- 19 hours ago
The Crown S03E05 [Full Movie] [Ranked]Full EP - Full
Category
š„
Short filmTranscript
00:10To Prime Minister Harold Wilson and his government today is fresh on the pound.
00:20Good afternoon, Mr. King.
00:23Damage had been done by the...
00:24Good afternoon, Mr. King.
00:25Britain's trade gap is a staggering 107 million pounds.
00:30It's the worst figure on record.
00:31The government said that these figures were distorted and meaningless.
00:39Good afternoon, Mr. King.
00:42Good afternoon, Mr. King.
00:45Where is it?
00:47About you.
00:48Tomorrow's front page, sir.
00:50Not strong enough.
00:53It's the strongest headline the Daily Mail has ever written about a Labour leader.
00:56About had guilty conscience. I don't know what it's saying.
01:25It's a sad day when the Daily Mirror, a Labour-supporting newspaper, turns against a Labour leader,
01:29like this.
01:34We've done some thinking and come up with an idea for how to deflect any further criticism.
01:39Yeah, go on.
01:41Lord Mountbatten.
01:45What's he got to do with anything?
01:46I'm sure we all agree that he's a symbol of a bygone era, of privilege and inequality, empire and extravagance.
01:53Not to mention a pompous, bloody arse.
01:55Go on.
01:56As Chief of the Defence Staff, he's refusing to make the defence cuts we need.
02:01Cuts which you promised in your election manifesto.
02:05One might even tolerate it if he weren't so...
02:08vain or crooked or power-mad.
02:12Quite.
02:14What are you proposing?
02:16That we kick him out.
02:20But at least he's busy.
02:22And inside the tent...
02:24You know, people like Mountbatten.
02:26Medallists, for want of a kind of word.
02:28Energetic, well-connected medallists.
02:29It's better that they're inside the tent pissing out than outside the tent pissing in.
02:33But he belongs to another time, Harold.
02:37Kicking him out makes economic sense and shows we're tough.
02:41And who knows?
02:42It might just buy us some good headlines.
02:47Yes, I could do with some good headlines.
02:52General salute.
02:55Pre-set.
02:58Out.
02:59Out.
03:02Out.
03:10Out.
03:16Out.
04:48Oh, they're increasing fivefold, tenfold.
04:52And the conclusion of the review is that we'd like to make a few changes, one of which is to
04:58your post of Chief of the Defense Staff.
05:02What?
05:08You kicking me out?
05:12Well, no, sir.
05:13I'm thanking you on behalf of the government, on behalf of the armed forces, on behalf of the whole country
05:18for your many years of remarkable service.
05:23You are.
05:24You're kicking me out.
05:28Well, there we are.
05:35There we are.
05:37There we are.
06:29It's absurd.
06:34But where one door closes, another opens.
06:41There is special providence in such a fall.
06:45If it be now, it is not to come.
06:46If it be not to come, it will be now.
06:49If it be not now, yet it will come.
06:52The readiness is all.
07:09What am I going to do, Barrett?
07:12You'll bounce back, sir.
07:14Before long, you'll have a hundred projects.
07:20Cake, sir.
07:31Hit, hit, hooray!
07:34Should old acquaintance be forgot and never brought to mind?
07:45Should old acquaintance be forgot and days of auld lang syne.
07:55For old lang syne, my dear, for old lang syne.
08:05We'll take a cup of kindness yet for auld lang syne.
08:16We, too, have brought up out the hills and pulled the daisies by.
08:25For old lang syne, my dear, for old lang syne, my dear, for old lang syne.
09:05I'll go home, sir.
09:49I'll go home, sir.
09:56Yes, of course.
09:58I think there's a picture on.
10:00You don't need to worry about the stairs.
10:09Pen's down, you must see.
10:15Ten minutes from Newmarket.
10:46I'll go home, sir.
10:46I'm so excited.
