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The Crown S04E10 [Full Movie] [Full Series]Full EP - Full
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00:28You
00:55This party
00:56Mr. Heseltine says Britain should reach for the levers of power
00:59If only to prevent others pulling them first
01:02One dead and ulster gun battle between soldiers and terrorists
01:07Policemake arrests over ballot rigging in the transport union
01:10Confusion over plastic cling film after the government's cancer warning
01:15And animals to the slaughter
01:17How the RSPCA hopes to stop live animal exports
01:21Michael Heseltine was speaking to a conference in Hamburg
01:24Mr. Heseltine is now on his way back to London to be in the Commons this afternoon
01:29There Sir Geoffrey Howe is expected to spell out in detail the reasons for his resignation
01:34Is there anything Sir Geoffrey is likely to say this afternoon that could influence Mr. Heseltine
01:39On whether to throw his hat in the ring
01:40Well Sir Geoffrey is an extremely cautious man
01:43I suspect that his speech will be carefully written
01:46And I just wonder whether it will be sufficiently in code not really to damage the Prime Minister
01:52Sir Geoffrey has very deep personal and ideological differences with the Prime Minister
01:57I think he will spell them out
01:59But whether he will spell them out in clear set terms that amount to an assault on her leadership
02:04I think we have to wait and see for that
02:06I remind the House that a resignation statement is heard in silence and without interruption
02:13Sir Geoffrey Howe
02:16Mr. Speaker, sir
02:22I find to my astonishment
02:24that a quarter of a century has passed since I last spoke from one of these back benches
02:31Mr. Speaker, I believe that both the Chancellor and the Governor are cricketing enthusiasts
02:36So I hope that there is no monopoly of cricketing metaphors
02:40Increasingly, those of us close to the Prime Minister feel like opening batsmen being sent to the crease
02:45only to find the moment the first balls are bowled
02:48that our bats have been broken before the game
02:50by the team captain
02:59The point, Mr. Speaker, was perhaps more sharply put by a British businessman
03:04trading in Brussels and elsewhere
03:06who wrote to me last week
03:09People throughout Europe, he said
03:11see our Prime Minister's finger wagging
03:14and hear her passionate
03:17No
03:18No
03:19No
03:21Much more clearly than the content of the carefully worded formal texts
03:25It is too easy, he went on, for them to believe that we all share her attitudes
03:30For why else, he asked, has she been our Prime Minister for so long?
03:37This is, my correspondent concluded, a desperately serious situation for our country
03:43And sadly, Mr. Speaker, I have to agree
03:48The conflict of loyalty
03:50Of loyalty to my right honourable friend, the Prime Minister
03:54And after all, in two decades together
03:57That instinct of loyalty is still very real
04:02And of loyalty to what I perceive to be the true interests of the nation
04:06That conflict of loyalty
04:08That conflict of loyalty has become all too great
04:11I no longer believe it possible to resolve that conflict from within this government
04:16That is why I have resigned
04:18In doing so, I have done what I believe to be right for my party and my country
04:24Time has come for others to consider their own response
04:27To the tragic conflict of loyalties
04:30With which I have myself wrestled
04:32For perhaps too long
04:34A little bit
04:49Uh, the Queen?
04:51The drawing room, Your Highness
04:52Right
04:54She has resumed her affair with Major Hewitt
04:57With flagrant disregard for the agreement we made in our meeting with you
05:02A meeting in which it's now clear she brazenly lied to your face
05:08So, I hope you agree
05:09It leaves me with no option but to start a formal separation
05:12Oh, Charles
05:13I am wretchedly unhappy
05:14And yet there is someone else out there who would make me perfectly happy
05:17Quick, switch on the television
05:18Why?
05:19The Ides of March
05:21The Julius Caesar
05:22Or, when I say, Julia Caesar
05:25I'm sorry, we're in the middle of an important conversation
05:27Shh
05:27Her style of government
05:28He says her nightmare image of Europe risks the future of the nation
05:33Can Sir Geoffrey's peroration where he said
05:36The time has come for others to consider their response
05:39Be read in any other way than a clear invitation to open a contest for the leadership?
