The Leonardo DiCaprio adventure takes the basic facts of real-life frontiersman Hugh Glass’s ordeal and adds extra characters, extra ultraviolence and more horse guts
Bajirao Mastani: the movie Indian film-goers tried to ban for inaccuracy
The courts refused to censor this period Bollywood romance and rightly so. But while the historical howlers are irritating, its main problem is the imagined narrative is so dull
Reel history: Richard and Saladin compare swords in The Crusades
The symbolism is blatant and the gender politics iffy in this fanciful version of the Christians’ campaign, but it has a decent stab at historical balance
Historians still debate whether the violence of the women’s suffrage movement was justified. This movie commendably focuses on a working-class suffragette, but doesn’t attempt to make any of the really tough calls
Scrap accuracy – give me Ringo Starr as the pope: the 10 quirkiest historical films
Alex von Tunzelmann
From John Wayne as Genghis Khan to 1776’s catchy showtunes about dysentery … here’s my favourite examples of movies which have played fast and loose with historical truth
Legend: Tom Hardy's double take dilutes the story of the Kray twins
Ron’s escape from hospital was more ingenious, Reg’s marriage less violent … Tom Hardy’s portrayal of both twins is admirable, unlike the film’s attention to detail
The Railway Man: dramatic licence is well-earned and sparingly deployed
Colin Firth stars in this adaptation of the memoirs of a POW tortured by the Japanese military during the second world war. No movie could recreate such horrors, but it’s easy to forgive this redemptive tale its mild flights of fancy
London Road: a deadly serious song and dance round the houses
Rufus Norris’s adaptation of the National Theatre musical, about the 2006 murder of prostitutes in Ipswich, offers a unique and disturbing take on tragedy
A Royal Night Out: as fluffy and sugary as a Victoria sponge
The tale of Princess Elizabeth and Margaret’s sortie among the wild nighttime celebrations of commoners on VE Day loses the facts in the crowd – except for that conga
Mary of Scotland: Katharine Hepburn in Tudor romance with inaccurate kilts
Katharine Hepburn’s real-life affair with director John Ford adds extra spice to this tale of a fiery proto-feminist queen’s love for the Earl of Bothwell
A Little Chaos: leads historical accuracy down the garden path
Alan Rickman’s historical romance, about the landscape architect to the Palace of Versailles, is a limp, aimless film without any feel for 17th-century speech or manners
Rhodes of Africa: only slightly less offensive than the man himself
With narration that omits to mention Rhodesia’s African tribes in its population, things only get worse with Rhodes’ racist, imperialistic delusions masquerading as kindly paternalism