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The Crown S05E04 [Full Movie] [High Quality]Full EP - Full
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13:50That's so, that's brilliant.
14:00It's just the sheer humiliation of it all.
14:05Which is why this time, I'm left with no option but to...
14:12Or mention the D word.
14:15Diplomacy? Détente?
14:17What? Is it asking too much to say duty?
14:22Divorce, mummy.
14:23Oh, darling.
14:25She's had enough.
14:28And I don't blame her.
14:31I blame us.
14:33What?
14:33We all knew what we were getting into when we brought Sarah into the family.
14:37Everyone was so pro. You more than anyone.
14:41Yes. She was a breath of fresh air.
14:46Modern, relatable, buckets of fun.
14:49That laugh.
14:51So infectious.
14:52Yes.
14:54But that's what we do in this family.
14:57Destroy anyone that's different.
14:59Not at the beginning, of course.
15:01First we tell ourselves how good they'll be for the system.
15:04They'll be our salvation, our secret weapon.
15:07Make us look more modern, more normal, more human.
15:14And we learn the same painful lessons yet again.
15:19That no one with any character, originality, spark, wit and flair, has a place in the system.
15:30Dear Peter, it was a great pleasure to hear from you again, and I look forward to seeing you on
15:36the 7th.
15:38I would say keep your eyes open for a diminutive 60-year-old prune.
15:42But mercifully, time hasn't touched me at all, and I'm entirely unchanged since our last meeting in 1955.
16:08HEM TO Gates
16:11I love you!
16:14I love it! I love it!
16:17You may remember a couple of us on the tour.
16:20I'd like to see you.
16:22Roger Carter.
16:27Harold Armstrong Scott.
16:30I'll see you again.
16:32After some.
16:35And the former equerry to His Majesty the King.
16:41You're all honey.
16:44Peter.
16:47Having danced a little too vigorously with the princesses,
16:52join me with the festivities.
16:55I and I expect the rest of you
16:58will never forget the beauty of the Drakensburg Mountains,
17:03Victoria Falls,
17:05endless deserted beaches,
17:09as well as the Port of Elizabeth.
17:21you're not at a time.
17:31I've noticed you guys.
17:34You're welcome.
17:35I've noticed that.
17:40I've noticed that there's nothing there.
17:41You're welcome.
17:42I love you, I love you.
17:42Oh, Margot, please, certainly put some colour in your cheats.
17:55Does he have a name?
17:57Tim.
17:59Does he make you happy?
18:02Are you in love?
18:05I think I am.
18:07Does everyone disapprove?
18:09Almost certainly.
18:11Then take it.
18:14Fight for him.
18:16Ah, this song.
18:18And that's my cue to leave.
18:20Are you going so soon?
18:22Yes.
18:23Goodbye, darling.
18:24So, Joe, home.
18:27This song used to be your cue to stay.
18:30I know, but I...
18:32I'm afraid I must insist.
19:04I'll be right back.
20:10That was lovely.
20:13I hope we don't leave it another 40 years or meeting again.
20:18Well, as it happens, I shall be back in London soon.
20:25And there are some things I'd like to return to you.
20:29The letters.
20:32Oh.
20:33Not as a rejection.
20:36I kept them all.
20:39Reading them, it took me back to that time.
20:41And I thought, they're so precious.
20:45I'm not getting any younger, and if anything should happen, I'd hate to see them fall into
20:50the wrong hands, so I...
20:54Well, I thought better with you.
20:58Well, that's very thoughtful of you.
21:01As it happens, I kept all your letters, too.
21:05Every one of them.
21:11Good night, Peter.
21:13Good night, you royal homers.
21:34Princess royal, your majesty.
21:37Good darling.
21:38Mummy.
21:44Oh.
21:46My book.
21:48Almost finished.
21:50So many other riveting things to read, too.
21:53No.
21:54Don't.
21:56Anyway.
22:00I'm here to talk about Tim.
22:03Tim?
22:05Commander Lawrence.
22:07Oh.
22:09Are you two still...?
22:10We are.
22:12And I'm here to say we intend for it to be permanent.
22:18As in, till death do us part.
22:21What?
22:23You hardly know one another.
22:26Almost three years, Mummy.
22:29And the ink is barely dry on your divorce from Mark.
22:33And in the climate we find ourselves.
22:36With so much scrutiny on the family.
22:41Are you sure it wouldn't be wise to...
22:44Wait?
22:46Wait?
22:47Just a little.
22:49Darling.
22:50I'm glad you found happiness.
22:52I know how difficult it was in the end with Mark.
22:54But of all the families you could have been born into, fate has endowed you with this one.
22:59With everything that goes with it.
23:01Including the fact that your mother is Supreme Governor of the Church of England and remarriage when the first husband
23:06is still alive, as you well know, is not only frowned upon, it is forbidden.
