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The Crown S05E02 [Full Movie] [Trending]Full EP - Full
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00:14I'm sorry I'm gonna have to ask you to speak up a little I I can't hear you very well
00:19okay
00:20no problem well what's your first question I want to know more how it started it started
00:28by accident well with an accident I yes I'd been injured once too often playing polo
00:40do you understand what I'm saying yes I understand good good and so age 50 I decided to give up
00:48the
00:49big love of my life and look elsewhere for some fun well that didn't come on right um I'm gonna
00:56insist we do that again excuse me we're going to go again again you ready yes yes and so age
01:1050 I
01:11decided to give up the big sporting love of my life and look for new challenges which is how I
01:21ended up
01:22carriage driving
01:28yeah
01:28yeah
01:29yeah
01:29yeah
01:30yeah
01:30yeah
01:30yeah
01:30yeah
01:30yeah
01:30yeah
01:30yeah
01:47we've become quite a gang traveling up and down the country from competition to competition
01:53the country from competition and the country to become something of a second family
01:55in world
01:57yeah
01:58yeah
01:59yeah
01:59yeah
02:00yeah
02:02well
02:08yeah
02:09yeah
02:10yeah
02:10yeah
02:12yeah
02:13yeah
02:15yeah
02:16yeah
02:16yeah
02:17Let's pray.
02:47Let's pray.
02:50Let's pray.
03:13There's a school of progressive medical thought.
03:17That suggests we bring cancer upon ourselves as a result of repressed emotion or unresolved psychological trauma.
03:30Then a perfectly angelic five-year-old dies of it and you realize what utter rubbish that is.
03:41Poor Norton.
03:43Yes.
03:45Why don't you pay him a visit?
03:48He could probably do with some support from his godfather.
03:51Yes.
03:55Yes.
03:56Yes, right.
04:01What's that look?
04:06I've never seen so many thoughts go on behind someone's eyes.
04:09Gratitude.
04:11Appreciation.
04:13What for?
04:15You make a better person of me.
04:19And you of me.
04:23Isn't that the point of marriage?
04:34Good night.
04:42Good night.
04:43Good night.
04:45Good night.
04:57Good night.
05:03Good night.
05:11Good night.
05:14Good night.
05:21Good night.
05:22Good night.
05:23Good night.
05:23Good night.
05:23Good night.
05:23Good night.
05:23Good night.
05:24Good night.
05:25Good night.
05:26Good night.
05:26Good night.
05:27Good night.
05:27Good night.
05:27Good night.
05:28Good night.
06:08Hello. Hi. You, um, you are coming.
06:14Sorry, one of those mornings. We're there in.
06:17One minute.
06:17One minute.
06:18One minute.
06:22One minute away, and she apologises.
06:25Was that actually her?
06:27Yes, that was.
06:28Actually her.
06:37One minute.
06:39Yes, that was.
07:10Thanks for a great space.
07:11Yes, of course.
07:14We saw the pictures of you in Italy.
07:16You, um, well, you all look so happy.
07:20Phony and you.
07:21It's honestly worse than ever.
07:23I'm going to ask for what to do.
07:24So many.
07:28I'm going to ask for what they're going to do.
07:30Be now.
07:41I'm going to get down.
07:59James Coldhurst, isn't it?
08:01Uh, yes.
08:03Keep a moment.
08:04Which one?
08:07Tall, with glasses.
08:09Hmm.
08:11I know the one.
08:12Clark Kent.
08:13He said his name was Andrew.
08:15Yeah, it's just what I call him, silly.
08:17Andrew Morton.
08:19He's one of the friendly ones.
08:21He's written some nice things about me in the past.
08:23Well, now he wants to write a whole book about you.
08:26What it's really been like marrying into the royal family.
08:29The truth behind the fairy tale.
08:31I said you'd never agree to be involved in something like that.
08:34Oh, no.
08:35So then we arranged to play a game of squash.
08:37What?
08:38You saw my racket in the corner of my office and suggested a game.
