- 7 hours ago
The Crown S03E01 [Full Movie] [English Subs]Full EP - Full
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15:18Just one of those
16:12Jesus Christ
16:13As a large majority
16:43of those things
17:19Saturns anduring
17:52Sir, the protocol is as follows.
17:54When you're announced, you bow from the neck.
17:56First time you see the queen, you say your majesty.
17:58After that, it's man.
17:59Runs with hand until you leave.
18:01Then it's your majesty again.
18:02Don't sit until her majesty does.
18:04Don't talk until she does.
18:05Absolutely no physical contact other than taking a hand if and only if she offers it.
18:10No small talk unless she invites it.
18:12And at the end, she'll buzz and I'll come and get you.
18:15Bow from the neck and walk back towards me.
18:29The leader of the opposition, your majesty.
18:33Mr. Wilson.
18:42Your majesty.
18:44The country's spoken.
18:46Your party has won the election.
18:48The duty befalls me as sovereign to ask you to form a government in my name.
18:54Congratulations, Prime Minister.
19:10Well, I suppose I should kick things off with an apology.
19:14Whatever for?
19:15Winning.
19:17I'm aware of your affection for my predecessor, and doubtless you'd have preferred him to have continued in office.
19:22It is my duty not to have preferences.
19:25Well, we all do, though, don't we?
19:27We can't help it.
19:27It's human nature.
19:29And I can see the attraction of someone like Boshalik.
19:32Someone you can chat with about the racing.
19:34Someone well-bred, high-born, who knows how to hold his cutlery as opposed to a ruffian like me.
19:40Hardly.
19:40Still, the country said otherwise.
19:43They'd had enough of the mess those conservatives left us.
19:46And the havoc they wreaked.
19:49Soaring land and house prices.
19:51Race riots.
19:52Sex scandals.
19:53Large-scale unemployment.
19:55Rejection from the EEC.
19:56And an annual trade deficit of 800 million pounds.
20:02Yes, it's an unenviable legacy.
20:06What will you do about the balance of payments?
20:08Will you devalue?
20:09No, ma'am.
20:12A Labour government devalued the pound once before, with little success, and my party cannot risk being seen as the
20:19party of devaluation.
20:22It is also a matter of national pride.
20:25This is still a great country, and the pound is a powerful symbol.
20:33Can't have been an easy one to get used to.
20:36What's that?
20:37Were you being part of that symbol, your face on every coin and banknote?
20:43No.
20:45I remember seeing my father's face on a shilling for the first time.
20:48And thinking how odd it looked.
20:51At the same time realizing I would probably one day have to look at my own face.
20:56But one never knows what destiny has in store for one.
21:00Did you ever imagine you'd be Prime Minister?
21:02Goodness, no.
21:04How could you have done?
21:06Mr. Gateskill was still such a young man.
21:08He was.
21:10No one could possibly have foreseen his death?
21:13No.
21:14So sudden?
21:15Yes.
21:17And unexpected?
21:18Yes.
21:20Still, we make of our destiny what we can.
21:23Indeed.
21:27I'm not sure what I was expecting.
21:29Each of his predecessors, Churchill, Eden, Macmillan, even Ellick, each in their own way, was formidable.
21:37Statesman-like.
21:39But Wilson is neither old nor young, tall nor short, loud nor quiet, warm nor cold.
21:48He seems to have come from nowhere and is entirely unremarkable.
21:52Best qualities in a spy.
21:54What did you say?
21:56Aren't those the best qualities in a spy?
21:59Well, it should be forgettable, unremarkable.
22:02Not stand out in a crowd.
22:04We used to say that about Henry, didn't we, dear?
22:06What?
22:07That you would have made the perfect spy.
22:09Because no one could remember having met you.
22:13I'd say that was marginally better than everyone having nightmares having met you.
22:30Of course, we do tease each other.
22:32With Tony, one never knows quite whom one's going to get from one moment to the next.
22:37It's changeable.
22:39It goes from loving to hating.
