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The Crown S03E08 [Full Movie] [Trending Drama]Full EP - Full
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00:28You
00:40Sydney
00:42Sydney
00:44Sydney
01:03Sydney
01:28Sydney
01:29Sydney
01:33Malheureusement, les examens ont révélé des modifications structurelles
01:36dans le larynx de son Altesse Royale
01:40et un stade avancé de la maladie.
01:44Il n'y a pas de traitement possible, seulement des soins palliatifs.
01:49Et quand la morphine agira,
01:51elle provoquera une somnolence quasi permanente chez son Altesse Royale.
01:56Mon conseil serait de profiter au mieux du temps précieux qu'il vous reste.
02:20We must throw a party.
02:23Our greatest ever party.
02:29And concentrate only on happy things.
02:34To that end, let's cancel the Japanese Emperor.
02:38You ever think to?
02:39No, we can't do that.
02:40Not too much planning has gone into it.
02:43Besides, it may be my only remaining opportunity to restore my reputation.
02:51Our reputation
02:52is an idol and most false imposition
02:57of God without merit
02:59and lost without deserving.
03:22We don't want it to look like Kabuki.
03:34Only the second time he's ever left his country.
03:37Last time, he was only 20.
03:40A boy.
03:41I was 26.
03:42He didn't speak a word of English.
03:45I gather he has a little now.
03:47He's got a baby!
03:48He's got a baby!
03:50I want another photo.
03:52Put it in the picture.
03:55He promised he had no longer do it.
03:59My kids don't want to stay safe.
03:59It's a huge thing to protect people.
04:00I don't want to show the people's lives.
04:03I don't want to show the country...
04:04Well...
04:05He didn't agree to this visit for the conversation.
04:111, 2, 3
04:14Perfect, turn a little bit on the left
04:16Perfect, don't move
04:17I ask you, please, to take a good pause
04:20Excellent, thank you
04:261, 2, 3
04:40Never leaves Japan
04:43Imagine being stuck on an island your whole life
04:48An island which is home
04:52Where you reign as sovereign
04:57I can think of worse things
05:09The Emperor and the former King
05:11Two great statesmen reunited, the Times
05:16A royal reunion, the New York Times
05:2050 years of strife laid to rest in triumphant meeting
05:24The Guardian
05:26I heard this morning that he's requested to do a television interview with the BBC
05:30What kind of interview?
05:31An in-depth retrospective
05:33I can't bear it
05:35Now they're rehabilitating him
05:37It's possible, Mummy, that not everyone is as consumed by loathing of him as you are
05:42Charles asked my blessing to visit him in France
05:44Whatever for?
05:46He said out of respect
05:49But I imagine it's curiosity, too
05:52One doesn't often get the opportunity to meet a former king
05:54Former kings are usually dead
05:57I fear that he can go to an Cathy
06:25I hear aautre
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08:03What you can't not come is the amalgamation ball.
08:06I had a clash.
08:08With what?
08:09None of your business.
08:14Look, this escalation of facilities is neither necessary nor justifiable.
08:18You had your chance for a ceasefire and you broke it.
08:20If you're talking about Ginny, it's over.
08:22The whole thing was hideous.
08:24No, hideous was knowing you were out on manoeuvres with her.
08:28So before we even discuss the terms of a truce,
08:31you just have to know how it feels.
08:36Who's there?
08:39Maybe you mind.
08:57Evening.
08:57Good evening, sir.
09:04You alone?
09:06Ah.
09:07Huh?
09:08Where's, uh, where's Mam's up?
09:10She had a better offer.
09:12Really?
09:13Hmm.
09:14Oh.
09:15But, as it turns out, evening.
09:18That means I'm free to seek a proposition of my own.
09:23Well, in that case.
09:24Yes.
09:28There's, uh, there's someone you should meet.
09:31Come with me.
09:44Your Royal Highness, may I present Captain Andrew Parker-Bowles.
09:50Hello, Andrew.
09:56Your Royal Highness.
10:00What are you staring at?
10:02At you, ma'am.
10:05And how much you've...
10:06I advise you to choose the next word very carefully.
10:09Flowered.
10:10Oh.
10:11You mean the dress.
10:13It's the Queen's.
10:13I look like a hydrangea.
10:15No, no, I mean, uh...