08:41James.
08:42Don't worry.
08:43I said any further discussion of you was totally off-limits.
08:46It better be.
08:47I'll call you after I've seen him.
09:06Hello?
09:19Hi, are you?
09:20Hi.
09:25Hi.
09:31Hi.
09:33Hi.
09:36Hi.
09:44Hello?
09:48Hello?
09:53Oh, no.
09:54What have I done now?
09:56You're here today.
09:58Norton said you were coming tomorrow.
10:00He just left for London for meetings with the bank.
10:04Let me see if I can reach him.
10:06Oh, don't go to any trouble.
10:13What can I get you? Are you hungry?
10:16Oh, God, no. No, nothing like that.
10:20No, I, uh...
10:23I just came by to see how you're coping.
10:28That's kind.
10:31And to bring these.
10:36Daisies.
10:37Well, Leonora.
10:39You mentioned at the memorial that they were her favourite.
10:45That's so kind of you.
10:48Shall we take them to her?
11:00Norton thought it was morbid to have her so close.
11:04Yes, but...
11:06I wanted somewhere I could see her every day.
11:10To be near to her every day.
11:14It also means I can never leave here.
11:17Why would you want her?
11:22It's not always easy.
11:24It's not always easy.
11:47You know, one of the many, many things that attracted me to Lilibet...
11:52was that the commitment would necessarily be lifelong.
11:59To a young man who'd had such an unsettled and romantic childhood.
12:05The clarity of that permanence felt so reassuring.
12:09It still does.
12:12But it brings its problems, too.
12:16Because it doesn't take into account the one thing human beings do...
12:21the minute they make a commitment to a life together.
12:25Which is?
12:27It's growing separate directions.
12:47Tell Norton I'll be sure to be in touch soon...
12:49for a godfatherly chat.
12:53And as for you, there's...
12:55there's two things you might consider.
12:57Why not start a charity in Leonora's name?
13:01Yes, I'd already had that idea.
13:03And you might find yourself a hobby.
13:06Something that has nothing to do with any of this.
13:09Not a hobby.
13:10An escape.
13:12A passion.
13:13I'll bear that in mind.
13:15Good.
13:17Speaking of hobbies...
13:19Norton said that you'd...
13:21given up polo and developed a thing for carriage driving.
13:25I have, yes.
13:27I'm obsessed.
13:28Why?
13:36Look at that.
13:40An old four in hand.
13:42Norton wanted to sell it.
13:44Can't do that.
13:45We've been told it's beyond repair.
13:47Then he thought if you could make use of it...
13:49Well, she may be a bit dusty.
13:51Oh, I think the damage is worse than that.
13:53All right. A bit cracked in places.
13:55Norton was told structurally irreparable.
13:59No, no, no. She's a beauty.
14:01And part of the family heritage.
14:07I'll tell you what.
14:09Why don't we do this?
14:12I'll send someone to collect her.
14:15We'll clean her up, take a look at her.
14:18And then we can talk again.
14:19We don't need to talk again.
14:22This could be a hobby for you.
14:24Oh.
14:26No, it's really not for me.
14:27Oh, well.
14:29That was my attitude at first.
14:31But then I tried it and...
14:32I saw the light.
14:38Um...
14:39Oh!
14:43Oh!
14:44Oh!
14:47Oh!
14:48Oh!
14:49Oh!
14:49Oh!
14:56Oh!
14:58Oh!
15:03Oh!
15:03No, no, no.
15:06Oh!
15:06I'm going to go first.
15:20I'm going to go first.
15:28Hi.
15:32Right, thank you.
15:47How was it?
15:49Bloody hell.
15:51Very evenly matched.
15:52He moves infuriatingly well for a tall man.
15:55Quick to the tee.
15:57Plenty of nasty little drop shots and boasts.
15:59We played the best of three games.
16:02Pipped him in the third.
16:03I wasn't asking about the squash.
16:05I want to know about the lunch.
16:07Ah, a little Italian place near the squash club.
