"Spotlight" has received an overwhelming amount of critical praise for its depiction of the Boston Globe's uncovering of sexual abuse in the Roman Catholic Church — but one real-life figure in the scandal said the film induced him to vomit.
Jack Dunn, a longtime communications representative for Boston College who holds a board seat at Boston College High School, where multiple students were molested by cleric teachers, blasted the movie's take on the news events.
He also objected to his depiction in Tom McCarthy's film, where he is portrayed by actor Gary Galone.
"The things they have me saying in the movie, I never said," Dunn said in a recent interview with the Boston Globe.
For Dunn, the most offending scene depicted a conversation he and Boston College High School President Bill Kemeza had at the request of then-Boston Globe editor Walter Robinson, to discuss the abuse allegations that took place at the institution.
In the script, Galone's Dunn is confronted by Michael Keaton as Robinson, and Rachel McAdams portraying Globe reporter Sacha Pfeiffer. Dunn said he felt the dialogue in the scene minimized his actual concern for abuse victims.
"It's a big school … and we're talking about seven alleged victims over, what, eight years?" the movie version of Dunn said.