Skip to playerSkip to main content
  • 1 day ago
The Crown S01E01 [Full Movie] [High Quality]Full EP - Full
Transcript
00:00to help you do with a better design.
00:14www.kbt.com
00:14www.kbt.com
00:14www.kbt.com
00:15www.kbt.com
00:15www.kbt.com
00:16www.kbt.com
00:17www.kbt.com
00:20www.kbt.com
00:28www.kbt.com
01:00His royal highness, Prince Philip of Greece and of Denmark, renounces his Greek nationality and all foreign titans.
01:14And from henceforth, he will be known as Lieutenant Philip Mountbatten, Royal Navy.
01:39Philip Mountbatten, I...
01:50I...
01:52I...
02:00I grant you and the heirs, male of your body, lawfully begotten, the dignities of Baron Greenwich, Earl of Marianne
02:17and Duke of Edinburgh,
02:20and knight-companion of our most noble order of the Garter.
02:41Congratulations.
02:44Thank you, son.
02:59Well done. Thank you.
03:06Yes.
03:07Good morning.
03:23They got through it.
03:25I got through it.
03:27I think they'd have preferred a nice pink-faced Marquess with a grouse wall in the Scottish borders
03:36Are you sure you wouldn't have preferred one of those someone with the grand title rather than a homeless Charlie
03:41crown?
03:42No
03:44Oh, that would have all been very antiseptic
03:55Must you really smoke?
03:57You know how I hate it
03:58Pity, because I love it so very much
04:02But like a great many other things, I'm going to give it all up
04:06For you
04:08You still have 24 hours to change your mind
04:10You think I can change my mind after all that?
04:14No, too late
04:18I've signed myself away
04:20Who won the greatest prize on earth?
04:25That's certainly what they think
04:38It's what I think, too
04:45Watch out
05:00See you tomorrow
05:03Try and get some sleep
05:09You, too?
05:11A naval officer's stagnant
05:13Charles will be a fine thing
05:16Thank you
05:17God bless you
05:19God bless you
05:21God bless you
05:22God bless you
05:23God bless you
05:23God bless you
05:23God bless you
05:23God bless you
05:24God bless you
05:28God bless you
05:30God bless you
05:32God bless you
05:32God bless you
05:33God bless you
05:35God bless you
05:35God bless you
05:35God bless you
05:37God bless you
05:37God bless you
05:37God bless you
05:39God bless you
05:40God bless you
06:49A spot of blood in my spittle yesterday morning.
06:53Would I be concerned?
06:55Well, I'm not a doctor, sir.
06:57If it's just specked, sir...
07:00It was.
07:01It's probably just the cold weather.
07:04It gets right to the back of the throat.
07:07Cold weather.
07:08That's what I thought.
07:11The carriage will be cold, too, Peter.
07:14I've arranged for there to be hot water bottles, sir.
07:16Oh, well done.
07:27For grace, thanks, James!
07:30Making bloody hard going out of this collar!
07:32Sorry, sir.
07:34Nearly there.
07:35Doing it on purpose.
07:36Now, sir, we're not going to let something as small as a collar and agitate us, sir.
07:44No, thank you, James.
07:46Sir, eyes front.
07:49Chin up.
07:54There was a young lady named Sally
07:58who enjoyed the occasional dally.
08:03She sat on the lap of a well-endowed chap
08:11and cried,
08:12Sir,
08:13you're right up my alley.
08:22Right.
08:24There was an old Countess of Bray.
08:30And
08:33you may think it odd
08:34when I say
08:35that despite her high station,
08:39rank and education...
08:41Your Majesty.
08:43She always spelled cunt with a K.
08:48Shall we?
09:12You're beautiful.
09:20You'll be fine.
09:27I'm fine.
09:30I'm fine.
09:30I'm fine.
09:31I'm fine.
09:37Here we go.
10:00Here we go.
10:08Oh
10:12Yes
10:20Now
10:46That's Winston where's shame. It's a royal wedding, not a campaign trail.
