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thecrownnetflixuk · 3 months
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The Crown TV Royally Waves Goodbye
**🛑this site is now closed🛑**
With the final season over - and The Crown's jewels up for sale to fund National Film & Television School scholarship(s) - the time has come for us to renounce the throne and focus on new projects.
After 7 years, and almost 2,500 posts, including over 800 pages of our own original gifs, it's been quite the carriage ride. We also loved meeting fellow fans, and sharing your creative work here.
Dear followers and supporters: thank you so much for every kind comment, like and reblog, but particularly for your patience in the early days whilst we were still learning and (hopefully!) improving.
Thanks especially to Netflix and the talented team behind The Crown for being so generous with their time, as well as trusting us to review episodes ahead of release. Truly the royal treatment!
We won't be posting (or reblogging) new content, but The Crown TV  will continue for now as a limited archive, feat. posts from the past year. Please credit us if you reblog our old posts or feature our creations on any other site: Terms & conditions remain the same.
All 6 seasons of this epic drama are on Netflix, so ... re-watch? 😁
LONG LIVE THE CROWN!
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thecrownnetflixuk · 3 months
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The Crown 👆 dropping truth bombs in the final season.
Prince William (Ed McVey) & Prince Charles (Dominic West) | 6x05
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thecrownnetflixuk · 3 months
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I give you mon petit chou. Lilibet. Elizabeth. The Queen.
All 3 versions of The Crown’s Elizabeth & Philip being adorable.*
S1 & 2: Claire Foy & Matt Smith 🔥😈⚡
S3 & 4: Olivia Colman & Tobias Menzies 💋💕🥰
S5 & 6: Imelda Staunton & Jonathan Pryce 👴🏻👵🏼❤️
*this is for 'the shippers', AKA me. Sail away, sail away (as Enya warbled in the '90's.)
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thecrownnetflixuk · 3 months
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Ed Mcvey and Meg Bellamy as Prince William and Kate Middleton in The Crown S6E09 (2023)
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thecrownnetflixuk · 3 months
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*Gillian Anderson finally put down her phone to celebrate castmate Elizabeth Debicki's win at the Golden Globes 2024📱💓🤣
(*Gillian wasn't this quick on her feet when she won her Emmy for The Crown 😉)
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thecrownnetflixuk · 3 months
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Men’s hands are so important. Like their lips have to be just the right temperature. -- Are mine the right temperature? I don’t know. Hmm. Need to check.
Elizabeth Debicki as Princess Diana | The Crown 6x02: Two Photographs
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thecrownnetflixuk · 4 months
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It’s hard to talk when you’re chewing gum. – – When did you get that? I’m not sure. Think it might have come after a kiss.
Teenage Lillibet (Viola Prettejohn) & Margaret (Beau Gadsdon) | The Crown 6x08
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thecrownnetflixuk · 4 months
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The Crown at Christmas
Jared Harris (King George VI), Claire Foy (Queen Elizabeth II, S1&S2), Vanessa Kirby (Princess Margaret, S1&S2), Emma Corrin (Princess Diana, S4), Olivia Colman (Queen Elizabeth II, S3&S4), Helena Bonham Carter (Princess Margaret, S3&S4), Tobias Menzies (Prince Philip, S3&S4) & the Season 4 Royal Family
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thecrownnetflixuk · 4 months
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Young William & Kate’s Christmas meet-cute🎄💑
The Crown 6x07: Alma Mater
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thecrownnetflixuk · 4 months
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Ed Mcvey and Meg Bellamy as Prince William and Kate Middleton in The Crown S6 Pt.2 (2023)
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thecrownnetflixuk · 4 months
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If you went looking for Elizabeth Windsor, you wouldn’t find her. She’s gone, long gone.
Imelda Staunton & Claire Foy as Queen Elizabeth II in The Crown.
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thecrownnetflixuk · 4 months
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Princess "YOLO" Margaret 👑
The Crown 6x:08: Ritz
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thecrownnetflixuk · 4 months
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Ed Mcvey and Meg Bellamy as Prince William and Kate Middleton in The Crown S6E09
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thecrownnetflixuk · 4 months
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Ed Mcvey and Meg Bellamy as Prince William & Kate Middleton in The Crown S6 E07
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thecrownnetflixuk · 4 months
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Fond Farewells Mark the End of an Era for The Crown.
