I've watched two Benedict Cucumberpatch vehicles recently, The Courier and The Mauritanian (in the latter he's not the lead) - both movies that are ostensibly true stories.
Both very good movies, for very different reasons. The Courier tells the story of Greville Wynne, a businessman from Britain who in the 1960s was persuaded by MI6 and the CIA to essentially be a mule for secret documents that a USSR defector (Oleg Penkovsky) was smuggling out of the Soviet Union. It's your fairly standard Cold War espionage thriller, but where it differs from most is that it is very much centred around the friendship and personal relationship between Wynne and Penkovsky, and the loyalty that they had for each other even in the face of certain death. Excellently acted by both Cabbagepatch and Merab Ninidze, and a good show from Jessie Buckley, who I recognised as the wife of one of the doomed firefighters in the Chernobyl miniseries.
7.5/10
The Mauritanian is about Mohamedou Ould Slahi, who was taken prisoner by the USA and held at Gitmo for over 10 years without ever being charged of a crime, and suffered extreme torture and physical, mental and sexual abuse in a bid to make him "crack". Tahar Rahim plays the titular character and does a stellar job of getting across the emotional turmoil and physical stresses that he was put under while imprisoned. Jodie Foster plays a defence attorney with an axe to grind against the US Government and decides to take on Slahi's case, with Cummerbund playing her counterpart for the prosecution. This film again tries to shy away from some of the "tough" topics that they could have dealt with, focusing instead on the personal relationships between Slahi and his lawyer, as well as another inmate at Gitmo that he befriends early on. They do eventually go into some of the awful things that the US Government did to the prisoners at Gitmo, and it's nothing less than shocking.
8.5/10