王冠第一季

欧美剧美国2016

主演:克莱尔·芙伊,马特·史密斯,约翰·利思戈,凡妮莎·柯比,丹尼尔·贝茨,詹姆斯·希利尔,杰瑞米·诺森,杰瑞德·哈里斯,阿历克斯·杰宁斯,尼克·欧文福特,马丁·贝肖普,托马斯·派登

导演:本·卡隆,史蒂芬·戴德利,菲利普·马丁,朱里安·杰拉德

 剧照

王冠第一季 剧照 NO.1王冠第一季 剧照 NO.2王冠第一季 剧照 NO.3王冠第一季 剧照 NO.4王冠第一季 剧照 NO.5王冠第一季 剧照 NO.6王冠第一季 剧照 NO.13王冠第一季 剧照 NO.14王冠第一季 剧照 NO.15王冠第一季 剧照 NO.16王冠第一季 剧照 NO.17王冠第一季 剧照 NO.18王冠第一季 剧照 NO.19王冠第一季 剧照 NO.20
更新时间:2024-06-13 20:22

详细剧情

  马特·史密斯和约翰·利斯高加盟Netflix剧集《王冠》(The Crown,暂译),二人分别饰演菲利普亲王和丘吉尔。剧集剧本由《女王》编剧彼得·摩根创作,首播集由《时时刻刻》导演史蒂芬·戴德利执导,讲述伊丽莎白二世与丘吉尔在二战后,重塑英伦的故事。之前确定由克莱尔·福伊出演伊丽莎白二世。

 长篇影评

 1 ) 不是你混得不好,技术投胎也烦恼

剧里出现的帝国王冠真身我没见过,但属于伊丽莎白二世的王冠,我见过另一顶。

前年夏天跑去爱丁堡边缘艺术节,顺便观光了城堡,就见到了。人们排长队进一个旋转上升的小塔楼,楼上放的就是象征苏格兰君主权的宝剑,权杖,和王冠,还有一块看似平凡无奇的加冕石,每件各还能说出几桩野史。几百年了,为了盘这么几件东西,英格兰和苏格兰人民大战不下三百回合。

那个操着销魂的苏格兰口音,穿着苏格兰短裙的男导游也神秘莫测:『现在的英女王同是英格兰和苏格兰的女王,所以这顶王冠,暂时是属于英国皇室的。不过等到下一任君主上位,王冠可要还给苏格兰喽!』

同行的朋友看这东西金光闪闪,简直什么贵镶什么,就酸酸地说:『戴上一时爽,不过脖子也要断了吧?』

爽,都在心里呀!我当时这么想着。

有人造过一个词,叫『技术投胎』,指他人生下来就在一般人花多少力气也到不了的起点。

举个🌰,就好比你很享受谈恋爱时看看电影拉拉手,暂称穷光蛋式的浪漫。突然有一天女朋友告诉你,现在搞对象,流行先给女方浪掷千金,豪宅起送,比如,她就收到过这么N套......这起点太不一样了,值得生气。

说实话,我们这种平凡人,光想着自己没受到的好处了,要怎么理解技术投胎后的烦恼。《The Crown》里出现的哪一个人不是技术投胎的受益者。很多人说欲戴王冠必承其重。知道重,但具体有多重?太抽象了。

那就换一个角度讲讲吧:技术投胎者要吃的苦,你也没吃到呀!张女士的那句话反过来怎么说?你穿不上的华袍也沾不上虱。

我试着厘清一下这部女王养成记里的主要人物的关系。如果这里史实虚构傻傻分不清楚,请不要怪我,毕竟我看的还是一部讲皇室的肥皂剧。

来自宇宙时尚大刊Vogue

伊丽莎白二世倒霉的爸爸,老国王乔治六世,作为次子,本来根本就摊不上当国王的使命。他那位性格软弱的哥哥,伊丽莎白二世的伯父,曾经的爱德华八世,后来的温莎公爵,在二战时面对德国人性格十分软弱,想了一个逃进温柔乡的办法让皇室蒙羞,讨离异、且前夫在世的美国交际花当老婆,在这件事上开了个头。于是这位《国王的演讲》里写的乔治六世,只能结结巴巴上位,又几乎没过上什么好日子,就罹病去世了。他母亲玛丽王太后说,我的一个儿子是被另一个儿子害死的。

