00:07Now, Anne, what's this?
00:09A penguin.
00:10Very good.
00:11And Charles, who do you suppose is surrounded by penguins at the moment?
00:15Daddy.
00:15Yes, that's right.
00:17That's because he's in the Antarctic.
00:18And from there, he goes to the South Shetland Islands,
00:21and then he goes on to the Falkland Islands,
00:24and then goes all the way up here to Ascension Island.
00:28Now, all these are British overseas territories,
00:30and they have to be visited every once in a while,
00:32so they don't feel neglected or forgotten.
00:34They don't get any silly ideas like becoming independent.
00:37Right, you brush your teeth?
00:38Yes.
00:39Good.
00:39Have you said your prayers?
00:40Yes.
00:40Dolly good.
00:41Right.
00:41Night-night.
00:42Night-night, Mummy.
00:45Oh, we might put a picture of the Duke of Edinburgh by the children's bed,
00:49so they recognise him when he gets back.
00:51Five months is a long time at that age.
00:58Oh, what's that?
01:00From his Royal Highness, ma'am.
01:02Footage from the Royal Tour.
01:04How nice.
01:07We might watch that instead of our next film.
01:14Oh, what's that?
01:51Hansen 3-7-4-2
01:53Tommy
02:22Tommy
03:03Tommy
03:20Tommy
03:51Tommy
03:56Tommy
03:57Tommy
03:58Tommy
03:58Tommy
03:58Tommy
03:58Tommy
03:59Tommy
03:59Tommy
04:29Tommy
04:31Tommy
04:33Tommy
04:41Tommy
04:49Tommy
04:56Tommy
05:05Tommy
05:11Tommy
05:13Tommy
05:18Tommy
05:30Tommy
05:37Tommy
05:48Tommy
05:50Tommy
06:20Tommy
06:26Tommy
06:52Tommy
07:22Tommy
07:24Tommy
07:31Tommy
07:34Tommy
08:04Tommy
08:14Tommy
08:21Tommy
08:23Tommy
08:24Tommy
08:55Tommy
08:56Tommy
09:03Tommy
09:29Tommy
09:30Tommy
10:01Tommy
10:23Tommy
10:25Tommy
11:01Tommy
11:32Tommy
11:41Tommy
11:43Tommy
11:51Tommy
11:54Tommy
12:24Tommy
12:25Tommy
12:35Tommy
12:41Tommy
12:42Tommy
13:11Tommy
13:12Tommy
13:48Tommy
14:20Tommy
14:42Tommy
15:06Tommy
15:13Tommy
15:52Tommy
16:04Tommy
16:27Tommy Tommy
16:30Tommy Tommy
16:32Tommy Tommy
16:51Tommy Tommy
17:00Tommy
17:15Tommy Tommy
17:29Tommy Tommy
17:47Tommy Tommy
18:15Tommy Tommy
18:28Tommy Tommy
18:58Tommy Tommy
19:13Tommy Tommy
19:45Tommy Tommy
20:13Tommy Tommy
20:43Tommy Tommy
20:56Tommy Tommy
21:08Tommy Tommy
21:37Tommy Tommy
21:51Tommy Tommy
22:18Tommy Tommy
22:29Tommy Tommy
22:52Tommy Tommy Tommy
23:48Tommy Tommy
24:18Tommy Tommy
24:31Tommy Tommy
24:34Tommy Tommy
25:12Tommy Tommy
25:34Tommy Tommy Tommy
26:28Tommy Tommy
26:33Tommy Tommy
26:40Tommy Tommy
27:06Tommy Tommy Tommy
27:08Tommy Tommy Tommy
27:43Tommy Tommy Tommy
27:52Tommy Tommy Tommy
28:25Tommy Tommy Tommy Tommy
29:11Tommy Tommy
29:14Tommy Tommy Tommy Tommy
29:43Tommy Tommy Tommy
29:46Tommy Tommy Tommy
30:21Tommy Tommy Tommy
30:23Tommy Tommy Tommy
30:55Tommy Tommy Tommy
31:24Tommy Tommy Tommy Tommy
31:52Tommy Tommy Tommy Tommy
31:52Tommy Tommy Tommy Tommy
32:24Tommy Tommy Tommy Tommy
32:56Tommy Tommy Tommy Tommy
33:29Tommy Tommy Tommy
33:35Tommy Tommy Tommy Tommy
34:01Tommy Tommy Tommy Tommy Tommy
34:41Tommy Tommy Tommy Tommy
35:03Tommy Tommy Tommy Tommy Tommy
35:07Tommy Tommy Tommy Tommy Tommy
35:11Tommy Tommy Tommy Tommy Tommy Tommy
35:38in the West End apartment of a society photographer, Baron Nahum.
