A man balances on a wire stretched between the Twin Towers. A pilot safely lands an airliner on a river with 155 people still on board. A CIA team escapes Tehran by pretending to shoot a sci-fi film.
Sounds made up, right? But every one of these movies is based on a true story, with sources like NASA, the FBI, and the BBC backing them up.
They’re not just award winners or critical darlings but the kind of stories that leave you blinking at the screen, wondering how any of it actually happened.
#1 Hacksaw Ridge (2016)

WWII Army medic Desmond Doss refused to carry a gun, yet managed to save about 75 men on Okinawa. History vs. Hollywood details how his determination to run into the fire, unarmed, makes his survival look nothing short of miraculous.
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17points
#2 The Boy Who Harnessed The Wind (2019)

The film shows the life of William Kamkwamba, a Malawian teenager who built a windmill from scrap materials to save his village from famine. Watching his ingenuity unfold on screen is both humbling and deeply inspiring, turning a simple act of survival into a story of human brilliance.
15points
#3 Hotel Rwanda (2004)

In 1994, hotel manager Paul Rusesabagina sheltered more than a thousand people during the Rwandan genocide, protecting them from mass killings. The film portrays his bravery with striking realism, turning one man’s defiance into a testament to courage amid humanity’s darkest hour.
12points
#4 The Pianist (2002)

One of the best examples of movies better than the book, Pianist is adapted from Władysław Szpilman’s 1946 memoir about his survival as a Jewish pianist in Nazi-occupied Warsaw. The movie depicts his escape from the Warsaw Ghetto with stark realism.
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12points
#5 Schindler’s List (1993)

As Encyclopedia.com recounts, Oskar Schindler was a Czech-born German industrialist who risked his life to outwit the SS and save more than 1,100 Jews from Nazi death camps. The film portrays this unlikely act of heroism against the backdrop of overwhelming evil.
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10points
#6 12 Years a Slave (2013)

The film tells the harrowing case of Solomon Northup, a free Black man from New York who was kidnapped and sold into slavery in 1841. Britannica recounts how his eventual fight for freedom after twelve brutal years happened.
10points
#7 Lion (2016)

People magazine recounts the real narrative of Saroo Brierley, who was separated from his family in India as a child and adopted in Australia. Decades later, the film shows his astonishing journey of tracing his roots back home using Google Earth, a reunion that feels almost unreal.
10points
#8 Sully (2016)

Captain Chesley “Sully” Sullenberger pulled off an emergency landing on the Hudson River after a bird strike disabled both engines, saving all 155 people on board. The film captures this split-second decision-making process that made this story so memorable.
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10points
#9 Alive (1993)

The film recounts the harrowing true story of a Uruguayan rugby team stranded in the Andes for 72 days after a 1972 plane crash. It portrays their desperate fight for survival with unflinching honesty, confronting the limits of human endurance and the will to stay alive against all odds.
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10points
#10 Monster (2003)

Monster follows Aileen Wuornos, a Florida woman whose crimes between 1989 and 1990 led to one of the most infamous trials in American history. It portrays her life and downfall with unsettling realism, offering a stark look at how hardship and trauma shaped her tragic path.
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10points
#11 Apollo 13 (1995)

An oxygen tank explosion turned the Apollo 13 mission into a near-disaster, forcing the crew to improvise life-saving fixes in space. NASA notes that the movie captures this real event with such intensity that the astronauts’ survival feels almost too miraculous to believe.
9points
#12 Thirteen Lives (2022)

The Australian Broadcasting Corporation recounts how an international group of divers carried out the perilous rescue of 12 boys and their coach trapped in a flooded Thai cave. On screen, the sheer precision and courage required to survive are beyond comprehension.
9points
#13 The Great Escape (1963)

The National Archives recounts the daring breakout of Allied prisoners from Stalag Luft III in 1944, where more than 70 men tunneled out of the German camp. The film captures the ingenuity and defiance of that escape with gripping detail, turning a wartime legend into a timeless story of resilience.
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9points
#14 United 93 (2006)

Passengers aboard United Airlines Flight 93 fought back against hijackers on September 11, 2001, forcing the plane down in Pennsylvania. The film captures their final moments with haunting realism, honoring an act of collective bravery that redefined heroism in the face of tragedy.
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9points
#15 Spotlight (2015)

The BBC recalls how a small team of Boston Globe reporters uncovered the Catholic Church’s systemic cover-up of child abuse, sparking a global reckoning. The film shows how such a local investigation could topple one of the world’s most powerful institutions, achieving a breakthrough that once seemed impossible.
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8points
#16 Black Hawk Down (2001)

The film dramatizes the 1993 mission in Mogadishu, when a US raid spiraled into a daylong battle after two Black Hawk helicopters were shot down. It captures the chaos and brotherhood of that operation with brutal clarity, revealing the human cost behind one of modern warfare’s most harrowing missions.
8points
#17 Girl in the Box (2016)

The film recounts the shocking ordeal of Colleen Stan, who was abducted in 1977 and kept in a wooden box under her captor’s bed for years. It revisits her survival with haunting realism, confronting the unimaginable endurance it took to withstand seven years of captivity.
8points
#18 The Impossible (2012)

The Guardian describes how a family was torn apart by the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami and, against staggering odds, managed to find each other again. The film recreates their survival with flawless intensity.
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8points
#19 Zodiac (2007)

Zodiac investigates the unsolved case of the Zodiac Killer, who terrorized California in the late 1960s and 1970s with cryptic messages and brutal murders. The FBI Archives confirm the case remains officially open.
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8points
#20 Concussion (2015)

According to the International Review for the Sociology of Sport, the film is based on Dr. Bennet Omalu’s discovery of chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) in NFL players, linking repeated head trauma to long-term brain damage. It portrays his battle against institutional denial with gripping conviction, highlighting the cost of speaking truth to power.
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8points