温莎公爵和妻子演的是一场被贬谪到法国,有家回不了的苦命鸳鸯戏。皇室说起『那个女人』,也是一副咬牙切齿的样子。为了维持奢靡的生活,两人表面上与皇室维持友好关系,想尽办法领津贴,私下则骂骂咧咧。真爱说了那么多遍,不是为了撒狗粮,而是为了说服自己,没有做错选择。

公爵心里也不是不想当王。这个念想变成了法国家中的阁楼,里面装满了他短暂身为『爱德华八世』时的纪念品,变成了他时常吹响的苏格兰风笛。这个念想,变成了他与庶人同看伊丽莎白二世加冕典礼电视直播时的刻薄吐槽。侄女真正戴上王冠的时刻,直播中断了。别人问他这个『圈内人』,为什么?他说,『因为此刻,她就是神。』

也来自Vogue,这个角选得跟原型好,像,啊

谁要当这个没有实权,又一辈子被约束的神啊?

但这种事,没的选。『神』身边的人,也没的选。

女王小时候帮助过父亲在加冕典礼前演习向教会、议会、人民宣誓。轮到她自己的时候,她问能不能借帝国王冠来练习。

『借?这顶王冠不是你的,又是谁的呢?』

老国王得知自己重病后主要做了两件事,一件是安排女儿访问邦国,另一件就是给女婿安排工作。周围的侍从都虚情假意,只有老国王知道自己时不久矣,特意挑了一个大雾天,带着大家都不看好的女婿去猎鸭子。

史传这位女婿,菲利普亲王,是出了名的喜欢裸睡,剧拍得很仔细,出现了好几个早晨他光屁股被叫醒的场面。这次是老国王亲自出马。在湖上,老国王一句点破:亲王这个职称,才不是你的工作呢。

『She, is the job』。爱她,保护她,没有比这更伟大的爱国了。看到这里有些泪目。

女王的丈夫,就这样变成了一个被闲置的男人。他的孩子不能继承他的名字,要姓温莎,他不能先行于他的妻子,他必须在加冕典礼上向自己的妻子下跪,余生必须留守白金汉宫,他也不能继续自己的海军事业。为了培养点爱好,他跟着玛格丽特公主的姘头学开飞机,几乎提前感受中年危机

女王的妹妹,玛格丽特公主在剧中的性格十分飒爽,爸爸在世时的一句『Lilibet is my pride, but Margaret is my joy』让她恃宠若娇,但并不令人讨厌。22岁的玛格丽特爱上爸爸身边比她年长16岁的侍从,又是离异,前妻在世,人民拥护的姻缘却被英国教会否定。姐姐作为皇室家长不能支持她的自由婚姻,也是一种痛苦。

真美啊这个set,一身衣服也喜欢

还有一条线没有说,丘吉尔,倔强的人民领袖战后服老的一段,人物刻画得特别好,不展开讲了。提示大家注意他和女王口音的神还原,还有很多场景服装的设置,都是这部剧讲究的地方。

至于不仅有王冠还有很多顶帽子的女王本人,还在超长待机呢,也是真敢拍。提供一个小道消息:《王冠》一共会出五季,每季跨度十年。掐指一算也能拍到现在了。

很多人还提到,这部剧是靠钱砸出来的。就凭能让平凡人看到极尽完美中的身不由己,该砸。

 2 ) 王冠之下:年轻时代的女王

海报上面的那个女孩,黑白阴影之间,眉目轮廓清淡而凛冽,垂目低视。 这部不像美剧的美剧《女王》,乍一看,似乎是BBC出品,叙事节奏平缓,剧本扎实有力,带有一股浓浓的英伦味道。 虽然两部剧之间没有关系,但是,在第一眼,我即想起了那部《无人生还》。也许是英国的风格太凛冽,但凡有一点相似,便会唤醒脑海中的回忆。

