A biopic you’d never believe was true celebrates Netflix success

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unbroken

Long before Angelina Jolie’s first studio-backed directorial effort Unbroken had screened for critics, it was singled out as a potential awards season heavy hitter, and with good reason.

The story of Louis Zamperini is so jaw-dropping that you’d scarcely even believe it was true if you’d never heard it before. That made him the ideal candidate for a prestige drama, even if he passed at the age of 97 in 2014, and never got to see the movie.

Bullied as a child, Zamperini took up track in high school, ultimately qualifying for the 1936 Olympics and coming eighth in the 5000m, setting a new lap record in doing so. During World War II he served as a bombardier, before his plane crashed into the ocean during a search and rescue mission, where he and two others spent 47 days stranded at sea.

unbroken

Eventually, they washed up on the Marshall Islands, where he was tortured and beaten as a Japanese prisoner of war, during which time he was declared both missing at sea and killed in action back in the United States. Unbroken was a decent-sized hit at the box office after earning $163 million on a $65 million budget, but it didn’t resonate with critics and audiences the way it should.

A 51% Rotten Tomatoes score was almost shockingly average, but it appears to be finding a new lease of life on Netflix. As per FlixPatrol, Unbroken has cracked the Top 10 most-watched list in multiple countries around the world, bringing the incredible tale to a brand new audience.