22:40Mummy, you're not listening.
22:43Of course I am, darling.
22:46Tony doesn't hate you.
22:48I think he may be starting to.
22:50You must try not to let him consume you like this.
22:55Two of you have your trip to America coming up.
22:58Yes.
22:59You'll be with each other round the clock, working together as a team.
23:02Your father and I always found those trips very bonding.
23:08I hope you're right.
23:10I love you.
23:17Hello!
23:19Hello!
23:21Hello!
23:23Hello!
23:27Hello!
23:58What's up?
23:58Margot.
23:59Margot.
23:59Margot.
24:02How did you know?
24:03Margot.
24:0417 minutes door-to-door.
24:06I'm claiming that as a landscape record.
24:08Is there any food left?
24:10Have you eaten it all?
24:10Your Majesty.
24:14Your Majesty, a thousand apologies.
24:17Happy birthday, Henry.
24:19Tony, where were you?
24:20Hello.
24:21Hello, darling.
24:22Tony, darling, come and sit next to your wife.
24:26Why would I do that?
24:27I see her all the time.
24:29She was just saying she sees you none of the time.
24:31Because he's always working.
24:33Travelling or water skiing.
24:36It's my new passion, ma'am.
24:37Your Majesty, there's a telephone on the label.
24:39Oh, it's lovely.
24:41Actually, there's a ghastly little pond.
24:43Pat, I think it's fine.
24:44We owe you.
24:45I think it's fine.
24:46You're singing.
24:46What do you know?
24:47You have the wine to go.
24:49Oh, whichever one.
24:50Oh.
24:53Charming, Elizabeth.
24:54Thank you so much.
24:56Oh, it's a really good job.
24:58Happy birthday to you.
25:01Oh, my word.
25:02Happy birthday to you.
25:06Happy birthday, dear Henry.
25:10Happy birthday to you.
25:14Oh, my word.
25:15Now, turn out.
25:16Shh, shh, shh, shh.
25:18Winston is dead.
25:41Ah!
25:42Ah!
25:49Don't talk to me.
25:49Ah!
26:05Hour.
26:06Oh, dear.
26:08Oh, no.
26:09Oh, dear.
26:09Oh, dear.
26:10And another mess.
26:11Opposed.
26:11Oh, Anton pie.
26:15Oh, dear.
26:17Oh, dear.
26:17Ah, what?
26:17Oh, dear.
26:17Oh, dear.
26:38Sir, the CIA's director of counterintelligence on the phone.
26:43I'll call him back.
26:44He called on Juliet, sir.
26:47Heads of states from around the world are arriving, crowding in to this great mother church of the Commonwealth.
27:19Jim?
27:21Martin.
27:22A man by the name of Michael Strait has surrendered himself to us at the DOJ.
27:28He claims to be a sleeper agent working for the Russians.
27:31He says he has information that will uncover a senior KGB mole at the top of the British establishment.
27:58Where is he now?
27:59Washington.
27:59We can have him flown into you by tomorrow.
28:03We are assembled here as representing the people of this land to join in prayer on the occasion of the
28:13burial of a great man who has rendered memorable service to his country and to the cause of freedom.
28:24We shall think of him with thanksgiving that he was raised up in our days of desperate need to be
28:32a leader and inspirer of the nation for its dauntless resolution and untowling vigilance.
28:41My name is Michael Strait.
28:44And since all men are subject to temptation and error, we pray that we, together with him, may be numbered
28:54among those whose sins are forgiven and have a place in the kingdom of heaven.
29:02I attended Cambridge University, and it was during this time that I was first approached by members of the Communist
29:12Party.
29:23Right?
29:25Right.
29:33I'll confirm with them, Your Majesty, and come back to you straight away.
29:46Director General of MI5, Mr. Furnival Jones, Your Majesty.
29:55Your Majesty, thank you for seeing me.
30:06It gives me no pleasure to tell you that we have been approached by a former Russian agent who has
30:11identified a mole at the top of the British establishment.