这部剧的故事从菲利普亲王迎娶伊丽莎白女王开始。伊丽莎白二世,在中国,我们习惯调侃她的在位时间。 那位在二零一二年伦敦奥运会上从飞机上一“跳”而下,震惊了所有年轻人的高龄女王陛下。 她的父亲,乔治六世,同样是一位有名的人物,以口吃闻名。 二零一二年《国王的演讲》以大势之姿横扫奥斯卡,讲的便是这位国王的故事。 故事的幕布便是从这位国王身上拉开。 他病了。他咳嗽、咳出了血沫子。紧接着,他被诊断出肿瘤。 《王冠》第一季的叙事,主线其实不是女王与亲王的婚姻,而是这位国王的病。 也恰恰是这位国王的病,暗示了接下来,女王的登基。 在平时的新闻中,我们经常看到有媒体赞颂菲利普亲王与女王的爱情。说,真正爱一个人,是为她放弃继承权,甘心守候在她身后。 那样的深情。 我们习惯了这样的符号。仿佛这样的深情,是与身俱来的。 但是,在《王冠》中,在女王未登基之前,这位深知自己不久于人世的国王与菲利普的一番谈话,证明了菲利普同样是一个普通的男人。他依然困惑,依然有自己的执着。他也不甘愿放弃自己的前途与职责。 但是,他娶的人是女王。 相比起大部分人称颂的说,第一集最后乔治六世对菲利普说的话,是父亲对女儿的爱。 或许是我心太冷硬。那就像是我们古代的王朝,父亲在死之前为儿子留下的一些贤臣。 乔治六世希望用自己最后的力量,帮下一任女王,解决后顾之忧。

比起后来女王的种种传奇,在未登基之前,她其实就像一个普通的女人,只不过,有着皇家的规范礼仪教养。 但是,在教堂里宣誓时,也会紧张得说不出话;在自己的爱情里面,也会不顾周围人的反对,执着地对自己的丈夫说“服从你。” 这个时候的女王,还未展露她的风范。 与其说,第一集是女王登基前的铺垫,不如说,是给乔治六世弹奏的欢送曲。 这样一位不敢在众人面前讲话的国王,“口吃”的国王,他或许是史上最有损礼仪的国王,但是,他一生为了国家而奉献自己。 得知自己肿瘤,即将不久于人世,他几乎连为自己伤心的时间都没有,化妆、掩盖自己的病容,和再度上任的丘吉尔会面。 他在努力维持一个作为国王的尊严。 直到那个圣诞夜晚,他知道了自己的肿瘤,当地的民众们遵从礼仪风俗,举着灯来为国王陛下祷告。 他终于红了眼眶。 大概,那是他一直拼命做好一个国王的铠甲之下,死亡来临之际,破冰而出的疲倦,与对这个国家的眷恋。

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 3 ) How accurate is The Crown? We sort fact from fiction in the royal drama, series one (Hugo Vickers)

原文链接

Series one, episode one: Wolferton Splash

The series opens with King George VI spewing blood into a lavatory pan, to indicate that he is a sick man. Before the opening credits, there is a scene in which the King invests Prince Philip, as Duke of Edinburgh. Prince Philip is described as a Prince of Greece and ‘of’ Denmark. Then the King knights him as he bestows titles on him in the wrong order, and only then gives him the Order of the Garter. There is a scene in which the King uses the ‘C’ word. We are introduced to the Prince Philip character, portrayed throughout the series as a kind of ‘Jack the Lad’, smoking a cigarette on the day before the wedding and treating it all as something of a game.

This episode introduces the various themes. We see tension between the King and Prince Philip, we meet Group Captain Peter Townsend hovering amorously around Princess Margaret, and Princess Elizabeth preparing for her future role, at work with her father.

At the 1947 royal wedding Prince Philip’s mother is depicted in a nun’s habit – in reality she was a civilian then and did not adopt the habit (which she wore at the Coronation) until 1948. But this allows Queen Elizabeth (the Queen Mother) to describe her disparagingly as ‘the hun nun’. But then she calls her daughter ‘Elizabeth’ when it was always ‘Lilibet’. There are scenes in Malta of Princess Elizabeth’s carefree life, though her son, Prince Charles, was not in Malta at that time.

The King has to have an operation, so we see Princess Margaret waiting anxiously with Queen Mary and the King with his doctors. There are gory scenes of the lung being removed and the lung is wrapped up in a copy of The Times (a story gleaned from Hugh Trevor-Roper’s letters). There is a scene where Sir John Weir, the well-known homeopathic doctor, informs the King of the gravity of his illness despite the operation. It is curious that this role was assigned to Weir. In reality he failed to give the King proper advice. He was even mistrusted by the admirable Dr Margery Blackie, the most distinguished of homeopathic doctors, who had little time for him.