23:11I, of all people, hardly need reminding of the requirements of being in this family.
23:18I have dedicated myself to my role, bent myself into shape, placed duty above all else, including more often than
23:24not my own happiness.
23:26Five engagements a day.
23:28Three hundred days a year for the past 24 years.
23:32Well, you cannot have all of me.
23:36And I will not give all of me.
23:40And I will marry Tim.
23:56In you go.
23:57In you go.
23:58Good girl.
24:00How was that?
24:02Fine.
24:06Let's just go.
24:07Wait.
24:40Sometimes I wonder why I spend the lonely night dreaming of a song.
24:53The melody haunts my reverie.
24:58And I am once again with you.
25:02Though I dream in vain.
25:08In my heart it will remain.
25:13My stardust melody.
25:17The memory...
25:18Your Royal Highness.
25:20As requested, I will be accompanying you on a short ride to Gregowan Lodge tomorrow.
25:25Weather permitting.
25:26Group Captain Peter Townshend.
25:33Your Royal Highness.
25:35I've been meaning to thank you for your kindness in Balmoral.
25:38You may have thought your kind act went unnoticed, camouflaged as you were in your green tartan skirt and tweed
25:46jacket.
25:47It did not.
25:51My darling Margaret, it was reckless of you to visit me in my office today.
25:56My stardust melody.
25:58My stardust melody.
25:59The memory of love's refrain.
26:05Reckless.
26:07And magnificent.
26:10I do love you so.
26:26Darling Margaret, it seems the world has intruded our private Eden.
26:32And wants to forbid our love.
26:37They're banishing me.
26:39Sending me away like a criminal.
26:44I hate to think of you suffering.
26:46A creature made for happiness.
26:49But hold to our pact.
26:52Stay true to one another.
26:55In spite of everything.
27:00Margaret, I write to you with a heavy heart.
27:04I have just returned to Brussels from a year abroad around the world.
27:09A young woman named Mary Luce accompanied me on this trip as my secretary and photographer.
27:16Her companionship has been one of the few joys in my life.
27:20I have decided to ask her to marry me.
27:24I know you will feel betrayed by this decision.
27:33I know you will feel betrayed by this decision.
27:53It's a great way.
27:54It's a great knight.
27:54It's a great knight.
27:59It's a great knight.
28:20Prince Harming, they're calling me now, amid endless other calumnies and lies.
28:27I know you've always tried to see both sides of the marriage, but will you now finally
28:31agree that official separation is the only sensible course?
28:36Charles.
28:39If it were just incompatibility or infidelity, that would be one thing, but the sheer vindictiveness
28:47of that Morton book, and then the temerity to insist that she had nothing to do with it,
28:54I've done as you asked, Mummy.
28:58I've tried to make it work for 11 years, but there comes a point...
29:04I have been no stranger this year to my children's marital difficulties.
29:09But while Anne's and Andrew's problems are deeply distressing, yours are in a category
29:14of their own, because you as future king are in a category of your own.
29:19At my coronation, I took an oath that you will one day take it yours, to maintain the laws
29:25of God.
29:27And God's law is that marriage is for life.
29:31And while it is expected for the monarch to be married and produce an heir, being happily
29:36married is a preference rather than a requirement.
29:41You also took a solemn promise to maintain and protect the crown.
29:46Diana won't rest until she's blown the whole thing up.
29:49Is that what you want?
29:57It's funny, isn't it?
29:58I...
29:59For years, I've called for a more modern monarchy that reflects the world outside.
30:05But look at the rates of family breakdown out there, and then look at us.
30:09Margaret divorced.
30:11Anne divorced.
30:12What?
30:13Andrew humiliated and heading for divorce.
30:16Me trapped and dreaming of divorce.
30:18And you talk about moral examples.
30:21If we were an ordinary family and social services came to visit, they'd have thrown us into care
30:28and you into jail.
30:28That's enough.
30:31We've got our modern monarchy all right, just not in the way we hoped.
30:44It begins to look like parental failure, the gravest kind.
30:51And yet the Duke of Edinburgh and I could not have been more clear with the children about
30:55how important we consider marriage to be.
31:01I have every sympathy.
31:05My own daughter is divorced.
31:08My son is separated.
31:11All we can do is ask for God's guidance.
31:16How did it come to this?
31:21Our generation was brought up to believe that marriage was an ideal and divorce was a problem.
31:27This generation.
31:32Yes.
31:34But the prince and princess are not yet separated.
31:39There is still hope of reconciliation.
31:42And we all pray for it.
31:48We do.
31:53Daily.
32:29The force is coming in of a fire at Windsor Castle
32:32with flames shooting from the turrets and smoke pouring over them now.
