20 Best True-Story-Based Movies on Prime Video Right Now

20 Best True-Story-Based Movies on Prime Video Right Now

April 18, 2025

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Whether to learn from them or to simply reminisce on them, there are people, places, and moments that are so notable that they have to be remembered through film. Art imitates life, and all that jazz. It’s because of this that biopics and docudramas are beloved genres, so every single streaming site would likely have a good selection, including Prime Video. But if you’re having a hard time finding them, or if you simply want to find some underrated true-to-life stories, we’ve listed a few below that you might enjoy.

11. The Man Who Sold His Skin (2020)

best

8.0

Genres

Drama

Director

Female director, Kaouther Ben Hania

Actors

Adrienne Mei Irving, Anissa Daoud, Christian Vadim, Darina Al Joundi

Moods

Discussion-sparking, Sunday, Thought-provoking

Tunisian director Kaouther Ben Hania’s new movie is about an arrogant European artist who tattoos a Syrian man’s back, essentially turning the man’s body into artwork. 

The man, as a commodity, is able to travel the world freely to be in art galleries, something as a simple human with a Syrian passport he couldn’t do. Seems unlikely? It’s based on a true story.

But Ben Hania is not really interested in the political statement aspect of this unlikely stunt. Instead, she looks at what this would do to a human-being, to the man’s self-esteem, his relationships, and the turns his life takes. It’s a fascinating movie.

12. A Hijacking (2012)

7.9

Genres

Drama, Mystery, Thriller

Director

Tobias Lindholm

Actors

Abdihakin Asgar, Allan Arnby, Amalie Ihle Alstrup, Andre Royo

Moods

Thrilling, True-story-based

A Danish cargo ship is hijacked by Somali pirates in the Indian Ocean. The pirates demand millions of dollars in ransom and from there on, a psychological drama between the pirates and the ship owner develops, as they negotiate the price for the ship and its crew. A really great thing about this film is the fact that it doesn’t get tangled up in the weepy feelings of the families back home – but instead focuses on the shrinking hope of the ship’s crew and the psychological consequences of the brutal negotiation, that drives the ship owner to the edge of madness. Inspired by a true story. Brilliantly acted.

13. Argentina, 1985 (2022)

7.9

Genres

Crime, Drama, History

Director

Santiago Mitre

Actors

Agustín Rittano, Alejandra Flechner, Alejo Garcia Pintos, Antonia Bengoechea

Moods

Discussion-sparking, Dramatic, Smart

Argentina, 1985 is a legal drama about how a prosecutor and his young team were able to mount evidence—despite all threats and odds—against the officials behind a brutal military dictatorship. The public trial is supposedly the first of its kind in Latin America, a marker of true democracy that made a hero out of Julio Strassera and Moreno Ocampo, who both led the case.

Despite the presence of very serious themes, there are moments of lighthearted humor here that work to stress the film’s underlying message of goodwill and perseverance. Argentina, 1985 competed at major festivals this 2022, and it’s Argentina’s official entry at the 2023 Academy Awards.

14. By the Grace of God (2018)

7.8

Genres

Drama

Director

François Ozon, François Ozon

Actors

Éric Caravaca, Alexandre Steiger, Amélie Daure, Amélie Prevot

Moods

Discussion-sparking, Instructive, Thought-provoking

In Lyon, the second biggest city in France after Paris, a man confronts the church about a prominent priest who sexually assaulted him and his friends when they were young.

The man, being religious, wanted to keep the issue within the church. He only asked that the pedophile’s priesthood be revoked so that he doesn’t assault more children.

When it becomes clear that the church will not act, he considers legal action, even though the statute of limitations has expired. But, as is usual in these cases, he was far from being the only victim.

15. Dying to Survive (2018)

7.7

Genres

Comedy, Drama

Director

Wen Muye

Actors

Eric Wang, Tan Zhuo, Xu Zheng, Zhang Yu

Moods

Discussion-sparking, Funny, Grown-up Comedy

Robin Hood might be a centuries old folk hero, but his reincarnations seem to pop up in real life, including the true story behind Dying to Survive. Alternatively translated as I’m Not A Medicine God, the modern day Chinese iteration is initially less concerned over the common good and more concerned with money. It makes for a much more humorous take, as the ordinary peddler bribes, smuggles, and asserts his desire for profit, but it also sets up the real desperation created by a medical drug industry that hopes to incentivize research and protect consumers, but inadvertently blocks the very people that needs said drugs. Dying to Survive might focus more on the smuggler than critiquing this conundrum, but nonetheless it understands the real recurring tragedy that modern life can’t seem to completely solve.