In 1948 Dermot Morrah, a respected Times writer, reported privately that the King was in danger of losing his leg: ‘One special source of anxiety is his personal physician – a homeopathic quack with a fascination for women, some of whom planted him on Edward, Prince of Wales, who bequeathed him to his successor as official medical officer. Of course they’ve called in good men as consultants, Cassidy and Learmouth especially, but this old menace is there all the time, and it was he who let the trouble go to this length before sounding the alarm.’

It was as bad in 1951, in which this episode is set. Weir accompanied the King to Balmoral for the summer. The worldly doctor enjoyed himself shooting with Scottish dukes. Only when the local doctor was called in was the gravity of the King’s illness appreciated, resulting in him being whisked down to London to have his lung removed. Following that, those who understood such things realised that the King’s life was likely to be short.

This episode depicts Churchill becoming Prime Minister again (in October 1951), and suggests that neither he nor the King are in good health, the King is forced to wear rouge (which was the case). In reality it is not certain how much the King was told about his state of health. The episode ends with Princess Elizabeth looking at the King’s boxes, and in a sense facing her destiny.

A minor mistake: Princess Elizabeth’s car has the royal coat of arms on it. This is reserved for the monarch. Lady Churchill’s GBE riband at the wedding is too red and too wide.

Series one, episode two: Hyde Park Corner

Episode 1 warned us that the King’s life was in danger. Episode 2 carries him off. It starts with Princess Elizabeth arriving in Kenya on the first leg of the proposed Commonwealth tour she is undertaking on her father’s behalf.

We see the royal limousine arriving at an event and the Royal Standard fluttering on the front of it, the inference here being that Princess Elizabeth has already become Queen, but no, it is the wrong Royal Standard. Princess Elizabeth’s would have had a label of three white points. Soon afterwards a cocky Prince Philip mocks a Kikuyu chieftain for wearing a medal to which he is apparently not entitled, in fact a VC, though this is not explained. This was in February 1952 and yet Prince Philip was wearing a 1953 Coronation medal, which, arguably, might not have mattered, but for the fact that he was chiding someone else for wearing the wrong medal.

As they arrive at Treetops for the fateful night of 5/6 February, the Prince Philip character does a Crocodile Dundee feat in seeing off a bull elephant. In reality there were no elephants there that day or night.

The scenes in which Lord Salisbury is seen plotting to get rid of Churchill have not been well received by the Cecil family due to inaccuracies. He would never have elicited the help of Lord Mountbatten, for example. Anthony Eden did not go to Sandringham to ask the King to exercise his constitutional right to remove the Prime Minister from office on account of his incapacity to run the country properly, least of all in February 1952. Churchill himself is given a fictitious secretary called Venetia Scott, so that she can play a role in Episode 4.

Following the King’s death, we see a gruesome scene in which Princess Margaret visits the body of her father during the embalming process. Churchill did not broadcast in the presence of the entire Cabinet, yet his actual words are as moving to listen to today as they surely were at the time. Tommy Lascelles, the Private Secretary, is invested with a most sinister role. He is given good lines, such as when he passes on the Queen Mother’s offer to Townsend to become her Comptroller at Clarence House: ‘I don’t expect you to accept.’

Minor mistakes: It was not Lascelles who told Churchill of the King’s death, it was Sir Edward Ford; Queen Mary was told by Lady Cynthia Colville, not by a footman; it is unlikely that Princess Elizabeth had just written to her father before hearing of his death; Queen Mary did not come to Sandringham to curtsy to the new Queen (that happened at Marlborough House); there is no evidence that Lascelles caught Princess Margaret and Townsend kissing; contemporary evidence proves that the Queen Mother did not cry hysterically when she heard of the King’s death (she was far too stoical); Martin Charteris did not disappear from royal service immediately after the King’s death (he became part of the team, though no longer the new Queen’s actual Private Secretary). Some of these things are acceptable under the heading of dramatic licence.

