Bombshell: The Hedy Lamarr Story (2017) Poster

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8/10
Touching, moving, edifying
futuretype30 November 2017
For some reason I thought it was going to be a bio epic.  I wondered who they would get to play Ms. Lamar.  Using archival footage, stills and a recording of an interview with the star they got Hedy Lamar to play Hedy Lamar.  It was a moving touching history of a woman who had many accomplishments.

She helped Howard Hughes design better planes by studying streamlining in birds and fishes.  She invented Frequency Hopping (along with composer George Antheil).  She founded Aspen as a ski resort.  She produced movies (unheard of for a woman at the time).  She came up with techniques on cosmetic surgery to hide the scars.  Unfortunately she also became a poster child for reasons not to undergo the operation.  Her unsuccessful surgeries probably added to her being a recluse.

She wanted to be recognized for her mind and not her beauty.  Yet she married a series of men who treated her as a trophy wife.  Her most famous contribution to science was in devising a system for secret transmissions (frequency hopping).  It's greater value was not realized until the advent of GPS, Bluetooth and WiFi.

She was recognized/honoured for her invention at a Science Forum which she opted not to attend but left a recording played by her son.  The film showed her phoning halfway through the presentation to ask how it went.  Her son advises that he is in the middle of it and that he loves her.

Frequency hopping has multiple inventors. In 1899 Marconi performed an experiment using the technique.  Nikola Tesla received a patent in 1903.  German military used frequency hopping in World War One.  A Polish inventor, Leonard Danilewicz had the idea in 1929.  In 1942 a patent was awarded to Hedy Lamar.  In 1980 a Winnipeg filmmaker originated the idea (called Variable Transmission Broadcast) as a plot device to represent Norway in a symbolic re-enactment of World War Two where rival transportation companies, representing Germany and England, sought to steal the idea symbolic of invading Norway (both sides wanted to).  The film did not get made but it is ironic that frequency hopping technology of Bluetooth has Scandanavian roots.  Ray Zinn gained a patent in 2006 for his version.  Slight improvements justify issuing new patents.

Although she had raised $25 million for the War effort her patent was confiscated based on her being a foreign alien (having been born in Austria).

The navy had secretly used her technology some ten years later.  She would have been entitled to royalty payments if she had known.  She also didn't know that you can only go back six years from the time one launches a lawsuit.  It is not enough to have a patent; one has to Police it to see if being infringed; Prosecute (take it to court); Prove it was your idea they stole; and Profit* for the effort By the time she found out her patent had long expired.

The film covers her being exploited as a movie star and inventor and innovator.  This late tribute values her contributions and recognizes her pioneering roles.

* back then you could recover costs - today that provision has been taken away.  So it is profitable to steal patents and only pay royalties once losing in court (happens may be one time in eight that an inventor sues).  See "Flash of Genius".
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8/10
88 Keys
clarkj-565-16133625 November 2017
Fascinating look at the life and work of Hedy Lamarr. About five years ago, I distinctly remember reading in an electrical engineering journal about the inventions of Hedy in the field of telecommunications. I rushed to the local library and sure enough there were several books about her. It was such a pleasure to see this documentary. It tied it all together for me. We learn a good deal about her early life and upbringing and her start in the European Film business. Like many European artists, Hedy was alarmed at the rise of Fascism and decided for a better life in America. We also learn about the early studio system, both the positive aspects and also about some of the negative ones, which are front and centre with the public these days. Hedy was a multi faceted artist/inventor and we see her forming collaborative relationships with all sorts of people from avant-garde pianists to airplane designers! She was certainly a modern day Ada Lovelace.
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8/10
Even-handed....you learn about the genius and the genius' faults as well.
planktonrules5 May 2018
I mentioned that the documentary was even-handed because all too often, I've seen biographies of various celebrities which either only focus on the bad or only the good about folks. Folks have positive and negative qualities...and Hedy Lamarr is no exception.