16:10The Barker, run by a husband and wife.
16:12Not where you had lunch.
16:14Oh, sorry.
16:15Oh, what you ate?
16:16Linguini.
16:20Let's start with who paid.
16:22He did.
16:23James.
16:23He's a tabloid journalist.
16:25And he bought lunch because he lost.
16:27And if you are worried about indiscretion,
16:29he got nothing from me, not a word.
16:30Whereas I got plenty out of him.
16:33Revelation number one.
16:35He's already started writing.
16:36What?
16:37He thinks there's already another book coming out about you
16:39that's likely to be a bit of a hatchet job,
16:41you know, based on sources close to the Prince of Wales.
16:44Oh, God.
16:45Anyway, Morton's view is that his version
16:47would at least give you some control.
16:49Like, uh, be sympathetic.
16:52He'd even let you have final approval.
16:54Trust me, I'd love to have a book out there
16:55so everyone understands how difficult it's been for me,
16:58but I don't want to be responsible for starting a war.
17:00Morton said that you'd never need to meet him.
17:02Ever.
17:03There would be no connection between the two of you
17:05that anyone could prove.
17:07It would all be totally deniable.
17:09How'd that even work?
17:10Tape recordings.
17:12You would record your side of the story,
17:14saying only what you want to say,
17:16all in your own words,
17:17and then Morton would...
17:19write the book from those recordings.
17:22If you and I don't meet,
17:23how would he get the recordings?
17:27There would have to be a middleman.
17:30Go between someone who you both trusted,
17:35someone who thought it was important.
17:39And you would do that?
17:42If you wanted me to.
17:48Give him join us.
18:10All right, Jimmy.
18:12Yeah, don't eat nothing.
18:18Oh, marvellous, marvellous. You've got the hickory in time.
18:31I've taken the liberty of getting another few ideas.
18:43Between the eggs and the food comes the new.
18:46You missed a bit.
19:22Thank you, sir.
19:23Thank you, sir.
19:26You said it couldn't be done.
19:27You pulled all the stops here, sir.
19:29He looked very hard.
19:42What do you think?
19:44Is it even the same carriage?
19:47The original paintwork was a dark black.
19:51I thought we'd have these dashes of gold in this nice sloping footboard.
19:57Go on.
20:04Now, grab here.
20:06The foot here.
20:08The other foot here.
20:18How does it feel?
20:20Fine.
20:22Largely because it's not moving.
20:41You try.
20:44These two reins control the leaders.
20:47Those are the horses at the front.
20:49And these two, the wheelers.
20:51They control the horses nearest to us.
20:54Feel free to nod or say yes to let me know you're still alive.
20:58Yes.
21:00The trick is to keep these both together.
21:02Put between these two fingers.
21:05There.
21:06Now, these two reins, you have control over all four horses.
21:11To turn left, make a loop.
21:14That's it.
21:15Turn to the left.
21:18And to turn right.
21:19Take it.
21:20Very good.
21:23Off you go.
21:33Here.
21:34Let me take you.
21:41Where are we going?
21:53Hang on.
22:11Surprising, isn't it?
22:12Yeah.
22:13More fun than it looks.
22:14Yeah.
22:22The princess is intrigued by the proposition and is wanting to consider it.
22:26But as her friend, I want to make sure that this will actually make her life better, not just yours.
22:34You understand why I ask.
22:36She can be a little naive at times and you stand to become a rich man.
22:41I feel protective.
22:43As a royal correspondent, I've had a ringside seat to this marriage for a while.
22:49Most recently her second honeymoon.
22:53And I can't stand to see someone being crushed like this.
22:56You think she is being?
22:57I do.
22:58Take this book that's being written.
23:00With the Prince of Wales' cooperation?
23:02Maybe not him directly, but his friends for sure.
23:06Who want what they see as the truth about Diana to be told.
23:09Trust me.
23:10It won't be pretty.
23:14I just want to do what's right for her.
23:16She'd like a sister to me.
23:19Can I give you my word?
