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The Crown S04E05 [Full Movie] [Must See]Full EP - Full
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00:13finally from here in london under the heading is nobody safe anymore a royal ruckus has started
00:19over the man who had an audience with queen elizabeth uninvited and unannounced in the queen's
00:24bedroom in the middle of the night the man had cut himself on a broken window and left blood
00:29stains on the queen's bed yesterday's intruder was able to get through an elaborate system of
00:35electronic alarms as well as past palace guards and police the man was identified as 30 year old
00:41michael fagan a police investigation indicates that fagan climbed over a fence into the 51 acre
00:46palace grounds during the night he then reported he climbed a drain pipe and entered the royal
00:50quarters through a window and made his way to the queen's private bedroom on the first floor
00:55for 10 minutes he sat talking six feet away from the queen then he asked her for a cigarette
01:01according to his mother he spoke of a girlfriend called elizabeth living in sw1 the incident has
01:07shocked britain and resulted in a scotland yard investigation of royal security mrs thatcher made
01:13an urgent return to the house of commons today ahead of a statement from the home secretary the house
01:18will admire the calm way in which her majesty responded to what occurred the queen has carried
01:24on performing her duties seemingly unperturbed despite the unprecedented and severe level of
01:30threat that the intruder posed the incident left royal commentators asking two questions
01:37how on earth did he get in and what did they talk about
01:43you
02:06you
02:19you
02:21you
02:21you
02:35you
03:00mrs thatcher says her government has a coherent political agenda for many years ahead
03:06to complete the transformation of britain
03:09i'm saying the background where you come from doesn't matter because if you can prove yourself
03:15to be a value to the economy if you can contribute if you can increase your own prosperity for the
03:22good of others
03:23fuck off
03:24fuck off
03:25fuck off
03:26fuck off
03:30fuck off
03:36fuck off
03:39fuck off
03:39seriously
03:39fuck off
03:48what well
03:48yes
03:49do you
03:50you
03:55f
03:57good
03:57yeah
03:57well
04:07Let's go.
04:27I try to laugh about it, hiding my tears in my eyes, cause boys don't cry, boys don't cry.
04:43Earlier this day, the sinking of the Argentine cruiser, the General Belgrano, and the initial reports of a possible 1
04:49,000 casualties.
04:50That was a distinct wavering of the graph of international support on Britain.
04:54Next.
04:57Me again.
04:58Name.
04:59Michael Fagher.
05:00Any work in the past two weeks?
05:02Every fortnight I come in here, and every fortnight you ask me the same question.
05:07Any work in the past two weeks?
05:09I chaired the Olympic Committee.
05:11Then I did a few days as Secretary General of the United Nations.
05:18Next.
05:19Donald Belder, in Brussels, past Mrs. Kessler.
05:21How far have they come above you have to jump these British men?
05:41No, it's okay.
05:43Catch you later.
05:48Bill.
05:50Hello, mate.
05:51How are you doing?
05:52All right, you?
05:53Yeah.
05:53Not bad.
05:54Yeah, have you still got that mate?
05:56The, uh...
05:58What's it?
05:58The cash-in-hand fella?
06:00Yeah.
06:01Yeah, yeah.
06:01You can swear.
06:02Whatever you have, I will take.
06:07Who's punching these?
06:08I'll see you.
06:10All right, then, guys, let's get on with this.
06:13As soon as you finish.
06:14As soon as we're not up.
06:15All right, man.
06:15Twenty-eight babes, twenty-eight babes, twenty-eight babes, coming with my life.
06:46I might just have breakfast, if you'd like to play.
06:48Hi, mate.
06:49Hi, mate.
06:49Have a good guest.
06:56Michael's here.
06:57Where?
06:59Stay here.
07:07What are you doing?
07:08I told you never to come here.
07:10I need to talk to you about the flat.
07:12Not tonight, Michael.
07:14How are the kids?
07:16They're fine.
07:17Now go.
07:23Who's that twat?
07:24Don't be rude.
07:24Who is it?
07:25Someone who works for a living.
07:27And looks after your kids.
07:28Now go.
