A film portraying the discovery of the remains of Richard III could be viewed as defamatory towards a former official at the University of Leicester, a judge has ruled.
Richard Taylor, formerly deputy registrar of the university, is suing actor Steve Coogan and both Pathé and Baby Cow production companies over his depiction in the film The Lost King, which was released in 2022. Mr Coogan produced, co-wrote and starred in the film.
The film is told from the perspective of Philippa Langley, one of the figures who led on the discovery of the remains under a Leicester car park in 2012. The real Mr Taylor, now chief operating officer at Loughborough University, claimed that his character is portrayed as dismissive and misogynistic towards Ms Langley and as having taken credit for her work.
The defendants argued that Mr Taylor had âpublicly exaggeratedâ the universityâs role in locating the remains and had âmarginalisedâ Ms Langleyâs role, and that he was, at times, âunduly dismissive and patronisingâ towards her.
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His Honour Judge Lewis ruled in Mr Taylorâs favour on 14 June, saying the character Mr Taylor was portrayed in âa negative lightâ throughout the film.
âAt no point was he shown in a way that could be described as positive, or even neutral,â the judge writes in . âTaken together the film makes a powerful comment about the claimant and the way he conducted himself when undertaking a senior professional role for a university.â
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However, the judge says, he did not believe that a âreasonable viewerâ would come away viewing Mr Taylor as misogynistic or disablist, a reference to a part of the film where the character mimics a hunchback.
The judge concludes: âThe poor way in which [Mr Taylor] was depicted as behaving towards Ms Langley was contrary to common shared values of our society and would have been recognised as such by the hypothetical reasonable viewer.â
This ruling means that the case can now proceed to a full trial.
The University of Leicester previously  arguing that the film contains âmany inaccuraciesâ and that the production team âtook no stepsâ to establish the facts with Mr Taylor.
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âWe understand the portrayal of Richard Taylor in the film does not in any way resemble the reality during this period, whilst an employee of the University of Leicester,â a university spokesperson said. âOur records point to a colleague engaging constructively, collegiately, fairly and professionally throughout the project.â
After the filmâs release in 2022, a spokesperson for the film-makers the BBC: âWe stand by our film and Philippaâs narrative. The university and Richard Taylor have a different narrative, much of which is factually incorrect.â
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