Truth is stranger than fiction, they say. So no wonder that many Hollywood movies look for inspiration in real historical events. Think of Dunkirk, Gladiator, 12 Years A Slave, to name just a few award-winning movies inspired by real events.
But we all suspect that history is full of many more incredible, mysterious and hard-to-believe stories hiding in plain sight. “What historical event has not been, but should be, made into a movie?” someone asked on Ask Reddit and the thread turned into legit notes someone should show to the film directors who’re hungry for ideas.
Below we selected some of the most interesting responses, so pull your seats closer, everyone!
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Mariya Oktyabrskaya sold everything she had to buy a tank and kill Nazis after they killed her husband.
If that's not a baller move worthy of a movie, I don't know what is.
Robert Smalls
A black slave that stole a confederate transport ship, freed the slaves aboard, and sailed it to the union to be converted into a warship. Oh and then he became a congressman in South Carolina.
Richard Rescola, the man who singlehandedly saved 2700 people in the South Tower during 9/11. A Vietnam vet, he was an adventure-seeker before settling down at Morgan Stanley's WTC offices. He regularly held evacuation drills after predicting the previous explosives attack on the WTC, so he was prepared for 9/11. He evacuated his entire office against protocol and saved everyone but himself - he went back up shortly before the towers collapsed in search of survivors. Can't think of anyone better suited to play him than Tom Hanks, I hope this movie is made someday!
Syndrome K.
in 1943, a hospital in Rome located next to a Jewish ghetto, let Jews fleeing Nazi raids hide there. The professors in charge admitted Jews under the fake diagnosis of "Syndrome K", described as a highly contagious and dangerous disease. This successfully kept the Nazis out of the quarantine wards and the Jews safe for the duration of the war.
The 1921 Tulsa Massacre... To this day they still haven't found where these demonic savages buried the 400+ bodies of their victims..
w the assist of the US gov & National Guard , whites from surrounding towns slaughtered an entire town of wealthy Black families, children. professors, war veterans, doctors, architects etc.... then burned their beautiful homes, hospitals, schools to the ground.
Survivors were rounded up and put in camps for no reason other than white racist hate
US literally dropped BOMBS from above..the ONLY time in history the US gov attacked and bombed a US city.
An atrocity so shocking... It was not even talked about afterwards.. Most Americans had no idea it even occurred til 5 yrs ago.
I had never heard of this either until reading this...that is just sad that I was never taught this and I'm sure most people weren't
Julie D'Aubigny was a 17th-century bisexual French opera singer and fencing master who killed or wounded at least ten men in life-or-death duels, performed nightly shows on the biggest and most highly-respected opera stage in the world, and once took the Holy Orders just so that she could sneak into a convent and bang a nun.
Let me clarify for this person, the nun she banged was her girlfriend who was sent there by her parents because she was gay
she also burned down the convent and faked her girlfriend's and her own death to escape and run away with her
Load More Replies...And the award for most badass bisexual before the 1900s goes tooo.......
She entered the Convent at the end of her opera career and 'died' at 33. Which is a face-saving way for her family to just get her out of society. It was common to take a new identity when becoming a nun. She had no history of ill health, so it tracks, imho.
There is a TV series about her - "Julie, Chevalier de Maupin." It is presumably not very good - or very accurate -- but it is there if you want to check it out.
Not sure why you received a downvote, here's an upvote from me.
Load More Replies...She inspired a little known early version of the song "Get it on. Bang a nun. Get it on".
OMG...this takes 'God moves in mysterious ways" to a whole new level!
At the very least, they could do a Funny or Die sketch starring Aubrey Plaza which gets turned into a Roku movie a decade later starring a kid from the Hunger Games.
where is HER movie (or better yet, a mini series on HBO......gotta get the spicy scenes )
Not sure why you were downvoted....an upvote from me.
Load More Replies...There was an engineer at NASA named Roger Boisjoly who knew the Challenger was going to explode and he tried to tell people but nobody would listen to him. The movie should be called The Man Who Knew.
Another day I'll never forget exactly where I was when the news broke. It was like watching something out of a bad movie. So tragic
Night witches ~ Russian female pilots that flew night bombing raids in world war 2.
HalfPint1885 replied:
This is what I came here to say! They were epically badass.