10:48thank you Cecil how is he as good as new again and you really think he's recovered from his
10:57injury I do ma'am gelded fired well rested we won't have been breaking down again any chance
11:06of seeing him on the gallops today oh no ma'am it's too wet and muddy out there it's been
11:13a lot
11:14like this hardly been able to train him at all well we can't do anything about the weather now we
11:24come
11:24to the most anticipated race of this year's Royal Ascot meeting the Queen Alexandra Stakes this is
11:30Britain's longest flat race where stamina is of the essence and the favorite is of course number
11:36nine her majesty's own horse apprentice and they're off with number six panics in the early
11:42lead followed by number one valentine's day with number two Olympic boy cleaning right down their
11:46necks they're off the pace now as they make their start behind the number 10 of the and as far
11:53off
11:53the leaders but number nine apprentice tails behind in bitten legs a disappointing start for last year's
12:00yorkshire club champion and and he's still ahead but behind him apprentice is gaining crowns he got
12:06the challenge from number seven five even and pulling into four majesty darling chin up a breakfast
12:16really has the look of eagles as they make the turn and yes apprentice turns up the pressure on
12:20Olympic boys he moves into third place and in what is a fantastic recovery from a slow start
12:25apprentice is now level with number two Olympic boy as they raise uphill and as they come out in the
12:30final
12:30turn panically it's my length of the half but apprentice is coming through with a challenge
12:33and now it's the home street and apprentice is charging down for their signs
12:37nearly nearly nearly nearly no he hasn't got no apprentice is starting to struggle
12:44panic is holding on he's holding his lead and apprentice is falling behind as valentine's day
12:48balls back in the second Olympic boy coming up from here and it's a busy finish but number six
12:53panic finishes first and there goes my number two Olympic boy and what are you doing right with what
13:00you used to be at the top now he barely competes it's possible that the system set up by your
13:08late
13:08father is now a little obsolete and might need kicking out throwing on the dust heap if you want to
13:20keep up
13:20with the Aga Khan's of this world I would suggest you follow their lead and do what travel around the
13:29world and catch up with all the latest developments I can't just do that in case you haven't noticed I
13:34have a job to do you would only be friends not Timbuktu there are experienced people who are able to
13:41deputize for you in your absence
13:52As you know this government is committed to maintaining sterling at two dollars eighty to the pound
13:58But with every economic blow the oil embargo the balance of payments deficit and the docker's union strike
14:06It's proving harder and harder to maintain
14:22And I'm afraid that now we have no alternative but to devalue the pound
14:29Oh
14:31And I need hardly say it is a matter of overwhelming regret
14:36For me personally
14:39And a humiliation for the government
14:44It feels like a bad time to say that I won't be here for our meeting next week
14:49Perhaps the next two weeks
14:51But Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother will step in as councillor of state
14:54Oh
14:56Oh
14:56Oh
14:57A role she has executed many times
15:07Your Majesty
15:25good evening a few days ago the cabinet took its unanimous decision to devalue the pound
15:33i can now tell you why we have taken this action and more importantly what it will
15:38mean for you from now on the pound abroad will be worth 14 percent or so less in terms of
15:46other
15:46currencies now this does not mean of course that the pound here in britain in your pocket or your
15:52purse or your bank has been devalued what it does mean is that the goods we buy from abroad will
15:57be dearer so for many goods it will be cheaper to buy british for this devaluation has been a hard
16:08decision and some of its consequences will be hard for a time for three years this government
16:16has fought as it was our duty to fight the burden of the deficit that the previous government left us
16:22with but now is not the time to triple blame now is our chance to break free from that straight
16:29jackie to seize this opportunity with both hands this is a proud nation we're out on our own now
16:38now we must choose to put britain first
17:07tonight we veterans of the burma campaign are gathered here to renew old comradeships
17:14and to remember fallen brothers at yang gang yong and ryan good we remember how it was fought
17:23the old way the honorable way body to body bayonet to bayonet
17:32and that swift exhilarating sweep of victory that carried us over the irrawaddy and in mandalay
17:39and there we met the japanese army and we tore it apart
17:48yes gentlemen we military men will always have our past glories to look back on
17:56but what of this new generation these young men and women for whom some of the best of us gave
18:02our
18:02lives decline irrelevance and the devaluation of pound sterling that is the sunless future that faces
18:13them for them the white heat of revolution is not a forging heat it is a melting heat
18:22it melts the silver of our battle on us and reduces to cinders the very foundation of our economy
18:30our currency
18:36so if the only glories available to this nation are its past glories then let us cherish them now
18:50come you back you british soldier come you back
18:58who will join me
19:01ship me somewhere east of sewers where the best is like the worst where there are no ten commandments
19:10and a man can raise at first for the temple bells are calling and it's there that i would be
19:19by the old mo mine pagoda looking lazy at the sea
19:26on the road to mandelay where the old foot is away with us sick beneath the orange when we went
19:38to mandelay
19:40on the road to mandelay where the flying feet is away and the door comes up like thunder out of
19:52china
19:52amazon
19:53taker
19:54oh
19:54tera
19:55oh
20:09taker
20:10taker
20:40We need great men more than ever to restore confidence, inspire us, and perhaps even lead us out of the
20:47mire.
