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The Crown S04E07 [Full Movie] [English Subs]Full EP - Full
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00:13C'est bon, c'est bon, c'est bon.
00:19C'est, c'est bon.
00:21C'est bon, c'est bon.
00:22Lovers say that in France.
00:25C'est bon, c'est bon.
00:26When they thrill to romance.
00:28C'est bon, c'est bon.
00:30It means that it's so good.
00:35I say c'est bon.
00:37C'est bon, c'est bon.
00:38So I say it to you.
00:41C'est bon, c'est bon.
00:42Like the French people do.
00:45C'est bon, c'est bon.
00:46Because it's all so good.
00:49I wonder how many of them are aware of the tension behind the scenes.
00:51Every word.
00:53Some of these people have paid a thousand pounds for a ticket.
00:58All that remains for the performance is just sort out.
01:01I don't know how many of them are aware of the tension behind the scenes.
01:14I say it to you.
01:15I say it to you.
01:17I say it to you.
01:20I say it to you.
01:24The Queen, the real star of tonight, steps out onto the red carpet to be greeted by the
01:30much-loved theatrical impresario, Delcott, president of the entertainment artist Benevolent
01:35Buck.
01:35For tonight is the night when the world of show business and royalty come together for a good
01:41call.
01:42For you, Annette.
01:43For you, Annette.
01:45It's from the challenge.
01:46Do the city.
01:48Have anyone got my own?
01:50All right, then, George.
02:02Catherine.
02:14There you are.
02:16And you, Nerissa.
02:24It's well done.
02:27Well done.
02:29How are you doing, sir?
02:33Bedtime.
03:00聖歌 中文字幕。字幕
03:15李宗盛
05:48How can you tell?
05:50This is a huge secret.
05:53It's virtually a state secret.
05:56I'm...
05:56I'm all ears.
06:00And eyes.
06:02And lips.
06:03All right.
06:05Did you say lips?
06:13Are you feeling naughty?
06:15Yes, I can see that.
06:18Mm-hmm.
06:23Ma'am, I have greatly enjoyed the last few months...
06:28So have I.
06:28...and the closeness that has developed between us.
06:31Not closeness, intimacy.
06:32Oh, God.
06:38Please.
06:58There was a time when the men I loved would simply leave me for other women.
07:02And now they're living for the church.
07:05Who?
07:06Derek Jennings.
07:08Dazzle.
07:09Yes, Dazzle.
07:10What were we doing with him?
07:12Falling slightly in love.
07:15Oh, Margaret.
07:16Mm.
07:16Colin Tennant said we were the two most impossible people he knew that we should be kept apart
07:22at all costs in the interests of public safety, like nitrogen and glycerin.
07:27But he's so handsome.
07:30He is.
07:31Has an unkind word for everyone, which I adore.
07:37And touching vulnerability.
07:42And because he has found happiness as elusive as me, so we discuss all the different kinds
07:49of ways that we've tried to find joy and calm.
07:53A good brisk walk, I say.
07:54Mm.
07:55Yes, that might work for you.
07:57It does, every time.
07:58But it might not be enough for the rest of us.
08:02And Dazzle has found the thing that works best for him.
08:08Which is?
08:10The priesthood.
08:11Catholic priesthood?
08:12Yes.
08:13Well, that's the second reason he was never the right man for you.
08:19The first being?
08:22Well, you know.
08:24Friend of Dorothy.
08:27Dazzle?
08:27Famously, yes.
08:29You sure?
08:31But the way he looks at me sometimes.
08:34Mm.
08:35Describe that.
08:36With great, big, adoring eyes.
08:39I think you're fine.
08:40That's because you're a royal princess.
08:42And he's a raging snob.
08:45Am I that stupid?
08:48Oh, desperate.
08:50I don't like the sound of that cough.
08:52That's fine.
08:53And you've been struggling with your chest for a while.
08:55Should have realized when he kept suggesting going to the opera.
09:22Princess Margaret is undergoing investigative surgery at the Royal Brumpton Hospital.
09:27The 54-year-old princess, who was admitted this afternoon, is unlikely to learn the results of those procedures for
09:33several days.
09:33But royal sources say she has not been suffering from any specific ailment.
09:37The hospital has declined to release any further details on the princess's condition.
09:42It's thought that Princess Margaret was smoking as many as 60 cigarettes a day.
09:46And that, of course, would go against any medical...
09:47I think we'll switch this off, shall we, as well?
09:50Princess Margaret will switch it off.
09:51Princess Margaret will be fine, dear.
09:54Princess Margaret will be in good hands.
09:57You all right, Catherine?
09:59John.
