- 6 minutes ago
The Crown S05E01 [Full Movie] [Ranked]Full EP - Full
Category
🎥
Short filmTranscript
00:25At John Brown's yard on Clydeside,
00:27the 4,000-ton Royal Yacht is ready for launching by Her Majesty.
00:37Thousands of dock workers, many of whom helped to build the Royal Craft,
00:40give the Queen a warm reception as she walks past them to inspect the yacht.
00:44For many months, there has been speculation about the name of the new yacht,
00:48and there's an air of expectancy as Her Majesty steps forward
00:51to perform the actual launching ceremony.
00:57I am delighted to join you in Clydebank today,
01:01for the launch of this, the latest Royal Yacht.
01:05I hope that this brand-new vessel, like your brand-new Queen,
01:12will prove to be dependable and constant,
01:16capable of weathering any storm.
01:19I now take great pride in naming this ship Britannia.
01:30I wish success to her, and to all who sail in her.
01:36Her Majesty releases the traditional bottle,
01:39not of champagne this time, but of empire wine.
01:50Soon, the Britannia will become a home for the Queen,
01:53the Duke and their children.
02:09Ah, please, Your Majesty.
02:11Ah.
02:13And again.
02:15Ah.
02:17Lovely. Thank you.
02:29Deep breath in.
02:31And out.
02:34And again.
02:44122 over 80.
02:52And if we could just pop the stockings off, Your Majesty.
02:58Still getting the aches on the balls of the feet?
03:02I'm at the risk of sounding like a broken record.
03:05The less time you spend on your feet, the better.
03:08Occupational hazard, I'm afraid.
03:10Now, if I can invite you to come this way.
03:23Nine and a half stone, as opposed to last year's...
03:26Not sure I want to know.
03:27Nine stone.
03:28And the year befores?
03:30Eight and three quarters.
03:32It makes no sense.
03:34In terms of diet and behaviour, I've not changed a thing.
03:37As we get older, weight stays on, and it's harder to shift.
03:40For men, they say a stone a decade.
03:42And for women?
03:44Maybe half a stone.
03:46All right. Half a stone by the end of summer.
03:51Scotland, as always?
03:52Oh, yes. Heavenly Scotland.
03:54Though slightly less heavenly without the cream teas.
03:56Is Balmoral your favourite home, would you say?
04:00Probably my second.
04:05That's a rather personal question.
04:08I do apologise, Mamma.
04:12I don't know what I was thinking.
04:14There is another.
04:16That's even more special to me.
04:35That's amazing.
04:41Thank you, Scott.
04:47You came to the table.
04:48You've been understanding some of theанию.
04:48times a day, sir, regarding a poll they've conducted about the monarchy, and it's interesting.
04:53When talking about the Queen, again and again, the same words came up. Irrelevant, old, expensive,
05:00out of touch. Quite distinct from the way people talked about you, sir. Really? Should I cover my
05:07ears? No, on the contrary. They described you as young, energetic, modern, empathetic, and when asked
05:16almost half believe you would make an excellent king and would support an early application by the
05:20Queen in your favour. And the story is running when? Sunday week, sir. When I'll be in Italy with the
05:31family. Well, actually, we think the timing of the holiday is ideal. As you know, a big part of your
05:37appeal as future king is the prospect of the Princess of Wales as Queen. Yes. So we've taken the liberty
05:43of
05:43briefing one or two friendly newspapers that it's a second honeymoon. Right.
06:08That's what they said. Those are the words they used. Second honeymoon.
06:21One moment.
07:53Five minutes to go boarding.
08:01Five minutes.
08:02Let's go.
08:09This is classic, Charles.
08:14On the one hand, he says he wants his holiday to his second honeymoon, and he invites cousin Norton and
08:19wife Penny to join us.
08:20Those two are so much apart of the high-growth furniture, Camilla might as well be here herself.
08:25If one were to be charitable for a moment, they've been through a lot recently with their youngest.
08:30Oh, I know.
08:31My goddaughter, Leonora.
08:33What's the latest?
08:34She's in a mission.
08:36You know how it is.
08:37One can never be sure.
08:50I know.
08:52Hi.
08:54Hello.
08:55Hi.
08:56Hi.
08:57Hi.
