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The Crown S04E02 [Full Movie] [Free Online HD]Full EP - Full
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08:52We stand for
09:21Thank you
09:52Speaking of
10:21Malcolm Muggeridge
10:23Thank you
11:05Welcome to
11:09Thank you, it's all right
11:36What's up, what was she
12:35Of course I said?
12:36Thank you, it's all right
13:06Thank you, it's all right
13:36Oh, it's all right
13:41Oh, I do believe.
13:42Yeah?
13:43Yeah.
13:44Yes, I do believe.
13:57What are they doing?
13:59Christ.
14:00Prime Minister, how nice to see you.
14:03Your Majesty.
14:04And dressed for dinner already.
14:06How very thoughtful of you.
14:09We shall have supper early.
14:10Don't be ridiculous.
14:12It's six o'clock.
14:13What do you tell the kitchens?
14:14We'll eat in 45 minutes.
14:16But it's tea time.
14:17Good boy.
14:22Your Majesty.
14:28Good evening.
14:30Good evening.
14:30Good evening.
14:31Your Royal Highness.
14:33Christ, we think we'll come to lunch tomorrow and then for a chance.
14:38Oh.
14:39I think we've failed that test.
15:03I could have sworn I heard him at one point.
15:06Did you call that?
15:07Yes, I tried.
15:08Um.
15:12Yes.
15:13Mark, you do it better.
15:16That is nuts.
15:19Powder.
15:21Did I hear there was a sighting on the western shore of the Loch?
15:27Ridiculous suggestion.
15:28What are you talking about?
15:30What is that?
15:31There are low grounds.
15:32It's too open.
15:33You know, the high tops and the ridges.
15:35That's where you'll find it.
15:36Am I right?
15:37Criminal events.
15:38To kill a perfectly healthy breeding stag like that.
15:42But commercial guests want trophies and are prepared to pay huge amounts of money.
15:47And our neighbours are greedy enough to take it.
15:50I have some sympathy.
15:52I have some sympathy.
15:53It's business.
15:55It's not business.
15:57It's conservation.
15:58This is what people fail to understand.
16:00It's purely good.
16:01It's conservation.
16:02What's he doing?
16:03I'm going to be stalking tomorrow.
16:04I'm going to be stalking tomorrow.
16:05A big or 18 cents a card.
16:07It's a very, very tragic.
16:08Now, how about a round of games after supper?
16:10Number five, Ibble Dibble with one Dibble Ibble calling number four, Ibble Dibble with two Dibble Ibbles.
16:16That's the best I've ever done it.
16:19Number four, Ibble Dibble with two Dibble Ibbles calling number seven, Ibble Dibble with one, two, three, four, eight Dibble
16:26Ibbles.
16:28Number seven, Ibble Dibble Ibbles.
16:30No, Ibble, you Bibbles.
16:32Oh, no.
16:34Margot, show Granny how it's done.
16:37Dippity-toppity, down with the Nazis.
16:38Number three, Ibble Dibble with two Dibble Ibbles calling number one, Ibble Dibble with no Dibble Ibbles.
16:51Good luck.
16:53Right.
16:55Oh, thank you.
17:03Number one, Ibble Dibble.
17:09With no Dibble Ibbles calling number ten, Ibble Dibble with six Dibble Ibbles.
17:32Oh, thank you.
17:34Well done.
17:34Did I get that right?
17:35Yes.
17:36Very good.
17:38Do I pass a minute now?
17:40Thanks.
17:40That's very.
17:41Well done.
17:43What was she doing?
17:45Yes, she was rather hopeless.
17:46But I'm willing to give her the benefit of the doubt.
17:49It was probably just nerves.
17:51Of what?
17:52Of the situation, of where she finds herself.
17:54We were playing parlour games, having fun.
17:57Perhaps her idea of fun is something else entirely.
18:00Or she's incapable of it.
18:02I wouldn't know fun if it bit her on the backside.
18:05Well, I've taken pity on her and invited her stalking tomorrow.
18:09Good luck with that.
18:13Good night.
18:18Oh, Lord, you're not going to start work now.
18:21Oh, what choice do I have after wasting a whole evening like that?
18:26Oh, come on.
18:27Bit of harmless fun.
18:28To make matters worse, the Queen has invited me to join the stalking tomorrow morning.
18:34Ha, ha, ha, ha.
18:35Yes, you laugh, but it means I have to get ahead of the work now.
18:40All right, then.
18:41Why don't I go and sleep in the other room?
18:44Don't you dare.
18:46I don't want to catch any upper-class habits.
18:49Those that sleep apart grow apart.
18:52It's just for one night.
18:53Yes, and that's precisely how bad habits start.
18:56Yeah, you can stay here, and, well, there's a book on the bedside, too.