09:59Come one.
10:00Why did I say that?
10:01Don't be difficult now.Catherine,
10:03come one. Right. Come
10:05on,
10:05обс��요. Donny needs
10:07to go to bed now. Doesn't she?
10:11All together. We're
10:13all looking at
10:14this. Daddy buys, Catherine.
10:18You're this one.
10:19Oh, God. Oh,
10:23God. She loves
10:23you.
10:55Happy birthday to you, happy birthday to you, happy birthday dear everyone, happy birthday to you.
11:24Children-wise, we seem to do things in twos in this family.
11:28I can honestly say I never wanted four.
11:31A brace would have been quite enough for me.
11:33But the boss put her foot down after a tough negotiation on the yacht in Lisbon in a storm.
11:41Do you remember?
11:42Yes, I do.
11:44Along came another two.
11:47The B-team.
11:48It's the second eleven.
11:50Who have been very special.
11:52Not that the first lot aren't special, but they were expected, I suppose.
11:56Duty.
11:58Whereas the second lot came out of...
12:01I was going to say pleasure, but that's really not the right word.
12:04Judging by Anne's face.
12:07That's the word I'm looking for.
12:09Joy?
12:10Exactly.
12:11Joy.
12:13They were conceived in reconciliation.
12:17They have bound us all together and brought great joy.
12:21So please, raise your glasses.
12:27Oh, Margot.
12:31Many, many happy returns to...
12:35I'm sorry, what's your name again?
12:38The runt of the litter, dear Edward.
12:41Happy birthday.
13:05I remember the day that one was christened.
13:12And there's a photograph of us both with our babies.
13:15Yes.
13:16You were holding yours as if it were a bomb.
13:19No.
13:21You're looking terribly glum, having just had another huge row with Tony.
13:26He was never the right man for you.
13:28Well, I've come to the view that there is no right man for me.
13:32You don't see that.
13:33No, it's true.
13:34Love is a tender kiss for most people.
13:37For me, she saves her sharpest ex.
13:41Well, I am ready for a new chapter.
13:45Without men.
13:48Without cigarettes.
13:52Without...
13:58I'm finally ready to focus on the one thing that won't let me down.
14:04What's that?
14:05Us.
14:06My position as a royal.
14:09My duty.
14:11So, I come on bended knee with a familiar request.
14:18Give me as much responsibility as you can.
14:22As many jobs, as much work.
14:25What your sister needs to stay afloat.
14:29It's a sense of meaning.
14:31I come here.
14:36I'll see you soon.
15:16Hello, you.
15:18Hello, you.
15:22And hello, him.
15:24Your Wild Highness.
15:25Not interrupting, are we?
15:26No, not at all.
15:27Renee is coming at noon.
15:30Oh, a new bow?
15:31No, a new hairdresser.
15:34Another friend of Dorothy's.
15:36Ah.
15:38Other than that, nothing.
15:39No.
15:41The day stretches before me like a great yawning void.
15:50So.
15:54What do you want?
15:57Can't be good news, or you wouldn't have brought Lurch.
16:03Ma'am, we've come to talk to you about the 1937 Regency Act, which created a list of senior royals
16:10who could be called on to deputise for the monarch on formal occasions.
16:15Yes, I know all about that.
16:17I've been stepping in for half a year.
16:19Yeah.
16:21But there is a specific number of those senior royals.
16:25Just six.
16:28Go on.
16:29Well, the recent 21st birthday of Prince Edward means that he is now of age, and as a child
16:37of the sovereigns, well, he ranks higher than you in the line of succession.
16:44And you will therefore be required to relinquish your role as councillor of state.
16:55Don't take that away from me.
16:56It's all I've got.
16:57Oh, Margaret.
16:58It makes no sense.
17:00I have the maturity.
17:01I have the wisdom.
17:02Not to mention the experience.
17:04Edward's a boy.
17:06He's an immature, useless boy.
17:08Yes, that may be, but we all have to play by the rules.
17:11You will have time to concentrate on your convalescence.
17:15Would you leave us, please?
17:19Leave us.
17:38I don't want more time.
17:42Don't you see?
17:46Time.
17:47It scares me.
17:49It fills me with dread.
17:52I want...
17:55I want something.
17:58To fill it with.
17:59Well, you still have your interests.
18:01Oh, please.
18:03And your friends?
18:04Friends.
18:06The ones worth knowing.
18:07They're fed up with me.
18:09Your charities?
18:10Charities?
18:11They don't want me either.
18:13No, not now.
18:14We have the Princess of Wales.
18:17She's younger.
18:18She's nicer.
18:19Prettier.
18:20No.