They would fly in, in wooden planes, and cut their engine to get over their target so they wouldn't be heard. They were called Witches because all you could hear was the wooshing sound of the wind over their wooden planes. They'd drop their bomb and then restart it. Sometimes their bombs would stick and not drop from their location on the wing so they'd climb onto the wing in midair and release it. They didn't even have parachutes in their planes. The cockpits were open air so it was freezing cold. And of course they were treated like absolute sh** by everyone, especially the male fighters.
I. Want. This. Story.
And not only the pilots were women, the whole 588. Squadron consisted of women - Officers, pilots and mechanics. They flew Po-2 planes
I need a Coen brothers movie of the 1904 Olympic marathon.
Just keeps getting more bonkers.
Fubo added:
- Over half of the 32 entrants did not finish the marathon.
- The marathon's first "winner" got his picture taken with the US President's daughter. Then it turned out that he cheated by hitching a ride in a car.
- The second "winner" had been doped with rat poison, and was carried over the finish line by his friends. If he hadn't received immediate medical attention, he would have died on site.
- Multiple runners, including the winners of the previous two years' Boston Marathons, got lung injuries from dust kicked up by the race officials' cars.
- The fourth-place finisher got sick on the way, having stolen apples that turned out to be rotten from a nearby orchard.
- The ninth-place finisher might have placed better if he hadn't been chased off course by wild dogs.
- One of the organizers believed that "purposeful dehydration" would help the runners, and had deliberately limited the water sources available to the runners.
BibleButterSandwich:
Also keep in mind that the 4th place finisher was a 5 foot tall Cuban man who raised the money to get to the race by walking the entire length of his country, and then immediately blew all his funds gambling as soon as he landed in New Orleans, so he hitchhiked the rest of the way to St. Louis before running the marathon in dress shoes and formal pants that he had cut off the knee just before the race started.
Unless it's been done already, the life story of Ching Shih. She was a Chinese prostitute that because the deadliest pirate of all time.
At the height of her power, she commanded over 800 large ships, 1000 smaller vessels and over 70,000 pirate crew, comprised of both men and women.
Don’t forget the fact that she got away with it SCOT FREE! Because the government gave up trying to catch her so they bargained with her that she could keep her treasure and her freedom if she stopped. Her treasure haul btw makes Every’s gunsway heist look like chump change. I wasnt this to be a movie and I will die on this hill
I always wondered if babies were born in concentration camps during WWII. Indeed there were and there is a nurse named Stanislawa Leszczyńska who tried to save those babies and she has an amazing story.
Yes should be a movie. Might be a sad movie but. .. .there are a lot of true sad movies
The adventures of Simo Häyhä.
Usually in Finland we don't put war heroes on a pedestal, but Häyhä has gotten so much attention thanks to YouTube that his story could be quite interesting.
jicty replied:
Yes!
He is one of my favorite historical figures. Around 500 kills with only a sub machine gun and a sniper rifle with no scope because he didn't want glare on the lens to give his position away. Also he laid in the snow eating snow and ice to keep his mouth cold so he didn't breathe steam. Russians moved artillery just to try and kill this one man. He almost died by getting shot in the face with an exploding shell and woke up in the hospital with a permanently disfigured face and instantly requested to be sent back to the front lines! All this and he was just a farmer who volunteered for the war!
The story of the Pan Am flight that got caught in New Zealand at the start of WWII and couldn't fly back home by going east because it was too dangerous. So instead they took their flying boat and flew west on routes they had to figure out from maps pulled from borrowed encyclopedias, dodging the Japanese, and trying to find enough fule to keep the plane going. The whole thing took months culminating in taking off from a river in the Congo and having to skim along through a canyon to build up speed since they were too heavy in order to even have a chance of crossing the Atlantic. The whole thing is tailor made for TV or a Film. There's a fantastic book written about the whole story called "The Long Way Home" and was written with the Captain of the flight.
I can't see a Pan Am logo and not think of Tom Hanks chasing Leo Dicaprio in Catch Me If You Can.
FedEx flight 705
TL:DR - Man tries to hijack plane to get insurance money to send kids to college, crew fight back, jet basically turns into weapon for them.