09:14I just wanted to say how happy I am that we're doing this.
09:31Gonna, gonna, gonna, gonna, gonna, gonna, gonna, gonna look out.
10:08What do you think she's given some of the old magic?
10:11Well, come on, then. Let's blow them away.
10:25Let's blow them away!
10:49So, the route I propose that we take
10:53is from Naples to Ischia,
10:57where Garibaldi spent some time recuperating
10:59after being injured in the Italian Wars of Independence.
11:02Am I right?
11:03Yes, sir.
11:04Then on to Capri,
11:06to see the ruins of the magnificent Villa Jovis.
11:08Then down the Amalfi Coast, on to Sicily,
11:11with a final stop in Olbia on Sardinia
11:14for a private view of the Museo Archeologico there.
11:19And were there any other requests?
11:21Some beaches, perhaps.
11:23There will, of course, be beaches along the way.
11:28And watersports.
11:29And noisy watersports.
11:31And shopping.
11:36Shopping?
11:37It's possible some people might like to go shopping one day.
11:40Who?
11:42Show of hands?
11:43Would anyone apart from Diana like to go shopping?
11:47And the entire point of being on a beautiful yacht like this
11:51is that you can escape from hordes of people
11:53indulging in retail as recreation.
12:00Me!
12:00I want to go shopping.
12:02Me too.
12:03Me too.
12:10Then we'll go shopping.
12:21Thanks for sticking up for me.
12:24What's brave?
12:28A special treat you get to choose between a bedtime story or...
12:32Super Mario!
12:33Don't tell your father.
12:37Are you going back upstairs now?
12:39God, no.
12:41Off to read the classics.
12:43Good and early night.
12:44Love you.
12:45I love you, Mummy.
12:46I love you too, my darlings.
12:48I love you.
12:49I love you, man.
12:50I love you, James.
12:52You've already been up there.
12:54I'm not even turning to the same place.
12:57I love you.
12:59I love you.
13:03I love you.
13:06I love you, and I love you.
13:07I love you.
13:07I love you.
13:08I love you.
13:09I love you, since you've been here.
13:09I love you, James.
13:09Charles and Diana seem to be the happy couple again.
13:13What a blessing that would be.
13:16for everyone.
13:20Who's that?
13:22What was what?
13:23That noise.
13:27There was a mechanical noise.
13:33There it is again.
13:35Right, I'm off.
13:38One last day cutting ribbons in Morecambe,
13:40then feet up for the summer.
13:56As patron of the Church Urban Fund,
13:59I am aware of the vast challenges
14:02faced by this community
14:04and many others across the diocese.
14:07The Milk Marketing Board
14:09is among the most enduring
14:11and resilient of Britain's commercial enterprises.
14:15This state-of-the-art dairy complex
14:19is testament to the continuing vitality
14:23of British others.
14:27It has been a great pleasure
14:28to learn more about intermodal containers,
14:32representing a great 30%
14:34of the European freight market.
14:36It is clear that intermodal containers
14:39are Lancashire's ticket
14:41to a bright future.
15:06How long has the pressure been down on that ground?
15:08Since this morning, sir.
15:22It shouldn't come as a surprise
15:24she's falling apart.
15:25She's a creature of another age.
15:28Effectively, a World War II cruiser
15:30with soft furnishings.
15:32In many ways, she's obsolete.
15:34Don't say that.
15:36What are the options?
15:38Well, trouble with the main engine.
15:40Stubborn boilers out of service.
15:44Sentimentally, I think we'd all prefer to stick with her.
15:47I should say.
15:48But we have to be realistic
15:50about the cost of repairs
15:51when she's so obviously past her best.
15:55Are you seeing the Prime Minister
15:56in Balmoral next week?
15:58Yes.
15:58He's coming with his wife, Dora.
16:01No, that's not right.
16:03Nora.
16:05Norma.
16:06Well, you might want to bring it up with him then.
16:08I'll talk to the Admiral
16:09and come up with some figures.
16:12But it's the first time I've started
16:13to consider the unthinkable.
16:15What's that?
16:17A replacement.
16:20Built in AD 27 by...
16:25Tiberius?
16:26Exactly.
16:27Wow.
16:27The most magnificent
16:28of world imperial residences here in Capri.