18:21Nobody wants this.
18:22Oh, Margot.
18:24I asked you for just one thing.
18:27To give me work.
18:29A purpose.
18:31Dignity.
18:31Yes, and if it were up to me, I would have given it all to you.
18:35The whole show.
18:36Gladly.
18:36From day one.
18:38But it's not.
18:40So we have to live with it.
18:41No.
18:42I will have to live with it.
18:43Not you.
18:44I will.
18:45I will.
18:46I will.
18:47I will.
18:56I will.
18:59I will.
20:04Everything all right?
20:06No.
20:06No.
20:07No.
20:07No.
20:08No.
20:11No.
20:22No.
20:27No.
20:33No.
20:34No.
20:36No.
20:36No.
20:39No.
20:48No.
20:50No.
20:54No.
20:55No.
20:56No.
20:59No.
21:01No.
21:03No.
21:04No.
21:14No.
22:13Ma'am?
22:17Ta-da!
22:19All dry.
22:23Lunch?
22:34What a wonderful spot.
22:37You should have seen it in this heyday.
22:40It's rather sad now.
22:41It's neglected, gone to seed.
22:45Look at these heliconias.
22:50Is that a silk cod pen tree?
22:52Hmm?
22:54Yes.
22:55The challenge for any gardener is the pruning.
22:59You need very nimble things.
23:03Roddy.
23:07The garden or the neglect?
23:10Sadly.
23:12Both.
23:32Diana's pregnant again.
23:37Congratulations.
23:44Which one might imagine would lift this spirit.
23:47Instead, an even deeper gloom seems to have descended on both of us.
23:52We hardly see one another anymore.
23:54And when we do, we quarrel more than ever.
23:59It's so depressing.
24:02Corrosive.
24:06And it's left me with no option but to start seeing someone.
24:10Yes, I think we all know about that.
24:12No, not Camilla.
24:13I meant a professional.
24:17A therapist to help with the moods.
24:20A head shrinker.
24:23But, Margaret, you can't call him that.
24:26Has it helped?
24:27Well, it hasn't made things worse.
24:29Not much of an endorsement.
24:33The reason I bring it up is I promised Anne that I would urge you to try seeing someone too.
24:40Are you both ganging up on me?
24:42We both care.
24:45Why not try when you're back in London?
24:47Anne thinks she's found someone good.
24:57It's outrageous that I, in HRH, should travel to see her.
25:02I gather it's part of the process that the patient accepts that they are the patient.
25:10Apparently, the healing cannot start until the grandiosity is diminished.
25:15What grandiosity?
25:16I'm so far down the royal pecking order these days.
25:20I'm virtually untouchable.
25:21Here we are.
25:34I had therapy once before.
25:38In the early days of my marriage to Lord Snowden.
25:42The problem we face is I'm, well, I'm so opposed to all of this, I find it so pathetic.
25:48Violet's everything I was brought up to believe.
25:49What were you brought up to believe?
25:52Self-pity won't get you very far.
25:56I've just got to get on with it.
25:59Well, that's a very common attitude.
26:01It's also quite an old-fashioned attitude.
26:04Did you just call me common?
26:05And old?
26:09Because that would not be a good way to start.
26:16So, what made you want to try again?
26:19Ma'am.
26:20Ma'am.
26:37Because, well, I'm ashamed to say I've been feeling a little low for a while now.
26:48And this current slump seems to have resisted every attempt I've made to muscle through.
27:02Are you aware of anyone else in your immediate family struggling with mental health issues?
27:14Prince of Wales.
27:15He has his ups and downs.
27:17I wouldn't say that's a condition.
27:19That's just marriage.
27:22The Duke of Gloucester.
27:24My uncle.
27:26He got low.
27:27From time to time.
27:29I only ask because I am aware, through professional colleagues, of the sisters.
27:37Sisters?
27:40What sisters?
27:43That's when she told me about our cousins.
27:46Our first cousins, Catherine and Larissa Bowes-Lyon.
27:50Third and fifth daughters of mummy's favourite elder brother, Uncle Jock.
27:54Being locked up in the Earlswood Institution for mental defectives, if you please, in Red Hill.
28:00Yes, I remember hearing about Catherine and Larissa.
28:03And their terrible problems.
28:06But they're long dead.
28:09It's my understanding they're both very much alive.
28:12But we can check.
28:15What are you doing?
28:16That's my button.
28:20Oh, here we are.
28:21It burks.
28:25Let me do that.
28:26I'll do that now.
28:27I'm fine.
28:35Here we are.
28:36Oh, heavy.
28:43Catch.
28:43Don't you dare.
28:45Not funny.
