Hacksaw Ridge - I believe I have seen this one before I think, feel like I vaguely remember some scenes, but it was interesting, because while it has what you expect from these types of war movies, the story about a conscientious objector going to war as a medic, refusing to carry a rifle, and ended up saving dozens of men himself, is a pretty strong story. It feels a little schmaltzy in the beginning in places, but decent setup as to why Doss is the way he is, a man of faith, but it isn't all just a thing of faith, some of it having to do with his alcoholic father who is a veteran of World War 1 and is clearly haunted by his time there, and growing up under that man lead to how he wanted to live his life.
Looking into the factual elements, it's interesting, because it did some changes for narrative purposes, combining characters into one for the sake of convenience, and apparently the ending where Doss gets hurt after deflecting grenades, which I think happened, but instead of being carted off, in actuality, he gave his stretcher to another soldier after helping bandage him, and then was shot in the arm and crawled 300 yards to safety after hours of being left alone, but they thought audiences wouldn't believe that, which is wild honestly. There was also some time shifts, as apparently his time there was spent over three weeks saving people rather than the shorter length of a few days that it was for the movie. So, accurate, but not out inaccurate for the sake of sensationalizing the events in particular, at least with the actual war aspect, apparently the pre-war part of the beginning isn't very accurate, which is abit less important to me in particular.