07:29He's a fucking twat.
07:30You're a fucking twat.
07:31Michael, I mean it.
07:32Don't stop.
07:32Do you want some?
07:33Maybe I do.
07:34Yeah?
07:35Maybe you're not worth it.
07:36Well, maybe you haven't got any balls.
07:38No, God.
07:39Shut up!
07:39Fucking balls.
07:41I've got balls.
07:42Let me tell you something else.
07:43She knows all about my balls.
07:45Right.
07:46That's enough out of you, all right?
07:47Don't stop, Michael.
07:49Fucking come on, Michael.
07:50Fucking go.
07:51Fucking do it.
07:53Fucking doing it.
07:55Fucking do it.
07:56Fucking do it.
07:57Look at all.
07:59Fucking kids.
08:00Stop.
08:00You fucking do it.
08:02You fucking do it.
08:04You fucking do it.
08:05No.
08:05No.
08:37I am very happy to say that after the recapture of South Georgia last week, our forces have now escalated
08:46operations. An RAF Vulcan and accompanying support plane have successfully carried out bombing raids near the capital.
08:55Any casualties?
08:55None. Enemy forces attempted to mount a counterattack, but one Argentine Canberra and one Mirage were successfully shot down by
09:05our Harriers.
09:06I think we can confidently say the tide has turned and the recapture of the Falkland Islands is within reach.
09:20The Prime Minister came to see me today.
09:22I hope you rolled out the red carpet.
09:24Why would I do that?
09:25Everyone was against us going to the Falklands, but she believed we could pull it off, and now victory is
09:29within sight.
09:31Her victory.
09:32She's finally doing what we've been waiting years for someone to do.
09:36Which is?
09:36Lead this country firmly and decisively after years of incompetence and mismanagement.
09:45She brought up the subject of palace security again, which infuriated me.
09:49Why?
09:50Do you want our walls to be built even higher, or the public to stand ten feet further back at
09:54engagements?
09:57I take great pleasure in meeting members of the public, and have learnt so much from them.
10:02You remember the lesson Lord Aldrin taught us.
10:05Twenty-five years ago, we were given the advice to be more transparent, accessible, to lower the drawbridge.
10:12It doesn't feel right to be pulling it up again.
10:22Nice. Gloves on.
10:25We've identified and prepared a few suitable members of the general public for you to meet.
10:30Mm-hmm. But no questions, no actual conversation.
10:33No, ma'am.
10:34Right, let's get this over with.
10:54Thank you for the issues here today.
10:58Leave me in.
11:00That's the vice president of the human substitute.
11:03Do you still find time to bake cakes?
11:06Yes.
11:14I always brought up by a Victorian grandmother.
11:17We were taught to work jolly hard.
11:19You were taught to improve yourself.
11:21You were taught self-reliance.
11:24You were taught to live within your income.
11:26You were taught that cleanliness was next to God's house.
11:29Megan.
11:30Name.
11:31Uh, bombed. James bombed.
11:33Any work in the past two weeks?
11:35International espionage.
11:37Agent. You know, intelligence work.
11:38Counterintelligence.
11:40Assassination.
11:44Twat.
11:45I've got a question for you.
11:47Who's your boss?
11:48I want to make a complaint.
11:49If you feel you've been treated unfairly, please speak to your Member of Parliament,
11:53who can refer you to the Parliamentary Ombudsman.
11:56Oh.
11:57Ugh.
12:00You know you're the fucking twat.
12:07While your process with the rest of the economy works its way through them, one of the consequences
12:12appears to be very high unemployment, unemployment which is rising.
12:16Now, it's, can I put it this way?
12:19It's like a nurse looking after an ill patient.
12:22Which is the better nurse?
12:23The one who smothers the patient with sympathy.
12:27Never mind, dear.
12:28There, there.
12:28You just lie back.
12:30I'll bring you all your meals.
12:31I'll bring you papers.
12:33There, there.
12:33You just lie back.
12:34I'll look after you.
12:36Or the nurse who says, now, come on.
12:39I'll just shake out of it.
12:40I know you had an operation yesterday.