20:48It must have been made very clear to me that my leadership days are over.
20:52My colleagues and I don't believe that, sir, not for a minute.
20:57As a matter of fact, we'd be delighted if you'd agree to have lunch with us at Threadneedle Street one
21:02day.
21:03Bank of England?
21:04We've been working on a proposal which we'd very much like to put to you.
21:39Thank you, Mr. Ed.
21:41But there is no need for such formalities.
21:44In the world of conservation, it's you who are the roo.
21:47You are very gentle, Madame, and very indulgent.
21:50I hope you will be flattered.
21:53Here, here.
21:54Hello.
21:55Allons-y.
21:57Hello.
22:01Of course, if you were a coward like a singe,
22:04you came out of Bidangar, a magnificent spay.
22:07Oh, it was Grampsire, a white settler.
22:10Oh, that's right.
22:11You had a tremendous success with it.
22:13Yes, I'm a beautiful sprinter.
22:16Are these your stud books?
22:17Indeed, ma'am.
22:18And I think you will find some very familiar names in there.
22:22Yes, I will.
22:24If I'm not mistaken, this one.
22:27Oh, gosh, yes.
22:28My grandfather's one of his favorites.
22:32What would you say, six months?
22:33Yes, I'd say so.
22:35Nice temperament.
22:36Warm-blooded.
22:37Not too skittish.
22:38Indeed.
22:39Look at her hocks.
22:41Oh, yes.
22:42Very well proportioned.
22:43Excellent line to the back.
22:44Yes.
22:46Come here.
22:55It was extraordinary.
22:57Not just their facilities, their entire attitude to breeding, but the fact they keep their
23:02fells and their yearlings so close.
23:04Merci.
23:05While we send ours off to graze in Ireland.
23:09Tell me honestly.
23:11Is it over?
23:12Have we slipped too far behind?
23:14Not yet, ma'am.
23:16But if you want to keep up, you do need to act decisively now.
23:20It'd mean rethinking the operation from top to toe, changing the personnel, changing the
23:26approach.
23:26Yes.
23:26Yes.
23:27And currently there is a drain of the best British racehorses to America.
23:31You have to ask yourself, why?
23:35You don't think I should go there too?
23:37Well, obviously from a racing perspective, it would be ideal.
23:40Just for a day or two.
23:42But, er, won't you be needed at home?
23:46Well, they've always got mummy.
23:48Me being away is good for her.
23:50She hates feeling old and superannuated and surplus to requirements.
23:54I'm sure she's relishing being the big chief again.
24:12Thank you, sir.
24:16Mr. King.
24:20The Great Britain of our childhood is dying before us.
24:25The country is bankrupt, our national security is in tatters, our allies are in despair.
24:31And on our current trajectory by 1970, we will be a vassal state.
24:37A pariah.
24:39I don't know about you, sir, but I'd sooner die than stand idly by and watch this happen.