16:34Some people say that Tiberius escaped to Capri
16:37because he could no longer endure
16:38the machinations of his mother's court in Rome.
16:41Not something I could ever understand.
16:44But after a long, successful career
16:47as a general...
16:59Bye, Charles.
17:01We'll miss you while we're having all the fun.
17:07It's an extraordinary
17:09how two people's understanding of fun
17:10could be so wholly different.
17:21When they suggested to us,
17:23Diana and I,
17:24that we should reassure the public
17:27about the strength of our marriage
17:28by coming on a second honeymoon,
17:31I said to them,
17:32you obviously weren't at the first one.
17:35On Britannia, wasn't it?
17:36Yes.
17:36I know the Queen thinks the Royal Yacht
17:39is perfect in every way,
17:40but as an intimate space for newlyweds,
17:43it's like a floating observation tank.
17:48Every awkward silence
17:50and stilted conversation
17:53between bride and glue
17:55glaringly obvious to each and every one
17:57of the two hundred crew.
18:06Did you just say bride and glue?
18:10Did I?
18:17The irony is, I'm the only person
18:19this marriage does make gloomy.
18:21It seems to lift the rest of the world up.
18:26When we're together in public,
18:29I can't deny it is magical,
18:31the perfect team.
18:33Yes, in private.
18:39Listen to me.
18:41After everything you've been through
18:42with your girl.
18:43Oh.
18:47She let me comb her hair last week.
18:51First time since it's grown back.
18:53Do you know it's come back curly?
18:56I found myself slightly ashamed to think
18:58I actually preferred it that way.
19:03It's a dreadful, wicked disease.
19:08You've all been so wonderfully strong.
19:13Is it important?
19:15The Sunday time, sir?
19:18Oh, yes.
19:19I'll leave you to it.
19:25It's running tomorrow.
19:27I've managed to gain advanced sight of it,
19:29and I think you'll agree it's pretty punchy.
19:47Good morning, Your Majesty.
19:49Good morning, Peggy.
19:52Oh, a bit wet for the arrival of the Princess Royal.
19:56Oh, she won't mind this.
20:03Good morning, Your Majesty.
20:05Good morning, Your Majesty.
20:08Welcome aboard, Your Royal Highness.
20:25Fellas?
20:25Cheers.
20:25Fellas?
20:25Robert, you've got a bit of a problem.
20:27TELLING
20:31have the newspapers been delivered just arrived sir has the queen gone to breakfast on our way
20:37make sure the sunday times is removed better still thrown away under no circumstances can
20:43the queen or the princess royal be allowed to see it understood sir
21:01good morning
21:03oh this is very good
21:07hello darling mommy
21:20sorry ma'am you can't read that
21:23why not it's not today's it's yesterday's but yesterday was saturday and that i think we can
21:30all agree is the sunday times i mean last week's what but this is today's sunday telegraph today's
21:36mail on sunday and the latest racing post oh yes please
21:42thank you
22:04yes
22:08i'm sorry to disturb sir
22:12but i thought you should be aware of this
22:22it's outrageous
22:24she never stops she never complains she never puts a foot wrong she's utterly magnificent
22:29and they print rubbish like this
22:31looks like more rain on the way i shouldn't be surprised it is the west coast of scotland
22:38i suppose you've seen the sunday times
22:40oh morning robert good morning your majesty
22:43because i checked apparently it has been delivered
22:48i'll look into it ma'am when you find it i'll be on deck
23:06well to say the article has had an impact would be an understatement
23:10it's provoked significant debate radio and television with one particular phrase getting most attention
23:16queen victoria's syndrome
23:19yes i saw that
23:23an aging monarch too long on the throne
23:26whose remoteness from the modern world has led people to grow
23:30tired not just of her but of the monarchy itself
23:36any reaction from the queen
23:38my understanding is she hasn't seen it
23:40that they've kept it from her to protect her feelings
23:45doesn't that tell you everything
23:51i'd like you to arrange a meeting
23:53with the prime minister as soon as we're back
23:57you'll think of them suitable pretext
24:06look it's a whale where
24:11oh good spot
24:15no look at the way it's surfacing it's a minky
24:18probably smell it before we see it again if we get any closer
24:22their blow smells of rotten cabbages
24:24a stinky minky
24:33oh there she is
24:36bladder
24:38there
24:42oh yes
24:44like a bulrush out of a pond
24:47isn't she a beauty
24:49you say so dear
24:53it's one of the last manned lighthouses in scotland
24:58why don't we pay her a visit
24:59really must we
25:00come on
25:01a bit of exercise is good for the figure
25:03at our age the weight does not stay off by itself
25:06come on
25:07no
25:13no
25:17no
25:18no
25:19no
25:38People wonder why I find lighthouses so inspiring when you get to a place like this.
