Tag: The Crown

  • The Crown: Seven takeaways from the latest series of Netflix’s royal drama

    Season five of Netflix’s The Crown has already created its own drama before its release on Wednesday, causing controversy over its depiction of the royal family.

    Netflix defended its show as a “fictional dramatisation”, after Sir John Major and Dame Judi Dench questioned its accuracy.

    It has also added a disclaimer to its marketing for the show, saying it is “inspired by real-life events”.

    I’ve spent my Friday night binge-watching all 10 new episodes, to find out just what this new series is like – here are my takeaways.

    1. It’s hard to tell fact from fiction

    Jonathan Pryce as Prince Philip, Natascha McElhone as Penny Knatchbull
    Sir Jonathan Pryce as Prince Philip with Natascha McElhone as Penny Knatchbull

    The closer this series gets to the present day, the more the truth and and the blurring of fact and fiction matters.

    This season is set in the 90s and the Queen – played magnificently for the first time by Imelda Staunton – is in her mid-60s. Her children’s marriages are failing and, controversially, the show suggests an affair between Prince Philip and Lady Romsey, 32 years his junior.

    The Duke of Edinburgh, played by Jonathan Pryce, denies it, but in a testing scene, he tells the Queen of his “disenchantment” with the marriage. But The Crown is so plausible and so human that it’s always been impossible as a general viewer to distinguish drama from reality.

    In the absence of royal-related facts that we will likely never know, this fiction fills the void, and for many becomes the truth.

    So soon after the Queen’s death, and with so many of the characters still living, that feels more difficult to justify editorially.

    2. John Major’s portrayal is a revelation

    Jonny Lee Miller as John Major in The Crown
    Jonny Lee Miller plays then Prime Minister John Major

    The former prime minister has attacked this series for suggesting Prince Charles wanted to force the Queen to abdicate, calling that “malicious nonsense”.

    But in The Crown, the politician, once ridiculed by Spitting Image for being dull and boring (and eating peas), is anything but.

    Brilliantly brought to the screen by Jonny Lee Miller, he’s highly regarded by the Queen – a wise voice of the people and a diplomatic go-between in the messy divorce-wrangling between Charles and Diana.

    (And there are no peas in sight when his wife, Norma, played by Flora Montgomery, serves up his dinner in episode nine).

    It’s a revelation.

    3. Elizabeth Debicki steals the show

    Elizabeth Debicki as Diana, Princess of Wales
    Elizabeth Debicki said she was initially overwhelmed at the prospect of playing Diana, Princess of Wales

    The voice (hesitant, breathy, the right side of posh), the dipped head as she looks up through her eyelashes, the haircut, the expressions and, of course, the clothes; it’s all so Diana.

    While Dominic West does his best to inhabit the character of (the then) Prince Charles, he’s too suave and too obviously handsome to be entirely believable.

    Debicki is perfect.

    4. The BBC comes under scrutiny

    Imelda Staunton
    Imelda Staunton takes over the role of the Queen from Olivia Colman

    The BBC is a character in series five and it doesn’t make comfortable viewing.

    The Queen’s loyalty to the BBC is juxtaposed with the bigger, damaging story of the interview Princess Diana gave to Panorama and the controversies surrounding how it was obtained.

    The BBC has said it will never broadcast the interview again, but The Crown recreates the scenes.

    Any drama about the royal family from that time would likely do the same, but it’s hard not to imagine the pain it will cause those involved and is grist to the mill of those who say The Crown should have stopped long before it reached such a recent and difficult period.

    The advent of satellite television and what that means for the BBC also is a thread that runs through this series.

    The Queen is resistant to changing her TV until Prince William tells her if she gets a satellite dish, she’ll be able to watch a racing channel any time she wants.

    5. Money has been no object

    Royal family portrait photo
    Season five depicts the Royal Family during the 90s

    The Crown is believed to cost around £10m an episode (though that’s always been denied by its creator and writer Peter Morgan).

    In this series, it appears again money has been no object.

    We’re offered sumptuous stand-ins for royal houses and palaces, a recreation of the Hong Kong handover ceremony and we see Her Majesty in London’s Guildhall making her famous “annus horribilis” speech.

    The (fading) Royal Yacht Britannia becomes a metaphor through the series for a sense that the Queen herself is becoming out of touch, obsolete and irrelevant.