10:18Developed.
10:20I've grown up.
10:21Evidently, I've gone from invisible to visible.
10:24No, you were, you were always visible.
10:25But somehow you'd never seen me.
10:28Now you're making up for it.
10:31By gawping.
10:33I'm so sorry.
10:34But don't apologise.
10:37I hate it when men apologise.
10:38It isn't honourable or chivalrous.
10:40It's wet.
10:43I didn't say I objected to it, did I?
10:47No.
10:48Well, then.
10:51I don't mind admitting I've done my fair share of gawping at you over the years.
10:54Have you?
10:55On the polo field.
10:58When I should have been watching either the Duke of Edinburgh or the Prince of Wales,
11:02my young, impressionable female eye,
11:04for some reason, was drawn to you.
11:22That was fun.
11:23Yes, it was.
11:28That said, we should probably make it the last time.
11:30I don't want you to get hurt.
11:31What makes you think I would?
11:34Oh, it's what tends to happen to anyone who gets in the way.
11:37Of what?
11:38Me and her.
11:42You sail, don't you?
11:43Do I need to brace myself for a nautical metaphor?
11:46Let's see, there are, um, hidden currents, deadly.
11:51They can pull one under.
11:55Camilla and I are a bit like that.
12:04What are you doing?
12:06Leaving.
12:08But I don't want you to.
12:09You just said you did.
12:11No, I didn't.
12:12I said I don't want you to get hurt.
12:13This conversation is going round and round in circles.
12:16I preferred it when we were going round and round in circles.
12:20I can see perfectly clearly who you are and what this is, and I can assure you I'm not going
12:25to get hurt.
12:29Now, what's it going to be?
12:32A resumption or a cessation?
12:35Of what?
12:42A resumption.
12:45Fine.
12:48Where do you get it from, at your age?
12:50What?
12:51Oh, come on.
12:52That confidence.
12:54I'm not confident, dear.
12:56Just tough.
13:00And here come Windsor Park, who's a reason on the attack, who could run off the field on
13:04a glorious day here at the Guards Polo Club.
13:07Coming straight through, looking confident.
13:10Prince Charles, the charge there, at the number four.
13:13Cleans it forward, but oh, there's Parker Bowles, Parker Bowles, put a town shot.
13:16Backs up the ball to his teammates, and Windsor Park on the pivot to try and recover.
13:20Go on, Charles.
13:21Go on.
13:22Blue and Rolls, the white with the red strike on the counter attack now, with two minutes
13:26left.
13:26Come on, sir.
13:27A tussle for possession now.
13:29You're on your roll, Heidon, sir.
13:30You can do it.
13:33Yes, it's Windsor Park.
13:35Windsor Park pushing up all score.
13:38Oh, Parker Bowles rides up the Prince of Wales.
13:42He's ridden him off.
13:45Parker Bowles hits the big one.
13:48Windsor Park rushing back now.
13:49They're in trouble.
13:51Parker Bowles striking ahead, but Prince Charles is still in the race.
13:55Come on, sir.
13:56Come on.
13:57He's closing.
14:00He's closing.
14:03Let the Parker Bowles score.
14:05Yes.
14:05Parker Bowles, for the place of Wales.
14:08Nothing.
14:09No, no.
14:09There's nothing.
14:11There's nothing.
14:12There's nothing.
14:12There's nothing.
14:13There's nothing.
14:21Bad luck out there.
14:23I don't see you often.
14:31You play well today.
14:33You and I both know I didn't.
14:36Andrew Parker Bowles played well today.
14:39You just need a bit more aggression in your game, that's all.
14:42So you keep telling me.
14:46How was Paris and the Duke of Windsor?
14:50It was all very odd.
14:51You didn't look at all well.
14:54Mm-hmm.
14:56The house is like some bizarre monarchy museum.
15:01Reeked of jostics and dogs.
15:05Was she there, flapping around like a demented bet?
15:09Yes.
15:11Hmm.
15:12I hear she consumes nothing but whiskey.
15:15She's had so many facelifts, she can barely speak.
15:20Dickie.
15:20Oh.
15:22I don't know if I've told you, but we've been writing to one another.
15:28I think he sees something of himself in me.
15:31Don't tell her grandmother that.
15:36Keeps telling me to find a wife.