05:44That is one of the implications
05:45Some people would go further than that
05:47They would say that he's urging people to vote
05:49Yes, Mrs. Thatcher
05:50Margaret Thatcher is facing the most serious threat to her 11 years in power
05:54For the first time in 15 years
05:55Sir Geoffrey Howe, Mrs. Thatcher's longest serving colleague throughout her years in power
05:59Turned on her in the Commons today
06:01And accused her of risking the nation's future
06:04He was explaining for the first time
06:06Why he resigned as deputy prime minister
06:08Deserting her over her refusal to keep in step with the European Union
06:11MPs had expected a coded diplomatic speech
06:13Instead, years of resentment and frustration
06:16Were compressed into a picture of Mrs. Thatcher
06:19And her attitude to Europe
06:21He called on Conservative MPs to consider what he described as their conflict of loyalties
06:26They now delivered a stinging indictment of Thatcher in the House of Commons
06:29And virtually called on Tory members of Parliament
06:31And they hoped there would be some reaction in her favour
06:33It's now down to Conservative members of Parliament
06:36The Prime Minister Mark has planned your face as a challenge that could cost her her job
06:38Instead, MPs, ministers and peers are still trying to assess
06:42What one described as an incitement to mutiny
06:45And another said was an act of treachery
07:16The Prime Minister Mark
07:46The Prime Minister Mark
08:00The Prime Minister Mark
08:00The Prime Minister Mark
08:01The Prime Minister Mark
08:01I don't know.
08:37I don't know.
09:18I don't know.
09:22I don't know.
09:23I don't know.
09:24I don't know.
09:30I don't know.
09:38Bye, my darling.
09:41Not long until the holidays.
09:44Love you.
09:49Well done, Sarah.
09:51I'll see you at Christmas.
09:53Goodbye.
10:15Is that it?
10:16I'm not going to talk again, ever.
10:19Since every time we do talk, it ends in an argument, I'd say silence was preferable.
10:28What's this I hear about a trip to New York?
10:31Oh, don't look so surprised.
10:33The government requested it.
10:34Everyone knows I'm going.
10:35No one knew you were going on your own.
10:37What an ugly, avaricious piece of self-advancement that is.
10:41I'd sooner be doing it with my husband by my side.
10:45Doing what?
10:47The past few months, you've barely been in a fit state psychologically to go to the hairdresser,
10:51much less represent the crown.
10:52Although I gather you've still found time to see certain other people.
11:00I think this conversation's gone as far as it can.
11:02You were the one who insisted on talking.
11:05They always said silence was preferable.
11:14One crisis rising above all the others, to bear your majesty.
11:19Yes.
11:19An inconvenience one would dearly like to avoid, given the significant challenges this country
11:25already faces.
11:27The crisis in the Gulf.
11:30Oh, that crisis?
11:32Well, that is the predominant challenge facing us.
11:35I thought you might be referring to matters closer to home.
11:38There are one or two minor domestic matters, some changes to fishing license conditions, but
11:44nothing I would want to waste your valuable time with.
11:48You don't think we should briefly discuss that speech?
11:52Which speech?
11:54The resignation speech made by Sir Geoffrey Howell that's caused such a stir.
11:58Why would we want to discuss that?
12:00Because a great deal of fuss is being made of it.
12:03Oh, poor Geoffrey.
12:04I had offered him the position of deputy prime minister, and he seems to have taken it rather
12:09the wrong way.
12:11In the newspapers, his speech is being seen as a direct challenge to your authority.
12:14I think that all depends on which newspapers you're reading.
12:18Not just newspapers.
12:20Television, too.
12:21Or watching.
12:22And as sovereign, I must ask you, do you expect a leadership challenge?
12:29The prime minister came to see me today.
12:31Ah, yes.
12:32To discuss the crisis in the Gulf.
12:34What?
12:36Not the fact that she'd just been knifed in the back by one of her longest standing allies?
12:40Yeah, I asked her about that.
12:42Did you really?
12:43Yes.
12:45You're brave.
12:47What did she say?
12:48Well, she said the situation was unfortunate.
12:51But it amounts to little more than petty rivalries and resentment being played out at the level
12:57of the schoolyard.
12:58I shall see them off in no time.
13:01And really, we should not dignify an insignificant internal party squabble with any more of our
13:08precious time.
13:15No.
13:25For Geoffrey's attack makes this, the criticism of Mrs. Thatcher, much more lethal.
13:31I think she's in deep trouble.
13:33Not that she will be beaten in the first ballot by Michael Heseltine, but more probably that
13:38there will be enough votes against her and enough abstentions to damage her seriously.
