Hidden Figures
The story in itself is mighty interesting and it's a very nice thing that it finally came to light. NASA and the Mercury program (and even a lot of the later ones) had contributions from a lot more people that what the public were told about for decades. This one tells the story - with some artistic liberties, that however are quite acceptable - of three African-American mathematicians and engineers, who were also women, and who had some pretty significant roles in the US space program. So, again, this would already be good, even as a documentary.
But the movie works really well beyond that, too. It's a really good mix of drama and comedy (with some romance), that manages to avoid quite a lot of clichés common to such stories. It has great acting and looks nice, and the music is outstanding as well. We sort of randomly picked this for a movie night (was the most interesting one playing at the time), but were pleasantly surprised
, it's really worth watching and makes for a lot of good reading afterwards.
It also made me a bit disappointed in Tom Wolfe's docu-novel The Right Stuff (also highly recommended), as there was no mention of these women at all, even though John Glenn in particular was really appreciative of their work (he actually requested Katherine Johnson to personally re-check his flight calculations before launch).
Split
This is the new Shyamalan movie, a sort of psycho-thriller, about a person suffering from multiple personalities disorder (I know it's actually called dissociative identity disorder but that's not descriptive enough
. Think about Tyler Durden or The Fifth Sally.
I haven't really watched anything from the director after Signs and as far as I know I haven't really missed anything. Well, it's hard to say a lot about this one without ruining the experience, but I'd say it's probably better than the last few. But it's only really worth watching for the performance(s) of James McAvoy, he's really good but the rest is mostly just average. Oh and of course there's a bit of a surprise at the end, too...