24:45And to that end, my associates and I have come up with a plan to put the country back on
24:51track.
24:52Which is?
24:55Replacing the prime minister and installing a new emergency government.
25:01What?
25:02And in his place, we would need to install an inspirational figurehead.
25:07Someone who could unite the nation, command its respect.
25:11Someone who had stepped into a national leadership role before.
25:15Now, there are some obvious candidates, but frankly, none would be as good as you, sir.
25:19No, no, no. This is quite unthinkable.
25:22At this point, I should close my ears.
25:28Despite my own very profound reservations regarding our prime minister, what you're talking about is effectively a coup.
25:34And I can have nothing whatsoever to do with it.
25:38In peacetime, it's true. An intervention like this would be unconstitutional.
25:44But we believe this is no longer peacetime.
25:48And the circumstances are unprecedented and quite exceptional.
25:55Gerald.
25:58In order to hijack control of the economy, Wilson and his socialist colleagues have devised a plan.
26:05Plan Brutus, which would strip the Bank of England of all its powers, freeze the sterling balances of foreign governments,
26:13and enforce crash cuts in defence spending.
26:18Bankers cannot be allowed to run the show.
26:20The Bank of England has known about gold pouring out of the country since Monday and has done nothing to
26:26stop it.
26:27What is our response?
26:28The imposition of exchange controls, the crash cuts in defence expenditure, and the compulsory acquisition of all privately held overseas
26:37securities.
26:38Sure of hands.
26:43It is an effective declaration of war.
26:47On freedom, democracy and capitalism.
26:51We must act now.
26:54Not just to save Britain, but the world.
26:57We are proposing a radical revolution led by bankers, businessmen and the armed forces.
27:03Professionals who can save us from amateurism, incompetence and Russian infiltration.
27:09And as our interim leader, we can think of no one better than you, sir.
27:27This is all very interesting.
27:33May I suggest that we meet again?
27:38In 48 hours.
27:42Sorry.
27:52Can we challenge those actions?
27:54All of us that ancients will be mixed in.
27:59Once in organising bourgeoisie is very huge, we're going to focus onrons with a nearly $50,000 or break attack
28:03site in the air.
28:03As the Alerta arbeiten side, roulette on down on the other side.
28:05Oh!
28:08Well, movements in the borders within the borders are triangle, it's been placed on strike.
28:30Welcome to the Commonwealth of Kentucky, you imagine.
28:33Thank you, Mr. Hancock.
28:34Please, call me Paul.
28:36Sorry we don't have better weather for you.
28:37It's quite all right. We like a good watery.
28:40Paul Hancock.
28:40Pleasure to be here.
28:41Your shopping basket will hold less for the same money.
28:44A lot of imported footsteps will cast pause.
28:47And several to find for off the feet.
28:52On Monday, after the announcement, the stock exchange was empty.
28:55There was no training.
28:57Outside in Tron Morton Street, brokers and drummers crowned together to try and sort out what the drop is.
29:05Morning, boys.
29:06Morning, sir. Morning, Mr. Hancock.
29:08They're testing for minerals, sulfur, calcium.
29:12Correct nutrition is vital, ma'am.
29:14When it comes to the bone strength, the bone formation in the folds were raised.
29:18Yes, sir.
29:19Tommy's one of the best.
29:21Thank you, sir.
29:21Does Tommy ever come to England?
29:22Oh, no, no, no.
29:24Oh.
29:25Paris worked up to find the transfers on the brink of civil war.
29:29With the rebel generals in Algeria sent paratroopers, defense measures were quickly put into operation.
29:38All the airports were closed to flights in and out.
29:41Nobody in the capital knew the rebel's intentions.
29:44But plastic bomb outranges here and elsewhere showed that pro-rebel sympathizers were on the power.
29:56These are veterinary students we've invited to spend time here at the farm.
30:00They learned reproductive management, neonatal and foal management, herd health management.
30:06What we're aiming for is better integration between our practices here at the stud and the clinical research being conducted
30:12in the wider world.
30:17Remind me of the year, Porchy.