13:43One person said to me that he thought it possible, if she were badly enough damaged, that members
13:49of the cabinet would go to the chief whip and say that she ought to consider her future.
13:54It's premature to say that yet, but undoubtedly there's a rather stronger tide running against
13:59Mrs. Thatcher tonight than there has ever been before.
14:04Oh.
14:06Yes.
14:08Yeah.
14:10I see.
14:17How many?
14:19Four short.
14:20Not enough to stop it going to a second ballot.
14:24Oh, it's a betrayal of the very worst kind.
14:30They owe their political lives to me.
14:33It's despicable.
14:34Oh, those little men.
14:37And you want me to get on my knees to them?
14:42Never.
14:46Have them brought into me, one by one.
15:11First item on the agenda is Her Royal Highness's forthcoming solo visit to New York.
15:19Looking at the itinerary, our concern would be that it seems to be challenging several
15:27appointments each day.
15:28It's just four days, Edward.
15:30In multiple locations.
15:32We all know the toll a schedule of engagements can take.
15:36And I'm sure no one here would wish to see the Princess of Wales overstretched.
15:42Certainly not at a risk to her own health.
15:44The Princess of Wales's health is exemplary.
15:47Mental health.
15:50Not to mention the amount of time she'd be separated from her children.
15:54And the distress that might cause her.
15:56The Princess of Wales is well aware of what's required of her.
15:59And is very much looking forward to the trip.
16:10The Princess of Wales is well aware of what's required of her children.
16:20The Princess of Wales is well aware of what's required of her children.
16:31had my unconditional support i am with you you can always count on me
16:39the problem is the numbers are against you and your inability to unite the party behind you over
16:46europe over the economy of the taxation perhaps if your methods were less confrontational and
16:52if you'd consulted with cabinet rather than ruling by decree your rejection of core conservative
16:58values of moderation compassion and your total disregard for the center ground leaves you
17:04vulnerable exposed isolated i shall always defend you margaret always but as your friend
17:17as an ally i think i speak for majority when i say the time might have come for some new
17:23blood
17:26and that it would be in everyone's best interests if you were to stand down
17:32so
17:48bastards
17:51bloody lot of them murderers
18:04so is that it is that the end no i still have one card to play britain will send more
18:17troops to
18:17the gulf the defense secretary tom king president bush called to tell me he thought it barbaric
18:24uh... chancellor cole said it was inhumane michael gorbachev reminded me that ten years ago
18:32it was britain holding democratic elections whilst russia staged cabinet coups now it's the other way
18:40around what they all agree on is that getting rid of me is an act of national self-harm which
18:49is why i've
18:50come to come to you ma'am that together we may act in the national self-interest
18:55how might i help
18:57by dissolving parliament
19:01what
19:02we are on the brink of war we are on the brink of war what kind of signal does that
19:08give to our enemies
19:09to sit down if we were to change leadership now it would make us look hopelessly weak and divided
19:17i agree it's not ideal have you consulted cabinet on this matter
19:23i have not
19:24ma'am
19:24surely that would be the normal course of action
19:27with all due respect the decision to dissolve parliament is in the gift of the prime minister alone
19:36it is entirely within my power to do this if i see fit
19:40you are correct technically it is within your power to request this
19:46but we must all ask ourselves when to exercise those things that are within our power and when not to
19:53your first instinct as a person i think is often to act to exercise power
19:58what is what people want in a leader to show conviction and strength to lead
20:08i'm merely asking the question whether it is correct to exercise a power simply because it is yours to use
20:17power is nothing without authority and at this moment your cabinet is against you
20:25your party is against you and if the polls are to be believed if you were to call a general
20:30election
20:31today you would not win which suggests the country is against you perhaps the time has come for you to
20:41try
20:41doing nothing for once the difference is you have power in doing nothing i will have nothing
20:57you will have your dignity there is no dignity in the wilderness then might i suggest you don't think
21:04of it as that think of it as an opportunity to pursue other passions i have other loves
21:14my husband my children but this job is my only true passion
21:25and to have it taken from me stolen from me so cruelly
21:34what hurts the most is that we had come so far and now to have the opportunity to finish the
21:45job
22:04i'm in hell
22:11and he just hates me and wants me to fail he tells everyone i'm mad
22:20they treat me like i'm mad and i'm starting to feel mad why did i agree to this trip
22:29i'm going to fall flat on my face
22:51i'm going to fall flat on my face
22:58a diretta
22:58i'm going to fall flat
23:00i'm going to fall flat on my face
23:01What do you think of the world?