The backstory of the hijacker ~~was a tragedy~~ ~~very unfortunate~~ never fell into his favor . Auburn Calloway was a Stanford graduate who loved his family, but couldn’t afford to send his kids to college. He used his experience as a navy pilot, and the location of Memphis to grab a job at FedEx. He was frustrated at the fact his life amounted to only flying airplanes, when he could have so much more potential. Calloway then devised a plan to die in a plane crash, so that he could send his insurance money to his ex wife, so that his kids can go to college. He was going to be the flight engineer for the same flight, but the day before he falsified flight hours by a single minute , so he was on the verge of unemployment.
On April 7, 1994, he packed a spear gun and hammers to disguise the hijacking as an accident. His plan was to turn off the flight recorder, and then incapacitate the crew with blunt force trauma, since investigators would rule out that they died from the force of hitting the ground. He would use the spear gun as a last resort. He would put the weapons in a guitar case, to not arouse suspicion. This took place before 9/11, so he just walked through without looking suspicious.
He boards the flight, gets acquainted with the crew to lower their guard, and waits. 19 minutes into the flight, he walks into the cockpit, and hits everyone with hammers.
First Officer Jim Tucker, was rendered unconscious. The other two crew, Captain David Sanders and flight engineer Andre Peterson get off of their seats to stop Calloway, but he threatens them with the speargun he got from the back.
Here’s the crazy part.
Calloway f****d with the wrong crew.
Peterson grabs the gun, and starts to wrangle it away. Sanders joins him in trying to stop Calloway.
Tucker, still dizzy and disoriented, realizes the situation, and goes back to what he learned. Ex-Navy, Vietnam vet, he knows a thing or two about planes.
He treats the jet like it’s a fighter aircraft. Turning it 140 degrees (basically) upside down, it pushed the bounds of what an DC-10 could do.
There’s a fight in the cargo hold between two injured crew members and a man who had nothing to lose, and a half conscious pilot who is treating the jet like a fighter, flipping the plane upside down so that his crew could overtake the hijacker.
They take a u-turn back to Memphis, emergency landing, about a mile above the ground. The problem is, is that the plane is too heavy, too fast, and too high. There’s a real chance adrenaline will impair their movements and overshoot the runway.
They land, SWAT arrest Calloway, and everyone is sent to the hospital. The damage that Calloway has done to the crew unfortunately makes the crew not able to fly commercially again.
The plane is still in service, but it was upgraded… without the flight engineer position.
I learned about this in this plane investigation series on YouTube, and it astounds me how this literally has never been turned into a movie.
I would be as action packed, if not more, than FLIGHT. Staring Denzel Washington
The Haitian Revolution. The only slave revolt that successfully established an independent nation
Deborah Sampson. Real life American Mulan - she disguised herself as a man in order to fight in the American Revolution. Not because of her father or anything. She just fervently believed in the cause. And she was friends with Paul Revere
The Lioness of Brittany - medieval woman who led brutal attacks by land and sea against the French king in vengeance for the execution of her husband.
pretty much half of this list is just us asking for stories about bad*ss women in history. Take some notes, Hollywood!
In 1956 a man named Tommy Fitzpatrick stole a small plane from New Jersey for a bet and then landed it perfectly on the narrow street in front of the bar he had been drinking at in Manhattan. Two years later, he did it again after someone didn't believe he had done it the first time.
I feel like it could make for a fun comedy movie.
The story of Vulcan, a small town in West Virginia who had a collapsed bridge that the state and federal government refused to fix so the township with no other options decided to call America's biggest rivals at the time, The Soviet Union & East Germany to replace the bridge and they actually did.
So basically, a small town in West Virginia got so pissed off by America's lack of help that they decided to give a huge middle finger to the rest of the country by getting the Soviets to help them.
The US government built the bridge after finding out the Soviet's were will willing to help.
I'm still shocked there hasn't been a modern movie about the WASPs of wwii. These were the women who delivered airplanes to the theatre of war straight from the factory. Flying brand new airplanes off the production line, often with known issues that had to be corrected in the field (easier to have the mechanics fix stuff than constantly stop the assembly line). Fighting bad weather in the north Atlantic, dangerous landings, airplane issues, and of course being women. Seems like a gimme for a women's empowerment movie. Especially today with the shortage of pilots, it could be a very inspiring movie. Or... You know.... Completely f****d up with cgi and over the top b******t.