10:53He's outrageous.
10:55But you have to admire him.
10:58This poor old Attlee is our prime minister.
11:01No one brought up for him.
11:08No, no.
11:11Winston still thinks he's the father of the nation.
11:31He's the one who grew up.
11:36This little thing is mountain mountains.
11:38Triumph. Engineered it all.
11:43The man who gave away India.
13:15To join together this man and this woman in holy matrimony.
13:25Who giveth this woman to be married to this man?
13:41I, Philip.
13:44Take thee, Elizabeth, Alexandra, Mary.
13:49Take thee, Elizabeth, Alexandra, Mary.
13:52You know why his three sisters aren't here.
13:54They're all married to Nazis.
14:02I, Elizabeth, Alexandra, Mary.
14:06I, Elizabeth, Alexandra, Mary.
14:09Take thee, Philip.
14:12Take thee, Philip.
14:13To my wedded husband.
14:16To my wedded husband.
14:18To have and to hold.
14:28To have and to hold.
14:35To have and to hold.
14:39From this day forward.
14:42From this day forward.
14:44For better, for worse.
14:46For better, for worse.
14:48For richer, for poorer.
14:51For richer, for poorer.
14:52In sickness and in health.
14:54In sickness and in health.
14:57To love.
14:58And to cherish.
15:02And to obey.
15:05Obey?
15:06She insisted.
15:07And was disgust.
15:12And obey.
15:16To love and cherish.
15:18And obey.
15:20Till death us do part.
15:24Till death us do part.
15:30Sheer perfection.
15:32Your highness.
15:33You have to hand it to her.
15:35It's quite a victory.
15:37There wasn't a single person supported the match.
15:40Not a single ally, a court or in government.
15:44Yet here we all are.
15:46Utterly divine.
15:48May we have the grooms family?
15:50She turned us all on our heads.
15:52And barely opened her mouth in the process.
15:55You overestimate her.
15:57You underestimate her.
16:03Well, in the past 48 hours, reality has sunk in with Philip's family.
16:09Would you look at the mother?
16:13Just out of his sanatorium, I am.
16:16You're dressed as a nun.
16:18Are we ready?
16:19Are we ready?
16:20A nun.
16:22Are we ready?
16:23To be ready?
16:27Are we ready?
16:29Quite magnificent.
16:32Your majesty.
16:33This is the last one, dear.
16:35That has been such a deal.
16:37No, I'll have to put that over, sir.
16:41No, I'll have to put that over, sir.
16:54What's that?
16:55This present is from me.
16:59Can I open it?
17:04Oh, the path.
17:08If your marriage is as happy as mine has been,
17:16I don't want you to miss a single thing.
17:23Lilibet, they're waiting.
17:28Put it in.
17:30We need you.
17:34Ready.
17:34Here.
17:37I'm fine.
17:39You ready?
17:40You ready?
17:44Everyone ready?
17:46You are good?
17:47Sir.
17:49Oh, my God.
20:23Oh, good.
20:24You're here.
20:26Right, come on, you two.
20:27Inside.
20:28We can't stop without you.
20:29Of course, come on.
20:30Yes, ma'am.
20:40Ladies and gentlemen, pray silence for her royal highness, Princess Elizabeth.
20:44Thank you, Martin.
20:47As I'm sure you know, my dear husband will be Lieutenant Mountbatten, but Lieutenant Commander Mountbatten, which I gather involves
21:05a whole new gold ring.
21:12So I've asked the two most important people here to do the presentation.
21:24So I've asked the two most important people here to do the presentation.
21:33Very good.
21:37Very good.
21:37There we are.
21:38Good boy, Charles.
21:39Well done.
21:41Important call for London.