    I can see why the writers leapt on that narrative – the yacht was decommissioned in 1997 in the first year of Tony Blair’s administration. But the parallels feel overdone, particularly in light of the real Queen’s subsequently long and lauded reign.

    6. Does it show Britain stuck in the past?

    Imelda Staunton as the Queen in The Crown
    Imelda Staunton shows the Queen in public and private moments

    The Crown affects how Britain is viewed internationally, but it probably only confirms what people already think.

    The Britain of the programme is awash with regal splendour. We see fine dining and the classrooms of Eton; the English are depicted as lovers of game shooting and good manners.

    For some, these portrayals mean we’ll be seen as a country stuck in the past, for others as one informed by a rich history.

    Some of the tensions in series five concern whether it was the Queen or Prince Charles who had a better sense of what modern Britain represented.

    In real life, the pageantry of Her Majesty’s funeral showcased the country to the world. In its own way, The Crown could be applauded for also keeping Britain on the world stage.

    7. It reflects our own complexities

    Dominic West
    Dominic West as Prince Charles, as he was known then

    Humans are complex and the characters in The Crown are no exception.

    Much of the controversy around this series has been about whether Prince, now King, Charles is unfairly portrayed in his relationship with Princess Diana, and as he tries to find a role for himself as Prince of Wales.

    After five series of The Crown, my sense is that writer Peter Morgan’s skill is that he shows us the complexity of what it means to be human.

    He falls in love with his characters and can’t help but infuse them with real depth of emotion.

    Only the most fervent anti-monarchist would fail to respond.

    Source:myjhoyonline.com

  • Prince Harry, Prince William will be ‘quite uncomfortable’ with new seasons of ‘The Crown,’

    The upcoming season of The Crown is going to be covering some of the most painful times in recent memory for the Royal Family, and it might prove to be very difficult for Prince William and Prince Harry to stomach.

    ET recently sat down with royal expert Katie Nicholl, who helped shine some light on what the princes may be struggling with when it comes to season 5 of The Crown, which largely covers the 1990s — a particularly tumultuous and dark time for the family.

    “I think this series is going to be quite uncomfortable viewing, not just for [Queen Consort] Camilla and [King] Charles but also for William and Harry,” Nicholl explained. “Scenes leading up to their mother’s death are going to be very, very uncomfortable for them.”

    Princess Diana died in a shocking car crash in Paris in 1997, at the age of 36. At the time, William and Harry were 15 and 12, respectively.

    “This is a period that they had to live out so publicly. We heard Harry talk about the very real impact it’s had on his life, and William as well,” Nicholl shared. “So for this to sort of be revisited, even if it’s done tastefully … for this to be brought up all over again is incredibly hard for William and Harry.”

    “[There is] a sense that, really, their mother’s ghost can’t ever be laid to rest for them,” she added. “I think [that] is really still something that’s very real and very difficult for them.”

    Nicholl explained that the “biggest problem” the royal family and critics of the show have with the current seasons is that it “is about people who are still alive today.”

    “The events, yes, are 25 years old, but they still feel very current because they’re constantly still making headlines — largely through films and TV series like this,” she said. “Those early [seasons] felt like there was enough history, felt like there was enough distance. But this just feels uncomfortably close.”

    “That being said, with all the media hype and the attention the series has been getting, it wouldn’t surprise me at all if this is the biggest rated [season] for the series, in terms of viewing figures,” Nicholl added.

    Another element of awkwardness may stem from the casting of Dominic West — a real-life friend of Harry — to play a younger Charles.

    “For Dominic West, going into that role playing Charles, during some of the most tumultuous years of the Royal Family — and at a time when Charles’ popularity was absolutely rock bottom — I think any actor would jump at the chance because, obviously, it’s a wonderful opportunity,” Nicholl said. “But [they might] also think twice about it as well. I mean, when they were making The Crown they would have known, given the queen’s age, given her frailty, [that] there was always a real risk that this series was going to go out when she was either close to death or indeed had died, as is the case.”

    “So I think that is a big responsibility for the actors,” Nicholl said. “It’s not just a role, it’s not just a character, it’s not just a part. It’s a real person who now happens to be king, and it is the dredging up of a past which he’d much rather move on from.”

    Season 5 of The Crown premieres Nov. 9 on Netflix.