15:39Oh, it's far too early for that.
15:42Now, now's the time to sow your oats.
15:45Play the field.
15:46Perhaps.
15:48But as it happens, there is someone I quite like.
15:55The one cheering you on today, yes?
15:58Yes.
15:59Hmm.
16:00Who used to be with Andrew Parker Bowles until they heard a falling out.
16:04Over Anne.
16:05If you please.
16:07Your sister.
16:08Don't ask.
16:09It's all a bit messy.
16:11But the long and the short of it is, Camilla is now free, and I'd like to snap her up.
16:17Hmm.
16:18Well, that's her name?
16:20Yes.
16:21What?
16:22Camilla Shand.
16:25I like her.
16:33So?
16:36Have you voted yet?
16:38Yes.
16:40Who for?
16:42None of your business, sir.
16:46They say it's a formality for Wilson.
16:49Ugh.
16:49Not if I've got anything to do with it.
16:51Ah.
16:52I'd rather give them things away there, haven't I?
16:57How am I going to be able to persuade you to have dinner with me?
17:01Is you a royal decree?
17:02I can't do that.
17:04I'm not king.
17:06Yet?
17:09Yes.
17:10Then just say please.
17:15Please.
17:16If the gamble of calling this early general election has failed to pay off, then it could be we find
17:22ourselves waking up to a different Prime Minister tomorrow.
17:31The leader of the opposition, Mr. Edward Heath, Your Majesty.
17:46Mr. Edward Heath.
17:48The people have voted in your party's favour.
17:50As their sovereign, I invite you to form a government in my name.
17:54Congratulations.
17:55Thank you, Your Majesty.
18:02It really is an encouraging set of circumstances.
18:05Labour took the British people for granted.
18:07Mr. Wilson behaved like a petty emperor and treated this election like a coronation.
18:14Nothing wrong with a coronation.
18:17Under the right circumstances.
18:29We then had a brief foray into small talk.
18:32He's taking a grand piano with him to Dining Street, if you please.
18:36Some bring a wife, others a grand pianist.
18:39I then asked him what his first priorities were, and he said he'd like me to go to France at
18:43the earliest opportunity.
18:44What for?
18:45To try to charm Pompidou, so he doesn't block our entry into the European economic community like his predecessor.
18:51He's passionately committed to Europe.
18:59Majesty.
19:01Your Highness.
19:02Martin.
19:03I never see the other one anymore.
19:05Sir?
19:06Where's the other one?
19:07The, um, the bald one.
19:11Oh, Colonel Dean.
19:12He's retired, sir.
19:14Has he?
19:15Three months ago.
19:17You gave him a clock.
19:18Did I?
19:22What is it, Martin?
19:23A reminder that the BBC interview with the Duke of Windsor is coming up soon.
19:27Now, we understand the Duke is no longer in the best of health.
19:31Might be worth visiting when you go to Paris.
19:34Certainly not.
19:35Go on, Martin.
19:36It's just a slight concern that if the BBC interview were to go down well following the successful visit of
19:41Emperor Hirohito,
19:42the question might be asked, if the Japanese make the effort to visit him, why will his own family not?
19:48Because he didn't cause them offence.
19:50He didn't abdicate the Japanese throne or kill the Emperor's father.
19:54But for the last time, no.
20:01That man is shame.
20:04Like the stench of livestock.
20:07Sir?
20:09It seeps into the woodwork and never goes away.
20:16Your Majesty.
20:19Your Highness.
20:41What's your loving hand?
20:51I'm begging you, put your loving hand out, baby.
21:10Baby, begging you, put your loving hand out, baby.
21:17I'm riding high when I was king.
21:21I'm playing it hard and fast because I had everything.
21:25You walked away from one near then.
21:28But easy coming, easy going, it wouldn't.
21:33I'm begging you, put your loving hand out, baby.
21:39I'm fighting hard to hold my own.
21:42No, I just can't make it all alone.
21:51What's it like?
21:53Like?
21:54Living here.
21:57Not very grand, as you can see.
22:01This is the apartment where they keep Anne and me.
22:05Two bedrooms, one small drawing room.
22:08It's all very normal.
22:10Come on, none of this is normal.
22:13Not just the fact that you live in a palace,
22:15but the fact that you are who you are.