22:46Charles and children wait wait
22:54they're waiting in the green drawing room
22:55where's grandpa he's just upstairs
22:58with the doctors now you wait with
23:00nanny move back in a minute
23:02Charles wait here
23:15mommy so glad you're here we came as soon
23:18as we could I know
23:21I'm so sorry
23:26they're operating
23:28it's been two hours
23:30he's in with the doctors now
23:57I'm happy to say the procedure went well and that his majesty's immediate
24:01post-operative condition is satisfactory
24:09thank you doctor
24:13it's good news
24:14it's good news
24:16it's good news
24:17it's great
24:19I know
24:20it's good news
24:21it's good news
24:26it's good news
24:38that's enough
24:38it's good news
25:01After the votes are finally counted, Winston Churchill is Prime Minister of Great Britain
25:07and Northern Ireland once again, after the conservative party achieved a...
25:12No bacon.
25:13Oh, a little bacon won't hurt, surely, Joan.
25:15It's been five weeks.
25:16Let's cool this down.
25:19And make sure that egg is well-baked.
25:22And no shell to risk irritation.
25:25And turn those ones off.
25:27He'll still be Prime Minister tomorrow.
25:29Ready?
25:29Ready.
25:30Let's get him back on his feet.
25:33He took office aged 83.
25:35We await the announcement of the new cabinet in the coming days.
25:45Good morning, Your Majesty.
25:48Your first day back at work.
25:51Who won?
25:53Who won?
25:55Mr. Churchill, Your Majesty.
25:57By 17 seats.
25:59Good for him.
26:00You didn't hear me say that.
26:02Mr. Winston Churchill.
26:05I keep trying to count him out.
26:10This is indeed a prime and unhappy moment to be elected for the second time as your Prime Minister.
26:25What this nation needs is several years of strong, steady, experienced administration.
26:59Congratulations.
27:01Dr. Moran's here for you.
27:04Mm-hmm.
27:05Cheers.
27:06Cheers.
27:07Cheers.
27:10Yes.
27:11We've just won a general election, but...
27:17135 over 90.
27:19We can do better, Winston.
27:27Have a look at this for me, William.
27:30In the war, we used mathematicians to decode the indecipherable.
27:34I need an expert to cut through the jargon.
27:41Are they keeping something from man?
27:44Well, I wouldn't be unduly concerned about the man's pneumotics.
27:48And given his age, and he's a smoker, control inflammation, it's not that unusual.
27:52But I would be concerned about the bronchoscopy.
27:56And they wouldn't have done that unless they were looking for something far more serious.
28:01And they conspicuously failed to mention the results.
28:05Instead, they go on about the lung resection which they performed because of structural alterations.
28:14What are structural alterations?
28:17It's what doctors say when they're trying to avoid using the word that it almost inevitably describes.
28:25Who is this man?
28:35Just a little.
28:39One doesn't want to overdo it.
28:42One doesn't want to look ill either.
28:45Sick.
28:49King is no good to anyone.
28:54There must be no weakness.
28:57No vulnerability.
29:37What is that?
29:39In our chair, sir.
29:40I just thought a man of his age...
29:42This one will never see us. Get rid of me.
29:46Mr. Churchill, Your Majesty.
29:54Your Majesty.
29:56The people have spoken.
29:59Your party has won the election.
30:03And as...
30:04as their sovereign,
30:07I invite you to form a government in my name.
30:10An honour I gratefully accept.
30:13My dear Winston, congratulations.
30:17Would it be terribly unconstitutional of me
30:21to say how happy I am?
30:25I've missed our weekly chats.
30:31Your predecessor is a fine parliamentarian.
30:36A good man.
30:38But, um...
30:39Well, as company,
30:42as a companion.
30:45An empty taxi pulled up at the House of Commons
30:47and Mr. Attlee got out.
30:50Oh, quite.
30:55Now you may congratulate me in return.
30:59What for?
31:01My rapid recovery.
31:03Oh, yes.
31:06I seem to have bounced back
31:08a lot quicker than people expected.
31:11Yes.
31:13I'm not sure I ever imagined
31:14what breathing through one lung would feel like.
31:18Turns out there's barely any difference.
31:21Good.
31:23Good.