To be honest, I wouldn't want to see such movie (or any movie about strong women in history) made today - the writers in Hollywood suck, they'd turn them into unlikeable jerks to make them look strong and have everybody around them being idiots. Their real archivements wouldn't come across strong enough
The story of the guy who rescued the Titanic surivors. There are plenty of movies about the Titanic sinking, but I want a movie depticitng the Carpathia changing course on a dime and racing the rescue, navigating the same icy waters without stricking an iceberg and picking up all the life boats.
Not sure how there hasn't been a summer disaster blockbuster flick about The Great Molasses Flood.
Spanish flu saga maybe.
We could've learnt so much about pandemic.
We're not even learning from the current pandemic... (Or rather, the scientists are learning, but society is not.)
The Cold Case of who murdered Ken Rex McElroy. It is prime material for a dark comedy. This dude was such an unrelenting piece of s**t, buried beneath the prison type scumbags, and terrorized a small rural town his whole life. He'd get away with it everytime because he'd intimidate the f**k out of anyone who sought to press charges against him. Implicated in rape, arson, assault etc. So yeah no tears shed for that psychopath.
Anyway there was a town meeting to discuss what to do with him because everyone was sick of his s**t. The Sheriff told them to just avoid him and set up a neighborhood watch to keep track of him. Right then they found out he was drinking at a bar. Sheriff told them to leave him alone and go home but he had other s**t to do so he left THE COUNTY. So what do these people do? They go to set up that neighborhood watch....neighborhood watch this man die.
Over 60 people travel to the bar Ken is at where they crowded him as he drinks and slings insults. He goes to his truck where his underage wife is sitting in the passenger seat, talks some more s**t and reportedly was going to grab a gun. So over 60 people must subscribe to the theory that a bad guy assumes room temperature only when well ventilated because he then got lit up. Unknown the number of shooters but there were 2 separates calibers identified from the rounds found in his body and both were popular hunting rounds. To this day his murder is unsolved because all 60+ wont say s**t. The FBI showed up to help investigate and still everyone kept tight lipped. One person told them "thay boy needed a killin".
So yeah, prime material.
Movie has already been made - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/In_Broad_Daylight_%281991_film%29#%3A%7E%3Atext%3DIn_Broad_Daylight_is_a%2CRowan%2C_portrayed_by_Brian_Dennehy.?wprov=sfla1
Sophie Blanchard was the world's first woman to become a professional aeronaut: she had an appointment from Napoleon Bonaparte.
Her husband had been trying to make a living as a balloonist but fell to his death deep in debt. Sophie had a knack for it, giving shows and crossing the Alps in a balloon. She specialized in night flights and set off extremely dangerous fireworks beneath her hydrogen balloon.
At one point she nearly froze to death when her balloon went too high, then she nearly drowned when her balloon landed in a swamp near Naples. After a 15 year career she died in an aviation accident when her balloon caught on fire.
Harlem's hell fighters,what an amazing story of America history and it's totally ignored because...racism? I guess?
Bring all the Black actors together! We are yet to see the reunion of Fishburne and Washington :O
A biopic on Hannibal would be really good. The visuals of crossing the Alps with elephants would be stunning.
The Halifax explosion in 1917.
On December 6th, 1917, SS Mont-Blanc collided with SS Imo in Halifax Harbour, causing a massive explosion, a tidal wave, and fires. Some 2,000 people died and thousands more were injured. Destruction was widespread, with many homes destroyed or damaged. The unprecedented scale of the devastation caused a tremendous local, national, and international outpouring of aid and support, as first responders acted swiftly. The explosion had profound and long-lasting consequences.
The story of Bass Reeves. Easily the most badass wild west sheriff who was also black. Idris Elba, Jonathan Majors, or Denzel Washington would do a great job. I think the new movie "The Harder They Fall" takes a couple beats from his story, but just a replay of actual historical events of Reeves' story akin to the way "Tombstone" was done would be fantastic.
