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The Crown S03E03 [Full Movie] [Trending]Full EP - Full
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16:27Quiet! Quick up!
16:29Quiet!
16:57Back to work, everyone!
17:03Every time the whistle blows, it makes they think they've heard something.
17:07Another child trapped beneath the wreckage.
17:27One last chance.
17:46Some knew alike but the also knew new to them.
17:46Case Speaker osoba!
17:46An earthquake and smoke!
17:52A trap right now!ем
17:57I guarantee you the highest level independent inquiry into this tragedy.
18:06All the necessary matters will be given to those in charge to take whatever action they need.
18:14Have they neglected this?
18:15Does the blame lie on the matter of the dead?
18:17Do they think about that?
18:17Do they think about that?
18:20No intention of adding to anything I've made in my state.
18:25It's a bit late now.
18:28We've been 10 hours in for years, those tips are dangerous.
18:38There was a disaster waiting to happen, and no one listened.
18:43The casualties in the tip disaster in South Wales could be as high as 200.
18:47Thirty-six people remain in hospital, and plensary bodies have been recovered, and estimates suggest that as many as 150
18:54more are still missing, most of them children.
19:06What are you doing?
19:08You haven't heard the news.
19:09No?
19:11I've been at Caroline's birthday party.
19:14When you read the papers, tomorrow you'll understand.
19:21All right.
19:57The smoke continues to hamper rescue efforts tonight in the village of Abadhan, South Wales.
20:02So far, 67 bodies, mostly children, have been pulled from the wreckage of Pant Glass Junior School,
20:08which was struck by coal waste from a nearby tip.
20:11Hope remains for many more still missing, but work to recover bodies is likely to continue through the night.
20:17The Prime Minister, Harold Wilson, visited the scene today,
20:20and Buckingham Palace have issued a statement of sorrow from the Queen.
20:24The message reads,
20:25I am shocked and distressed to learn of the terrible disaster which has taken place at Abadhan.
20:30Please convey a message of my heartfelt sympathy from my husband and myself
20:34to the children's parents and to the families of those who have lost their lives.
20:39That's the news from us at the moment. Now back to London.
20:43There will be special reports during the evening.
21:10The Prime Minister, ma'am.
21:13As of an hour ago, the loss of life in Abadhan stands at 116.
21:18Now it appears that over 80 is still missing.
21:2136 of the survivors have been hospitalised.
21:23I see.
21:25Are any more victims expected to be found?
21:28Not alive, ma'am.
21:30To make matters worse, it has been reported that the north shoulder of Tip 7 has moved
21:34and the village is ready for immediate evacuation.
21:37Mechanical diggers are out of action, bogged down in the soggy mud.
21:42The military have been brought into hell.
21:44Now, given all this, I was hoping I might persuade you to go.
21:55One of the most unfortunate things about being sovereign I have discovered
21:59is that you've paralysed virtually any situation you walk into.
22:03The very last thing emergency and rescue services need
22:07when they're working against the clock is a queen turning up.
22:17I'm not sure I agree.
22:20The children have died.
22:22The community is devastated.
22:26What precisely would you have me do?
22:32Well, comfort people.
22:34Put on a show?
22:36The Crown doesn't do that.
22:41I didn't say put on a show.
22:43I said comfort people.
23:01Give me an answer to it.
23:04I'm sorry.
23:09I'm sorry.
23:10I'm sorry.
23:14I'm sorry.
23:16I'm sorry.
23:18I'm sorry.
23:39Good morning, darling.
23:41Tea?
23:41Would anyone object if I had something stronger?
23:44Coffee?
23:45No, I was making whiskey.
23:47Margaret, it's nine o'clock.
23:49Yes, I know.
23:50But it's not morning.
23:52Not my world, anyway.
23:55Tony called.
23:57In the small hours.
23:58From a call box.
24:01In the middle of nowhere.
24:07Hello, it's me.
24:10Can you do something for me?