22:18The Prince of Wales.
22:20It's not so much an existence as a predicament.
22:26I am both free and imprisoned.
22:31Utterly superfluous and quite indispensable.
22:35One can never fully invest in one thing or another
22:39because at any moment,
22:41it could all change.
22:43Then you become king.
22:47Not to mention what it does to you as a family.
22:50How can one be a good son when,
22:54even though it's the thing you most dread?
22:57Her dying.
23:01It's the thing you most...
23:03not desire.
23:06Oh, yes, desire.
23:08Because until she dies,
23:10I cannot be fully alive.
23:13Nor can I be the thing for which I have been born.
23:16So...
23:18one is condemned to this
23:20frightful business of waiting.
23:23Like Saul Bellow.
23:25Sorry, I don't know who he is.
23:27Did he wait a lot?
23:29He's an American author.
23:30He wrote a book called Dangling Man.
23:33I sometimes feel like the main character
23:35whom he describes as existing in a timeless
23:39and slightly ridiculous abyss.
23:42Was he a prince?
23:44No.
23:45An unemployed man from Chicago
23:47waiting to be drafted to go to war.
23:51And he actually wants to be drafted
23:53because it will give his life meaning.
23:56Even though he might be killed?
24:01Yes.
24:04I guess that's how much humans need meaning.
24:18Mum?
24:19No, for me.
24:24Mm-hmm.
24:24Ohion!
24:29Oh,
24:34Dreadful waffle about
24:35dangling in the abyss.
24:37Oh,
24:37little cello.
24:39Saul Bellow.
24:40The queen died.
24:42Yes.
24:43Mummy kicking the bucket at long last
24:45and then,
24:46pow!
24:46Gotcha!
24:48That's brilliant.
24:51Your face was like, oh, for me?
24:55I wasn't expecting that, sir.
24:58You got me!
25:01Sorry. Yes.
25:03Sir, just a reminder, the television interview with His Royal Highness
25:07the Duke of Windsor is about to begin.
25:09Thank you. Thank you.
25:20You join me in the Bois de Boulogne in Paris,
25:23in this magnificent house once home to General de Gaulle.
25:27Its occupants today need no introduction.
25:31His Royal Highness, the Duke of Windsor, Edward VIII,
25:34King of England for a little more than ten months,
25:38and the Duchess of Windsor, Mrs. Wallis Warfield Simpson, when they met.
25:44Ma'am, when you first met the Duke,
25:47what was your first impression?
25:50He struck me as being rather with it, ahead of his time.
25:56Full of pep, unlike most Englishmen.
26:01And that meeting occurred when you were Prince of Wales?
26:05Yes, a role that I also very much hoped to redefine.
26:10I had my own ideas, my own opinions, my own philosophy.
26:16And then finally the day came, when you acceded to the throne.
26:22Yes, and much to everyone's frustration, I stayed true to myself.
26:29And the conviction that monarchy had to change, to move with the times.
26:34But I soon discovered that any attempt to make even the most trifling change
26:39was met with hostility and suspicion.
26:45By whom?
26:47By the establishment.
26:48By the grey men of the court.
26:51And by my family, too.
26:54They saw me as a rebel.
26:56A threat.
26:58Too...
26:59Colourful.
27:00Dynamic.
27:03Individualistic.
27:04Christ, that ghastly.
27:05In the end, I didn't get to introduce...
27:08Both of them.
27:08...in half the innovations I had to find.
27:11Because of the pressure to stand down, to advocate, had become unbearable.
27:16Yeah?
27:18People always assume it was because of the Duchess.
27:22Because of my obstinate desire to marry.
27:25But the establishment's opposition to our marriage was really a symptom of something deeper.
27:32Their fear of the character and freedom of thought which I represented.
28:03How was it?
28:05The candle lit dinner.
28:08Come on, there are no secrets in this place.
28:12Lovely.
28:16Camilla Shand, eh?
28:20Yes.
28:21You're seeing her ex, Andrew.
28:25Not sure you can call what we're doing seeing.
28:28Not sure you can call him an ex, either.
28:32Camilla told me.
28:33He's definitely an ex.
28:35Hmm.
28:37Just make sure things remain the right way round.
28:42Us playing with Camilla and Andrew.
28:46Not them playing with us.