23:21No one will ever know she had anything to do with it.
23:26Let's take it one step at a time.
23:28Get a draft written.
23:30The princess can always kill it later if she wants.
23:41Here's a list of questions for her.
23:54Bye, Mummy.
24:10Bye.
24:51Ready?
24:57I'm sounding incredibly nervous.
25:02Andrew wanted you to start by explaining why you're doing this.
25:13I've tried everything.
25:17I've confronted my husband about his mistress and I have been dismissed.
25:23I've gone to the Queen.
25:26It's like facing a blank wall.
25:29And it finally dawned on me.
25:31And that's how I get my side of the story out there.
25:35People will never understand how it's really been for me.
25:40And I thought about moving abroad with the boys.
25:44But the Crown could take legal custody of any heirs to the throne.
25:51And I'd have the boys taken away from me.
25:58Which is what happened to my mother.
26:03And I couldn't survive that.
26:21Can you tell me something about your childhood?
26:24It was a very unhappy childhood.
26:29My parents were always wrapped up in their own problems.
26:33And my mother was always in tears.
26:37And my father...
26:39...never telling us what was going on.
26:43And there was always a succession of nannies.
26:47Who I hated.
26:50Prince Charles famously replied,
26:52Whatever in love means.
26:54And asked if he was in love with you.
26:56How did that make you feel?
27:00Absolutely traumatized.
27:02My self-worth was cut in two.
27:07But...
27:08I was too scared to ask him what he meant.
27:11And then it was too late.
27:14From the outside, it was the fairytale wedding.
27:17How did it feel on the inside?
27:22Like a bad dream.
27:24The night before the wedding.
27:28I was...
27:29...suddenly overwhelmed.
27:31And I sobbed my eyes out.
27:36And I ate everything inside.
27:39I was sick all over the place.
27:42Which was a big sign.
27:45It all was not well.
27:47I'm walking down the aisle.
27:48I was overwhelmed with love for my husband.
27:52And then I saw Camilla.
27:54And her grey suit.
27:56And her pillbox hat.
27:58And I just felt chill to the bone.
28:02How quickly did things start to go sour?
28:05When I started to unravel at the honeymoon.
28:09And at night I was having these dreadful nightmares about Camilla.
28:13And when the Queen was there, I always felt second place.
28:16And Charles barely looked at me.
28:17And I just felt like a fish out of the water.
28:18When I was so thin.
28:20My bones were just sticking out all over the place.
28:22When I talked to him about photographers pounding me.
28:25He talked about Camilla.
28:26When I tried to be brave.
28:28Make a speech in Wales.
28:29I got no support.
28:31Well, I just felt like a lamb to the slaughter.
28:33Did you feel that your husband was committed to the marriage in the same way that you were?
28:37Well, there was always the other one.
28:41From the word go.
28:42No.
28:45And I couldn't compete.
28:49And I'd overhear him on the phone to her.
28:52And he used a voice I'd never heard him use with me.
28:56Tender.
28:57Caring.
28:58Adoring.
29:03When I was pregnant with William I threw myself down the stairs at Sandringham.
29:09I threw myself down the stairs at Sandringham.
29:12I let you know what made you happen to her.
29:13Thattrl SISTER.
29:13No, no not really.
29:13No, no not really.
29:22I did.
29:22I did not see anything at all.
29:22In the end of the store.
29:28I fell in the face again.
29:40and just listen to the tapes he has and drafted some follow-up questions what
29:46should he think I think it was a bit shocked he said he had to look up
29:52bulimia nervosa and Kumar and Clarks I have to admit there have been a few
29:59surprises for me in all this too I wish you'd have told me before about the
30:13the suicide attempts so sorry
30:19why didn't you call us
30:30he wants to know if he can speak to any of your friends why he said it would
30:34help with the deniability if you can show he has other sources for all this
30:37that gives you cover he'd ask them the same questions I've asked you and
30:41they'll be corroborating witnesses
30:47all right
30:53I'll start with Sue
30:54who's Sue?