24:13You told me to go into the children's bedrooms.
24:16And kiss them.
24:18While they slept.
24:24As soon as he got to Aberfan, he went straight to the school.
24:38It was unimaginably awful.
24:43Miners used to digging for coal, now digging to reach their children.
24:53Many of them spent several hours stuck under the mud, beside dead friends.
24:59Buried alive.
25:01Running out of there.
25:04He then went to the mortuary, where people were waiting to identify the children's bodies.
25:11Nurses and Salvation Army volunteers, they were writing a description of each adult, each child.
25:20Noting any possessions they found in their pockets, like a handkerchief or sweets, anything, to help identify them.
25:45And from there, I went to the hospital.
25:49But there, he comforted a man, who was holding his son's school cap.
25:56After the hospitals, he wanted to walk back to the house where he's due to stay.
26:02But he carried on walking.
26:06And walking.
26:09I walked, walked, walked.
26:14No, I've never heard him like that.
26:26I hope I never do again.
26:38We have Geoffrey Morgan from the National Coal Board.
26:42I'm George Thomas, Minister of State for Wales, here to answer our question.
26:47Will you both accept responsibility?
26:50We did it!
26:51National Coal Board cannot accept responsibility for the weather.
26:57Abnormal levels of rainfall have created extraordinary conditions.
27:01You've known about the spring under the tip for years.
27:05I wrote to you.
27:07So did I.
27:08That's what's caused this, not rainfall.
27:10And nothing was done.
27:12Buried alive by the National Coal Board.
27:16That's what I want to see written on my child's desk.
27:20Talk about financial assistance.
27:23We've got people in dire need now.
27:26When's government going to step in?
27:30Let us be quite clear.
27:34A dreadful tragedy has taken place.
27:37But blame for that.
27:39And I'll give this at the door of the Labour Party.
27:42Tip number seven was built in 1958 when the Labour Party wasn't in power.
27:49I had a visit today from certain members of the Cabinet.
27:54You need to tell me who.
27:56Who are concerned that this is all turning political.
27:59Of course it's turning political.
28:02And they want you to do something to deflect the blame.
28:06Their view is, if the Labour government pay the price for this tragedy, and the Tories make political capital from
28:12it, it would be obscene.
28:13And a betrayal.
28:14Not just of the people of South Wales, but of all of us in the movement.
28:18We've been waiting for this for too long, Harold.
28:22Thirteen years in opposition.
28:24And now we're finally in power, in government.
28:27We cannot allow ourselves to be crucified on the altar of public opinion over something that isn't our fault.
28:34Oh, when people are angry, they throw stones at their leaders.
28:38Then it's the duty not just to deflect that anger, but to show solidarity with our supporters.
28:43Oh.
28:45This is grief, Marcia.
28:47It's injustice.
28:48It's just another in a long list of injustices.
28:51There's parents grieving their children.
28:53It's also cold-hearted refusal to accept responsibility by the people who are to blame.
28:59The Tories.
29:00And now they're making us the scapegoats.
29:03Well, what do you want me to do about it?
29:06Make sure they take the blame.
29:08And if you can't blame it on the Tories, and you won't press it in the House,
29:12and you can't go after the NCB until the tribunal is over,
29:15then perhaps we should look for another establishment figure to deflect negative attention.
29:24Who?
29:27Her.
29:28The Queen.
29:30But you must admit her behaviour is symptomatic of establishment neglect.
29:35Her behaviour is unfortunate.
29:38You went to see her today, didn't you?
29:41Yes.
29:42And you asked her again to go?
29:44Yes.
29:46And what did she say?
29:47The Crown doesn't go.
29:50Something like that.
29:52The Duke of Edinburgh is now going.
29:55They pulled him away from some duck shoot.
29:58Yes, but she isn't.
30:00Perhaps there's good reason for that.
30:02Maybe she finds that kind of situation difficult.
30:07Losing your children is difficult.
30:11Losing brothers and sisters is difficult.