19:00Very well, dear.
19:02Whatever you say.
19:05I don't realise.
19:07Hunting memoirs of Balmoral Castle.
19:10You read that when I do this.
19:12Oh, can't wait.
19:145th of September, 1848, a letter from Prince Albert to Marie,
19:19dowager Duchess of Saxe-Coburg.
19:22The rain has not stopped for one minute since we arrived,
19:27but it has not prevented me, naughty man,
19:31from spending the whole week creeping stealthily after glorious stakes.
19:54Skate.
20:26Oh, hot.
20:28Say nothing.
20:32Prime Minister.
20:34What a lovely morning.
20:37Shall we?
20:39We're in here.
20:42We're in this morning.
20:43Don't be done.
20:44I think so.
20:45Come on, then.
20:48Come on, boy.
20:49Come on.
21:04I'm so glad you agreed to join us.
21:06I didn't have you down as a sportswoman.
21:09I'm not, ma'am.
21:11I'm afraid we're all madstalkers.
21:13It was how I spent some of the happiest times with my father, King George.
21:16He taught me everything.
21:17Oh, my father taught me a great deal, too.
21:20And what did you do together?
21:22Well, you worked.
21:25Work was our play.
21:28I worked with him in our shop.
21:31As an alderman, he took me everywhere.
21:34I watched as he wrote his speeches and listened as he roused and delivered them.
21:43It was my political baptism.
21:48How lovely of you both.
21:50Yes.
22:00Now, if you don't want to break your ankles, you should never think about those.
22:10What size are you?
22:12Five.
22:13Oh, is that handy?
22:14Me, too.
22:21With stalking, the trick really is to disappear into nature, to preserve the element of surprise.
22:27So, next time, you might not wear a bright blue.
22:30It means the stag can see you.
22:33Or wear scent.
22:35It means he can smell you.
22:37Oh!
22:39Now he can hear you, too.
22:44I could go back and change.
22:46Oh, that's an idea.
22:47Yes, if you hurry, you could make it back in time for lunch.
22:51I'll be as quick as I can.
22:54Now.
23:06Ah, Mary.
23:08Drive out and join them for lunch.
23:10Do we know where?
23:12I think I heard them saying they're going to the Loch Mink Beach, ma'am.
23:15Ah, yes.
23:19No.
23:24What are you doing?
23:25Oh.
23:26Ah.
23:28Your Royal Highness.
23:31Aren't you supposed to be out there stalking?
23:33Yes, I was, but your sister agreed with her.
23:36No, you don't call her that.
23:37You call her the Queen.
23:38She's the Queen.
23:39Not my sister.
23:42And that chair.
23:43No one sits in that chair.
23:46Oh, I beg your pardon.
23:47God, don't say that either.
23:48Say what?
23:50Begging for anything is desperate.
23:53Begging for pardon is common.
23:56That chair.
23:58No one sits in that chair.
24:00It's Queen Victoria's chair.
24:03Oh.
24:04And you do realize this is supposed to be a bank holiday.
24:09Yes.
24:09Although it is hard to have a holiday when the country is in its current state.
24:15Hmm.
24:16The country has been in a state before.
24:18It will doubtless be in a state again.
24:20One learns when one has the benefit of experience that sometimes time off is the most sensible course
24:27of action.
24:28Well, I'm not best suited to time off.
24:33It gives me no pleasure.
24:37It might give you something more important than that.
24:42Perspective.
25:17Is there nothing I can say that might persuade you to come for the weekend?
25:20Why?
25:21I have no place up there.
25:23And I'm busy anyway.
25:24Doing what?
25:25What is so important that you decline an invitation from the heir to the throne?
25:29Being a mother.
25:31And a wife.
25:32That's never stopped you before.
25:33Now, now.
25:34It's true.
25:37You need to find yourself a young woman who's free to be where you want, when you want.
25:41And is willing to give up her whole life for you.
25:45Like this new one.
25:48I'm Diana Spencer.
25:50Might and she fit the bill.
25:53Don't say that.
25:56I'd much rather hear how jealous you are.
25:59I would be, but...
26:02It's not helpful, is it?
26:05Given the situation we find ourselves in.
26:08And what's now required of you.
26:12I'm serious.
26:13You should ring her.
26:15And see what?
26:18I can't stop thinking about you.
26:21I can't bear to wake the whole summer before seeing you.
26:25Any chance you could drop everything and come up to Scotland now?
26:30I know.
26:32I'm balling.
26:49I'm out.
26:58I'm out.