The film is a biography of the actress that also focuses on her inventing the concept of rotating frequencies...enabling a sub, for example, to launch a radio-guided torpedo without worries about the enemy jamming the signal. It's a strange invention for an actress to have made...and the film helps to show that Lamarr was not just a pretty face. It also, sadly, talks about her personal life...which was filled with husband and husband and disappointment after disappointment. And, it talks about Lamarr's drug use (created by the studio) and her odd personality quirks. All put together, it makes for an intriguing look at a fascinating lady. Well worth seeing...and a nice film about a feminist in 1930s-40s Hollywood.
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Totally underrated and unappreciated during her lifetime
bettycjung25 April 2018
4/25/18. This is a really well done biopic about an underrated actress who got her just due with this film. I really liked her in Samson and Delilah although I haven't seen any of her other movies. Over the years I have heard her mentioned as an inventor and thought that was a curious fact to share about an actress. This biopic goes into enough detail for the viewer to understand just how intelligent Lamarr was in electronics and that her inventions are still being used in our time through the technology we use. Sadly, she was never compensated for her patents. If she was she wouldn't have lived such a hardscrabble life in her later years and had all that plastic surgery that really ruined her face. It is somewhat sad to see how such a talented woman had a series of unhappy marriages that emotionally ruined her and how Hollywood never gave her the recognition she wanted and so truly deserved. Worth catching.
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7/10
Fascinating life lived
SnoopyStyle8 December 2019
A Forbes reporter finds tapes of an interview with Hedy Lamarr which forms the backbone of this documentary of the Hollywood legend. She is an Austrian teen who caused a scandal with her nudity in Ecstasy. At 19, she marries a munition tycoon allied with the Nazis. Being a Jew in an edgy movie, her film gets banned by the Nazis. With a jealous, controlling husband, she escapes to the west where she becomes a Hollywood star but beyond the spotlight, she is an inventor in her own rights. She struggles in the studio system. In the end, she lived her own life despite the obstacles. This is a fascinating life of a woman who is more than her beauty. She used it but also is trapped by it. By the end, she trapped herself but she leaves behind a lasting legacy beyond her movies.
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9/10
Fascinating Documentary
larrys326 April 2018
Fascinating documentary on the gorgeous, brilliant, and complicated screen star Hedy Lamarr. Her beauty was known to all, even serving as the inspiration for the face of Disney's Snow White. Yet few, including myself , knew of her inventing genius, and how one of her patents (frequency hopping) would serve in later years as an important part of cell phone, Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, and military technology.

All in all, I thought this was an exceptional documentary filled with surprises.
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7/10
Well made documentary
Calicodreamin17 January 2020
A well directed documentary on the life of Hollywood icon Hedy Lamarr. Viewing her life in its entirety, the documentaries main focus is to shed light on who she was outside of the limelight. Most notably her contribution to science. The doc doesn't shy away from the bad times either, and goes through her decline after her Hollywood years were over. A truly beautiful but complicated woman. An interesting watch.
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9/10
A Straight forward biography we should all see and learn from
ayoreinf18 July 2017
No trick photography, no special gimmicks. Nothing out of the ordinary is needed when the life story we're presented with is so unique. The Hedy Lamarr story is way more than a biography of an old timer who used to be a Hollywood star. It's more than the story of "the most beautiful woman in the world" whose talents well exceeded her beauty.

It's a story of our failings as a society when faced with whatever defied the conventions we live by. And the tragedy of those that wouldn't fit under the labels we like to stick on whoever crosses our path. To put it in a single sentence it's a story most of us know nothing about but all of us should. If you do get the chance just go see it.
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7/10
Well done documentary about a person that deserves more then being seen just as a diva
deloudelouvain20 May 2018
If we are all honest nobody really knew about the story of Hedy Lamarr, and that's not even because she's not from our generation. Of course, I knew her as an actress, but what she accomplished besides her acting career is far more interesting, and it's good to have a nice documentary about it. The documentary is well done, with interviews from all kind of people, going from family members, actors, journalists and scientists and so on. There is also alot of interesting footage of her childhood, movies, her public appearances and her at an older age. She's been called the best looking woman in the world at that time, I wouldn't go that far, but she wasn't ugly that's a fact. The start isn't great, her as a Jew married to a weapon supplier of the Nazi's but at the end she did her best helping to fight the Germans, and that through her creative inventing mind. She should deserve much more then just a plaque for her invention. At least this documentary will give her the respect she deserves for the things she did. She was probably not an easy person to live with, but that's because she was a victim of Hollywood and drugs. In the end, I think she would be much better off if she didn't start her acting career and just concentrated her efforts in the promising inventions she had in her creative mind. Bombshell: The Hedy Lamarr Story is certainly worth a watch, just to have another and better view of the woman she was, way more then just a glamorous Hollywood diva.
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10/10
positively brilliant
blanche-210 December 2017
If this shows up on public TV or somewhere in your area, definitely go and see it. It's amazing.

