A university academic who is receiving "substantial damages" for how he was portrayed in a film has told Sky News he hasn't received an apology from star Steve Coogan - nor the two companies involved in its production.
Richard Taylor said he was "shell-shocked" after seeing The Lost King for the first time, a film about how Richard III's skeleton was discovered below a car park in Leicester.
He told The UK Tonight with Sarah-Jane Mee: "I wasn't consulted or even knew I was in the film. The first I hear is I get a phone call while I'm on holiday - and eventually, after press previews, I persuade the producers to let me see a preview."
Last year, a judge ruled that Mr Taylor was depicted as "smug, unduly dismissive and patronising" - with the plot suggesting he "knowingly" misled the public.
"I'm portrayed by someone on screen who looks like me, who sounds like me, who dresses like me - but behaves in a way that falls so far short of the standards I set for myself and what others might reasonably expect of me," the academic explained.
Mr Taylor revealed he received emails at work telling him to "rot in hell", while others described him as a "disgrace".
He added: "Something that was a collaborative effort that showcased the best of British universities in my view was turned into this farce - where I was the villain and portrayed in a way that was completely inconsistent with the reality and the truth."
Now chief operating officer at Loughborough University, Mr Taylor said "none of the facts" in the 2022 film were ever checked - and the Alan Partridge star, his company Baby Cow and Pathe Productions did not reach out to him before its release.
"The producers just went ahead, filmed it, produced it, stuck it out there and left me to deal with all the flack and all the fallout from it. Grossly unfair and I feel vindicated from the result we've achieved," he told Sky News.
'The film's going to look pretty silly'
As part of the settlement, an on-screen clarification will now be added to the start of the film, but no scenes will be removed.
When asked whether he was satisfied with this outcome, Mr Taylor replied: "I'd have liked them to re-edit the film, but one's got to be realistic about what one can achieve.
"The insertion of the card will say that the person on screen is a fictitious portrayal - and the real Richard Taylor didn't behave like that … so the film's going to look pretty silly."
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The case was due to proceed to trial, but a High Court hearing on Monday heard that the parties had settled the claim.
In a statement afterwards, Coogan had said: "If it wasn't for Philippa Langley, Richard III would still be lying under a car park in Leicester. It is her name that will be remembered in relation to the discovery of the lost king, long after Richard Taylor has faded into obscurity."
He went on to add: "That is the story I wanted to tell, and I am happy I did."
Reacting to the statement, Mr Taylor argued "it's a pretty strange definition of happy when you've had to settle a defamation claim for seven figures in costs".
He said: "Steve is never anything other than certain in himself and of his own position, but I think he's got it wrong - basic facts were not checked."
(c) Sky News 2025: Academic who sued Steve Coogan over Richard III film says he hasn't received an apology

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