31:28Well,
31:30probably wise
31:32to let the Princess Elizabeth
31:34undertake the Commonwealth tour.
31:37What say you?
31:40Is she up to it?
31:42Yes.
31:43I'd say so.
31:45Besides,
31:47we have to start
31:49breaking her in gently,
31:50don't we?
31:52Do we?
31:54Keep one eye on the future.
31:57The distant future.
32:11Peace!
32:11Oh, Jesus!
32:17Peace!
32:19Aloha!
32:20Peace!
32:21Days likese.
32:21Peace!
32:22Peace!
32:23Beach!
32:24A half o'clock!
32:40What's this?
32:42Let's have an upstairs.
32:43Everything as it was before, sir.
32:45Yes, everything exactly as it was before.
32:48Ladies, ladies.
32:51Who is this?
32:54Oh, Miss Venetia Scott, sir.
32:57A new edition.
32:58A good one, I'd say.
33:00Thank you, sir.
33:03I had hoped I'd seen the back of this place.
33:06Could you give us a moment, please, Jog?
33:13How is the king?
33:16He talked a great deal about his recovery.
33:19Lots of mentions of bouncing back,
33:22which always makes one fear the worst.
33:25Not to mention the make-up.
33:30He was wearing rouge.
33:33Poor man.
33:38It's cancer.
33:42What?
33:48Who knows?
33:50No one.
33:53At least of all, him.
33:56Sir?
33:57Lunch?
33:57Oh, let's have it in here.
34:00I see what they've been serving for the past five years.
34:05So he's dying.
34:07We're all dying.
34:10That's what defines the condition of living.
34:13Will he die tomorrow?
34:15No.
34:16What about the day after tomorrow?
34:17And the day after that?
34:19The country needs to be led by someone strong.
34:22I'm strong?
34:23You are also tired, Winston.
34:26We both are.
34:28A situation like that would require enormous energy.
34:33And I won't lie to you.
34:35I have considered resigning for Anthony's sake.
34:39For your sake.
34:41But then I realized a situation like that would also require statesmanship.
34:46The party needs me.
34:48The country needs me.
34:50She needs me.
34:52Who?
34:53Her.
34:56Oh, her.
35:00This is Clarence House dining room to Clarence House kitchen.
35:03Dining room to kitchen.
35:06Dining room to kitchen?
35:08Dining room to kitchen.
35:10Oh, bugger it.
35:11Right, check the circuits and up the amperage of the fuse wire.
35:14Right.
35:15Hi, ma'am.
35:17Breakfast with your mother?
35:18And Margaret.
35:19I can't imagine.
35:20I'm checking curtain fabrics in an hour.
35:24Yeah.
35:29Let's open the curtains.
35:31Where to, ma'am?
35:32Buckingham Petties.
35:37Buckingham Palace.
35:46I see.
35:48The Queen has asked to see you.
35:51Yes, we look forward to seeing the doctor then.
35:54Goodbye.
35:55Drawing room.
35:56Now?
35:57Yes.
35:58Yes.
36:05We do both so love living at Clarence House.
36:08He has all sorts of ideas about how to modernize it.
36:11He really is rather ingenious like that, actually.
36:13Now, Peter.
36:15Your Majesty, Your Royal Highnesses.
36:17I have to make a decision about Christmas.
36:20Tell me, do you think the king will be well enough to go to Sanfranum?
36:24I do.
36:24As a matter of fact, I think it would do him good.
36:27So it's decided.
36:29Will you be joining us too?
36:32Me?
36:34Of course not.
36:35Peter will be spending Christmas at home with his family.
36:38I was only thinking of Papa.
36:40Given the choice, you know he never let him out of his sight.
36:43Well, that's true.
36:45He's quite devoted to you.
36:48Then let me discuss it with Rosemary.
36:49Oh, no.
36:50No, it's out of the question.
36:53Why, Mummy?
36:54Let Peter discuss it.
36:59We did offer.
37:00Oh, very well.
37:02As a wife, I know what my answer would be.