25:55New query? Tim? No, he's been with us for a while.
26:03What come I never noticed?
26:06Because you're married.
26:08Are you technically?
26:12What's he like?
26:15Reliable, sensible, agreeable.
26:18Hmm.
26:20I think we ought to get back to lighthouses.
26:25Those beacons of light in an otherwise black and hopeless night.
26:30But reassure the lonely mariner they are not forgotten.
26:34And we'll soon find land and home.
26:38And hope.
26:56It appears that there has to be an unfortunate curtailment to the holiday.
27:01Clash of diaries, I understand.
27:02What?
27:03The Prince of Wales is due to give a lecture at the university.
27:10What's this about us going home?
27:13It turns out there's a diary conflict through no fault of mine and I have to get back.
27:20You're supposed to be here for two weeks.
27:21Yes, I know.
27:23The plans change.
27:25I have a commitment at Oxford University.
27:27It isn't the university.
27:30It's a summer school for tourists.
27:31It's not essential.
27:32It is to me.
27:36This is our holiday.
27:39It's a rare opportunity for us to be together with the boys as a family.
27:42And I know you struggle with that sort of thing,
27:44which is why I agreed to you bringing your friends along to entertain you.
27:48And I even agreed to do the photo call today,
27:50requested by your people so the lie could be paraded to the world's media
27:53about what an adoring husband you are on one condition.
27:55What's that?
27:56That you actually are one.
28:36What's that?
28:47That's
28:48Oh, my God!
29:35Tens of thousands of British families, repossessions are now at record levels.
29:40In the first half of this year, 36,600 homes were taken over by building societies.
29:53I think there's a case for saying it's the most difficult economic recession since the
29:57war, and it has struck right across the economy.
30:01It's certainly been a very difficult year.
30:06The Prime Minister, Your Royal Highness.
30:12Prime Minister.
30:14Your Royal Highness.
30:15So kind of you should come.
30:16Sir.
30:19Uh, before we begin, I wonder, did your office let anyone at Buckingham Palace know that
30:25we were meeting?
30:25I don't believe so, sir.
30:27Probably for the best.
30:36There are two reasons I asked if I could see you today.
30:40The first conserving our built heritage.
30:44I wonder, did you receive the copy of my book?
30:46I did.
30:48I don't suppose you found time to flick through it.
30:50Knowing we were meeting today, I made a point of it.
30:53Reading it, I'm sure you thought, what an old fogey.
30:58How stuck in the past he is with his loathing of modernism and change.
31:04Not at all.
31:05Why?
31:08You'd have been right to.
31:09I am fixated by the past, by tradition, preserving it, conserving it.
31:17But none of us is exclusively one thing.
31:19Human beings are too interesting for that.
31:22You yourself are full of fascinating contradictions.
31:25Sir?
31:26Coming from Brixton, a multicultural, working-class part of London, one might have expected you
31:32either to have concealed your past in order to fit in with the Tories or to have a more
31:37socialist viewpoint and become a rising star in the Labour Party.
31:40I have never felt that because of my background I should not be a conservative.
31:45Precisely.
31:46You not only refuse to deny your contradictions, you don't see them as contradictions.
31:52I don't.
31:53Which makes you a far more interesting, more complex, more impressive person.
32:02And I hope that the same can be said of me.
32:09Which brings me to the second reason for our meeting.
32:12You saw the, uh, the recent poll and Sunday Times article about the Queen.
32:20I did.
32:22Queen Victoria's Syndrome.
32:27What were your conclusions?
32:31It's just a poll, sir.
32:34True.
32:36Not a reassuring one.
32:38Bowls come and go.
32:40Dangerous to ignore them.
32:42Equally dangerous to be guided by them.