30:15So it's true.
30:18Ma'am?
30:19I'd heard the rumours.
30:21Initially, I dismissed them.
30:22But spending time with him personally, in close proximity, one had become more and more suspicious.
30:29Indeed.
30:30And that he should have been able to carry on for so long, undetected, is a subject of enormous embarrassment
30:37to all of us.
30:39This obviously needs to be handled very delicately.
30:42That's what I've come to talk to you about, to see if we might find a way to contain it.
30:48What?
30:50We can't do that.
30:52Have a Russian spy in Downing Street.
30:56Oh, those rumours.
30:58You were talking about Harold Wilson.
31:00Yes.
31:02I'm so sorry, ma'am.
31:03Yes, it's widely accepted that repeated attempts were made by the KGB to recruit Wilson when he was younger, working
31:10on trade missions.
31:11He travelled to Russia a great deal in those years.
31:14But the evidence for the Russians having succeeded is so weak.
31:18We discounted it some time ago.
31:21And the poisoning of Gateskill?
31:23Gateskill wasn't poisoned.
31:25He died of lupus.
31:26The fact is, even if the Russians had poisoned Gateskill, the most likely beneficiary would have been George Brown, not
31:33Harold Wilson.
31:34Wilson was not favourite to take over the leadership at the time.
31:38We don't have a Russian spy in Downing Street?
31:41No.
31:44But it seems we do have one in Buckingham Palace.
31:53We look at a painting and immediately want to know it, understand it.
31:59But can anything ever be fully understood?
32:05Take our bearded trickster here, a Venetian card sharp originally ascribed to Titian, until new evidence came to light proving
32:14the painting is actually by Lorenzo Lotto.
32:16As time passes, as time passes, so we learn.
32:21Truths are revealed.
32:23In the late Renaissance, painting after painting, masterpiece after masterpiece, seem full of hidden intentions, multiple meanings.
32:36Annibale Caracci's allegory of truth and time, painted in 1584 or 1585, this winged figure here rescues a young woman,
32:47his daughter, from the darkness.
32:50He is time, she is truth, and this figure below, trampled by truth, is deceit.
33:01Caracci's message is clear.
33:05Be patient.
33:07The truth will out.
33:08I'm afraid I can now confirm that the surveyor of the Queen's pictures, Sir Anthony Blunt, was the fourth man
33:16in the Cambridge spy ring.
33:18The message encoded in the painting is repeated in reality.
33:23As with the Lotto, time passed and the painting was restored to reveal deceit is two-faced.
33:29She has a second, monstrous visage.
33:34And that alongside conducting a distinguished career as an art historian and member of the royal household,
33:41he spent 15 years as an active KGB mole and passed almost 2,000 documents of sensitive military secrets to
33:50the Kremlin.
33:51Truth may lie beneath the surface, buried, forgotten, but time has a way of uncovering it.
34:00One thinks of the Merchant of Venice.
34:03Truth will come to light.
34:07Murder cannot be hid long.
34:10A man's son may.
34:13But at the length, truth will out.
34:35We had initially hoped the information was false.
34:38We get these sorts of claims all the time, but we subsequently detained and interviewed Blunt,
34:46and I'm sad to say he has confessed in full.
35:03What's the next step?
35:04Well, as a traitor to his country, he should have caused down trial, be put in prison, and the key
35:10thrown away, quite frankly.
35:11Unless it was felt that exposure of Blunt's treachery could cause even more damage.
35:19What, then keeping it silent?
35:22How?
35:23Apparently it could have a catastrophic effect on the reputation of our intelligence services.
35:27The fact that he had gone undetected for so long, which could, in turn, seriously affect our relationship with the
35:35Americans.
35:35We're on our last reserves of goodwill with them as it is.
35:39One more operational failure and our credibility would be completely shot.
35:43What are they suggesting, that we turn a blind eye and allow a traitor, an enemy of this country, to
35:51remain free, with his career and reputation intact, just to spare MI5's blushes?