12:42It's time you put your feet to the ground and took a few steps.
12:44That's right, dear.
12:45That's right.
12:46Now, get back and take a few more tomorrow.
12:49Which do you think is the better nurse?
12:51Well, I know which sounds bollock you, Mrs.
12:53How can I help?
13:19Mr. Fagan.
13:19I wanted to talk to someone about the system.
13:23Which system?
13:24This system, Britain.
13:27What is it about the system that bothers you?
13:30Um, it's unfair.
13:32And a disgrace.
13:34It says here you're currently unemployed.
13:36What do you do normally?
13:39I'm a painter decorator.
13:40But there's not a lot of work around recently.
13:43Perhaps because instead of investing in new homes
13:46which I could then paint and decorate,
13:49devil woman here is spending it all on a completely unnecessary war.
13:53Well, I have to tell you that I fully support the war.
13:56Do you know what it costs?
13:57I know precisely.
13:59The government has published the figures.
14:00Why would you spend over three billion pounds on a war against total strangers
14:07rather than looking after your own family?
14:10Because the invasion of the Falkland Islands was an illegal act by a foreign power.
14:15Because General Galtieri is a criminal and a fascist.
14:18And because the Falkland Islanders are British subjects living on British sovereign territory.
14:24But thank you for your observations, which I will note.
14:28No, you won't.
14:28Yes, I will.
14:30No, you won't.
14:38Noted.
14:39Mr. Fagan.
14:40Do you really need to have a picture of her in here?
14:43It's like being in Turkey or Iraq.
14:45She's my boss.
14:46I'm your boss.
14:47I'm a constituent.
14:48Did you vote for me?
14:49You must be joking.
14:51Forgive me if I don't think of you as my boss.
14:54Margaret Thatcher is the leader of the Conservative Party to which I belong.
14:57And so I think of her as my boss.
15:00You fancier her?
15:01What?
15:02I have dirty thoughts.
15:03I bet you do.
15:03I'm afraid that's all we have time for.
15:06I haven't finished.
15:08If you still wish to register your protest, I suggest you do so via the ballot box or peacefully
15:14in the street, as is your right in a civilised democracy.
15:17But if I want to talk to someone about her, who do I speak to?
15:20The leader of the opposition.
15:22He has the opportunity to put questions to her in the House of Commons twice a week.
15:26Failing that, the Queen.
15:28She has a private audience with the Prime Minister every Tuesday.
15:31Why don't you drop in at Buckingham Palace to ask her?
15:38Failing.
15:40By the left!
15:42Quick!
15:43Bounce!
15:44L-I-L-I-L-I-L!
15:48W-I-L-I-L-I-L!
16:01Her Majesty the Queen here taking the Royal Salute.
16:04The Key Moment.
16:05in this the Queen's annual birthday parade.
16:15As members of the household division troop their colour,
16:18those watching at home, as well as some lucky members of the public
16:21invited to attend, come together as one nation
16:24in celebration of this joyous event.
16:28I don't need to trust that I am the minister of this government.
16:32I'm desperately concerned.
16:34Number 72.
16:35The frozen industry and cars will create wealth for those without...
16:39Application for single payment to cover home improvements.
16:43Yep.
16:43Can you give me a little more information?
16:46Okay, my wife has left me.
16:49All right.
16:50I went to see social services to mediate
16:53because I want my kids to spend time with me.
16:55All right.
16:57But they've seen the flat and said it needs improving.
17:01There's water damage.
17:02I want to fix it.
17:04You're not the primary tenant.
17:07My wife's the primary tenant, but she's left.
17:09I just explained.
17:12You'd have to be the primary tenant at that address
17:14before we could even consider paying for the damages.
17:16Have you tried talking to the council?
17:19No, they told me to speak to you.
17:22Look, if this doesn't get sorted,
17:24I don't get to see my kids.
17:28You're going to have to take that out of the council.
17:30I'm a priest, so...
17:30Oh, yeah.
17:31I don't know.
17:32I can't see my kids here.
17:35You're good.
17:35I'm aack.
26:32You know.