30:15Living in a mining village where the coal board abandons you is difficult.
30:19And instead of sticking the knife in her and allowing us all to vent our anger at someone cold-hearted,
30:25you'd sooner let your own team take the blame.
30:27You're pathetic.
30:28You disgust me.
30:29So you keep telling me.
30:30If you ever want to be a real leader, a real man, a real socialist, you're going to have to
30:37grow some balls.
30:40The MCB is a creation of the Labour Party.
30:48This is a government-made disaster.
30:53Take responsibility.
30:55Take responsibility.
31:17This is something?
31:19Yes.
31:19Come on, you did it.
31:46And God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes.
31:51And there shall be no more death, neither sorrow nor crying, neither shall there be any
32:00more pain, for the former things are passed away.
32:10Fear not, for I am with thee.
32:13He shall feed his flock like a shepherd.
32:17He shall gather the lambs with his arm, and carry them in his bosom, and shall gently
32:24leave those that are with young.
32:26And the streets of the city shall be full of boys and girls playing in the streets thereof.
32:33And they shall be mine, saith the Lord of hosts.
32:38In that day when I make up my jewels, and I will spare them as a man spareth his own
32:45son
32:46that serveth him.
32:49I saw four angels standing on the four corners of the earth.
32:55I heard a voice from heaven.
33:09Amen.
33:19That was a man of the sea.
33:24That was a man of a woman's care.
33:30That was a man of the sea.
33:31And my son was half a man, and his son was a man of a man of a man of
33:35the sea.
33:35Leave I, leave me not alone
33:41Still support and comfort me
33:47All my trust on thee this day
33:53All my help from thee I pray
33:59Come on, I pray
34:34Come on, I pray
34:35Come on, I pray
35:0681 children were buried today
35:10The rage in all the faces behind all the eyes
35:16They didn't smash things up, they didn't fight in the streets
35:21What did they do?
35:23They sang
35:25The whole community
35:26It's the most astonishing thing I've ever heard
35:37Did you weep?
35:42Did I weep?
35:47What kind of question is that?
35:50Just a question, did you weep?
35:54I might have wept, yes
35:56Are you going to tell me it was inappropriate?
35:59And the fact is, anyone who heard that hymn today would not just have wept
36:09It would have been broken into a thousand tiny pieces
36:39Right, I see you
36:41Thank you for letting me know
36:48We've had a tip-off from a friendly newspaper editor
36:50That the government
36:52That the government, determined not to take the blame for Aberfan
36:55Have decided to refocus the subject of the national conversation
37:03And as briefed newspaper as that
37:07One person has been conspicuously absent from Aberfan
37:10And that is our Queen
37:12The scandalous lack of care and interest
37:15One can only assume it is that
37:17By our head of state
37:19Is symptomatic of a lack of care from the traditional establishment
37:23Not just for the people of Wales
37:25But for the whole working class
37:36And the Prime Minister gave that his blessing
37:40I think we have to assume so
38:15By the Father
38:16On arrival at RAF St. Athan
38:18You will be received by serkenod minorities
38:20Lord lieutenant of Gle Morgan
38:22And taken via a car to the school disaster site
38:25in Aberfan.
38:28Then on to the Bithania Chapel
38:30for the presentation of the heroes
38:32and survivors of the disaster.
38:35There will then be a visit to the cemetery
38:36where you will lay a wreath.
38:39And finally, a visit
38:41to the home of a local miner,
38:42Thomas Edwards, who lost relatives
38:44in the disaster and scheduled
38:46conversations with several other
38:48grieving families.
38:50A whole trip should be
38:52approximately two and a half hours.
38:55Without wishing to prompt
38:56your majesty, you may wish
38:59to consider that this is Wales,
39:01not England.
39:02A display of emotion would not just be
39:04considered appropriate.
39:07It's expected.
39:32A display of emotion will not just be
42:02Sorry.