36:00The man should be shot.
36:02I agree.
36:03But instead, I have to get up and pay tribute to him at this exhibition.
36:08How am I supposed to get through my speech?
36:11My joke or my words?
36:27We stand here tonight, surrounded by some of the royal collection's greatest treasures,
36:33to admire the genius of Rubens, Titian, Rembrandt and Hauvath.
36:38but we are able to make sense of it all appreciate it understand it speaks to the genius of another
36:46man whose exceptional scholarship and vision have brought us together today sir anthony blunt
36:59it is he who has curated this exhibition and given meaning to mystery and revealed what really does
37:07lie beneath the surface i for one had never thought of art history in that way as the art of
37:15investigation solving riddles finding clues unlocking secrets it's been quite an education
37:25i particularly enjoyed the portrait which turned out to have another person lurking beneath the
37:34surface have i described that correctly sir anthony or am i stumbling around in the dark as usual
37:40not another person ma'am the same person it was not uncommon in the early modern period for an artist
37:47to finish a portrait and the patron would take a look and ask for a more flattering version of
37:52themselves and the artist would paint another version over it so not two different people two
38:01different versions of the same person which might as well be two different people the idealized version
38:09of themselves they want to be seen and the less desirable person they rarely are hidden away
38:16there's even a word for it palimpsest that generally applies to manuscripts ma'am pentimento for
38:23paintings pentimento well i think i speak for everyone here when i say none of us will be able to
38:31trust
38:31or look at anything in the same way ever again
39:10i'm so glad you can it gives me the chance to apologize in person what for there's no need
39:16to understand all you need to know is that i misjudged you terribly and i'd like to take this
39:22opportunity to say sorry are you an art man art yes art paintings well actually no no uh i'm an
39:38economist statistician at heart i'm happiest with numbers you can trust numbers they're honest
39:48there's no mystery or deception or allegory you know where you stand what you see is what you get
40:01i prefer things that way i quite agree
40:15excuse me
40:20ready
40:39The very least you could do is quietly crawl away,
40:44not force us to live with you under the same roof,
40:49doing the right thing, the decent thing, the honorable thing.
40:55You know, the faintest idea what that was.
41:00Well, I am going to be watching you
41:02on one wrong step, you treacherous snake,
41:08and I will expose you and have you thrown in jail.
41:12I would think long and hard before I did that, sir.
41:17You would do well to reflect on your own position.
41:22What are you talking about?
41:27You may remember at the height of the Profumo sex scandal,
41:31there was talk of a member of the royal family being involved.
41:35No one knew who,
41:37but it was rumored to be a senior member of the royal family.
41:41Very senior.
41:45When the osteopath at the center of the scandal,
41:48Stephen Ward, took his own life,
41:52there was speculation that a number of portraits
41:54portraits of that senior member of the royal family
41:56had been found in his apartment.
41:59Naturally, a great many people were keen
42:01to get their hands on those portraits.
42:05Mercifully, someone respected
42:07and well-connected in the art world
42:10was able to make sure
42:12they didn't fall into the wrong hands.
42:14I never saw Stephen Ward in any capacity
42:16other than as an osteopath.
42:19If he made drawings of me,
42:21he would have done so from photographs.
42:24We all tell ourselves
42:26all sorts of things to make sense of the past.
42:30So much so that our fabrications,
42:32if we tell them to ourselves often enough,
42:35become the truth
42:38in our minds and everyone else's.
42:41And believe you me,
42:43I'm happy for your truth to be the truth.
42:47It would be better for everyone.
42:50Imagine how awful it would be,
42:52for example,
42:54if those pictures saw the light of day now,
42:57a storm it would create.
43:00And for what?
43:04It's the past.
43:13It's the past.
43:32Would you excuse me?
43:33Of course.
43:34Yeah, majesty.
46:34We'd have been aware
46:36That our love affair
46:39Was too hot not to cool down
47:27We'd have been aware
47:32We'd have been aware
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