30:56my room therapist
31:00Felix Lyle
31:02Felix Lyle
31:04my astrologer
31:08Una
31:08Shanna Toffolo
31:10don't tell me she's your Reiki healer
31:12my acupuncturist
31:16Stephen Twig my body worker
31:19looks like an osteopath
31:24right
31:35good good
31:37you're doing really well
31:39excellent
31:47yes
31:48here we are
31:52now
31:52I've had a go at the governing instrument for the charity
31:59these are the trust of deeds the memorandum and the articles
32:04what do you think of a research fellowship?
32:09to study cancer in children.
32:12They were all so good to us at Barts.
32:15Made such a difference to Leonora's final days.
32:18I think that's a lovely idea.
32:20Getting registration can be a bit of a slog,
32:23but I'm on good terms with some of the charity commissioners.
32:27Let me talk to them.
32:38You know, a long time ago,
32:40I lost my favorite sister,
32:44Cecile,
32:46in an airplane crash.
32:49I learned then what grief was.
32:53True grief.
32:59How it moves through the body.
33:04How it inhabits it.
33:08How it becomes part of your skin.
33:11Your cells.
33:16And it makes a home there.
33:20A permanent home.
33:27But you learn to live with it.
33:32And you will be happy again.
33:35No, never in the same way as before.
33:39But that's the point.
33:42To keep finding new ways.
33:49Yes.
33:50That's the point.
33:55I don't know.
34:31I don't know.
34:50I don't know.
35:11I don't know.
35:40One that claims how badly she's been treated by the family.
35:44Everyone's failure to understand her.
35:47The jealousy everyone feels about her popularity and success.
35:51Norton said he'd had several calls from people saying that
35:54either they'd been approached or knew someone else who had.
35:59Probably just gossip.
36:02Norton should know better.
36:07Send him my best.
36:09I will.
36:30You don't think the two incidents are related?
36:32First you get knocked off your bike, then Andrew's house gets broken into.
36:35It's not the first time I've been driven into the gutter by white van man.
36:39And break-ins happen in London hundreds of times a day.
36:42Besides, nothing was stolen.
36:44I'm not answering that.
36:45I'm not speaking on this thing again ever.
36:47I heard a click on the line this morning.
36:50This end.
36:51Patrick.
37:01Jeffson?
37:03Miles, good afternoon.
37:07Right.
37:08Of course.
37:10We'll come right back to you.
37:13Miles Hunt Davis, the Duke of Edinburgh's private secretary.
37:17Requesting a meeting with you as soon as possible.
37:24Three miles from Castle Durgin, County Tyrone.
37:28When at least two terrorists were frightened off
37:30as they planned to ambush an off-duty member of the Royal Irish Regiment at his home.
37:38...with the security forces in the early hours of this morning.
37:41According to police, the fierce exchange of gunfire...
37:44...
37:48...
37:52...
37:54...
37:54...
37:55...
37:56...
37:59...
38:19Well, it's been a while since I've been in Kensington Palace.
38:24The leper colony.
38:26Is that what you call it?
38:30I think of it as the depot where we put all the mad old arts.
38:37All watching each other's comings and goings through net curtains.
38:44Is there any privacy at all?
38:47None.
38:48Ghastly. Because privacy is so important, isn't it?
38:53Yes.
38:56Confidentiality, too.
39:01I suppose that's what I've come to see you about today.
39:05Please.
39:08I won't, if that's all right.
39:18Yes, I can be a tough old nut, but I've always had a soft spot for you.
39:23Maybe because you're young.
39:26Maybe because you're a beautiful woman.
39:30Maybe because I often share your frustration with your husband.
39:35No, I've always felt protective of you.
39:39Fond of you.
39:40There, I've said it.
39:43So when I see you're making errors of judgment, I want to lean across the table and remind you, I'm
39:51on your team.
39:53What am I trying to say?
39:56You're not a novice anymore.
39:59You're long past the point of thinking of us as a family.