32:36The Majesty is being kept informed of the operation
32:42and it's understood she's on her way to the scene.
33:04It went up like a tinderbox, those were the words of one observer about this blaze,
33:09which despite the efforts of the fire service, still shows no signs of being brought under control.
33:14The entire North Terrace is ravaged by flames.
33:18Fire crews are working determinedly to stop them spreading
33:21and destroying some of Britain's most priceless treasures.
33:25It's now about six hours since this fire started
33:28and much of the top left-hand side of Windsor Castle is still on fire, still burning.
33:34The destruction inside, I'm told, is absolutely enormous.
33:37Ceilings have come down, smoke damage, fire damage, water damage.
33:41Well, I was talking to one of the Queen's aides
33:43and I asked him what she felt about what had happened and what her mood about it was
33:48and he said that she's like any mother watching her own home burn down.
33:53She's obviously absolutely devastated.
33:54People are just absolutely stunned by what's happening around there.
34:23People are just absolutely stunned by what's happening around there.
34:54it was amazing.
34:54We are so excited about how great stuff is happening around the world.
35:01the Rembrandt saved Rubens God saved and the Leonardo but tragically more than a hundred rooms
35:16including nine state rooms destroyed what about the crimson drawing room there I ask I'm surprised
35:28you remember it of course I remember everyone had gone up to London for some ceremony or other it's
35:39the Monday service at St Paul's leaving us alone we spent a whole afternoon in the crimson room
35:48locked in conversation yes whatever were we talking about everything and nothing I suppose not nothing
36:01as I remember we were excitedly making plans for our future with such certainty and conviction
36:13like those plans I'm afraid the crimson room did not survive
36:20how sad yes I'm curious what made you write to me after all that time
36:34now life goes on forever
36:40recently I had that made clear to me by my doctor
36:48Peter I'm so sorry
36:52around the same time I heard a radio interview with you and I suppose I wanted to know
36:58if our love in the context of a whole life had been a fleeting one
37:09or a lasting one
37:11amazing
37:11health
37:11pain
37:11pain
37:11pain
37:11pain
37:11pain
37:11pain
37:41A restoration bill will be met. Some Labour MPs say the Queen, not taxpayers, should pay for all repair work.
37:49The monarchy can't have it always a one-way system under which we, the taxpayers, pick up the bills, but
37:57they refuse to be taxpayers themselves.
37:59Neither the building nor its contents were insured.
38:02What time, bad time?
38:03The appeal may be launched. Offers have helped to rebuild the world's most famous buildings have already been known.
38:09Any idea how it started?
38:11The Great Metaphor. I mean, fire.
38:17The spotlight blew a fuse or something.
38:21In the private chapel, all very innocent.
38:25Or was it?
38:28Like one of those Agatha Christie mysteries. One can imagine multiple suspects, each with their own perfectly plausible motive to
38:39burn the place down.
38:41Who?
38:41My neighbour, for one.
38:44Diana.
38:45Frustrated after years of neglect, she decides to take the matter into her own hands.
38:52Though arson probably isn't violent enough for her. She'd prefer an atomic bomb.
38:58Hasn't she detonated that already, Andrew?
39:01Andrew, the Duke of York, furious at his own mother for having led him to believe his whole life that
39:08he was irresistible and invulnerable, only to discover his principal role is to be humiliated.
39:16Mr.
39:20You?
39:23You don't think I have reason to burn down my sister's home?
39:30Why would you do that?
39:33Because of what she denied me?
39:40Peter Townsend.
39:43What?
39:45Without sun and water, crops fail, Lilibet.
39:56Let me ask, how many times has Philip done something?
40:03Intervene when you couldn't.
40:05Be strong when you couldn't be.
40:07Be angry when you couldn't be.
40:09Be decisive when you couldn't be.
40:11How many times have you said a silent prayer of gratitude for him and thought to yourself,
40:16if I didn't have him, I'd never be able to do it?
40:18How often?
40:21Peter was my son.
40:26My water.
40:29And you denied me him.
40:31I denied you as queen, not as your sister.
40:36The conditions are irrelevant.
40:38The prohibition is what counts a prohibition.
40:41Incidentally, you are not now extending to Anne.
40:43That is different.
40:44How is it different?
40:47Anne is a royal princess with no prospect of acceding to the throne, as was I.
40:54Commander Lawrence is a palace equerry marrying scandalously above his station.
40:59Peter was a palace equerry hoping to marry scandalously above his.
41:03Anne and Commander Lawrence are in love.
41:05Peter and I were in love.
41:06In both cases, one party is a divorcee.
41:09See, the situation is identical in every way except for the outcome.
41:15She is being allowed to marry him.
41:20I wasn't.
41:23Her story ends happening.
41:30Mine did not.