42:04Thomas and Gwen Edwards, ma'am, whose home this is, they lost their two children, and this is Howell, Gwen's
42:13father, who managed to rescue one of the grandchildren.
42:18Sarah, she has something for you, ma'am.
42:25From the remaining children of Abelan.
42:59We're so glad to have you.
43:02Oh, wow.
43:04Can I have you, ma'am?
43:05Say this, ma'am.
43:10It's very young.
43:39The Duke of Edinburgh.
43:40Sarah said the family sung a hymn when they buried their children.
43:45Yes, ma'am.
43:48Is there any way I might hear it?
43:50I'm sure we can find a recording.
43:55And I'll ask the Prime Minister to come and see me as soon as possible.
43:59Yes, ma'am.
43:59And I'll ask the Prime Minister to come and see you.
44:47The Prime Minister, Your Majesty.
44:50Your Majesty.
45:02Churchill would have had the character to do it face-to-face.
45:07Come to think of it, so would Anthony Eden and Harold Macmillan.
45:12Each of them would have had the courage to express their anger to me directly.
45:16None of them would ever have resorted to going behind my back like that.
45:23I have it on authority you tipped off journalists
45:26that I was letting the side down by not going to Aberfan.
45:30Never.
45:31It wasn't you?
45:32No, ma'am.
45:37But perhaps one or two of my colleagues
45:41concerned at the anger being directed at the government...
45:44Broke ranks.
45:45Took matters into their own hands.
45:50It's possible.
46:04Perhaps they're right.
46:06The people of Aberfan deserved a prompt response.
46:09They didn't get one.
46:11They deserved a display of compassion, of empathy from their Queen.
46:15And they got it yesterday.
46:16They got nothing.
46:19I dabbed a bone-dry eye, and by some miracle, no one noticed.
46:32After the Blitz, when we visited hospitals, I saw what my parents, the King and Queen, saw.
46:40They wept.
46:43I couldn't.
46:45Well, you were a child.
46:48What do you expect?
46:49Not just as a child.
46:50When my grandmother, Queen Mary, whom I loved very much, when she died, nothing.
47:05Well, if she'd been ill a long time, it had been expected.
47:09When I had my first child, a moment of such significance for every mother.
47:23I have known for some time there is something wrong with me.
47:28Not wrong.
47:30Deficient, then.
47:32How else would you describe it when something is missing?
47:40These meetings are confidential, yes.
47:46I have never done a day's manual work in my life.
47:51Not one.
47:52I am an academic.
47:54A privileged Oxford Dom.
47:57Not a worker.
47:59I don't like beer.
48:01I prefer brandy.
48:04I prefer wild salmon to tinned salmon.
48:08Chateaubriand to stained kidney pie.
48:12And I don't like pipe smoking.
48:15I far prefer cigars.
48:19But cigars are a symbol of capitalist privilege.
48:23So, I smoke a pipe.
48:26On the campaign trail and on television.
48:29It makes me more approachable.
48:35Likeable.
48:40We can't be everything to everyone and still be true to ourselves.
48:46We do what we have to do as leaders.
48:49That's our job.
48:51Our job is to calm more crises than we create.
48:56That's our job and you do it very well indeed.
49:01And in a way, your absence of emotion is a blessing.
49:07No one needs hysteria from a head of state.
49:14The truth is, we barely need humanity.
49:33Your majesty.
49:34Prime Minister.
49:38Your majesty.
49:39Your majesty.
50:05your majesty.
50:07Your majesty.
50:08Your majesty.
50:29Oh, my God.
50:39While the nearer portals go, while the tempest still is high,
50:51of the refuge have I known, as my help has soared on thee,
51:02leave now, leave me not alone, still support and support me,
51:15will thou not be alive, with my eyes still.
51:46For more information, visit www.fema.org
51:46For more information, visit www.fema.org
51:50For more information, visit www.fema.org
52:14For more information, visit www.fema.org
52:16For more information, visit www.fema.org
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