For the most part, I liked it. It was refreshingly uplifting and surprisingly positive for a movie about the black female struggles in america. Only part I was shaking my head was the NASA director who was obviously a fictional insert just so they get to say "See? Not all of us are like that, some of us are actually good!" When actually back then guys like the NASA Director were barely to none. If there were actually white guys like that, they would've made sure we knew about them in our history textbooks in middle school so they save face. Oh and also she never ran all the way back to the colored restroom, she went into the restroom for whites, give her credit for that bravery. And I felt that was a key point that the conveniently white movie director shouldn't have changed. Thanks, Theodore Melfi, and Fox. But other than that, it didn't take too much away from the theme and the story and the meaning behind it. And unlike other black historical movies they don't emphasize heavily on the pain like its part of the entertainment or pull up some bs drama for shock value.