27:04members of mrs thatcher's cabinet have expressed their alarm at new figures showing a sharp rise
27:09in the rate of unemployment unions are blaming the increase on the continued commitment to a
27:15policy of wide-ranging spending cuts this is now a very worrying situation indeed
27:20we have the most incompetent and radical labor opposition that should be in the wilderness
27:25now snapping at our heels no one would doubt the strength of the prime minister's convictions
27:30but what we need is a mature and more experienced leader who shares our values the danger is we have
27:39a prime minister whose inexperience whose unwillingness to recognize that our policy is
27:44failing might very well lead us over the cliff edge i think that many in cabinet will now be asking
27:50if
27:50it isn't time for a change
27:52from this film is sceptic about mrs that
28:16next up is mark watson from zebra current record holder for the hammer crew here in vermont he's gonna be
28:24in france you have confirmed william just back to enter the humanity of the world
28:33what am i doing here miles from westminster miles from reality wasting precious time in some
28:42half scottish half germanic cuckoo land
28:59and i'm struggling to find any redeeming features in these people at all
29:08they aren't sophisticated or cultured or elegant or anything close to an ideal but
29:15boorish snobbish and rude
29:19yes dt
29:21just like those patronizing bullies within my own cabinet
29:27all members of a certain class or notice
29:32well if this country really is to turn the corner then i say it needs to change fundamentally
29:40top to bottom
29:51you
30:19What happened?
30:21There was a crisis, apparently.
30:23Oh.
30:24Life in post-war Britain, there's been one long, painful, uninterrupted crisis.
30:30But no matter how bad things got, none of the other Prime Ministers left early.
30:34No one could scarcely get rid of them.
30:36Hmm.
30:38So how come this one can't get away fast enough?
30:42Perhaps we weren't very friendly.
30:44What are you talking about? I was incredibly friendly.
30:47I positively gushed.
31:06I don't know what I'm talking about.
31:07Who's that?
31:11A lady for Moy is here for you.
31:15Hello, Granny.
31:20I hope I don't need to tell you how fortunate you are to have been invited here,
31:25how unique an opportunity this is,
31:29or how much is potentially at stake for our family.
31:32It's just a weekend.
31:36The most important weekend of your life.
31:51The Prince of Wales has kindly promised to take me fishing.
31:54I'm hoping it'll be my first time in Scotland
31:56when I manage to catch something other than a cold.
32:00I can't give up. Is this one a friend friend or a girlfriend?
32:04In the balance, I think.
32:05Hence the invitation up here to see if she sinks.
32:10Or swims.
32:12Very quickly, that wasn't right.
32:16Not that I've ever had much more luck with a gun.
32:21Bless you.
32:22No, don't you, don't you, don't you?
32:24совершенно fine.
32:28Thanks for having me.
32:30Thanks for having me.
32:43Please, thanks.
32:43Thanks for having me.
33:09Good morning, ma'am.
33:105.30.
33:12His Royal Highness the Duke of Edinburgh
33:14has requested you accompany him stalking this morning.
33:18Gosh.
33:21All right.
33:22Well, you've been eating anything.
33:25Well, like what?
33:26I just thought, in case you have no outdoor shoes.
33:30Only brought outdoor shoes.
33:48I apologise for the early start.
33:51But there's a reason I asked you to join me this morning.
33:54It's great excitement ripping the house open.
33:58Oh, yes, the stag.
33:59It's all anyone could talk about at dinner last night.
34:02I don't mean about the stag.
34:05I mean about you.
34:08I thought this might be a time for us to get to know one another.
34:31You sure this isn't too wet?
34:32No, I love a good watering.
34:34You don't mind a bit of mud?
34:36Muckier the better.
34:37I'm a country girl at heart.
34:41Good.
35:35I suppose I must have seen you growing up on the estate at Sandringham
35:39when you lived in the cottage there.
35:41Yes, sir.
35:42Where do you live now?
35:43London.
35:44Earl's Court.
35:45In a flat with three girlfriends.
35:47I'm the bossy landlady.
35:49Are you bossy?
35:50I like things to be neat and tidy.
35:52Quite right.
35:52So do I.
35:53Does that come from the army, sir?
35:56The Navy.
35:57And I'm the one asking the questions.
35:59Sorry.
36:19So, is that what you do all day?
36:21Be a landlady?
36:22Oh, no, sir.
36:23My main job's as my sister's cleaning lady.
36:25All right.
36:25Well, that's a very important job.
36:27Yes, it is.
36:28I hope she pays you properly.
36:30One pound an hour.
36:31I don't know what the going rates are for domestic cleaning.
36:34Well, that's a very top rate.
36:36Only for the very best executive level cleaners.
36:39Is it?
36:39No.
36:40It's a complete rip-off.
36:42I don't know why I do it.
36:43Is it?
36:44Perhaps because you enjoy cleaning?
36:48Actually, I do quite enjoy cleaning.