40:02That's the mistake people make in the beginning.
40:05But you understand, I think, it's a system.
40:09And we're all in this system.
40:10You, me, the boss, the cousins, the uncles, the aunts, the lepers.
40:21For better or for worse, we're all stuck in it.
40:25And we can't just air our grievances and throw bombs in the air as in a normal family.
40:32Or we end up damaging something much bigger and something much more important.
40:39The system.
40:43So the tip I want to give you is this.
40:47I mean, just be creative.
40:53You can break as many rules as you like.
40:55You can do whatever you want.
40:58You can make whatever arrangements you need to find your own happiness.
41:04As long as you remember the one condition, the one rule,
41:10you remain loyal to your husband and loyal to this family in public.
41:18You mean silent?
41:20Yes.
41:24Don't rock the boat.
41:31Right.
41:32Ever.
41:35To the grave.
41:49You're not saying anything.
41:54I don't think there's anything to say.
42:00Do you know, I think that's the wisest thing I've ever heard come out of your mouth.
42:16you're not saying anything.
42:43She'll be fine.
42:47Good.
42:49Yes.
42:51I told her that if she were a little more clever,
42:55a little more strategic,
42:58she could find all the happiness she needs in this system
43:02without anyone being any of the wiser.
43:05Is that the solution, do you think?
43:08That husbands and wives should keep secrets from one another?
43:12Secrets? That's not a very nice word.
43:16No, um...
43:17No, what I mean is, you know, if people were, well, more considerate,
43:21more mature, more discreet,
43:25it can actually be the glue that binds it all together.
43:32You see, I think in a marriage one should aim to exist without secrets or accommodations.
43:39Yes, well, that's because you are who you are.
43:42And not just because any husband or wife can feel when something is awry,
43:47but ultimately, it's not what I know about you,
43:51or even what you know about me.
43:54It's what he knows about all of us.
44:00I think he has the night off occasionally.
44:10Good night.
44:11Good night.
44:12Good night.
44:13Good night.
44:32Good night.
44:35Tonight I'm joined by Andrew Morton, one-time royal watcher and now author of the book that everyone is talking
44:42about.
44:43Andrew, good evening.
44:44Good evening.
44:45For anyone who's been living under a rock and doesn't know, could you tell us what your book is about?
44:50My book is an intimate portrait of Princess Diana.
44:53An attempt to tell a story of what her life, particularly her marriage, is really like.
44:58And the fact is, behind the glamorous public facade, what we have is a woman who is deeply unhappy.
45:04Which you go into in great detail in a book that seems to be channeling Diana herself, and yet which
45:10you claim she was in no way involved.
45:12I can say categorically that I did not interview the princess, but I spoke to her friends, associates, anyone who
45:19was willing to talk.
45:20Many of them were not just willing, they were desperate to tell the world how it really is.
45:24And we really are talking about the whole world.
45:26I mean, this book is breaking all kinds of publishing records.
45:30In France, Holland, Germany, Japan, and is making you a rich man in the process.
45:36Do you feel a sense of guilt or responsibility for throwing the royal family into crisis?
45:41Honestly, I think the royal family have been throwing themselves into crisis.
45:45They knew what they were getting into with Diana.
45:47They knew she was vulnerable.
45:49They knew she'd had a difficult childhood.
45:53They knew she needed love and security and reassurance.
45:58But did they give it to her?
46:00No.
46:01They gave her the total opposite.
46:03So they can't be surprised she wants people to understand why she hasn't been happy.
46:08So where does that leave us?
46:10That leaves us in one of those cyclical moments where the royal family is in genuine crisis.
46:16But where the fragile truce between Diana and the royals is clearly not working.
46:21There are two alternatives to a truce.
46:23Either you have a long-term negotiated peace, which I don't see happening.
46:30The two sides are too entrenched.
46:33Or you escalate.
46:36Into what?
46:37All-out war.
46:39Which sadly seems to be where this is currently headed.
46:57All-out war.
47:08To make thepptch.
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