When the pilgrims landed in North America, they were astonished to be greeted by a man who spoke flawless English. Squanto (Tisquantum) had been kidnapped by Thomas Hunt, captain of one of John Smith's exploratory vessels, to be sold to North Africans. He was discovered, ransomed and educated by Spanish priests, after which he converted to Catholicism. He returned to North America, Newfoundland specifically, with Thomas Dermer in 1615. Returning to his Massachusetts home, he found his native civilization completely erased by small pox and lived instead with the Patuxets. Dermer was killed by Indians made hostile by a massacre. When the pilgrims arrived at Plymouth Rock, he met them and HE taught THEM to gather for a communal meal to thank God for their survival. The pilgrims found farming deceptively simple, because the land had been prepared by Squanto's extinct tribe. The Massassoit sought war against the Pilgrims, but Squanto brokered a peace.
Joseph Medicine Crow, who became the last Crow war-chief during WWII. He had to disarm a foe in combat, touch and defeat a foe actively trying to kill him (and then captured said foe), and steal an enemy's horses (he found a group of SS scouts with horses!). He was also a college-educated anthropologist and died at 102.
I remember learning about a Celtic warrior queen named boudica, who at one point in time, pushes the romans out on England. I may or may not be crazy, but I hope thats correct. There was also a story from the holocaust about an uprising in one of the biggest ghettos, maybe the lodz ghetto? These were half starved people operating on little to no weaponry, surrounded by soldiers, yet they held the army off for several days.
I want a movie about when the British bombarded Copenhagen and sank our whole fleet in 1807. I have come across several ppl stating that this was the first terrorist attack. I don't about that but would like to see a movie about it because terrorism or not it would be a wild and probably eye-opening movie.
A movie about the suffering of people in East Turkestan would be good to raise awareness. Maybe some good Palestine-Israel material as well since the media seems to be largely ignoring that right now.
This was a very interesting post: a lot of History, lots of well informed Pandas! This is a great community. People do know a lot about WWII, lots of events and with great detail. And now Iearned a few more, thank you to you all.
Only when my grandfather went into shellshock (usually induced by a thunderstorm) would he ever speak of the angelic bowman who were (in his mind at the present time) leading his unit through the swamps, protecting them from the Germans of WWI. No-one in his unit spoke of it, but several would talk in their sleep or have episodes like my grandfather. My father later pieced together that he was reliving the Battle of Mons, which a Welsh journalist reported in 1914. His report was labelled news, not fiction, but the author would later claim he had passed on mere legend. But these veterans were hardly colluding to pass on nonsense! Look it up in Wikipedia, under "Angels of Mons." It's a crazy story!
(I should note that I find it hard to believe that God would intervene on behalf of Britain in World War One, since I consider the British specifically to have been the villains of the war. [My grandfather emigrated to the U.S. out of disgust of the British.] Yet I can't help be fascinated by this story.)
Load More Replies...Edit: 32 remains of bodies have been found in Tulsa cemeteries. Some are children, men and women. Waiting for testing to be done on the remains . This whole story is sad.
I’d like to see one portraying the life of Aurora de las Heras, a Spanish woman that is buried with honors in Moscow. She was a spy for the soviets and took part in several big events. Just read a book about her, not a nice person. Not to be romanticize.
A lot of these stories, well-written and well-directed and well-acted, would make splendid movies! Unfortunately, Hollywood seems interested in only stale remakes and even staler sequels.
for everyone who likes this stuff, i HIGHLY recommend the buzzfeed unsolved true crime or puppet history, both on youtube. amazing stuff and very entertaining
Truth is often stranger than fiction...but fiction can edit out and gloss over the unpleasant truths and make movies more palatable. Not sure which I prefer...
Ota Benga deserves to have his story told. Poor man was kept in a human zoo.
It was pretty recent but...The USS San Francisco (SSN-711). It was a Los-Angeles class nuclear submarine, stationed in Guam. In January of 2005, it was going full speed and collided with an unmapped underwater mountain. 364 nautical miles(675km) away from land. So bad the ship was almost lost. The forward ballast tanks were ruptured, and no sonar. But the hull wasn't breached, nor was the nuclear reactor. 98 people were injured, one died. Two days later they were able to get back to land. Two days of this whole crew not sure if they'd get back home alive. To be fair, I do have a lot of thoughts on this, because a relative was on that ship. The person who died was his apprentice. But even separating that from this story, it's still just... jaw dropping to me. I imagine a movie of it would have a lot of suspense. Check out the photos, they were lucky they got back.