Series one, episode three: Windsor

Back we go to 1936, seeing Princess Elizabeth and Princess Margaret playing just before their uncle, King Edward VIII, broadcasts his Abdication speech. There is no way that Queen Mary would have come into the room to see the King to try to dissuade him from broadcasting. And Mrs Simpson was not hovering in the background as he made that speech. In reality she was in Cannes. In the real abdication speech he was announced as ‘His Royal Highness Prince Edward’ not as Duke of Windsor.

Presently there are many scenes involved with the aftermath of King George VI’s death, the young Queen wearing black and sometimes a black veil, and Tommy Lascelles becoming ever more the dominant figure in the Palace.

Two big issues are explored to show how Prince Philip no longer has any say in the running of his family. There are many scenes of the redecoration of Clarence House, and he wants the family to stay there. He insists that the Queen puts this proposal to Churchill. The other issue is the family name. It is understood that, in real life, the Queen and Prince Philip would have preferred to stay at Clarence House, which was the perfect London home for a young family, not too big, and with a well-sized garden. Buckingham Palace has always served multiple purposes: a series of state rooms, offices for members of the Household, and the King and Queen’s rooms along a long corridor on the Constitution Hill side. It must have been a bit like living in an Edwardian hotel. But Churchill insisted that the monarch must live in the Palace, and so they moved in on 5 May 1952. The Queen Mother moved into Clarence House on 18 May 1953.

The name issue was another genuine cause for Prince Philip to be upset. As seen in this episode, Lord Mountbatten, curiously dressed for dinner in his own home (Broadlands) as an Admiral, boasts, with some justification, that the House of Mountbatten now reigns in Britain. Normally the male who marries a Queen Regnant gives his name to the new house, hence Queen Victoria was the last Queen of the House of Hanover which became Saxe-Coburg when she married Prince Albert in 1840. Prince Ernst August of Hanover was at Mountbatten’s table in 1952 and did not like what he heard. He informed Queen Mary who called for Jock Colville, then Private Secretary to Winston Churchill. The Prime Minister duly informed the Queen that the Royal House must be called the House of Windsor. There is a fictional scene in which the Queen reads out this declaration to the Privy Council.

It is true that Prince Philip was livid about this though, in reality, he wanted it called the House of Edinburgh, rather than Mountbatten, the preferred choice of his ever-manipulative uncle. Harold Macmillan recorded that Prince Philip wrote a well-reasoned memorandum making his case, but the Government would not countenance the Mountbatten name being used. In opposing Prince Philip, ministers such as Macmillan were keen to send ‘a shot across his bows’, to keep the young consort in his place.

The Duke of Windsor comes over for his brother’s funeral, and the series makes much of the newly styled Queen Mother’s hostility to him. The Duke of Windsor also wants various things. There is a lot of bargaining in this episode. The Queen asks Churchill to do her a favour by informing the Cabinet about the Mountbatten name, claiming that she is keeping him in office by agreeing to a delayed Coronation. In fact the Coronation was always planned for June 1953 as it takes a long time to arrange such a ceremony.

Then Churchill asks the Duke of Windsor to help put various points to the Queen – for example to be an intermediary over the other two issues of this episode, the family name and the move to Buckingham Palace. In exchange, the Duke wants to retain the allowance King George VI promised him (which ceased at the King’s death) and again demanded an HRH for the Duchess. There is a curious scene in which three contrasting aspects of love are explored – we see a sequence with the Windsors dancing romantically, the Queen and Prince Philip at the opera (where he takes her hand), and Princess Margaret popping in to Townsend’s office to kiss him with some passion.

The Duke of Windsor then lunches with the Queen, which did not happen in real life, and puts Churchill’s two points to her. Most erroneously, we find the new young Queen turning to the Duke of Windsor for avuncular advice. He is presented as a sage and explains in the almost Shakespearean language the scriptwriters give him why she, as a monarch, must move from Clarence House to Buckingham Palace.

Alex Jennings, the actor, looks incredibly like the Duke of Windsor, but the real life Duke never delivered such Shakespearean oratory. Nor would the real Queen ever have asked for advice from a man so patently incapable of giving it.