23:03Let's just go ahead and open the door.
23:06Let's take care of the food.
23:07Let's take a look over here, please, please.
23:09Let's go.
23:32Let's go.
24:04Let's go.
24:31Let's go.
24:32Let's go.
24:33Let's go.
24:34Let's go.
24:34Let's go.
24:34Let's go.
24:35Let's go.
24:35Let's go.
24:35Let's go.
24:35Let's go.
24:35Let's go.
24:36Let's go.
24:37Let's go.
24:38Let's go.
24:38Let's go.
24:40Let's go.
24:42Let's go.
24:44Let's go.
24:45Let's go.
24:47Let's go.
25:00Let's go.
25:08Let's go.
25:16Let's go.
25:27Let's go.
25:29Let's go.
25:31Let's go.
25:33Let's go.
25:42Let's go.
25:44Let's go.
25:48Let's go.
26:16A modest hospital on the wrong side of
26:19Harlem. Very few American politicians
26:21have ever even thought to visit.
26:22But today, this is the final stop on
26:24Princess Diana's whirlwind tour of New York.
26:40We established the pediatric AIDS
26:43unit two years ago
26:44to deal with the rising problem
26:46of infants suffering with the disease.
26:58Hello.
27:02Many of the children have been abandoned
27:04or have parents who are addicts
27:07or sick with the virus.
27:08They desperately need foster parents,
27:10but people are too afraid to take them.
27:12Why?
27:14Because of the stigma.
27:16The fear of the disease.
27:35We want the princess to a hug in New York-Syland neighborhood today.
27:39A triumphant end to a trick which has seen the princess flying solo for the first time,
27:43missing new heights without her husband, Prince Charles.
27:47We love her.
27:48She's beautiful.
27:50She's warm.
27:50She's perfect.
27:51They don't want her there.
27:52We would love to have her here.
27:54The way she hugged that boy in the hospital nearly broke my heart.
27:58Prince Charles is a lucky man.
28:00You know what I'm saying?
28:00Princess Di, thank you for bringing love and vitality to the Lower East Side.
28:05You know how to make people feel good,
28:08and that is a God-given talent.
28:26If you care about me as much as you say you do,
28:28so you will let go of these ideas of breaking it off for Diana.
28:32Why?
28:34Don't you want us to be free to live our life in the open?
28:40I do.
28:45But I want to be humiliated and attacked even less.
28:49That's what will happen if you put me in a popularity contest against her.
28:53I will lose.
28:55I'm an old woman.
28:56I'm a married woman.
28:58No-one near as pretty.
28:59No-one near as radiant.
29:02Someone who looks like me has no place in a fairy tale.
29:06That's all people want.
29:07There's a fairy tale.
29:08If they knew the truth about our feelings for one another,
29:11they'd have their fairy tale.
29:12No.
29:13To be the protagonist of a fairy tale,
29:16you must first be wronged.
29:18A victim.
29:20If we were to become public,
29:22we would make her.
29:24In the narrative laws of fairy tales versus reality,
29:28a fairy tale always prevails.
29:32She will always defeat me in the court of public opinion.
29:36What is all this, my darling?
29:39What's gotten to you today?
29:44It's reality, sir.
29:48She's the princess of Wales.
29:51It's a future queen, the mother to a future king.
29:56And I'm just...
29:57My one true love.
30:03A mistress.
30:06Mistress to the Prince of Wales.
30:08Just like my great-grandmother, Alice Keppel,
30:10was the mistress to the Prince of Wales.
30:13Your great-great-grandfather.
30:14And he loved her till the end.
30:26Leave this with me.
30:34Number 10 is a house and a home, as well as an office.
30:37And as Margaret Thatcher left it after so long,
30:39there was applause to be heard,
30:41and I'm told a tear or two shed among the unseen staff.
30:44Mrs Thatcher's own voice had an emotional edge to it.
30:47Ladies and gentlemen,
30:49we are leaving Downing Street for the last time,
30:54after 11 and a half wonderful years.
30:58It was the end of an era dominated by this woman.
31:02His name has become a political byword.
31:0411 years of Thatcherism.
31:06She recovered quickly for one last wave.
31:10But then the Iron Lady's composure almost broke.