The documentary is the story of Hedy Lamarr, one of the most gorgeous women ever in Hollywood, and also the inventor of frequency hopping, which is still used today in everything - WiFi, Bluetooth, you name it.

Her story is inspirational and also extremely sad. Above all else, it is fascinating.

Her children are interviewed, as is Robert Osborne, and there are film clips from her career, and interview footage with Lamarr.

A few years ago on Jeopardy, there was a category called "Hedy Lamarr." Alex Trebeck wound up running the category himself, and asked, "Have none of you ever heard of Hedy Lamarr?" "Well," piped up one woman,"I know Hedly Lamarr from Blazing Saddles." A real pity, and it would be lovely if that were a thing of the past.
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7/10
Watch Without Your Preconceptions...
jeepyjb21 July 2019
Warning: Spoilers
The interview tapes of Ms. Lamarr used here were recorded in 1990, well before most of the people watching the film to supply more fuel for their misandry were even born, but of course young enough to be barely aware of life before video games. Men worked with her the entire way, maybe for the wrong reasons sometimes, but who among us hasn't done something special for someone with whom we were infatuated. There is entirely TO MUCH speculation as to the intentions of the subject, as well as those around her. A lot of 'I think' and 'it seems to me' is heard. I challenge anyone to invent something and take it to the military THEMSELVES and see what happens. The invention wasn't thrown in the vault because she was a woman, it was because the world was at war and it was a far fetched idea. A good idea, but as we all know from our own jobs it sometimes hard to get stuff approved during crunch time. Everything is always being spun, and it sad.
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10/10
Amazing story about an amazing woman
stephen74022 May 2018
Warning: Spoilers
A look at the amazing life of Heady Lamarr through the eyes of her children, the few left who know her, and 4 tapes of a conversation a writer made in 1990 when she wanted to sell her story to Ted Turner. Her story reads like a Hollywood screenplay. Truly amazing! The documentary does have several maddening shortcomings. There is no explanation as to why only one attempt was made to tell the armed forces (Navy) about her frequency hopping invention. For example, why didn't she to Howard Hughes, who she'd been both good friends and a lover with? Many aspects of her personal life are also left out, buy adding them would have expanded the documentary to two hours. Still, this is a star vehicle, and as always, Hedy carries the day.

I was impressed by Alexandra Dean's detective work piecing together how Hedy probably thought up the idea. And for those who sniffed at the graphics, they reflected the style of her drawings, and not a superhero movie. One small technical point that was missed is that frequency hopping is also the basis of multi-spectrum quiescent radar and sensors. As a result, the value of the market that uses her basic idea is far larger than the $30 billion listed at the end of the documentary. I highly recommend it, especially her reciting of the Kent M. Keith's "The Paradoxical Commandments" at the end. Considering her life, it's hard not to tear up.
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6/10
Radio controlled
Prismark1029 September 2018
In some ways this is a standard documentary on a Hollywood star from its golden years.

Hedy Lamarr did not have much of a film career. She was signed by Louis Mayer on a trip to Europe looking to sign starlets on the cheap before war broke out. Lamarr had caused scandal with a racy continental film called Ecstasy that featured nudity and a simulated orgasm.

Lamarr's best known film is Samson & Delilah but she did not managed to capitalise on it. Instead she went to Europe to produce a film and ended up in debt.

Lamarr had a turbulent private life. Amphetamine addiction thanks to Dr Feelgood, shoplifting and many short lived marriages.

What lifts this documentary was Lamarr's contribution to radio communications, frequency hopping that she co deviced in World War 2. Sadly she did not profit much from it. Lamarr's first husband was in the armaments field in Germany and the documentary examines whether she might had lifted the idea. However Lamarr was a lady full of diverse ideas which included building a ski resort in Colorado and taking skin from hidden parts of the body

Lamarr was a recluse in later life but some tapes were rediscovered where she talked to a journalist about her life and career. It is at least an honest, thought provoking documentary.
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3/10
A bio of a film star's brief career
Janet16128 November 2021
Yes she was attractive, but beautiful? Beautiful is Vivien Leigh, beautiful is Elizabeth Taylor. Hedy had the same colouring but not the same beauty. She also didn't have their talent. She starred in a few films, they weren't that great - check them out. Her career ended in the 40s I think.