37:05I'd want my husband at home at Christmas with his children.
37:09Excuse me.
37:23I saw that.
37:26What?
37:27No, I haven't finished.
37:29That look between the two of you.
37:34Oh, Margaret.
37:36You must tell no one.
37:39Papers all think up for Johnny Dow Keith.
37:41Billy Wallace.
37:42Mummy and Papa, too, by the way.
37:43They're just boys, whereas Peter is...
37:46No, I quite see the attraction of Peter.
37:49But he's married.
38:09Dr. Weir, Your Majesty.
38:17You told me that after the operation, I might expect some...
38:24Soreness.
38:27Some...
38:28Difficulty of breathing.
38:31But, um...
38:33You didn't tell me about this.
38:36The coughing has returned?
38:38Yes.
38:38How often?
38:40All the time.
38:43At the time of the operation, as you know, structural alterations were discovered.
38:49Of course.
38:50The blockage in the lung.
38:53It's time we gave that blockage a name, sir.
38:57It was a tumor.
38:59A malignant tumor.
39:08I see.
39:14But we removed it.
39:16We did.
39:18So what is this?
39:20We removed the left lung, sir.
39:23But the right...
39:26Has fewer, but still significant blockages.
39:46So what's next?
39:50Next.
39:57I argued that His Majesty should be told at the time.
40:01Patient has a right to know the full picture.
40:05But I was overruled.
40:06The theory was that if His Majesty felt he'd been cured, he could throw himself into his work without undue
40:11stress and worry.
40:31I have two questions.
40:35Who knows the full picture?
40:39Apart from the surgeons, perhaps the Prime Minister, sir.
40:54But not the Queen.
40:58Nor anyone else in my family.
41:01No, sir.
41:08And the second question.
41:15It's impossible to say, sir.
41:18My understanding is the surgeons did everything they could.
41:26And
41:29it could be years.
41:31More likely, months.
42:25Let's go.
43:16Let's go.
43:29Let's go.
43:55Let's go.
44:01Let's go.
44:13Let's go.
44:16Let's go.
44:25Charming.
44:34What can I give him, poor as I am?
44:45If I were a shepherd, I would bring a lamb.
44:56If I were a wise man, I would live my past.
45:06Yet what I can I give him, give my past.
45:27Let's go.
45:54Very good.
45:56Charles, my...
45:57That's a little boy.
45:59My, my, my.
46:01His majesty has requested you attend him in his study.
46:06Urgently requested, ma'am.
46:09All right.
46:11Will you take them?
46:12I'll be back soon.
46:16All right.
46:18Off we go again.
46:27In case you're wondering, I haven't anything specific to say.
46:32I'm sorry.
46:33I just wanted to spend time with you.
46:43If there's anything you wanted to ask me, just fire away.
46:50Are they a nuisance?
46:52Oh, the boxes.
46:54Not if you keep on top of them.
46:58Even at Christmas?
47:00Even at Christmas.
47:03What's inside?
47:05Everything they want me to know, they stick on top.
47:09Everything they'd rather I didn't know.
47:11Cabinet meetings, foreign office briefings.
47:15They tuck away at the bottom.
47:17Which is why...
47:20The first thing I do...
47:22No one is looking, is this.
47:32I don't care.
47:36Yeah.
48:09Don't you get sick of it all?
48:12I do.
48:15And lonely.
48:20Sometimes.
48:22Which is why it's so important to have the right person by your side.
48:28I've been very lucky in that regard with your mother.
48:34How's your fellow?
48:35Philip?
48:36Mm.
48:40Well, he...
48:43Well, I'm afraid he's become something of a snagaholic.
48:47A what?
48:48Well, you know we're renovating Clarence's house to make it our permanent home.
48:53Mm, yes.
48:54Yes.
48:54Well, ever since he started supervising the work, he can't look at anything without seeing its faults.
49:00That switch is an inch too high.
49:03And that door handle's wrong.
49:05Well, don't be silly, I say.
49:07A handle's a handle.