28:46Go carefully.
28:50Yes.
28:51Oh, it's here.
28:58Oh, yes.
28:59Look, here it is.
29:00Larissa, deceased, 1940.
29:04Catherine, deceased, 1961.
29:06There it is in black and white.
29:07Both died long ago.
29:09Oh, strange.
29:18Not here.
29:25Who was it?
29:27Mr. Jennings, ma'am.
29:29Dazzle.
29:31What did he want?
29:32To let you know that he was going to be in London next week for a few days.
29:36In case you had any time.
29:40No.
29:44No.
29:51What?
29:52I'm Marissa, Dolores.
29:53I'm 48, Laura.
29:54Dazzle, you're not praying, are you?
29:55I am.
29:57I'm Marissa, Gratia.
29:58When was the last time you drove a car?
30:00I tried all the time.
30:02Well, maybe not this particular model.
30:05Anyway, you're a fine one to talk.
30:07You can't drive at all.
30:09You say I recognize my limitations.
30:12Well, I'd have been happy for the chauffeur to drive us, but then...
30:15What are you doing?
30:17Well, then we wouldn't have been alone.
30:19Why is it so important that we're alone?
30:44Someone asks me who I am.
30:46They won't.
30:46You're a priest.
30:47But I'm not.
30:48Not yet.
30:49I'm still just a seminarian.
30:50I don't know that.
30:52You still look suitably clerical and beyond suspicion.
30:55Feels wrong, ma'am.
30:57Deceitful.
30:59You can always confess later.
31:01Now go.
31:20You're good.
31:22I'm just ready.
31:23You're good.
32:08They are alive, ma'am.
32:10You saw them?
32:11I did.
32:15How were they?
32:20They are like children, ma'am.
32:23But they know who you are.
32:26And they know who your sister is.
32:30They have pictures of the whole family,
32:33which they know is their family.
32:40Love that one, don't you?
32:42Oh, yes.
32:43Keeps it in pride of place, she does.
32:45Oh, yes.
32:48Oh.
32:55Shall I get your cousins to say hello?
32:57Did you say cousins?
33:01Hello.
33:01Hello.
33:02And there are more.
33:06More what?
33:09More relatives, cousins of theirs, equally afflicted.
33:16Sit down.
33:18Stop the bed.
33:20All family together.
33:21All family together.
33:24Have stuff to say.
33:26Have you?
33:26MUSIC CONTINUES
33:56Not hungry?
33:58Oh, we're starving. We've all been for long walks this morning.
34:02Well, you and I are about to go for another.
34:06You don't mind if I steal her away, do you?
34:09No, not at all.
34:16Five! Five, Mummy!
34:19Five members of our close family locked up and neglected.
34:23What do you expect us to do?
34:25Behave like human beings.
34:26Don't be so naive. We had no choice.
34:30They're your nieces.
34:33Daughters of your favourite brother.
34:34They were unwell.
34:36Aunt Vanella was overwhelmed.
34:38And then the way things suddenly changed for all of us.
34:41None of us could have foreseen it.
34:42It was it.
34:44Well, the abdication...
34:44They're not everything that is wrong with this family can be explained away by the abdication.
34:50But the abdication did change everything.
34:53You were too young to understand everything.
35:03It's complicated.
35:05No, it's not.
35:05It's wicked.
35:07It's cold-hearted.
35:09It's cruel.
35:10It's entirely in keeping with the ruthlessness I myself have experienced in this family.
35:17If you're not first in mind, if you're an individual character with individual needs, and God forbid, in a regular
35:25temperament.
35:27If you don't fit the perfect mould and silent, dutiful supplication, then you'll be spat out, or you'll be hidden
35:37away, or worse, declared dead.
35:41Darwin had nothing on you lot.
35:44Shame on all of you.
35:45Margaret.
35:46No.
35:48Margaret!
36:14If I try to explain, will you at least listen?
36:31The fact is, the moment that man, your perfidious uncle, abdicated the throne, it really did change everything overnight.
36:44I went from being wife of the Duke of York, leading a relatively normal life, to being queen, and wife
36:55of a king emperor.
36:58At the same time, my family, the Bowes-Lyons, went from being minor Scottish aristocrats, to having a direct bloodline
37:09to the crown, resulting in the children of my brother.
37:15Catherine.
37:17And Nerissa.
37:18And their first cousins.
37:20Edonia.
37:22Etheldrida.
37:24And Rosemary.
37:26Yes.
37:29Paying a terrible price.
37:34Why?
37:36Because their illness, their imbecility...
37:41They don't use those words.
37:43Their professionally diagnosed idiocy and imbecility would make people question the integrity of the bloodline.