A movie about Steven Bradbury. 2002 Olympic Gold winner. Winter Games. Won the Semifinal and Final against all odds. Check some YT videos of him. Fun stuff. Maybe a movie in the likes of "Eddie the Eagle". There is a film planned....but always being postponed. I'd love to see one soon.
Harold Hardrada. Warrior, lover, poet, berserker, mercenary, Viking king and tyrant. He was was the captain of the Varangian Guard in Constantinople and after many adventures, returned to seize the throne of Norway. In 1066, he invaded England but was defeated at the Battle of Stamford Bridge. Caught by surprise, he was allegedly swinging a sword, nearly naked in a state of berserkergang when he was shot in the throat.
Tisquantum (known as Squanto): Twice escaped slavery. Crossed the Atlantic more than most Europeans. Helping the Puritains (and all that entailed).
With the apparently serious political division in the USA in recent times, I think there is a place for a light-hearted biopic of Norton I, self-styled Emperor of the United States and Protector of Mexico.
I want movie, or Tv series about Czech National Revival. It would be great comedy.
Right-wing history buff: swords and guns and physical courage parading as moral virtues. Left-wing history buff: rotten acts by white people but not me I’m one of the good ones. Actual history buffs: boring economic dynamics and their intersection with human nature and ideations.
Olga of Kiev . It would be a story of love and revenge. There is a good video about her tale of revenge (https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=0pQv8nUHkUI) but I’d love to see a movie of it.
Olga was effectively ruler of the founders of the Kiev Rus, a Ukraine-based empire founded by Scandinavians that once dominated Eastern and Central Europe. (Officially, her grandson founded the empire.) After her legendary revenge, she converted to Christianity. She is venerated as a saint equal to the apostles throughout Eastern Christianity. Her emblem was a bident fork, which has become the symbol of a free Ukraine. Although her land included the Western heart of Russia, and gave Russia it's name, it should not be confused with the Russian Empire, which was founded after the Mongols had destroyed the empire of the Kievan Rus.
Load More Replies...When the pilgrims landed in North America, they were astonished to be greeted by a man who spoke flawless English. Squanto (Tisquantum) had been kidnapped by Thomas Hunt, captain of one of John Smith's exploratory vessels, to be sold to North Africans. He was discovered, ransomed and educated by Spanish priests, after which he converted to Catholicism. He returned to North America, Newfoundland specifically, with Thomas Dermer in 1615. Returning to his Massachusetts home, he found his native civilization completely erased by small pox and lived instead with the Patuxets. Dermer was killed by Indians made hostile by a massacre. When the pilgrims arrived at Plymouth Rock, he met them and HE taught THEM to gather for a communal meal to thank God for their survival. The pilgrims found farming deceptively simple, because the land had been prepared by Squanto's extinct tribe. The Massassoit sought war against the Pilgrims, but Squanto brokered a peace.
Joseph Medicine Crow, who became the last Crow war-chief during WWII. He had to disarm a foe in combat, touch and defeat a foe actively trying to kill him (and then captured said foe), and steal an enemy's horses (he found a group of SS scouts with horses!). He was also a college-educated anthropologist and died at 102.
I remember learning about a Celtic warrior queen named boudica, who at one point in time, pushes the romans out on England. I may or may not be crazy, but I hope thats correct. There was also a story from the holocaust about an uprising in one of the biggest ghettos, maybe the lodz ghetto? These were half starved people operating on little to no weaponry, surrounded by soldiers, yet they held the army off for several days.
I want a movie about when the British bombarded Copenhagen and sank our whole fleet in 1807. I have come across several ppl stating that this was the first terrorist attack. I don't about that but would like to see a movie about it because terrorism or not it would be a wild and probably eye-opening movie.
A movie about the suffering of people in East Turkestan would be good to raise awareness. Maybe some good Palestine-Israel material as well since the media seems to be largely ignoring that right now.
This was a very interesting post: a lot of History, lots of well informed Pandas! This is a great community. People do know a lot about WWII, lots of events and with great detail. And now Iearned a few more, thank you to you all.