31:14Watch her face as she reaches her car.
31:23Friends say that she is deeply shocked
31:26by the seeming injustice of it all.
31:28Three election victories
31:29and a clear though insufficient majority
31:31in the first ballot,
31:32rewarded as she sees it with the sack.
31:38Martin, could you ask the Prime...
31:40Could you ask Mrs Thatcher to come and see me?
32:04When I ascended the throne,
32:07I was just a girl, 25 years old.
32:11And I was surrounded by stuffy,
32:14rather patronising, grey-haired men everywhere,
32:16telling me what to do.
32:19And I wanted to say,
32:22the way you dealt with all your
32:24stuffy, rather patronising, grey-haired men
32:27throughout your time in office
32:29and saw them all off...
32:30Well, they've had their revenge now.
32:35I was shocked
32:36by the way in which you were forced to leave office.
32:40And I wanted to offer my sympathy,
32:43not just as Queen to Prime Minister,
32:47but woman to woman.
32:50Throughout the time we worked together,
32:52people tended to focus on our many differences,
32:57which was lazy and misleading, I think,
33:01and overlook the many things
33:02we actually do have in common.
33:05Our generation,
33:07our Christianity,
33:09our work ethic,
33:11our sense of duty.
33:14But above all,
33:16our devotion to this country
33:18that we both love.
33:21So, with that in mind...
33:36The Order of Merit
33:39is not awarded by some faceless committee.
33:43It comes at the personal discretion of the Sovereign
33:45and is in recognition
33:48of exceptionally meritorious service.
33:52It is limited to just 24 recipients.
33:55No matter their background,
33:57you could be the daughter of a Duke
34:00or a greengrocer.
34:05What matters
34:06is your accomplishments.
34:09And nobody can deny
34:11that this is a very different country now
34:14to the one inherited
34:16by our first woman Prime Minister.
34:23Now, it's normally handed over in the box.
34:29But if you would allow me.
34:46Congratulations.
36:23So I can only imagine, hope, that you've come here to apologize, to eat your words, and congratulate me.
39:43I really can't stay, but baby it's cold outside. I've got to go away, but baby it's cold outside. This
39:52evening has been so long there in night. I'll hold your hands, they're just like pies. My mother will start
40:02to worry. And father will be facing the door. So really I'd better scare you.
40:12Well, maybe just a handful of drinkers. Put some records on while I fall. The neighbors might fail. But baby
40:19it's bad out there. Say what's in this dream. No cabs to be had out there. I wish I knew
40:26how.
40:27Your eyes are like starlight now. I'll take your hat. Your hair looks small. I want to say no. My
40:36son. At least I'm going to say that I've tried.
40:40But let's just into pain. My child.
40:43I want to say baby it's cold outside.
40:46I want to call in now. I want to call in now. I want to call in now.
40:49Sure.
40:50That's fine. I want to call.
40:55What the baby it's cold outside.
40:58Did you see me, dear?
41:00Welcome back.
41:01How lucky that you got so nice and warm.
41:04Look out that window at that stone.
41:08My sister will be suspicious.
41:12My brother will be there at the door.
41:16My maiden aunt's mind is precious.
41:20Well, maybe just a scissor at most.
41:23Who needs to do one minute?
41:24Dad told you.
41:26It actually sounds funnier than the...
41:30There you are.
41:33Mama.
41:37Well, I'm sure no-one told you,
41:39but I made a request through my office
41:42for us to find a moment to speak together in private.
41:46Well, I hope you're not wanting to talk here.
41:49No, not here.
41:51Or now. The dogs need feeding.
41:53Dogs?
41:53Yes, the dogs.
41:54If you don't mind, we'll have to find another time.
42:05You're hungry.
42:06Are you all hungry?
42:09Who's going to tell me about their day?
42:11You had a lovely day.
42:12Have you had fun?
42:20What are you doing here?
42:22I hope you don't mind.
42:24I thought we might find a moment alone.
42:26Honestly, both of you.
42:28Both of us?
42:29You and your wife embushing me everywhere I go,
42:32with anxious looks in your eyes wanting to talk.
42:34I do want to talk, Mummy.
42:36We need to talk.
42:39Fine, let's talk.
42:41Might I request we do it like privy counsellors?
42:43On our feet.
42:44On our feet, to keep it brief.
42:52It's the marriage.
42:54Yes, I had a horrible idea we were going in this direction.