30:18What, 1967?
30:19Why?
30:20Because having seen what I've just seen, one might think it 2067.
30:25In terms of technology and their management of the pasture and their willingness to embrace new ideas, the Americans aren't
30:31just on a different level.
30:32They're on a different planet.
30:34And their racing manager, wasn't he impressive?
30:37When you think about Cecil, by comparison.
30:39Yes, he is getting on with that.
30:41150?
30:41Well, not quite that, but certainly 80.
30:4440-year-old Cecil.
30:46The Van Hur of Newmarket.
30:49But he had such success with your father.
30:51And grandfather.
30:52You know he was wounded at the Somme.
30:54Yes.
30:55So, probably time for someone a little bit younger.
30:58The question is, who is there?
31:01What about Gordon Richards?
31:04He's with the wine stocks.
31:05They've never let him go.
31:07Or with David McCall.
31:09Hmm.
31:11He's good.
31:13But can you honestly see him fitting in?
31:16No.
31:16Try that.
31:17Oh.
31:29Would you ever consider it?
31:33Me?
31:33Why not?
31:34You're brilliant.
31:36And you know the family inside out.
31:39I'm honored.
31:41But I'm also very ambitious.
31:45I could never accept unless I felt sure we had every chance of success at the highest level.
31:50Well, and in terms of our research, there's still one thing that we really need to see.
31:56What?
31:57They're training facilities.
31:59If we're going to gain the edge, there's still a lot to learn from the Americans.
32:04What?
32:04How much longer is that going to take?
32:07Well.
32:11Is that going to be my first choice?
32:13Yes.
32:13Is that going to be my first choice?
32:15I think we've seen him at that high.
32:41Gentlemen,
32:43in the past decade alone,
32:45there have, by my reckoning, been 73 coups
32:50in 46 different countries around the world.
32:53And the success of some of these might encourage us.
32:57In Ghana, two years ago,
32:59President Nkrumah was ousted with just 500 men.
33:03And in 1961, in South Korea,
33:06Major General Park Chung-hee seized power with 3,500 men.
33:13And in 1964, in Gabon,
33:16just 150 men were able to arrest President Nkrumah
33:21and thus gain control over the levers of state power.
33:25And, of course, it was with just one legion
33:28that Caesar crossed the Rubicon.
33:31And perhaps we would not seek to follow his fate,
33:35a sic semper tyrannis gentleman.
33:38And what all successful insurgencies have in common
33:42are five key elements.
33:45Control of the media, control of the economy,
33:49and the capture of administrative targets
33:51for which you need the fourth element,
33:54the loyalty of the military.
33:56Now, in Ghana and Gabon,
33:58this can be achieved with a handful of battalions.
34:01But here, in the United Kingdom,
34:05we would need to secure Parliament,
34:09Whitehall,
34:10Ministry of Defence,
34:12and the Cabinet Office.
34:13The Prime Minister would be arrested, of course,
34:16along with other politicians still loyal.
34:19We would have to shut down the airports.
34:21Air traffic control.
34:22Same with the train stations.
34:24Curfews would be put in place.
34:26Martial law declared.
34:28And I haven't even mentioned the police.
34:32It would take tens of thousands
34:34of unquestioningly loyal servicemen.
34:36And even in my heyday,
34:39I could never command that.
34:41Which brings me to the fifth element.
34:45Legitimacy.
34:47Now, our government draws its strength
34:50from long-established institutions that support it.
34:53The courts.
34:55Body of common law.
34:56The Constitution.
34:59For any action against the state to succeed,
35:01you'd have to overthrow these as well.
35:03But in a highly evolved democracy such as ours,
35:08their authority is sacrosanct.
35:12Which is why, gentlemen,
35:15a coup d'etat in the United Kingdom
35:18doesn't stand a chance.
35:28Unless...
35:31Unless...
35:34Unless we have the support of the one person
35:36not yet mentioned.
35:39Do you see the temper?
35:41Yeah.