Interesting life, especially sad at the end with her dreadful choice of plastic surgeons who ruined her face, resulting in her living in seclusion. Very hard to watch her state of mind.

The talk of her contribution to wifi etcetera is questionable. Yes, she and her friend designed some plans for 'frequency hopping' - whatever that means - which wasn't used at the time and only became of interest when technology progressed. Even then it was NOT an aid for WiFi or the internet.

I love bios and this was interesting. Just very sad.
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Exceptionally Good Documentary
Michael_Elliott20 July 2018
Bombshell: The Hedy Lamarr Story (2017)

*** 1/2 (out of 4)

Exceptionally entertaining documentary that takes a look at the life and career of Hedy Lamarr, the actress who many consider to be the greatest looking woman to ever appear in movies. The documentary covers her early childhood, the notoriety that came with her nude scenes in ECSTASY as well as her time in Hollywood and a controversial dealing with the U.S. government.

If you're a fan of Lamarr then you'll certainly want to check this documentary out. It starts off talking about the actress in her later years as well as a book she was to write about herself but that never materialized. The film's main draw is the fact that Lamarr did give an interview later in her life and those audio tapes were recently discovered and on display here.

I really enjoyed this documentary because it did a very good job at covering various aspects of Lamarr's life and it didn't shy away from some of the bad stuff. I respect the documentary for being open and honest on these subjects and a lot of credit goes to her children who are interviewed here and shine a light on what was going on in their mother's life at the time all of this was going on.

The documentary certainly pays close attention to her movies including the controversial nudity that she did and her reasoning's for it once she came to Hollywood. The good portion of the running time is devoted to how smart Lamarr actually was and how she designed a very important item during WWII and one that should have brought her riches but didn't.

BOMBSHELL: THE HEDY LAMARR STORY is well-researched and contains a lot of great information on the actress. The interviews with her family as well as fans (like Mel Brooks) makes this a must-see.
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7/10
A Case of Brains Over Beauty
jadepietro20 May 2018
GRADE: B-

THIS FILM IS RECOMMENDED.

IN BRIEF: An insightful documentary about the actress, Hedy Lamarr and her unacknowledged scientific inventions.

JIM'S REVIEW: Hedy Lemarr was a most fascinating woman and Alexandra Dean's documentary, Bombshell: The Hedy Lamarr Story, certainly adds to her allure. Most called her an international movie star of the 40's. Others called her a spy. Very few recognized her scientific achievements. It was always a case of beauty over brains.

The film focuses on her untold story from her childhood and early bohemian life in Vienna during the 1930's, her rising 40's Hollywood career, subsequent scandals, and many marriages and divorces. It also shows her as a woman of creativity and intelligence, one who actually patented inventions that were early prototypes of WiFi, Bluetooth, and GPS technology. Documents reveal her plans for radio controlled torpedoes during World War II, aeronautic aviation advances, and secret communication systems. One can easily accept the film's main title for its double meaning after seeing the evidence on display.

However, Ms. Lamarr's scientific aspirations and skills were derailed by her beauty and chauvinistic attitude at that time. It was her glamour that most wanted to idolize which led to a thriving film career. Using archival footage, photos, interviews with family, animation, and film clips of Ms. Lemarr's films, the documentary chronicles her life using a found taped interview by the actress that tells many hidden details of her flamboyant life as its primary source.

While always interesting, this documentary seems to overcompensate about her scientific breakthroughs and bogs down with the technical underpinnings of her inventions. The animation is crude and unnecessary. The film provides glosses over the few facts about her numerous love affairs and marriages it shares and uses her Hollywood films as an afterthought that takes second place to her personal backstory. All seems well researched, but one wishes the filmmakers would have concentrated more on her two-sided complex life, with more film clips and exposition about her love affairs and relationships. It rarely stays on any one aspect of Ms. Lemarr's for too long.

Still, with such a fascinating woman as the subject, Bombshell: The Hedy Lamarr Story is always compelling and offers many facts unknown to this reviewer. I gained more insight and admiration from this documentary for this under-appreciated talented woman which is a strong statement in itself for Ms. Dean's film too.