42:56I have done my best.
42:58My very best.
42:59And I am suffering.
43:01No, you are not suffering.
43:04We are all suffering having to put up with this.
43:06Let me make something clear.
43:08When people look at you and Diana,
43:10they see two privileged young people
43:11who, through good fortune,
43:13have ended up with everything one could dream of in life.
43:15No one, not a single breathing living soul anywhere,
43:18sees cause for suffering.
43:19They would if they knew.
43:20Knew what?
43:22They know that you betray your wife
43:24and make no attempt to hide it.
43:26They know that, thanks to you,
43:27she has psychological problems
43:28and eats or doesn't eat
43:30or whatever it is she does or doesn't do.
43:31They know that you are a spoilt, immature man,
43:34endlessly complaining, unnecessarily,
43:36married to a spoilt, immature woman,
43:37endlessly complaining, unnecessarily.
43:39And we are all heartily sick of it.
43:42All anyone wants is for the pair of you
43:43to pull yourselves together,
43:45stop making spectacles of yourselves
43:46and make this marriage
43:48and your enormously privileged positions in life work.
43:51And if I want to separate?
43:52You will not separate or divorce
43:54or let the side down in any way.
43:56And if one day you expect to be king...
43:58I do.
43:58Then might I suggest you start to behave like one.
44:30I don't ask the nueve to walk away then.
44:32I bounce my tinglesllä.
44:35I miss when I go to lunch.
44:37because they're Homer right now.
44:37For the eps 오늘 man,
44:39Grab it. Right to the seat.
44:41Ned!
44:56Do you want a bit of shit?
44:57No!
44:58Yes, please.
44:59Yes, please.
45:01No, no, no.
45:02No, no, no.
45:03No, no, no.
45:04No, no.
45:04No, no, no.
45:04No, no.
45:04No, no, no.
45:04No, no, no.
45:05No, no, no.
45:05No, no, no.
45:06No, no, no.
45:14Come.
45:19Hello.
45:21Oh.
45:22Oh, please.
45:24I, uh, I came to see if you were all right.
45:32Do you know, I don't think I've ever seen inside this room.
45:39We can be a rough bunch in this family.
45:44And I'm sure on occasion, to a sensitive creature like you, it must feel like...
45:51Well, let me ask, what does it feel like?
45:56A cold, frozen tundra.
46:00Right.
46:02Like that, then.
46:05An icy, dark, loveless cave.
46:12With no light.
46:15No hope.
46:16Anywhere.
46:18Not even the faintest crack.
46:20I see.
46:25He will come around.
46:28He will.
46:30Eventually.
46:32When he realizes that...
46:34You can never have the other one.
46:43Would it help you to realize we all think he's quite mad?
46:48That might have reassured me once, but I worry we're past that point now, sir.
46:56And if he, if this family, can't give me the love and security that I feel I deserve,
47:03then I believe I have no option but to break away, officially, and find it myself.
47:09I wouldn't do that if I...
47:10Why not?
47:11Let's just say, I can't see it ending well for you.
47:16I hope that isn't a threat, sir.
47:19Not now.
47:20Out!
47:33Although we are both outsiders who married in, you and I are quite different.
47:40Yes.
47:43I can see that now.
47:49You're right to call me an outsider.
47:53I was an outsider the day that I met the, the 13-year-old princess who would one day become
48:00my wife.
48:03And after all these years, I still am.
48:10We all are.
48:13Everyone in this system is a lost, lonely, irrelevant outsider.
48:23Apart from the one person, the only person that matters.
48:33She's the oxygen we all breathe.
48:36The essence of all our duty.
48:41Your problem, if I may say, is you seem to be confused about who that person is.
48:54Come.
48:57Um, just to say, your royal highnesses, the photographer, is ready.
49:12Let's do it.
50:14Everyone, we're going to do the photograph.
50:33The merriest of Christmas smiles?
50:36Yes.
50:37Three, two, one.
50:40Did anyone blink?
50:41The merriest of Christmas
50:47Christ, the merriest of Christmas
50:58Christ, the merriest of Christmas
51:13Christ, the merriest of Christmas
51:18Christ, the merriest of Christmas
51:35In his love, in his love,
51:45Da und schwebt die rentende Schuld,
51:55Christ in deinem Ruhe.
52:10God bless you.
53:03you
53:10you
53:40you
54:13you
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