10 Brilliant Historical Movies With Unforgivable Inaccuracies

4. Balian Was Never A Blacksmith - Kingdom Of Heaven (2005)

Orlando Bloom Kingdom Of Heaven
20th Century Fox

Kingdom Of Heaven depicts a man's struggle for his soul, set against the struggle for the Holy Land. With a meagre 39% on Rotten Tomatoes, it would barely seem to warrant a first watch, but it's actually a highly enjoyable movie.

Most of the initial criticism of Ridley Scott's crusader-epic centred around the portrayal of the Christian and Muslim characters. The Christians were seen as evil and the Muslims as saints. Scott was accused of simplifying history to make a political statement about the situation in the Middle East, post-9/11. But, this film is far more nuanced than it has been given credit for; at the very least it makes a decent commentary on the moral hypocrisy of religious institutions - plus there's some great actions sequences.

It does, however, fall victim to several inaccuracies. The story follows Balian (Orlando Bloom), a young blacksmith who flees to the Holy Land in search of salvation. By the end of the movie our lowly blacksmith has become a lord leading the defence of Jerusalem.

Most of this is nonsense. Balian was a real figure who defended Jerusalem, but he was born into nobility. There is no way a blacksmith could have risen to the position he does in this film, or have an affair with the Queen of Jerusalem for that matter.

Contributor

Before engrossing myself in the written word, I spent several years in the TV and film industry. During this time I became proficient at picking things up, moving things and putting things down again.