NOTE: This document is now available in movie art houses that showcase independent films. It is also on DVD and local streaming services.
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9/10
The incredible brilliant other side of Hedy Lamarr
cyclewag9 April 2018
Many film lovers ONLY know Hedy Lamarr the actress whose face lite up the silver screen. Few knew of her contribution to our digital/wireless/blue-tooth enabled world through her inventive mind. Bombshell is that very story wrapped around her cinematic career. The director delivers a wonderful documentary of the great Hedy Lamarr.
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6/10
A tribute including triumph, tragedy and a most unexpected talent
Horst_In_Translation19 August 2018
Warning: Spoilers
"Bombshell: The Hedy Lamarr Story" is an American English-language documentary that premiered back in 2017 already and looking at the awards recognition writer and director Alexandra Dean received recently, this could (maybe also at the Oscars) be one of the big players from the documentary genre in months to come. It runs for 1.5 hours and as the (not too perfect) title gives away, this is a film that focuses on successful actress Hedy Lamarr. There is one secntence that describes the film fairly well in my opinion, namely that she never was as big as Garbo or Dietrich, but a legend in her own right. We find out a whole lot about her life, her struggles with husbands and how none of all these could live up to how much she adored her father. Interestingly enough, there is no real reference about her mother. Then we get a great deal of information about her career, her glory years after leaving Germany during the Nazi days for the US and how she became irrelevant quickly before having a great comeback with Cecil B. De Mille and then moving back into oblivion again, her struggles with money and the lack of connection with her adopted son. Interviewees include children and grandchildren from her as well as long time friends. But the one area that makes a difference here compared to every other mediocre biography documentary is the technical aspect, the talk about Lamarr being an extraordinary inventor and one thing she failed with, namely the Coca Cola capsule drink stayed in mind as much as her far more technical developments that did not make an impact during the years of war due to the ignorance of a few, but were groundbreaking from today's perspectiv in the communication industry. And even if I am not really interested in technologiy at all, it made me happy to see her receove the recognition eventually still before her death and when we see her son accept this invitation, it is a really special moment when the phone rings while he is on stage. Moving decades back, there is no denying what a stunning beauty Lamarr was and yes it may have had a negative impact on her intellectual work. Anyway, the highglight is probably the long quote by Lamarr at the very end that I found really touching about forgiving people their weaknesses in terms of how they treat others. Lovers of the old movie days will find a great deal of joy in here too with many references about the Lamarr film Ecstasy that was such a trail blazer for her career in a positive as well as negative way. So I think Dean did a fairly good job here overall and looking at how she is far from an experienced filmmaker, it is even more impressive what she has managed to come up with here. I also liked the many interesting Howard Hughes references. So obviously, I give this film a thumbs-up for sure and recommend checking it out. A definite contender for 2017's finest when it comes to film on film. See it.
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10/10
She was so much more than a Pretty Face
woundeddove050530 March 2018
I like many others who watch this will be in awe of the full extent of all the she did before seeing this film. You will even be saddened that she was not really fully allowed to do what her passion really was. It was a constant "Wow! She did that? and Her mind thought like that?" Most of what she did was forced upon her to keep as a sort of secret hobby. It was a different time back then. It will leave you wondering about all she could have done if she had been born now. I was in shock of the many great things and people we do know to push limits in their inventions that she helped inspire and make better. Her mind never stopped when the cameras shut down.

I just remember falling in love with her watching old movies at my Granny's during sleep-overs. Back in the day where there were only a handful of channels and we had to walk across the room to turn the dial. In the evening there would be the Late show, then the Late-Late show and the Late-Late-Late show before the National Anthem would play early A.M. and the T.V. But, one of her greatest inventions which was turned down after being inspired like many Americans to do their part during the War.

Again, sadly it was a different time back then and women like her. Women as well known and as beautiful as her were imposed upon to do their part and just look pretty and start selling War-bonds, and being eye-candy for the troops.