Pt 2 of Season 6 Accedes to the Next Generation – But Reigns Most Triumphant Saluting Its Sovereign.
Review & gifs by L.L @The Crown TV
I wasn't sure what to expect from the final 6 preview episodes of The Crown. Part 1 gifted us with a season-defining performance from Elizabeth Debicki, but such intense focus on the tragedy of Diana and Dodi's deaths was heavy-going. How to move forward?
Not many TV shows stick the landing, but I believe The Crown does, mostly by putting Queen Elizabeth front and centre. In four different ways! But Part 2 takes a while to forge ahead and reign triumphant.
Ed McVey and Meg Bellamy make shy William and swotty Kate believable as a young couple who meet at university – or earlier, as per a flashback with (not Ghost!) Diana. I still found it hard to invest in their will-they-won't-they relationship (we already know they do.) 
Instead, it’s sisters Elizabeth and Margaret who have long been the emotional heart of this show; at every stage of their lives.
Former Oscar-nominee Lesley Manville (alongside Queen Imelda Staunton) is truly magnificent in Ep 8 as Princess Margaret, though it's painful watching this vibrant lady struggle as her health worsens.
Memories of the 1940's are a delight. However, I wish we'd seen more of wide-eyed teen Lilibet let loose (Viola Prettejohn) and carefree Marg (Beau Gadsdon) before older Margaret says her final goodbye.
Staunton saves her best for last, bringing dry humour, vulnerability as well as leadership to Ep 10. The 70+ min epic finale 'Sleep, Dearie Sleep' has its shaky moments, but beautifully completes Queen Elizabeth's story when it counts, bringing near-perfect closure. That alone elevates Season 6 beyond Season 5.
Warning - MAJOR SPOILERS AHEAD. This is my final *EVER* review (might be extra long!)
S6 is NOW ON NETFLIX - WATCH THE EPISODES before reading.
Images: courtesy of Netflix
Starting with less good news; the first couple of episodes of Part 2 were my least favourite. Ep 5, 'Willsmania', feels transitional, and a little stuck in the past. Following his mother's death, Prince William (Ed McVey; taking over from younger actor Rufus Kampa) turns inward as he struggles to cope with public attention and grief.
It's an understandable reaction to losing a parent, but Part 1 already spent nearly half a season on Dodi and Diana. It felt like we grieved in real time. As a result, whenever the subject of Diana crops up again in Part 2, it tends to weigh down both pace and narrative.
Ep 6 brings a welcome change of topic. This being The Crown, I'm sure there are critics poised to be offended by Queen Elizabeth's nightmare about Prime Minister Tony Blair being crowned king, but to me, his 'coronation' was hilarious, as was the choir boy singing Blair's cheesy Labour pop anthem.
It felt like deliberate tongue-in-cheek humour, an absurd reminder why monarchy might still be better than populist elected leaders.
I really wanted this episode to work, but it didn't go anywhere, and themes like tradition-vs-modernity were covered more effectively in episodes such as 'Marionettes.' Bertie Carvel has Tony Blair's voice down but suffers from comparisons with Michael Sheen, who was uncanny as the Prime Minister in 3 earlier Peter Morgan projects.
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^ PM Tony Blair. The Women's Institute weren't fans of his grandstanding.
The Crown: The Next Generation fully arrives during Ep's 7, 9 & 10. Some will love it. Those who prefer more historical episodes with broader scope may be disappointed, as the show follows William and Kate through University life in the early 2000's.
The newcomers do bring fresh energy to the show. It helps that they cast Ed McVey and Meg Bellamy, who make a sweet couple as Will and Kate, even if William sometimes comes across as petulant.
Unlike Ed McVey as William, Luther Ford doesn't bear much physical resemblance to Prince Harry, other than red hair. Ford does however put in a good performance as Harry becomes increasingly reckless.