The Duke of Windsor had been immensely tiresome ever since the Abdication in 1936, and Tommy Lascelles had seen him off on more than one occasion, most effectively in 1945. The Royal Family felt gravely let down by the Abdication, and Lascelles wrote at one point in the 1940s that any appearance in Britain by the Duke would have a grave effect on the health and peace of mind of George VI. Later on, in real life, the Queen was courteous to her uncle, and various rapprochements were made before he died, but the trouble with the Duke of Windsor was that if he was given an inch, he would take a mile.

In other themes, we see Prince Philip asking Group Captain Townsend to teach him to fly, a theme followed up in the next episode. He did learn at White Waltham, near Maidenhead, but was taught by Flight Lieutenant C.R. Gordon, of Cheltenham. He received his wings from Air Chief Marshal Sir William Dickson, on 4 May 1953, having flown for 90 to 100 hours.

The film-makers also introduce the idea that Prince Philip bullied Prince Charles, which is again addressed in later episodes.

Minor mistakes: Prince Philip was a descendant of the royal houses of Greece and Denmark, but not of Norway. King Haakon of Norway (1872-1957) was a Prince of Denmark who was given the Norwegian throne in 1905.

A recurring mistake throughout the series: All the characters arrive at Buckingham Palace through the ceremonial front gates. Normally they enter via the gate to the right near Constitution Hill.

Series one, episode four: Act of God

This is a curious episode based on the great fog that descended on London between 5 and 9 December 1952. This fog caused some spontaneous burglaries and one murder. London was perfectly used to fog, so it was not treated as a particular emergency until much later when it was estimated that between 4,000 and 12,000 people died – though most of them had breathing problems or were very old. Most of this episode is fictional and did not happen. Obviously the scenes involving Churchill’s fictional secretary, Venetia Scott, were made up. She is killed when hit by a bus, but since there was no public transport, other than trains on the London Underground, due to the fog, this could not have happened.

The film-makers then involve Churchill failing to take action, the question of Clement Attlee, the Leader of the Opposition, potentially turning the situation to political advantage, and Churchill’s decision to visit a hospital during the crisis, but all this is fiction too. Interestingly the fog did not rate a mention in Martin Gilbert’s official biography of Churchill.

The other scenes involve Prince Philip learning to fly and Government annoyance at this. Queen Mary falls ill and takes to her bed, attended by Sir John Weir. The Queen walks through the fog to visit her ailing grandmother to discuss what is expected of her as a monarch.

Series one, episode five: Smoke and Mirrors

There is a flashback to 11 May, with George VI explaining the significance of anointing in the Coronation ceremony, and talking of the weight of the crown, both actual and symbolic. The action then moves forward to 1953, with the Queen trying on the same crown before her Coronation.

Queen Mary falls gravely ill, which brings the Duke of Windsor over. In this series he comes from France, though he actually came with his sister, the Princess Royal, from New York. There are lots of opportunities for him to complain to the Duchess of Windsor about his family, his mother and his treatment. The Queen is warned by the Queen Mother to be wary of the Duke – ‘like mercury, he’ll slip through the tiniest crack.’ During his visit, the Duke is summoned from Marlborough House to Lambeth Palace where he finds the Archbishop of Canterbury, Tommy Lascelles and one other, ranged against him explaining why he should not attend the Coronation and that the Duchess would not be invited. The Duke is furious, but he agrees to put out a statement explaining why he won’t be there.

While he is at Lambeth Palace, a message comes through that Queen Mary has died. In reality the Duke was not at Lambeth Palace. Her funeral is shown (with the Royal Standard on her coffin, not her personal standard).

In real life, the question of the Duke’s possible attendance preoccupied the Archbishop of Canterbury as early as November 1952 and he raised the matter with the Queen at lunch. It was agreed that his presence ‘would create a very difficult situation for everybody, and if had not the wits to see that for himself, then he ought to be told it.’ Churchill took the line that while it was understandable that the Duke would wish to be present at family funerals, it would be completely inappropriate for him to attend the Coronation of one of his successors. Tommy Lascelles wrote to the Duke’s lawyers making it clear that no summons would be forthcoming. A statement was prepared for the Duke to issue to save face, but he must have alarmed the British Government by giving an interview at Cherbourg in which he said he might well be in England at the time of the ceremony. As it happened he and the Duchess stayed in Paris and watched it on television with friends, a scene recreated in this episode. We see the Duke explaining the proceedings in the Abbey, again in Shakespearean phrases, to a group of undistinguished guests. The episode ends with him playing his bagpipes outside the house, with tears in his eyes, presumably to hint that he is regretting all that he discarded.

