Los Angeles Times

On the trail of a ‘Lost’ legend

A woman inspired and driven by the story of Richard III goes on a quest in ‘Lost King.’

- By Katie Walsh Walsh is a Tribune News Service film critic.

Sally Hawkins plays a British woman who relates to the storied Richard III and aims to rewrite history.

Fact, fiction and feeling collide and combine in Stephen Frears’ “The Lost King,” written by Steve Coogan and Jeff Pope, an adaptation of the book “The Lost King: The Search for Richard III.” This unique and lively mystery based on a true story comes from the team behind the Oscarnomin­ated “Philomena,” and it takes much the same approach, centering the story of a British woman embarking on a nigh-impossible search for a man, assisted in some way by a kind, yet put-upon, Coogan.

While Judi Dench’s Philomena sought her longlost son, Sally Hawkins’ Philippa Langley seeks a longlost king, Richard III, trapped in the amber of our collective imaginatio­ns as the titular evil antihero of Shakespear­e’s play. Philippa, a middle-aged woman in Edinburgh with two boys, a faltering marriage to John (Coogan), a dead-end sales job and a challengin­g diagnosis of ME/CFS (otherwise known as chronic fatigue syndrome), becomes inspired by the story of Richard III at a production of the play she has to attend for her son’s school.

Struggling to be taken seriously at home and work despite her physical condition, she relates to Richard’s struggle with his own disability (his “hunchback”), and objects to his villainous depiction. Philippa sets out to discover the truth about Richard’s life and story, embarking on a research journey that lands her in a car park in Leicester, England, uncovering and rewriting history with her own intuition.

It’s an inspiring story of personal determinat­ion as Philippa meets obstacles at every step, from a lack of funding to folks who simply don’t believe her or object to her reliance on gut feeling. Frears animates her journey with crisp, beautiful cinematogr­aphy by Zac Nicholson, who frequently captures Philippa in aerial shots as she crosses the ancient squares of Edinburgh and Leicester, foreshadow­ing the maps of her future archaeolog­ical dig. A sprightly score by Alexandre Desplat, riffing on Bernard Herrmann, offers a whimsical, almost Hitchcocki­an sense of suspense to the drama, as big musical cues signify important moments, such as when Philippa is overcome with emotion as she stands on a giant “R” painted in the car park.

Frears anthropomo­rphizes Philippa’s otherworld­ly intuition by granting her a literal spirit guide in the form of a taciturn Richard III “apparition,” played by the actor (Harry Lloyd) who initially sparked her interest onstage. He pops up from time to time, encouragin­g Philippa to keep going and that she’s on the right path in her quest to lay the king to rest.

Toward the end, “The Lost King” reveals a distinctly British obsession with royalty and propriety that doesn’t always translate with the same reverence abroad. But the more important story being told is the one about discrimina­tion and misinforma­tion; that fact can be twisted into fiction that’s perpetrate­d for centuries. Philippa’s mission to ensure Richard III’s royal coat of arms on his tomb might seem a bit superfluou­s, but for her, it’s about restoring the truth, not necessaril­y the title.

Believing that Richard’s scoliosis allowed his rivals to characteri­ze him as monstrous, Philippa’s mission as a Ricardian is to emphasize his humanity over the politicall­y motivated “fake news” of the day that became Shakespear­ean fiction and was eventually cemented as common knowledge. It’s a film that calls into question our own biases and accepted notions and encourages one to get out there and find the truth — it could be an adventure after all.

 ?? Graeme Hunter IFC Films ?? A BRITON searches for the truth about Richard III after seeing Shakespear­e’s play in “The Lost King.” Above, Harry Lloyd stars as an apparition of Richard III.
Graeme Hunter IFC Films A BRITON searches for the truth about Richard III after seeing Shakespear­e’s play in “The Lost King.” Above, Harry Lloyd stars as an apparition of Richard III.
 ?? IFC Films ?? SALLY HAWKINS and Steve Coogan play a couple.
IFC Films SALLY HAWKINS and Steve Coogan play a couple.

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