32:55There must have been many polls around the time of Mrs. Thatcher's departure.
33:03I'm sure many people wanted the Iron Lady to go on forever, but what makes the Conservative Party the successful
33:09electoral force that it is?
33:11Its instinct for renewal and its willingness to make way for someone younger.
33:19For almost 60 years, my great-great-grandfather Edward VII was kept waiting in the wings.
33:29It was said that Queen Victoria had no confidence in him, thought him dangerous, free-thinking.
33:37He longed to be given responsibilities, but his mother refused.
33:44Even forbade him from seeing state papers.
33:49And yet, when his time came, he proved his doubters wrong, and his dynamism, his intellect, his popular appeal made
33:57his reign a triumph.
34:00What are you saying, sir?
34:03I'm saying, what a pity it was, what a waste, that his voice, his presence, his vision wasn't incorporated earlier.
34:16It would have been so good.
34:19For everybody.
34:31You're coming to Balmoral?
34:32To the Gillies Ball?
34:34Yes.
34:35Very much looking forward to it.
34:39Well, then you'll have an opportunity to, uh, judge for yourself whether this institution that we all care about so
34:49deeply...
34:54...is in safe hands.
35:02And now to my questions about our built heritage and rural planning regulations.
35:49I'm, uh, a little bit out of it for us.
35:52Help?
35:53Please help me.
35:54Well, there we are frequency.
35:54There you are!
35:55Wow.
35:55Oh, darling.
35:56Well, there never disappoints me here.
35:59Hello, you.
36:00Hello, you.
36:05Have you been for a nice walk?
36:07We have, and I haven't strangled her yet, which is a miracle.
36:10Oh, darling, darling.
36:11Hi, Mum.
36:13We had a lovely morning. We read the newspapers.
36:17No, we didn't.
36:17Then we went on a long walk to discuss it all.
36:20Don't you look pretty? Doesn't she look pretty, Mum?
36:22Yes.
36:36You asked to see me, ma'am?
36:38I did.
36:40Why is everyone being odd?
36:43Ma'am?
36:44It started on the Royal Yacht.
36:46What started, ma'am?
36:48People being odd with me.
36:52You're being odd now.
36:54Am I?
36:57What's going on?
37:01An unkind, silly, inaccurate article in the Sunday Times.
37:07Not worth thinking about.
37:09Don't you think I ought to be the judge of that?
37:13Do you still have a copy?
37:17Ma'am.
37:32Come on, Ellen.
37:34Come on.
37:35Clever?
37:36Cleeter?
37:39Cleeter?
37:40Cleeter?
37:42Cleeter?
37:44No?
37:45Peel.
37:46Cleeter?
37:53Hold on, let's go.
38:43Hold on, let's go.
38:51Hold on.
39:27Hold on, let's go.
39:40Three hours door-to-door.
39:41It can take as long as two weeks on the Royal Yacht.
39:45Wonderful way to decompress.
39:48And, as my great-great-grandmother, who started the Western Isles tour, said,
39:53let time slow down so that one breathes freedom and peace, making one forget the world and its sad turmoil.
40:09I am aware the comparison between Queen Victoria and me has been made recently in the newspapers and intended as
40:15criticism.
40:16What people fail to understand is I see any similarity with Queen Victoria as a compliment.
40:23Attributes people use to describe her, constancy, stability, calm, duty.
40:30I would be proud to have described me.
40:34And speaking of the Royal Yacht, it has now become clear that a small refit, teeny tiny little refreshment and
40:41refurbishment is required to keep her in tip-top shape.
40:45I am aware the costs for its maintenance are borne by the government, not by the palace, and so here
40:52I am, coming to you, Prime Minister, on bended knee for the sign-off.
40:57But I am hoping that will be a formality.
41:05I am just mindful that before she left office, Mrs Thatcher bequeathed the palace an extremely generous civil list settlement.
41:14A deal that leaves the Royal Family richer than ever before.
41:19Given that this deal was designed precisely to forestall any awkward public debate on Royal spending,
41:26I feel bound to at least raise the question of whether there's a way you might consider bearing the cost
41:33yourselves.
41:35It's just with the Royal Yacht being perceived as something of a luxury,
41:39there is a danger the palace could be seen to be asking for too much.