35:42The Crown has at its disposal
35:45unique constitutional powers
35:48which could still make something like this possible.
35:52In 1834, William IV used them
35:54to dismiss his government
35:55in the face of opposition from the House.
35:58And in 1920, the Emergency Powers Act was passed.
36:03Which gives the sovereign power in certain circumstances
36:06to declare a state of emergency by proclamation.
36:10Meaning, our Queen could dissolve Parliament
36:13and appoint a new government.
36:15And a Prime Minister as well.
36:18She's also a Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces.
36:22They swear allegiance to her and not to Parliament.
36:25So could count on their support to see it through.
36:31She is our Caesar.
36:39And you think she might entertain this idea?
36:42The circumstances are certainly compelling.
36:45I've made a list here of exactly how compelling.
36:49And as her second cousin,
36:51I am in an ideal position to ask.
37:04Not hungry?
37:05No.
37:10Somehow, today has managed to be
37:12one of the most enjoyable days of my life.
37:15And at the same time, one of the most depressing.
37:22Telephone call for you, ma'am?
37:23Lord Manbatten?
37:24I'll call him back.
37:33If I tell you something,
37:35do you promise it will stay between us?
37:36Of course.
37:40This is how I'd like to spend all my time.
37:45Owning horses, breeding horses, racing horses.
37:48It's what makes me truly happy.
37:53And I actually think it's what I was born to do.
37:56Until the other thing came along.
37:58That someone else was born to do.
38:00That they elected not to do.
38:02Which meant that first my father, and then I,
38:04had to do a job we were never meant to do.
38:08Well, you've managed to make it look like
38:10the other thing is the only thing you were ever meant to do.
38:16You're kind.
38:18But it isn't.
38:34And on days like today, in places like this, in company like this,
38:43you get a glimpse of what it all might have been like.
38:48The unlived life.
38:52And how much happier it might have made me.
39:02Not now!
39:07Who did? I just sniffed.
39:08Slightly.
39:09I shall have to grovel now.
39:10No, it's all right. He'll understand.
39:13I'm so sorry, Your Majesty.
39:15Yes, all right. I'm coming.
39:16Honestly, only Dickie.
39:26Yes, thank you, Master. I'll talk to you.
39:31Yes, thank you, Master. I'll talk to you.
39:47Your Majesty.
39:54You are persistent. Is it really so important?
39:59Yes, Your Majesty.
40:01Prime Minister.
40:05Ma'am, I have reason to believe there is currently
40:09a full-blown plot developing against me
40:11and the democratically elected Labour government
40:15that governs in your name
40:17being led by a senior member of your family.
40:21Who?
40:25Lord Mountbatten.
40:26And that he, in cahoots with Cecil King,
40:30the chairman of the Mirror Group newspapers,
40:32has been attempting to overthrow this government.
40:38Now, I feel compelled to remind, Your Majesty,
40:41the tolerance of the royal family
40:43is hanging by a thread as it is.
40:47Now, throughout my time in office,
40:50I have done my level best to protect you.
40:54But if members of the royal family
40:57were to interfere with the political business of the day,
41:00I would be left with no option but to side
41:02with the republican elements of my cabinet,
41:06which I have successfully controlled until now,
41:11and take steps.
41:16Leave it with me, Prime Minister.
41:20Your Majesty.
41:28Your Majesty.
42:15Drink up, Portree. We're getting home.
42:34We're getting home.
42:57Lord Mountbatten, Your Majesty.
43:10Your Majesty.
43:16You asked to see me.
43:19I did.
43:21Well, great minds think alike.
43:23As it happens, I was planning to drop by myself.
43:28On a matter of great importance.
43:41I'm getting a feeling that I've not had since Dieppe.
43:46That I'm walking into a trap.
43:51I'd like to think you had that sinking feeling on another occasion recently.
43:55When going to see your friends at the Bank of England.
43:59Is it even true?
44:02Yes, I did go to lunch at the Bank of England.
44:05To meet and listen to people who are horrified by what's happening to the country.
44:10A horror I hope you share.