37:53What?
37:55Can you imagine the headlines if it were to get out?
37:58What people would say?
38:00The hereditary principle already hangs by such a precarious threat.
38:06Throw in mental illness.
38:08And it's over.
38:12The idea that one family alone has the automatic birthright to the crown is already so hard to justify.
38:22The gene pool of that family had better have 100% purity.
38:32There have been enough examples on the Windsor side alone to worry people.
38:38King George III, Prince John, your uncle.
38:43If you add the Bowes-Lyons illnesses to that, the danger is it becomes untenable.
39:09It's all a family disease, isn't it?
39:13When they tell you you can't marry.
39:17When they strip away your official role.
39:21When they side with your husband as your marriage falls apart.
39:26And now this, this final insult.
39:35That every diminishment, every rotten misfortune is written in my blood.
39:55So, without tiptoeing to protect me, or dressing things up, tell me the truth.
40:05As well as being born second, am I destined to be mad too?
40:14No, ma'am.
40:18When I heard you'd made the appointment to come today, I did a little research.
40:25Now, the genetic fault responsible for your cousin's condition seems to have descended from their common maternal grandfather, Charles Trefusis,
40:3621st Baron Clinton.
40:39This suggests that the recessive gene responsible for their condition lies with the Clinton family.
40:46So how did it get to the Bowes-Lyon family?
40:49Through your aunt, Vanella, born Clinton, who married John Bowes-Lyon.
40:57Uncle Jock.
40:57What your cousins suffer from is a severe developmental disorder.
41:02Whatever issues you may or may not be facing, that's not the same thing at all.
41:07It hasn't somehow passed to my mother, Queen Elizabeth?
41:12No.
41:13Then, if they didn't threaten the integrity of the royal family, the girls need never have been hidden away.
41:23And what my family did was unforgivable.
41:45Anyway, she prescribed medication, psychotherapy, and increased exercise.
41:56I'd be suggesting giving up alcohol soon.
41:58Giving up alcohol?
42:00You could always just convert and come over to Rome.
42:04Dazzle.
42:05The only thing that's worked for me lifted my spirits.
42:09Before I became Catholic, I attended church.
42:12After I converted, I found a faith.
42:14The difference is night and day.
42:16Oh, now you're being evangelical.
42:17I feel evangelical.
42:18It's not just the beauty, it's the rigor of the Catholic Church.
42:22It demands complete submission, which strong, willful characters like mine,
42:27and I would suggest yours, ma'am, need.
42:31One cannot fully receive God until one has submitted to something larger.
42:36And the moment I did...
42:38Don't tell me.
42:39The lights went on.
42:40You found happiness.
42:42More than happiness.
42:46Ecstasy.
42:47And the gloom we talked about so many times.
42:52The emptiness...
42:54has gone.
42:59How nice.
43:01So come over.
43:05I would.
43:06But, in case you hadn't noticed, Dazzle, I've already submitted to something larger.
43:12The Royal Family of the United Kingdom.
43:14If I became Catholic, it would be a national scandal.
43:19There would be talk of betrayal.
43:21Second Reformation.
43:23No, they'd make me give up my title and kick me out.
43:27Would that be so bad?
43:29To free yourself once and for all.
43:32To find happiness.
43:35Why would I?
43:36The title, my seniority, the proximity to the crown, is my happiness.
43:42It's who I am.
43:43I don't expect you to understand.
43:45No, I don't understand.
43:46You've just discovered terrible things about your family.
43:50A system that ignored five members of its own to protect itself.
43:53Will that same system protect you?
43:55No.
43:56It doesn't protect anything except the center.
43:59Those away from the center...
44:01But I am in the center.
44:02I am in the very center.
44:05I am the queen's sister.
44:07Daughter to a king emperor.
44:09And I will always be in the center.
44:15Now go, dazzle.
44:19Back to your ecstatic new family.
44:21And I will struggle on in mine.
44:28And I think it would be better if we don't see one another again.
44:41And...
44:44Should you ever...
44:46Find a moment...
44:49Perhaps you will pray for me.
44:52I will.
45:01Go.
45:01Go, royal highness.
45:04Go.
45:08Go.
45:20Go.
45:23Go.
45:23Go.
45:23Go.
45:23Go.
45:23Go.
45:25Go.
46:00Go.
46:05Go.
46:06Go.
46:07Go.
46:07Go.
46:09Go.
46:10Go.
46:11Go.
46:11Go.
46:11Go.
46:11Go.
46:11Go.
46:14Go.
46:15Go.
46:16Go.
46:20Go.
46:22Go.
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