26:32Dining Street will overreact and we'll have alarms and surveillance cameras and policeman everywhere.
26:37Buckingham Palace is too like a prison as it is.
26:40Yes, ma'am.
27:11Chris? Chris?
27:14Go see your mum.
27:15That's my daughter.
27:17What are you doing? Stop it!
27:29What are you kids?
27:35What have you done in this car?
27:38You've had enough!
27:39You've had enough!
27:48Go on, Mike!
27:51It's all right. It's all right.
27:53It's all right. It's all right.
27:53Leave us alone. We don't need you in our lives.
27:57You've lost all right.
27:59For you in this evening,
28:00you just march every door.
28:04I'll hate him that it was great.
28:07But what I want to do, love.
28:24In light of the incident that occurred at around 3 p.m. last Thursday,
28:28a decision has been taken that your children should remain in the permanent care of their mother.
28:37Furthermore, it has been deemed to be in the children's best interests
28:41that you should no longer have any contact with them.
28:45Do you understand?
28:56Last night, our forces reached the outskirts of Port Stanley
29:02and in response, large numbers of Argentine forces threw down their arms.
29:08The Argentines are now reported to be flying white flags of surrender.
29:14With Britain's victory in the conflict now seemingly assured,
29:17the Queen has returned to Buckingham Palace
29:19ahead of her regular audience with the Prime Minister.
29:22I'm a speechwoman of the Majesty's
29:25and the Queen's will always say
29:32Oh, we're tied now, we're tied to your ways
29:37Great sounds, never, never, never shall we say
29:43We're tied to your own
29:48Lucky, lucky, lucky!
29:51Fight, fight, fight!
29:52Lucky, lucky, lucky!
29:54Fight, fight, fight!
29:56Lucky, lucky, lucky!
29:58Fight, fight, fight!
30:00When we started out, there were the waverers and the faint-hearted
30:06The people who believed we could no longer do the things we once did
30:13Well, they were wrong
30:14Britain has a newfound confidence
30:18And we will not look back
30:23Mrs. Thatcher was in jubilant mood this afternoon
30:27As she told MPs that the future of the Falkland Islands would now rest solely in British hands
30:32Britain's primacy had been re-established, she said
30:35And then she issued this warning
30:38Let every nation know that where there is British sovereign territory
30:42It will be well and truly defended
30:44The statement was met with loud applause
30:46Mrs. Thatcher has seen a dramatic surge in her personal popularity
30:51According to the latest polls
31:26Fr. William
31:26Where there was Scottish distributions
31:26And now she says
31:30Since it母s may be as young
31:30It was a nationalized loss
31:30M experi-dog
31:30If the American stresses
31:30As a matter of time
31:31In fact, there was azialist
31:44In fact that there were a Sei- lira
31:44Toh stream
31:44Toh stream
31:44I
31:46Sui
31:50Those
32:23Morning.
32:24You took your time.
32:26Any to report?
32:29Yeah, it's quite nice.
32:32Graveyard shift, isn't it?
32:38I'll see you tomorrow.
33:19I'll see you tomorrow.
33:47I'll see you tomorrow.
34:00I'll see you tomorrow.
34:03I'll see you tomorrow.
34:06I'll see you tomorrow.
34:10Good morning, Bobo.
34:12I'll see you tomorrow.
34:16I'll see you tomorrow.
34:27I'll see you tomorrow.
34:29I'll see you tomorrow.
35:14I'll see you tomorrow.
35:17Stop it!
35:21Just give me a minute, will you?
35:24I'll sort myself out.
35:25I'll say what I've got to say and then I'll go.
35:26I'll see you tomorrow.
35:28I'll see you tomorrow.
35:31I'll see you tomorrow.
35:53I'll see you tomorrow.
35:58I'll see you tomorrow.
36:10I'll see you tomorrow.
36:15I'll see you tomorrow.
36:16Where do I...
36:17Bathroom.
36:18That door.
36:41It's me tomorrow.
36:41It's me tomorrow.
36:48It's me tomorrow.
36:48Let's go.
37:20The richest woman in the world, but look, it's not even electric.