44:13Perhaps.
44:14But conspiring with them is not the solution.
44:17It is the beginning of a solution.
44:21Why are you doing this?
44:22Why would you protect a man like Wilson?
44:33I am protecting the Prime Minister.
44:37I am protecting the Constitution.
44:40I am protecting democracy.
44:45But if the man of the heart of that democracy threatens to destroy it,
44:48are we supposed to just stand by and do nothing?
44:51Yes.
44:52Doing nothing is exactly what we do.
44:54And bide our time.
44:56And wait for the people that voted him in to vote him out again.
44:59If indeed that is what they decide to do.
45:21I am sure you find it near impossible to do nothing.
45:24And to not have the role and the responsibilities you have always had.
45:29You were born to be busy.
45:30And to lead.
45:32But you still have a huge role to play in this family.
45:37A father figure to my husband.
45:40An uncle and a guide to me.
45:43A king to make in Charles.
45:45Not to mention a brother to your sister.
45:49When was the last time you even visited her?
45:52Cheered her up?
46:00That would be a greater service to the Crown
46:02than leading unconstitutional coups.
46:22That would be a bigger thing.
46:47I don't know.
47:10Nice of you to find the time.
47:12These days, I've nothing but time.
47:16And too little time.
47:30The four of us.
47:32What?
47:33The four of us.
47:37Look at us now.
47:40Only two left.
47:42You're left.
47:44Not me.
47:45I'm on the way out.
47:47Nonsense.
47:49There came a moment around the time I turned 70
47:53when it dawned on me that I was no longer a participant,
47:59rather a spectator.
48:01I've discovered that for myself.
48:04Then it's just a matter of waiting and not getting in the way.
48:20Now, I hear you have been getting in the way.
48:24I told you that.
48:25There are no secrets in this place.
48:29Did you get a dressing down from our doughty queen?
48:35Yes, I did.
48:38Oh, what's so funny?
48:40Well, that's funny.
48:42The little girl admonishing the grand old admiral of the fleet.
48:47Well, I'm glad it amuses you.
48:49Because the situation this country is facing is anything but amusing.
48:56Oh, who cares?
49:00Honestly.
49:04One of the few joys of being as old as we both are
49:09is that it's not our problem.
49:12Not really our country, either.
49:15What are you talking about?
49:16Of course it's our country.
49:18We Battenbergs have no country.
49:23Our family might have kings and queens in its ranks,
49:28but we're mongrels too.
49:31Part German, part Greek, part nowhere at all.
49:38Well, this is my country.
49:42Gave me a home, gave me a name.
49:47And in return, I've given it my life.
49:56And to see it like this breaks my heart.
50:34You must sleep, sister.
50:49Princess Alice, of nowhere at all.
50:54That's my power.
50:55Mama!
51:05Turn it off.
51:08Stop.
51:12Don't be a problem.
51:13Come on.
51:13I'm sorry.
51:16Here we go.
51:18You do.
51:18Time to cross your head.
51:20I'm sorry.
52:20Don't sound so surprised.
52:21I am. It's been so long.
52:27So how was France, America?
52:32Educational.
52:35The trip was supposed to be a week. You were gone almost a month.
52:38Yes.
52:40With Porchy?
52:42Yes.
52:45Was that fun?
52:49We went on racing business. It was a fact-finding expedition.
52:54Right.
52:56If you have something to say, say it now. Otherwise, if you don't mind, I'm busy.
53:00I've heard you've appointed him as your racing manager.
53:03I have.
53:03Which means he'll be around all the time.
53:05Yes, with any luck.
53:07Good for you.
53:08Good for all of us.
53:19Good for all of us.
53:49I heard about Dickie.
53:52A coup.
53:53Yes, can you believe it?
53:57It must be hard getting old.
54:05Yes.
54:19I'll be up in a minute.
54:22Oh, will you?
54:23Yes, I thought so.
54:26Unless you'd rather I wasn't.
54:29I'll see you in a minute.
54:32I'll see you in a minute.
Comments