She is one of those people that you wish that if there is life after death or reincarnation that she got to become whom she was meant to be in her first life. Now that women can be viewed a little differently for what they have to offer more now than just being another pretty face. A must watch if you love documentary movies as much as I do. A must-must watch if you grew up watching her movies way back when. You will love her even more.
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6/10
Sadly this documentary is no bombshell
changeever-148234 December 2018
Unlike Hedy Lamarr this documentary is not a bombshell. Having read about Lamarr's life story before, I came to the documentary hoping that it would be enlightening beyond what is commonly available. Instead, I came away feeling bad for Lamarr doubly for what happened to her and for what this documentary did too her as well.
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9/10
Exceptional, a must-see.
johnkretz3 December 2017
Warning: Spoilers
Hedy Lamarr's story, especially as it is told in her own words, is absolutely fascinating, spellbinding, inspiring and well worth the effort to seek it out. Hedy was a visionary who spent her whole life living down her public image by blazing her own trails in the most refreshingly unconventional ways and shattering her stereotype in the process. Thank-you Susan Sarandon and to your fellow producers, for making sure this story sees the light of day.
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7/10
BOMBSHELL: The Hedy Lamarr Story
a_baron18 December 2020
Hedy Lamarr was a remarkable woman, and like so many other remarkable people she was a complex individual with a dark side.

Her first taste of fame was the 1933 Czech film "Extase" in which she appeared naked. The film was controversial and scandalous, although by today's standards your grandmother wouldn't be shocked.

She is also known as an inventor, and is said to have had a fascination from an early age with how things work.

Lamarr was married and divorced no fewer than six times; the documentary does not gloss over this, nor about the two incidents of shoplifting, which were clearly the result of psychological issues rather than financial ones. Not mentioned is the 1967 incident in which she falsely accused her younger lover Donald Blythe of rape, an incident that cost her $15,000.

At one time she was said to be the most beautiful woman in the world, but as she aged and her looks faded, she resorted unwisely to plastic surgery, something that did not go unnoticed. We hear from many people who knew her, including her offspring. Lamarr died in January 2000 at the relatively advanced age of 85. She was buried in her native Austria.
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8/10
This 'Hidden Figure' Was Hidden in Plain Sight
stu-0032927 February 2018
Warning: Spoilers
With all respect to the women portrayed in the Oscar-nominated film Hidden Figures (2016), an earlier "hidden figure" was hidden in plain sight - in Hollywood, no less - with her figure being part of the façade.

The world knew movie star Hedy Lamarr for her looks and the movies they graced during three decades in film. Very few knew Lamarr as the inventor who conceived technology that paved the way for Wi-Fi, GPS and Bluetooth.

Lamarr's life story could have been a movie itself, and now it is: the documentary Bombshell: The Hedy Lamarr Story.

On one level, Bombshell is a tale of escape - from Lamarr's native Austria-Hungary as it fell under German domination; from her first husband, a controlling man who manufactured and sold weapons for Hitler and Mussolini; and from a 1930s immigration system stacked against refugees. But the story rises to a higher level amid the current debates about feminism; science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) education for women and gender inequality in the workplace.

Filmmakers Alexandra Dean and Adam Haggiag were about six months into their Lamarr documentary when they made an amazing discovery: Reaching out to reporters who had written about Lamarr in the past, they contacted former Forbes writer Fleming Meeks. "I have been waiting 25 years for somebody to call me about Hedy Lamarr," he responded, "because I have the tapes."

It was back to the drawing board for the filmmakers, because suddenly Lamarr could narrate her own story. To add context, the filmmakers spliced in interviews with her children and friends, as well as well as entertainment figures such actress Diane Kruger, who is producing a TV miniseries about Lamarr, and director Mel Brooks, whose admiration for the actress led him to famously name Harvey Korman's Blazing Saddles character "Hedley Lamarr." (Brooks' laugh lines seem rather stale in today's #MeToo environment.)

Born Hedwig Eva Kiesler in Vienna to Jewish parents, Lamarr was a quintessential "daddy's girl," which later may have contributed to her many failed marriages. Early on, she discovered that her looks enabled her to influence others. As teenager, she left school to pursue a career in acting. During the early '30s, she appeared in five German and Austrian films and started going by her nickname, "Hedy." In the last of those, Ecstasy (1933), she performed nude, which was considered shocking. It contributed to her rising fame but likely cost her respect, and opportunities, later in her career.

After fleeing Austria and her marriage, she made it to London and met legendary producer Louis B. Mayer of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, who was there to scout European actors and actresses fleeing fascism. She persuaded him to give her a contract with MGM, and he persuaded her to change her name, settling on "Lamarr," at the suggestion of his wife, to honor silent-film star Barbara La Marr.

