for just as much because of her gender as for her race. A poignant fact is shown with a bit of humor. Anytime Katherine needs a bathroom break, she much use the "Colored" restroom in another side of the NASA campus-- 1/4 mile away. So a couple of times a day, Katherine runs with her work on her bathroom break. Funny but a sad homage to the segregationist laws of Virginia in the day. I could continue to praise HIDDEN FIGURES as one of the best movies I have seen in a long time. Taraji P. Henson simply lights up the screen as do the other stars. Here is the perfect cast in a perfect film telling an overlooked story of dedication and inspiration.
S**S
Esse filme é lindo, com atuações espetaculares.
E**N
Llegó a tiempo y en excelentes condiciones. Película inspiracional, más allá del típico contenido de drama o acción. Buen manejo de datos técnicos.
R**E
Très bon film, j'ai adoré et je le regarderai encore souvent.
M**P
Très beaux film à regarder
T**R
an excellent video showing how coloured folks were so miss treated yet so valuable and intelligent
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