Only when my grandfather went into shellshock (usually induced by a thunderstorm) would he ever speak of the angelic bowman who were (in his mind at the present time) leading his unit through the swamps, protecting them from the Germans of WWI. No-one in his unit spoke of it, but several would talk in their sleep or have episodes like my grandfather. My father later pieced together that he was reliving the Battle of Mons, which a Welsh journalist reported in 1914. His report was labelled news, not fiction, but the author would later claim he had passed on mere legend. But these veterans were hardly colluding to pass on nonsense! Look it up in Wikipedia, under "Angels of Mons." It's a crazy story!
(I should note that I find it hard to believe that God would intervene on behalf of Britain in World War One, since I consider the British specifically to have been the villains of the war. [My grandfather emigrated to the U.S. out of disgust of the British.] Yet I can't help be fascinated by this story.)
Load More Replies...Edit: 32 remains of bodies have been found in Tulsa cemeteries. Some are children, men and women. Waiting for testing to be done on the remains . This whole story is sad.
I’d like to see one portraying the life of Aurora de las Heras, a Spanish woman that is buried with honors in Moscow. She was a spy for the soviets and took part in several big events. Just read a book about her, not a nice person. Not to be romanticize.
A lot of these stories, well-written and well-directed and well-acted, would make splendid movies! Unfortunately, Hollywood seems interested in only stale remakes and even staler sequels.
for everyone who likes this stuff, i HIGHLY recommend the buzzfeed unsolved true crime or puppet history, both on youtube. amazing stuff and very entertaining
Truth is often stranger than fiction...but fiction can edit out and gloss over the unpleasant truths and make movies more palatable. Not sure which I prefer...
Ota Benga deserves to have his story told. Poor man was kept in a human zoo.
It was pretty recent but...The USS San Francisco (SSN-711). It was a Los-Angeles class nuclear submarine, stationed in Guam. In January of 2005, it was going full speed and collided with an unmapped underwater mountain. 364 nautical miles(675km) away from land. So bad the ship was almost lost. The forward ballast tanks were ruptured, and no sonar. But the hull wasn't breached, nor was the nuclear reactor. 98 people were injured, one died. Two days later they were able to get back to land. Two days of this whole crew not sure if they'd get back home alive. To be fair, I do have a lot of thoughts on this, because a relative was on that ship. The person who died was his apprentice. But even separating that from this story, it's still just... jaw dropping to me. I imagine a movie of it would have a lot of suspense. Check out the photos, they were lucky they got back.
A movie about Steven Bradbury. 2002 Olympic Gold winner. Winter Games. Won the Semifinal and Final against all odds. Check some YT videos of him. Fun stuff. Maybe a movie in the likes of "Eddie the Eagle". There is a film planned....but always being postponed. I'd love to see one soon.
Harold Hardrada. Warrior, lover, poet, berserker, mercenary, Viking king and tyrant. He was was the captain of the Varangian Guard in Constantinople and after many adventures, returned to seize the throne of Norway. In 1066, he invaded England but was defeated at the Battle of Stamford Bridge. Caught by surprise, he was allegedly swinging a sword, nearly naked in a state of berserkergang when he was shot in the throat.
Tisquantum (known as Squanto): Twice escaped slavery. Crossed the Atlantic more than most Europeans. Helping the Puritains (and all that entailed).
With the apparently serious political division in the USA in recent times, I think there is a place for a light-hearted biopic of Norton I, self-styled Emperor of the United States and Protector of Mexico.
I want movie, or Tv series about Czech National Revival. It would be great comedy.
Right-wing history buff: swords and guns and physical courage parading as moral virtues. Left-wing history buff: rotten acts by white people but not me I’m one of the good ones. Actual history buffs: boring economic dynamics and their intersection with human nature and ideations.
Olga of Kiev . It would be a story of love and revenge. There is a good video about her tale of revenge (https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=0pQv8nUHkUI) but I’d love to see a movie of it.
Olga was effectively ruler of the founders of the Kiev Rus, a Ukraine-based empire founded by Scandinavians that once dominated Eastern and Central Europe. (Officially, her grandson founded the empire.) After her legendary revenge, she converted to Christianity. She is venerated as a saint equal to the apostles throughout Eastern Christianity. Her emblem was a bident fork, which has become the symbol of a free Ukraine. Although her land included the Western heart of Russia, and gave Russia it's name, it should not be confused with the Russian Empire, which was founded after the Mongols had destroyed the empire of the Kievan Rus.
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