35:43Nahum is also president of the Thursday Club in Soho,
35:48of which the Duke of Edinburgh is a founder member.
35:51Anyway, that story has rather lit the touch paper.
35:55The British press has caught on, with the Manchester Guardian reporting,
35:59not since the first rumours of a romance
36:02between the former King Edward VIII and Mrs. Ernest Simpson
36:06have Americans gobbled up the London dispatches so avidly.
36:12Go on.
36:13The Sunday Pictorial on its front page reminds its readers
36:18that the royal family is loved and envied throughout the world
36:21because it is a family.
36:24Time magazine has a headline, Too Much Thursday-ing.
36:27It goes on to say,
36:29Not since Wallis Simpson stalked the corridors of Buckingham Palace
36:33unless have the eyes of the world been turned so beadily
36:36towards those chintz drapes.
36:53I say we fly the Duke of Edinburgh back straight away.
36:57That's one thought, Your Majesty, and it's a good one.
37:00The Devil's Advocate might argue,
37:03and I'd be interested to hear Michael's thoughts on this,
37:07that the Duke's early return,
37:09obviously stage-managed by the palace,
37:12might appear too much of a concession to the newspapers
37:15and pour even more petrol on the flames.
37:20I would agree.
37:22And we don't want that.
37:25No.
37:33So what, then?
37:43What?
37:49Yes?
37:52The Admiral would like a woe, sir.
37:55It's fine.
37:56Tell him he can come.
37:58As a matter of fact,
37:59he suggested you go to see him, sir.
38:30Come on.
38:39Admiral.
38:41Could you come in?
38:43Come on.
38:45Buckingham Palace has been in touch
38:47regarding your reunion photo call
38:49with Her Majesty the Queen.
38:51With you, not me.
38:53I'm in command of this ship.
38:56I am her husband.
38:58It's been agreed that Her Majesty will fly out to Lisbon
39:00a day ahead of schedule.
39:03As I see it, your instructions...
39:04Instructions?
39:06... are to meet her at the airfield.
39:07You've been quite specific
39:08for how the reunion is to be managed.
39:21Thank you, sir.
39:42Thank you, sir.
40:14Wanna hear me?
40:14Thanks.
40:14Do you have to play?
40:14See, sir?
40:14Those were the instructions.
40:16For God's sake, it has hearts on it.
40:20And the hat, too.
40:21Yes, sir.
40:22I hate hats.
40:23I believe its value on this occasion is not in its being worn, but in its being removed.
40:28Ah.
40:30In a gesture of chivalry and deference.
40:33Before I enter the aircraft.
40:35Before you reach the stairs of the aircraft.
40:59Michael, you want a hat, sir.
41:40We'll talk later.
41:44Shall we?
42:19The world is delivered to 12 rumors of a risk.
42:53Unprecedented scenes here, as photographers from all over the world are...
42:57...the Queen and the Jew of Edinburgh...
42:59...hides of the world's eyes...
43:00...onward of the Great and Contemporary.
43:02Now the eyes of the world...
43:04...turns towards the royal yacht...
43:05...on which they have sought shelter.
43:09No, Fleur. No, I see.
43:21That was the Palace Press Secretary.
43:25In his view, the steps that we've taken...
43:27The share we've put on.
43:31The steps that we've taken haven't quite done the trick.
43:37The rumors still haven't gone away.
43:49I think we both agree it can't go on like this.
43:57No.
44:02No.
44:02No.
44:15So I thought we might take this opportunity without children, without distraction, to lay our cards on the table and
44:30talk frankly for once.
44:32About what needs to change to make this marriage work.
44:37All right. Who goes first?
44:40Stupid question. I've learned one thing by now, it's that I go second.
44:45If I am to go first, that's where I'd start.
44:51You're complaining.
44:53My complaining?
44:54It's incessant. Whining and whinging like a child.
44:57Are you surprised? The way those god-awful moustaches that run the palace continue to infantilize me.
45:03Perhaps if you weren't behaving like an infant.
45:04Giving me lists, sending me instructions, do this, don't do that, wear this, don't wear that, say this, don't say
45:09that.
45:09Can you imagine anything more humiliating?
45:11Yes. As a matter of fact, I can.
45:16I've learned more about humiliation in the past few weeks than I hoped I would in a lifetime.
45:28I've never felt more alone than I have in the past five months.