41:43But she isn't a luxury.
41:45Isn't she?
41:45Prime Minister, there has always been a Royal Yacht going all the way back to King Charles II.
41:51She is a central and indispensable part of the way the Crown serves the nation.
41:57And the revenue she has generated doing so is incalculable.
42:00But we're in the midst of a global recession.
42:02Each penny of public spending is closely scrutinized.
42:08I worry that the government spending public money on the refurbishment of a yacht might backfire.
42:17On us both.
42:26When I came to the throne, all my palaces were inherited.
42:32Windsor, Balmoral, Sandringham.
42:35They all bear the stamp of my predecessors.
42:38Only Britannia have I truly been able to make my own.
42:43Perhaps for that reason, the connection between me and the yacht is very much deeper than a mode of transport
42:49or even a home.
42:52From the design of the Hull, the smallest piece of China, she is a floating, seagoing expression of me.
43:07I hope we can agree that as sovereign, I have made very few requests, let alone demands, in return of
43:13the service I have given this country.
43:16Perhaps the reason I have held back is in the hope that when I actually do, people don't just take
43:22it seriously.
43:23They do as I ask, without question.
43:27So, I would like this government's reassurance, your reassurance, that the costs for the refurbishments will be met.
43:34And for you to inform me as soon as the arrangements are in place.
43:41I understand.
43:48Now, the ghillie's ball tonight.
43:50I have to ask, are you a dancer?
43:55Trying to turn the Ukraine into an independent European country.
43:59They want to break away from Moscow to turn their back on the leadership of Gorbachev and Yeltsin.
44:16To be aimed at the West in a bid to earn hard currency, the other Soviet republics have...
44:26I see you in the next couple says...
44:36thoughts and
47:09Some local history for you if you're interested.
47:12of course queen victoria held the first gillies ball in 1852 and there's been one every year since
47:21i see it began as a thank you to the gamekeepers and other servants and has since developed into
47:31something of a saturnalia if you know your classics
47:37but the rules are turned upside down for a day masters serving slaves
47:42and all disciplinary measures suspended for the night
47:57i was just telling the prime minister that these things can get quite giddy not that i ever
48:03witness any of it i'm afraid the real fun only starts when i go to bed
48:07can i count on you for a full report in the morning you can your majesty good night
48:12should we slip away our majesty the queen
48:34prime minister i understand you um you had an audience with the queen today
48:40i know i shouldn't ask but uh i just hope it plays well with the public
48:47sir the uh the refit to britannia that is what she asked you for sir
48:56sometimes these old things are too costly to keep repairing
49:05i'll leave you with that thought
49:09should we call it a night i can't not yet you dance with me before i scream
49:17i'm so jealous you get to jump on a plane and escape out of here tomorrow back to normality
49:22now i'm stuck here for another two weeks but you just had a lovely family holiday you and the prince
49:27of words look so happy
49:31you can judge the health of the family by the state of the marriages for binet
49:36and look anne and mark look at andrew and sarah charles and me
49:45i don't give any of us more than six months
49:50and what happens then when the family falls apart
49:54i say the institution falls apart and then
50:03your presentation here is
50:32what's the matter
50:39when you imagine the problems you might be confronted with this prime minister you imagine
50:43tricky sessions at pmqs the economy in free fall going to war
50:52you never imagine this
50:57the house of windsor should be binding the nation together
51:03setting an example of idealized family life instead the senior royals seem
51:11dangerously deluded and out of touch
51:15the junior royals
51:18feckless
51:19entitled
51:20and lost
51:24and the prince of wales impatient for a bigger role in public life fails to appreciate that his one great
51:31asset is his wife
51:37and what makes it worse is it feels it's all about to erupt
51:48what makes it worse
51:49on my watch
51:50Oh, my gosh.
52:47Oh, my gosh.
52:50Oh, my gosh.
53:47Oh, my gosh.
53:50Oh, my gosh.
54:25Oh, my gosh.
54:55Oh, my gosh.
55:20Oh, my gosh.
55:21Oh, my gosh.
55:39Oh, my gosh.
55:40Oh, my gosh.
55:40Oh, my gosh.
55:40Oh, my gosh.
55:40Oh, my gosh.
Comments