37:24What? Your toothbrush.
37:26But that's the thing about this place, it's even posher than you'd think,
37:30and yet more run down. Run down?
37:32Oh, yeah. Corridors and staterooms. Shocking.
37:42Chip paint, peeling wallpaper, stains, decorator.
37:46Can't help those in. Is that what you do?
37:49Paint a decorator. You should hire me.
37:56You might need a glazer too. I broke a window this time.
38:01Last time was you too? Yeah.
38:04What is the matter with you? This is private property.
38:06No, it's not estate property.
38:09Either way, you're trespassing. Which isn't a crime.
38:11Not if I don't steal anything.
38:13You stole a bottle of wine last time.
38:17Only to work up the courage to speak to you.
38:20Because I've tried everything else.
38:22Writing letters.
38:24Speaking to my MP.
38:25Fat lot of good any of that did.
38:28Mirage of democracy.
38:30So, I've come to you.
38:32The head of state.
38:35You're my last resort.
38:36Someone who can actually do something.
38:39What is it you'd like me to do?
38:41Save us all from her.
38:44Who?
38:45Thatcher.
38:46She's destroying the country.
38:48We've got more than three million unemployed.
38:51That's more than at any time since the Great Depression.
38:53Doesn't that bother you?
38:54Yes, it bothers me greatly.
38:55But there's nothing I personally can do about it.
38:58When you've been in my position as long as I have, you see how quickly and how often a nation's
39:04fortunes can change.
39:06Joblessness, recession, crises, war, all of these things have a way of correcting themselves.
39:14Countries bounce back.
39:15People do.
39:16Because they simply have to.
39:18That's what I thought.
39:20That I'd bounce back.
39:22And then I didn't.
39:25First the work dried up.
39:26Then my confidence dried up.
39:31Then the love in my wife's eyes dried up.
39:36And then you begin to wonder, I don't know, where's it gone?
39:40Not just your confidence or your happiness, but your...
39:47They say I have mental health problems now.
39:50I don't.
39:50I'm just poor.
40:01Well, the state can help with all of this.
40:04What state?
40:05The state has gone.
40:08She's dismantled it along with all the other things we thought we could depend on growing up.
40:12A sense of community.
40:13A sense of, you know, obligation to one another.
40:17A sense of kindness.
40:19It's all disappearing.
40:21I think you're exaggerating.
40:24People still show kindness to one another.
40:26And they still pay their taxes to the state.
40:28And she spends that money on an unnecessary war and declares the feel-good factor is back again.
40:37In the meantime, all the things that really make us feel good, the right to work, the right to be
40:43ill, the right to be old, the right to be frail, be human.
40:51Gone.
40:51Gone.
40:54You may think you're off the hook, but she's got her eye on your job too.
40:57Let me tell you, you'll be out of work soon.
40:59Let me assure you, Mrs Thatcher isn't all too committed monarchist.
41:02Yeah, but she has an appetite for power, which is presidential.
41:05And in this country, a president and a head of state cannot co-exist.
41:10Mark my words.
41:11She's put us out of work.
41:12She's quietly putting you out of work.
41:15Who's that?
41:16That'll be my morning tea.
41:17They come at this time.
41:18Come in.
41:25Are you all right, ma'am?
41:26Yes, quite all right, thank you.
41:27But you might ask the policeman to come in.
41:46Have you come far?
41:48York Way.
41:51Just beyond King's Cross.
41:52Lovely.
41:56Is it lovely?
41:58No, not particularly.
42:06Is there anything else you'd like to say to me?
42:21No.
42:30I do hope they don't make things too difficult for you, in light of all this.
42:39Well, goodbye.
42:43Boat Toucher!
42:44It's all right.
42:47I shall bear in mind what you've said.
43:02I shall bear in mind what you've said.
43:05Now, perhaps that cup of tea.
43:07Yes, ma'am.
43:10Yes, ma'am.
43:30The Home Office has confirmed that a man successfully breached Buckingham Palace security, and entered the Queen's bedroom not once,
43:38but twice.
43:38An investigation into this unprecedented failure has already begun, and more details were given this afternoon to an incredulous House
43:46of Commons.