41:36And yet, even after 40 years,
41:42you cannot bring yourself to acknowledge what happened to me
41:46and the part you played in it.
41:49Yes.
41:49Yes, Yes.
42:59Thank you, Peggy.
43:01Your Majesty.
43:02Mummy, that's a surprise.
43:05I've been told you're unwell.
43:08It's just a cold.
43:09I heard fever.
43:10In which case the only sensible course is bed rest.
43:13It's a lunch to celebrate me.
43:16I can't pull out.
43:17Yes, you can.
43:19And I don't want to pull out.
43:27I've also taken a look at the speech.
43:30You know the three questions we always ask ourselves.
43:33Does it need saying?
43:35Does it need saying now?
43:37Does it need saying by me?
43:40And to describe it in this way, Annus Horribilis.
43:45People will remark on it.
43:47Not just because of the theatrical deviation into Latin.
43:50What's your point?
43:51My point, since we're speaking Latin now, is tempus fugit.
43:59Time passes.
44:00People will move on and forget.
44:01Make a statement like this.
44:03No one will forget.
44:05Quite apart from the fact it's an expression of personal sentiment, the kind of which we do not make.
44:10Mummy.
44:10And it could also be interpreted as an admission of our failings, which will only encourage further attacks.
44:18It has been, by some margin, the worst year of my reign.
44:22Quite possibly my life.
44:24I'm happy for people to know.
44:27Know what?
44:28That their queen is depressed.
44:30That I am made of flesh and blood.
44:33And that perhaps we have fallen short in our duty as a family.
44:37And owe them an apology.
44:41Apology.
44:43That word shouldn't be in your vocabulary.
44:49Monarchy is the only part of the Constitution with an element of the divine.
44:54When you wear the crown, you are transfigured.
45:00Apologizing, Sal, is not just your dignity, but God's.
45:04Whose will it is that you are who you are.
45:08Actually.
45:10I'm not sure if there's anything to be gained by that.
45:13Yes, there is.
45:15Her peace of mind.
45:18She's done God's will about as immaculately as any human for the past 40 years.
45:24She's earned the right to say anything she likes.
45:28And it's our job to support her.
45:32Unconditionally.
45:32Since when have you sung that tune?
45:34Since day one he's sung that tune.
45:36Day one.
45:44Now if you don't mind, we're due at the Guildhall.
45:58But you're due at the Guildhall.
46:01Well done.
46:14Please be up standing for a while, my dear, please.
46:19My Lord Mayor,
46:21the anniversary of any occasion is a time to reflect.
46:28But in light of the events of the last 12 months,
46:32perhaps I have more to reflect on than most.
46:391992 is not a year on which I shall look back with undiluted pleasure.
46:47It has turned out to be an annus horribilis.
46:54No institution is beyond reproach,
46:58and no member of it either.
47:02The high standards we in the monarchy are held to by the public
47:07must be the same benchmark to which we hold ourselves personally.
47:13If we can't admit the errors of our past,
47:19what hope for reconciliation can there be?
47:28Today, I'd like to pay tribute, if I may, to my family.
47:37Throughout the four decades, I have been on the throne.
47:41They have quite literally been my son and water for all the sacrifices they have made.
47:53Indeed, to all of you here whose prayers and well wishes have been a source of strength to me
48:02this last 40 years,
48:06I say thank you.
48:09Please be outstanding for a close to the world and this is the way.
48:39And is so ridiculous.
48:41Well, it has been, for all of you.
48:43and i can see much of that has been my fault for the record no one blames you
48:50on the contrary everyone blames me all of the time and you're right to this system of which
48:58the sovereign is the principal beneficiary is horribly hard on the rest of you you too
49:04that's the job let's face it thank you come and have lunch here tomorrow we could get a little bit
49:14tipsy make light of it all the fire the job the children peter townsend i'd love to
49:26but sadly i'm going to carlisle to open a business park then penrith oh the scots guard association
49:34then kirby stephen in cumbria to visit the factory of heredities then i'll have to get sloshed on my
49:42own with rum rum you're not drinking rum like some pirate no rum my dog
49:59oh it's funny i'm here with brandy and sherry
50:07what does that say about us
50:12good night lilibet i do love you
50:20i love you too very much
50:27god that was middle class promise me we'll never do that again
50:30never
50:33good night
50:34good night
50:44sometimes i wonder why i spend the lonely night dreaming of a song the melody haunts my reverie
51:02good night and i am once again with you when our love was new and each kiss and inspiration
51:17oh but that was long ago now my consolation is in the stardust of the song beside the garden
51:32a wall when stars are bright. You are in my arms. The nightingale tells his fairy tale
51:45of paradise where roses grew. Though I dream in vain, in my heart it will remain. My star
52:01the hardest melody, the memory of love's refrain.
52:31you
53:01.
53:32.
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