  • ‘The Crown’ Season 5 Trailer Centers on Charles and Diana’s Explosive Divorce

    Ahead of season 5’s debut on Nov. 9, Netflix finally debuted a fiery trailer for the new episodes of The Crown, giving audiences an extended look “a house divided” as Prince Charles and Princess Diana’s divorce takes center stage on creator Peter Morgan’s historical drama about the royal family.

    Picking up in the early 1990s, the series will focus on the “most visual” era of the royals as they navigated newfound attention surrounding the Palace, which included many headline-grabbing events and scandals of the time.

    “That’s the amazing thing about playing these people at this time, because in the journey of The Crown so far out of all the seasons, this is the most visual content we have of the royal family,” said Elizabeth Debicki, who makes a stunning transformation into Diana as the trailer shows her struggling in her marriage to Charles, which many have said always included a third person, Camilla Parker-Bowles.

    As per tradition of the Emmy-winning series, a new cast has taken over the key roles, with Debicki now portraying the late princess after Emma Corrin originated the role in season 4 and Dominic West following in Julian Baring and Josh O’Connor’s footsteps as Charles, who was recently named king following his mother’s death in September.

    Joining them is Imelda Staunton as Queen Elizabeth II, Jonathan Pryce as Prince Philip, Lesley Manville as Princess Margaret, Claudia Harrison as Princess Anne, Olivia Williams as Charles’ longtime friend and eventual second wife as well as Jonny Lee Miller as John Major, Salim Daw as Mohamed Al Fayed and Khalid Abdalla as Dodi Fayed.

    The trailer, set to a haunting version The Verve’s “Bittersweet Symphony,” also teases other notable moments from the early ‘90s, including Diana’s “revenge dress” to her controversial, sit-down interview with reporter Martin Bashir to the fire that broke out in Windsor Castle, which offers a fitting allegory to what is happening with the family at that time.

    While Charles and Camilla’s “tampongate” was not seen here, it is another wild moment that West confirmed would be depicted in season 5. “I remember thinking it was something so sordid and deeply, deeply embarrassing [at the time],” he shared in a recent interview.

    “Looking back on it, and having to play it, what you’re conscious of is that the blame was not with these two people, two lovers, who were having a private conversation,” he continued. “What’s really [clear now] is how invasive and disgusting was the press’s attention to it, that they printed it out verbatim and you could call a number and listen to the actual tape. I think it made me extremely sympathetic towards the two of them and what they’d gone through.”

    Echoing that sentiment about the press, Debicki has said that “in the ‘90s everything had started to be filmed and also it was the birth of the 24-hour news cycle, so there’s just this incredible amount of content that we have access to.” And as a result, “Diana was the most photographed person in the world at that time.”

    Of course, no matter how much Diana and Charles’ marriage is depicted this season, there’s no forgetting that this series is always about the queen, and how she managed to maintain her reign and family’s place in the ever-evolving British consciousness.

    Following Emmy-winning turns by Claire Foy and Olivia Colman, Staunton is tasked with portraying Her Majesty in her later years until the series closes out with season 6. “I’m greatly honored,” Staunton previously told ET about being approached by creator Peter Morgan and his team to complete “the last lap” and finish out what the other two actresses started before her. “I don’t want to let the air go out of the balloon and I really have to bring it home. I would love to do that for all the people who have gone before me.”

    In a later interview, she acknowledged the fans who were excited to see her join the franchise, saying, “Let’s just hope that works out for them because I’ve done it. Nothing I can do about it now!”

  • ‘The Crown’ suspending production as ‘mark of respect’ for Queen Elizabeth II

    Producers of the Netflix historical drama “The Crown” are pausing production on the show’s sixth season after news of Queen Elizabeth’s death.

    “As a mark of respect, filming on ‘The Crown’ was suspended today. Filming will also be suspended on the day of Her Majesty The Queen’s funeral,” producers for “The Crown” said in a statement to CNN on Friday.

    The Emmy-winning series, created by Peter Morgan, centers on the reign of Queen Elizabeth II. Season 5, expected to premiere in November, will cover the events of the late monarch’s reign in the 21st century.

    “Harry Potter” alum Imelda Staunton will take over the role of Queen Elizabeth II which was played in previous seasons by Claire Foy (Seasons 1 and 2) and Olivia Colman (Seasons 3 and 4).

    Both Foy and Colman won Primetime Emmy Awards for their portrayals.

    The show is expected to conclude after Season 6.

    Source:CNN