36:50And ironing.
36:52Does that make me tragic?
36:53No.
36:53It makes you fascinating.
36:54I can't want you to discuss it further.
36:56Sir.
36:57What?
36:58Look.
36:59Oh, yes.
37:02Oh, you clever, clever thing.
37:04Oh, no.
37:16Oh, no.
37:35Shall we try and get closer?
37:37No.
37:38We'll never get another chance.
37:45We have one shot at this.
37:59Where's the wind coming from, the right?
38:03It's the left, sir.
38:07What?
38:08Well, look at the clouds.
38:12It's swirling.
38:17I see the right.
38:19It's the left.
38:39Good shot, sir.
38:41Was it from the left?
38:43It's the left.
38:47Good shot, sir.
38:55Good shot.
38:59Good shot.
40:01Well done.
40:02He's a beauty.
40:04I have Diana to thank.
40:07No, I did nothing.
40:09You were supportive, not me.
40:11You shot him, sir.
40:12It wasn't an easy shot.
40:14No.
40:15It was brilliant.
40:21Well, let's get a little look, shall we?
40:24Walking four hours before we found him.
40:26Four?
40:27Four.
40:27Single shot.
40:28Do they have all his clothes?
40:30No.
40:33No.
40:34No.
40:36No.
40:36No.
40:43No.
40:50No.
40:51No.
41:07Thank you so much for coming.
41:09Has it been awful?
41:10Not at all, sir. It's been heavenly.
41:12No-one has ever said that after their first visit to this place.
41:14But it has been.
41:17You weren't put off by all the scrutiny.
41:18My family's just as bad.
41:20If anyone knew, everyone tortures them trying to catch them out.
41:26We'll get all the reports tomorrow.
41:29You let me know if I passed.
41:31I'm sure you have.
41:33With distinction.
41:40You've been a great sport.
42:08So, how's it going up there?
42:10You don't want to know.
42:11I do, actually.
42:15Torture me.
42:23She's a triumph.
42:27In the history of Balmoral, no one has ever passed a test with such flying colors.
42:36Well, well, well.
42:38Rave reviews from the whole ghastly politburo.
42:42Anne.
42:46Malga.
42:47Mummy.
42:49Granny.
42:55The Duke of Edinburgh has asked to see me.
42:55Lord, Highness, the Duke of Edinburgh has asked to see me.
42:58Then I was summoned for a conversation with the power in the hanging room where, oblivious
43:02to the grotesque symbolism, might as well have been me strung up and skinned.
43:09What have you asked to see me?
43:13Diana Spencer.
43:16What have I, sir?
43:18Made the family position painfully clear.
43:34They want me to marry her.
43:39Oh, gosh.
43:40Yes.
43:44She really was a triumph.
43:48I suppose this was always going to happen.
43:51The right one was always going to come along.
43:53But is she the right one?
43:55Is anyone actually asking themselves that?
44:01She's a child.
44:08She's the founder of The King ofburger.
44:10Yeah.
44:26Yeah, he's really going to raise a hand in my arm.
44:31Yeah, I was a child as a kid.
44:52ORGAN PLAYS
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49:10in the junior ranks.
49:11Mrs. Thatcher is well and truly
49:13shuffled her cabinet.
49:15Well, in a moment, we'll be looking...
49:17Ah!
49:19Eeyore!
49:21I came to see how you were getting on.
49:24I'll be fine.
49:25I think you'll be a bit more than fine just once.
49:29After a selection process
49:30that involved half of Britain,
49:32you somehow stumbled on the perfect one
49:34in age, looks and breeding.
49:37Or have you managed to find fault
49:39even in perfection?
49:40No.
49:42She is...
49:44undeniably gorgeous.
49:46Those legs.
49:48Cow.
49:52And appropriate.
49:54Well, then.
49:58I just wish I'd had more time.
50:01What for?
50:02To find out who she is.
50:04We hardly know one another.
50:05There'll be plenty of time for that later.
50:07That's what everyone keeps saying.
50:09There'll be plenty of time for that later.
50:11Just get on with it.
50:12I concur.
50:22What does you know who say?
50:27Depressingly, she's all for it.
50:29Of course she is.
50:31Everyone's all for it
50:32because everyone understands
50:33it's time to finally close this chapter.
50:37to put the whole Parker Bowles soap opera behind us.
50:42All of us.
50:44For good.
50:49Yes.
50:51Oh, was that a smile?
50:54It will be soon.
50:58Don't fight it.
51:00She's perfect.
51:03She even got the stag, damn her.
51:11It must be written in the stars.
51:30It must be written in the stars.
51:35it must be written in the stars.
52:05It must be written in the stars.
52:33VIOLIN PLAYS
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