43:47Is the Home Secretary not aware that the British public is really very shocked and staggered at this event that
43:56have occurred?
43:57And that the Home Secretary's reference to security not being satisfactory must be the understatement of the year.
44:06I would say that no one is likely to have been more shocked and staggered than I was.
44:11I think that what we've got to await to hear, and to hear, we've got to await Mr. Dillard's report.
44:26On behalf of the government and the Metropolitan Police, I am so sorry.
44:32It is a national embarrassment that the Queen of the United Kingdom should be subjected to troublemakers and malcontents who
44:41feel at liberty to resort to violence.
44:44Oh, but he wasn't violent. In fact, the only person Mr. Fagan hurt in the course of his break-in
44:49was himself.
44:51And while he may be a troubled soul, I don't think he's entirely to blame for his troubles, being a
44:58victim of unemployment.
44:59Which is now more than twice what it was when you came into office just three years ago.
45:03If unemployment is temporarily high, ma'am, then it is a necessary side effect of the medicine we are administering
45:12to the British economy.
45:13But shouldn't we be careful that this medicine, like some dreadful chemotherapy, doesn't kill the very patient it is intended
45:20to heal?
45:21If people like Mr. Fagan are struggling, do we not have a collective duty to help them?
45:27What of our moral economy?
45:29If we are to turn this country around, we really must abandon outdated and misguided notions of collective duty.
45:42There are individual men and women and there are families, self-interested people who are trying to better themselves.
45:52That is the engine that fires a nation.
45:56My father didn't have the state to rely on should his business fail.
46:01It was the risk of ruin and his duty to his family that drove him to succeed.
46:10Perhaps not everyone is as remarkable as your father.
46:13Oh, you see, that is where you and I differ.
46:17I say they have it within them to be.
46:22Even someone like Mr. Fagan?
46:25Mr. Fagan is another matter.
46:30Two different doctors have reached the conclusion he is suffering from a schizophrenic illness.
46:35If he is spared criminal prosecution on account of his condition, then a nice, secure mental hospital will ensure he
46:44will not be a danger any longer.
46:47Now, if you will excuse me, I really must go.
46:51Where to?
46:52To the victory parade at the City of London.
46:58A victory parade?
46:59Yes, ma'am.
47:01We have just won a war.
47:14Good morning from outside the Royal Exchange in the City of London.
47:18And on the saluting base, the Lord Mayor and the Prime Minister waving.
47:29The Prime Minister taking the salute instead of the Sovereign, doesn't that bother you?
47:34No, I can't say it does.
47:37It's her moment that we enjoy it.
47:42It's interesting.
47:43What?
47:45How much it clearly bothers you.
47:48I think that woman is getting ahead of herself.
47:49And now this increased security.
47:52Who?
47:53She's trying to protect you.
47:54From what?
47:56From lunatics.
47:57Normal people.
47:59My subjects.
48:00Come on.
48:01That man was clearly a lunatic.
48:04And a fool.
48:05Yes, but in the best sense.
48:06Like Leah's fool.
48:08Don't get all Shigsperian with me.
48:24I'm sorry that I wasn't there to protect you.
48:28I feel terrible.
48:32But you're there by my side all the time.
48:35And do much more than keep me safe.
48:38But thank you.
48:42I expect Mr. Fagan is rather relieved he didn't come through that window and land on your bed.
48:49Yes.
48:51That would have been a very different conversation.
48:55Yeah.
49:20I see no joy.
49:22I see only sorrow.
49:23I see no chance of your fight here tomorrow.
49:26So stand down, Margaret.
49:28Stand down.
49:29Please.
49:29Stand down, Margaret.
49:32I say stand down, Margaret.
49:33Stand down.
49:34Please.
49:35Stand down, Margaret.
49:37You tell me how can it work in this old white law.
49:40What's a short chapter?
49:42Listen, what's a third world war?
49:43Stand down, Margaret.
49:45Stand down.
49:46Please stand down, Margaret.
49:49I say stand down, Margaret.
49:50Stand down, Margaret.
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