The Crown doesn't hide either Harry or William's bad behaviour. The brothers seem to get on well at the start, but it later seems like they're more at odds. Underneath a lot – a LOT – of boozing, both boys appear quietly screwed-up over their mother's death. Neither of them seem to enjoy playing happy families with Charles, either.
The show mostly concentrates on William and Kate, but there aren't many episodes left to develop a genuine romance. They have potential, but it feels fairly surface level. Suddenly, they rush to move into a house share together when we've barely seen them kiss. They (and we) needed more screen time to really get to know each other.
There's a bigger issue here with Kate's mother, Carole Middleton (Eve Best.) Pushy parent Carole is keen to play matchmaker between her 'commoner' daughter and the young eligible Prince, keeping tabs on William. Carole isn't as conniving, but ... didn't we just watch a similar storyline with Mohamed Al-Fayed/Dodi/Diana in Part 1?
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^ Kate 'n' Will. Her Mum would frame this picture.
Ep 8 'Ritz' plays like a standalone film. Margaret's final story is touching, but upsetting, at times; I was a fan of Diana, yet sobbed as much for Margaret as the credits rolled, even though her eventual death isn't shown. In fact, her final goodbye is sensitively done and stands as a fitting tribute to the princess, as well as to the Queen.
Lesley Manville makes Margaret's predicament so real as her health slowly breaks down. She bounces back from one stroke, then another hits. How awful too for Elizabeth to watch a much-loved sister deteriorate, though it was wonderful to see Lilibet read Margaret a bedtime story. It brought out the warmer side of Staunton's Queen.
The scene where Margaret scalds her feet in the bath is genuinely horrifying. I've suffered from ill health and loss of control myself and this was so much worse. I could feel her pain. That poor woman.
Human moments are where The Crown excels; through this episode, this working-class lass from a council house could somehow relate to a Princess in a palace. Peter Morgan has surely done more to humanise the royal family than any P.R team ever could.
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^ Fans of Margaret (and Lesley Manville) prepare yourselves for her sad final journey.
Onto the big reveal: when I mentioned at the start there are FOUR ways Queen Elizabeth appears – this is what I meant:-
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^ Newcomer Viola Prettejohn plays teenage Princess Elizabeth.
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^ & there's Olivia Colman & Claire Foy alongside older Queen Imelda Staunton.
Satisfyingly, all 3 of The Crown's leading ladies return to close the show. Olivia Colman and Claire Foy each have an additional scene, too (I won't spoil the entire finale, as it covers a lot of ground in over 70 mins, but Olivia and Claire aren't back as 'ghosts.')
As we get older, the ghosts who speak loudest are our own; the former versions of us we berate ourselves with. Not everyone may warm to the Queen (sort of) talking to herself, but personally, I was thrilled to see these talented actors on screen together.
Foy's scene with Staunton is particularly effective, as the younger Queen gives her older self an old-fashioned dutiful talking to. It's somehow also credible that they're aspects of the same person.
It reminded me of Peter Morgan’s 2013 (extraordinary) play, ‘The Audience', which inspired this series, and included scenes where Helen Mirren shared the stage with young Elizabeth. That play is also why this theatre-fan started watching The Crown to begin with, and later went on to create this website.
When Ep 10 finished playing, my Netflix returned itself to Season 1. 60 episodes over 7 years! I will miss the grand scale of The Crown, but appreciate the legacy which remains. Now feels like the right time for this story to end. A full-circle moment in more ways than one.
**Majestic thanks for reading, and to every person who has liked, reblogged, messaged, supported The Crown TV for all these years.
💎♕You each deserve a Crown of your own!♕💎**
N.B: These are my humble opinions at this point in time. No offence is intended. Agreement = lovely; not compulsory. Disagreement = happens; kindly coexist. Ta!
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thecrownnetflixuk · 4 months
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Vanessa Kirby as Princess Margaret in The Crown S1
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thecrownnetflixuk · 4 months
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ELIZABETH DEBICKI, LESLEY MANVILLE, GILLIAN ANDERSON & EMMA CORRIN for Vanity Fair at "The Crown" Finale Celebration on December 05, 2023 in London, England
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