49:08I should make more of an effort with him.
49:12Take him shooting.
49:14Would he like that?
49:15Yes, I think he'd love it.
49:17And then when your health's improved, we'll return to Malta.
49:20And he'll have his navy again.
49:22And all will be well.
49:23Of course.
49:26But, um, in the meantime,
49:29I'm still not yet well enough to travel.
49:32Not long distances, anyway.
49:36Which brings me to the forthcoming Commonwealth tour.
49:40I was wondering if you would consider stepping into my shoes, so to speak.
49:45that my health is improving, but I'm still not yet well enough.
49:52Well, if you think we're up to it...
49:55You'll be fine.
49:58Where is it?
50:00Well...
50:01Ceylon, Australia.
50:04Then on to New Zealand, Bermuda,
50:07and there's talk of starting in Kenya.
50:09Very good.
50:11Right.
50:12We'll be gone months.
50:14Are you moving?
50:15Yes.
50:16But it would mean so much to Papa that we do it.
50:18And what am I supposed to do all that time?
50:20Well, don't worry.
50:21We'll put you to work.
50:22Charles, come back.
50:23My work is as a naval officer not grinning like a demented ape while you cut ribbons.
50:28What about the children?
50:30Charles!
50:30The children will be fine.
50:32Oh, without their parents for months on end.
50:35Daddy, can you come and play?
50:37I won't be a moment, darling.
50:39If you go and play with Grandpapa, I'll be right over.
50:42Well, come on, darling.
50:43Daddy's busy.
50:44Come and start again.
50:45They won't know.
50:47Right.
50:48They're too young to notice.
50:49Come on, Anne.
50:50Quiet.
50:50You would so help in Papa's recovery.
50:52It's so creepy.
50:53It's so creepy.
50:55Charles, come back here.
50:57Daddy?
50:58Can you play now?
51:00Charles?
51:07Yes?
51:07You see somebody moving in the mirror there?
51:10Why?
51:12What are we playing?
51:14Go on his footsteps.
51:15All right.
51:16Come on, then.
51:16Let's go.
51:17And then it's bedtime.
51:18Ready?
51:19Daddy.
51:42Sir?
51:56What's the weather like today?
51:58Rather misty at the moment, sir.
52:02Morning!
52:04Nice morning.
52:05Bye for all.
52:07Yes.
52:08I'm not sure that's the correct address for the King of England.
52:13It's a beautiful morning for duck.
52:16What?
52:16I thought Wolverton Splash.
52:35See?
52:38Oh.
52:39Field.
52:40Below the withy there.
52:41Yes.
52:43When I woke up this morning, I thought we'd go to Beverly Flat or Eleven Acres.
52:47But in the end, there's nowhere better than a splash with a bag full of cartridges to lift the spirits.
52:53The magistrate's back to himself again.
52:55Oh, he is.
52:57Like a young man again.
53:07We'll be all right.
53:09My son-in-law's a naval man.
53:11We will.
53:11If I can handle a frigate.
53:17We will.
53:36If I can handle a frigate.
53:41Yes.
53:43She is the job.
53:47She is the essence of your duty.
53:52Loving her.
53:55Protecting her.
54:01Of course you'll miss your career
54:06But doing this for her
54:08Doing this for me
54:14There'll be no greater act of patriotism
54:19Or love
54:24I understand, sir
54:29Do you, boy?
54:32Do you really?
54:39I think so
54:54Let's do some duck to him
54:56Three cheers for his majesty
54:58Hooray!
54:59Hooray!
55:00Hooray!
55:02Hooray!
55:27Hooray!
55:31Hooray!
55:34Hooray!
55:39Hooray!
55:41Wooray!
55:43Hooray!
55:45Metmore
55:48Hooray!
55:54I don't know.
56:27I don't know.
56:55I don't know.
57:28I don't know.
57:58I don't know.
58:07I don't know.
58:15I don't know.
58:25I don't know.
58:28I don't know.
Comments

Recommended