28:52What does that mean?
28:58Ann?
29:08Oh, my God.
29:36Oh, my God.
30:00Oh, my God.
30:31Oh, my God.
30:33Sir, I'm all right, I'm all right.
30:38Sidney, call the doctor.
30:41Yes, ma'am.
30:49Oh, my God.
30:52Oh, my God.
30:59Oh, my God.
31:05Oh, my God.
31:28Oh, my God.
31:29Oh, my God.
31:30Oh, my God.
31:32Oh, my God.
31:32Oh, my God.
31:33Oh, my God.
31:50Oh, my God.
31:58Oh, my God.
32:30Oh, my God.
32:33Oh, my God.
32:44Oh, my God.
33:04Oh, my God.
33:05Oh, my God.
33:05Oh, my God.
33:05Oh, my God.
33:08Oh, my God.
33:34your royal highness ma'am her majesty the queen she's coming what here yes ma'am she's on her
33:44way get me up you can't be serious i've never been all that serious
34:20yes
34:22no
34:27ah
34:28yeah
34:29yeah
34:30yeah
34:31yeah
34:32Oh, my God.
35:02Oh, my God.
35:44Your Majesty, the Queen, sir.
35:50Oh, no, please don't.
35:51Oh, my God.
36:22If the roles were reversed, you would do exactly the same.
36:30Yes.
36:31Yes.
36:35I am sorry you're not well.
36:38We've had our disagreements, but you've always remained my favourite uncle.
36:46It's kind of you to say, and kind of you to visit, dear Lilibet.
36:55Shirley Temple.
36:58Yes.
37:02I underestimated you.
37:08It all did.
37:11But the crown always finds its way to the right head.
37:16My father, my brother, you, and one day, God willing, your son.
37:31You don't think it's up to it.
37:35I never said anything of the sort.
37:38But you think it.
37:41I can read you every bit as loyal as you can read me.
37:49And I know why you think it.
37:52You can often appear weak, indecisive.
37:59But with the right woman by his side, I say he'll make a good king.
38:05And his thoughts have already turned to the matter.
38:14He writes to me and I to him.
38:17He likes this girl, Camilla.
38:21They barely know one another.
38:25Sometimes, one knows immediately, you did.
38:33What does he say?
38:35Well, take the letters, read them.
38:38I can't do that.
38:40It's a private correspondence.
38:41They concern the future of the crown, and shed light on the soul, not only of a future king,
38:50But also, your son, better they shall be in your hands than anybody else's.
38:59Again, the Bureau, in this, they draw.
39:02I will.
39:11I will.
39:27Who?
39:35And before you go one last time, for all of it, for what I did to you, forgive me.
40:02What you did, your abdication of the throne, did change my life, forever.
40:08But I want you to know, it's not always a curse, and I haven't always been cross with
40:16you, that there are days, in fact, more and more the older I get, when I consider it to
40:27be a blessing.
40:30I have even on occasion found myself wanting to thank you.
41:48Dear Uncle David, I want to thank you again, and Wallace, for having me at your home in
41:53the Bois de Boulogne. It's a rare thing that fate should allow a former king and a king-in-waiting
41:59to meet. To tell the truth, it opened my eyes to a few things. To the nature of kingship,
42:09the nature of love, and all the difficulties that go with both. I'm sure you know that
42:18the family would have preferred me not to visit you, afraid perhaps I might recognize
42:23myself in you, sympathize with you. Well, let me confess that I do recognize myself in
42:30you. Yes. Your progressiveness and flair, your individuality and imagination. What a king
42:40you would have made in a kinder world. What a king we were denied.
42:49Thank you. It makes me so sad to see you living in exile, when all you did was take a
42:54stand
42:54for principle and love one woman completely. You were cruelly denied your right to reign alongside
43:02the woman that you wanted by your side. But I give you my word. I will not be denied what
43:13you have been denied. The crown is not a static thing, resting forever on one head. It is moving,
43:24alive, divine. The changing face of changing times. And if, God willing, it has been ordained
43:33that I should wear it, then I shall do so on my own terms. And hopefully, make you proud.
44:04not my own terms. los.
44:23Don't want to die.
44:26I know.
44:30Don't want to die.
44:31To get a Di.
44:32to gain里.
44:33Don't want to die.
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