45:33And why do you think that was?
45:36Because of your behaviour.
45:38Because you sent me away.
45:40Yes. And why do you think that was?
45:41I don't know. You tell me.
45:43Because you're lost.
45:45You're lost in your role and you're lost in yourself.
45:49Christ.
45:52Look.
45:54I realise that this marriage has turned out to be something quite different to what we both imagined.
46:00Understatement.
46:01And that we both find ourselves in a...
46:05Prison.
46:09In a situation that is unique.
46:15Our marriage is different to any other in the country because the exit route which is open to everyone else...
46:21A divorce?
46:22Yes.
46:23A divorce.
46:26It's not an option for us.
46:31Ever.
46:44No.
46:55Radha.
46:56This, this restlessness of yours, it has to be a thing of the past.
47:03It's what I need.
47:05And it's what our family needs.
47:10The monarchy is too fragile. You keep telling me yourself, one more scandal, one more national embarrassment and it would
47:16all be over.
47:25so what would make it easier on you
47:28to be in
47:30not out
47:35what will it take
47:40you're asking my price
47:45I'm asking
47:48what it will take
48:01all right
48:05to make it work
48:08to make it bearable
48:11I'll need the respect and acknowledgement of the dreaded mustaches
48:15please stop calling them that
48:17I'll stop calling them that when they don't all have one
48:19an end to their
48:21snobbery and prejudice
48:22no more being sniffed at for being a foreigner with a background
48:25nobody understands
48:26will you earn their respect with your behaviour
48:28no
48:29no
48:29no I will earn their respect with the only thing those creatures understand
48:34a gesture a statement something irrefutable that shuts them up and commands their respect
48:38right now I am currently outranked by my eight-year-old son
48:42yes of course he's the heir to the throne
48:54I am his father
48:55Elizabeth
49:05her majesty the queen has been pleased by letters patent under the great seal of the realm
49:12from bearing the date the 22nd of February 1957 to given to grant
49:19under his royal highness the Duke of Edinburgh
49:23the style and titular dignity of a prince of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and more than other
49:36the Duke of Edinburgh shall henceforth be known as his royal highness the Prince Philip Duke of Edinburgh
49:46thank you
50:28thank you
50:30thank you
50:53thank you
50:59thank you
51:36thank you
51:39thank you
51:46Lord
51:57O famous son of England this is he
52:00great by man and great by sea
52:04thine island loves thee well
52:06thy greatest sailer since our world began
52:11quite marvellous sir
52:12thank you
52:13Now to the roll of muffled drums, to thee the greatest soldier comes, for this is he who give him
52:21welcome, this is he, England's greatest son, he that gained a hundred fights, nor ever lost an English gun.
52:34Quite magnificent, sir.
52:39Michael, do you have a moment, Cosmo?
52:44No, it's not.
53:26I'm sorry it's a bit gloomy.
53:29A bit.
53:31I don't live much good around the house with that, Eileen.
53:34You could have at least put the fire on.
53:36Oi, I provided whiskey.
53:39All right, I've burnt some sausages.
53:41Who do you think you are, royalty?
53:46Here you are.
53:58They're our wives and sweethearts.
54:00May they never meet.
54:04What will you do now?
54:06Go back to the Navy?
54:08Yeah.
54:09Going back home.
54:11The Navy is home.
54:13I have the home.
54:14Australia.
54:16Oh.
54:18Can I come?
54:21I thought everything was all sorted in your world.
54:24As sorted as it can be.
54:25You sell yourself.
54:37She wants more children.
54:40Ouch.
54:41I told her the last thing the world needs is more romance to feed, she said.
54:46You should think of it as a second act.
54:48Of what?
54:49A Greek tragedy?
54:49Of her life as a mother.
54:54That makes sense from her perspective.
54:58Charles isn't a child to her, is he?
55:00He's also the crown.
55:02A living embodiment of who will replace her.
55:06Supersede her.
55:09Loving a child who through no fault of his own represents your own death can't be easy.
55:13No.
55:15Because she is a little cold with him.
55:19She tries her best.
55:22Might be nice to have a couple of kids that are just kids.
55:25Not mortal threats.
55:28Who she can actually love.
55:35It's the airport driver.
55:42What would I do without you?
55:44I'm always at the end of a telephone.
55:46Well, that's it then.
55:48End of an era.
55:55Thank you for that era.
55:59No.
56:00No, Mag.
56:05Sir.
56:07Philippe.
56:11Sir.
56:12Sir.
56:15Sir.
56:16Sir.
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