Patriotism and Perfidy

Hoping to bring her mother to America, Lamarr became concerned about the the number of ships being sunk by German U-boats, which eluded counterattacks by jamming the radar of Allied torpedoes.

Though Mayer kept her busy with 14 films during the war years, Lamarr, a lifelong inventor, made time to study torpedo guidance and came up with "frequency hopping," the idea of transmitting radio signals by rapidly switching among many frequencies known to both transmitter and receiver. She worked with avant garde composer George Antheil to turn her theories into reality; they obtained a patent in August 1942 and made it available to the Navy.

But the Navy wasn't impressed, suggesting Lamarr could do more for the war effort by pitching war bonds. (She did, and quite successfully.) It was years later that the Pentagon's perfidy would be uncovered: The government repaid Lamarr's patriotism by labeling her an enemy alien and seizing the patent, which it proceeded to use in subsequent years. Neither Lamarr nor Antheil made a dime.

She was just as headstrong about her movie career. After getting out of her MGM contract, Lamarr set out to produce her own movies, which was rare in the studio era. But she had another powerful weapon, herself. She produced and starred in The Strange Woman (1946) and Loves of Three Queens (1954), in some cases spending her own money to get the projects done. For making her own career choices, Lamarr was said to be "difficult," a label still used today to punish women who don't toe the line in the entertainment industry.

So by the end of 1965, Lamarr had given away her greatest invention, refused to sit quietly on the Hollywood gravy train and been through six failed marriages. (The film suggests she found several of her husbands "boring" because they couldn't engage her intellect.) On top of all that, she became addicted to prescription drugs under the care of Dr. Max Jacobson, Hollywood's infamous "Dr. Feelgood."

Her later years were marred by strange arrests for shoplifting items she could afford, repeated plastic surgeries that did not produce the desired effects, and increasingly reclusive behavior.

Bombshell paints Lamarr as a brilliant woman who was too far ahead of her time in a couple of America's most combative arenas: entertainment and war. It holds a viewer's attention throughout by convincingly tying the actress' life experiences to issues that remain relevant, even controversial, today.

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Stu Robinson does writing, editing, media relations and social media through his business, Phoenix-based Lightbulb Communications.
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7/10
Beauty and Brains
iquine6 July 2018
Warning: Spoilers
(Flash Review)

Is it possible for a beautiful and famed leading lady to also be taken seriously for her mind? Hedy Lamarr was a successful actress whose career kicked off in the early 30s. At one point she was regarded as the most attractive actress in Hollywood. But she also had an inquisitive mind of an inventor. During the time of WWII, she ended up inventing a significant security war device; a radio frequency-hopping signal that could not be tracked or jammed that she never received proper recognition for. Was the public too distracted by her good looks or multiple marriages to believe that idea was her brain child? The military sure thought so as they thought she was too pretty and she would be more effective selling war bonds. Thus her intellect wasn't respected. She married a total of seven times and after her acting career tanked, she built a ski resort in Aspen! She led a tough emotional life with career, family, men and trying to be a strong woman in the 40s. Would she ever get her intellectual redemption? This was a pretty solid documentary with archival audio interview footage, acting snippets and assorted interviews. There were a few spots with modern graphics for visual assistance and overall it was a straight-forward professional effort.
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3/10
Well I for one am not impressed nor am I drinking the Kool-Aid
Ed-Shullivan27 April 2021
I see that most of the other IMDB reviews are singing Hedy Lamarr's praises through this documentary but I for one have not drank the Kool-Aid. I keep hearing she was beautiful but what pictures are they looking at? I have little respect for woman who marry older men just to leave them after their money is no longer useful to them. I have even less respect for fathers and in this case a mother three times Hedy Lamarr who disowns one of her sons because she birthed him out of wedlock then sends him away at far too young an age to one boarding school after another.

As for her genius as an inventor, after listening to her trying poorly to explain her invention to a broadcaster I got the impression that she stole the idea as well as the documentation from one of her husbands or many lovers and called it her own. Women's lib be darned I see her as nothing more than a money grubbing scheming thief and heartless mother who lived her life as she saw fit regardless of whom she hurt to advance her career as well as her stature in life and in Hollywood.

Forget the many praiseworthy reviews and see for yourself but this documentary is spinning a tale greater than Moby Dick. I give it a 3 out of 10 IMDB rating.
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