16. The Burial (2023)

7.6

Genres

Comedy, Drama, History

Director

Female director, Margaret Betts

Actors

Alan Ruck, Amanda Warren, Andrea Frankle, B.J. Clinkscales

Moods

A-list actors, Feel-Good, Inspiring

Many people lament the decline of the mid-budget drama with Hollywood A-listers in the lead roles, and for good reason: when the charms of an inspirational, feel-good true story work, they really work. The Burial seems to have been made with this same, unabashedly sentimental attitude, and it makes for an endlessly watchable courtroom underdog tale. The film moves with real energy between its more comedic asides and its more urgent themes of underprivileged people being taken advantage of by wealthy companies. And while it still would’ve probably been effective as just a straightforward legal drama, the movie makes the effort to seek out a bigger picture—deepening its own title by grounding all its characters against complicated race relations in Mississippi.

Director and co-writer Maggie Betts doesn’t stray too far from the template that these kinds of films operate with (perhaps to a fault, especially during its climactic moments), but the cast she’s assembled is unimpeachable. Jamie Foxx turns in the kind of funny, energetic, deeply felt star performance that earned him an Oscar almost 20 years ago, while Tommy Lee Jones brings a powerful sense of modesty and centeredness to a role that could’ve easily taken a back seat to his flashier co-lead. Supporting turns from Jurnee Smollett and Alan Ruck round out a uniformly great ensemble that gives this small movie a commanding air of prestige.

17. Frida (2024)

7.5

Genres

Documentary

Director

Carla Gutierrez, Female director

Actors

Fernanda Echevarría del Rivero, Frida Kahlo

Moods

Character-driven, Discussion-sparking, Emotional

Frida Kahlo is an iconic Mexican painter, not just because of her outstanding art, but also because of her outlook in life, despite her ill health and tragic accident. Because of this, she has been talked about in multiple books, movies, and exhibitions, but a new documentary has popped up, this time from her own words. Carla Gutierrez’s directorial debut is a revelation, voiced primarily in Frida’s native Spanish and paired with key archival footage, vivid animations of her paintings, and an excellent acoustic score plucked from classical guitar. Being a biographical documentary, fans of the artist would, of course, be familiar with her life events, but Gutierrez’s approach is still worth watching, mostly because it’s Frida’s own words driving the film.

18. Fighting with My Family (2019)

7.5

Genres

Comedy

Director

Stephen Merchant

Actors

Adam Maxted, Aqueela Zoll, Ashley Darkwood, Bobbi Tyler

Moods

Easy, Feel-Good, Lighthearted

Fighting with My Family manages to pull off a respectable pro wrestling movie with a lighthearted teen drama slant — a nice change of pace and a victory in itself. Saraya (Florence Pugh) and her family paint the movie with dorky crass jokes, but the film doesn’t seem to tread that line masterfully enough to where we look past her family’s obnoxiousness and find it purely charming instead. But there is more to like here than not: Vince Vaughn as levelheaded NXT coach Hutch Morgan, Dwayne Johnson as himself, and even the blonde girls posse were a little more than just clichés and added a sense of maturity to the portrayal of modern WWE.

19. The Innocents (2016)

7.5

Genres

Drama, History

Director

Anne Fontaine, Female director

Actors

Agata Buzek, Agata Kulesza, Anna Próchniak, Eliza Rycembel

Moods

Challenging, Character-driven, Discussion-sparking

When depicting war and faith, it seems like men are the only ones that have to undertake these challenges, at least it seems, in the stories made available about these topics. But that simply isn’t true. The Innocents is one of the few reminders that, while women might have been kept from the front lines, war has spared no one. Through stark and wintry shots, and a solemn direction, writer-director Anne Fontaine crafts tense conversations between an atheist doctor and her nun patients, making all of them reckon with the ways trauma has shifted their present principles and future actions, in a sensitive way that has rarely been seen before. While the resolution can come across as a bit too sudden, The Innocents nonetheless is a compelling study of faith.

20. Funny Girl (1968)

7.5

Genres

Comedy, Drama, Romance

Director

William Wyler

Actors

Anne Francis, Barbra Streisand, Kay Medford, Omar Sharif

Moods

Dramatic, Emotional, Lovely

Ostensibly about Fanny Brice, there could never be any other Funny Girl than Barbra Streisand. Reprising her role on stage, she practically immortalized the story on screen, carrying it through her immaculate performance, compelling chemistry with Omar Sharif, and of course, the spectacular song numbers. She’s one reason as to why Funny Girl became one of the few Broadway musicals that survived the transition between mediums, but director William Wyler matches her star power with impeccable framing and the script written by Isobel Lennart was, and still, timely with its observations of the spotlight, the art of comedy, as well as wholeheartedly chasing what you want in spite of the consequences. Funny Girl showcased the best of Hollywood and the best of Broadway all at once.

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