The other main theme in this episode is the role of Prince Philip in the preparations and also in respect of the part he intends to play in the ceremony. Here he only agrees to chair the Coronation Committee if he has total control and we see him coming out with all sorts of modern ideas for the day, such as inviting Trade Union leaders and businessmen to take part. He is told that some things cannot be changed. There is a row with the Queen and he tells her he refuses to kneel before her to do homage. In the end he is obliged to do so, but he is given credit for insisting the ceremony be televised.

Having written a book on the Coronation and delved into the Archbishop of Canterbury’s papers I can testify that these reveal the Archbishop of Canterbury, pushing Prince Philip out as much as possible. He pronounced: “There must be no association of him in any way with the process & rite of Coronation.” Yet they also show that Prince Philip was quite happy to do fealty after the Archbishop (when he could have been expected to go first) and that he presented a silver gilt wafer box to the Abbey, and a chalice and paten to Lambeth as a form of offering to respect taking his place next to the Queen during the communion.

Unlike other flaky consorts such as Prince Claus of the Netherlands and Prince Henrik of Denmark, Prince Philip was raised within the Royal House of Greece. But for the birth of the future King Constantine in 1940, he would have ended up as King of Greece in 1964, and marriage with Princess Elizabeth would have been out of the question. In real life he adapted quickly to his changed circumstances, but in The Crown, they put him in conflict at every opportunity.

The Coronation scene was a wonderful opportunity to create a scene of great visual magnificence but it fell seriously short in regard to a great number of details. Earl Mountbatten, seated in the front row of the Royal Box (he was not in the front row) appears dressed in ducal robes, and is not wearing his Garter collar. Nor is the supporting actor representing the Queen’s uncle, the Duke of Gloucester. The Marquess of Salisbury carries the Sword of State (which he did at the actual Coronation), but he crowns himself with an Earl’s coronet. The Dowager Duchess of Devonshire (Mistress of the Robes) fails to put on a coronet. The oath was not administered during the anointing but before it. There are a number of peeresses sitting where the Peers sat in reality. Thus this scene is one of the least convincing in the series.

The St Edward’s Crown with which the Queen is crowned was far too big, but this may have been intentional to demonstrate the burden the Queen was assuming.

Series one, episode six: Gelignite

The theme of this episode is the Princess Margaret – Peter Townsend love affair and their attempt to marry in 1953. The opening scene shows the Queen and Prince Philip going to the Coronation Derby, but we then see a newspaper office where an unshaven journalist has picked up what he realises is a huge scoop (hence ‘gelignite’) – Princess Margaret having been observed picking some fluff off the jacket of Group Captain Peter Townsend at the Coronation – he being by then a divorced equerry. Princess Margaret and Townsend are on the point of accompanying the Queen Mother on an official visit to Rhodesia.

The Princess invites the Queen and Prince Philip to dine with her and Townsend and they believe that they have her blessing, but they soon run up against the establishment. Tommy Lascelles invokes the Royal Marriages Act of 1772, which stated that no lineal descendant of George II could marry without the consent of the Sovereign, and so Princess Margaret is asked to wait for two years. The series suggests that the Queen deceived her sister by appearing to support her wish to marry him and then eventually forbidding it. The film-makers imply that the Princess never forgave her sister, a theme which recurs in later episodes. The essence of this episode is more or less correct, but the sequence of events is somewhat muddled. Since there are also a number of contradictory accounts left by Peter Townsend, Tommy Lascelles, and Princess Margaret to her biographer, it is hard to settle on a true version, since that true version depends on which source is trusted.

Lascelles appears at his most severe in this episode, a Satanic and menacing figure. This is an interpretation that might well have resonated with the real life Princess Margaret, not to mention the real life Peter Townsend.

There is no doubt that Princess Margaret fell in love with the Group Captain. He was the trusted equerry of the father she adored and a Battle of Britain hero. He was rather a gentle figure. However, as Lascelles made clear to him in no uncertain terms, he had been placed in a position of trust and responsibility. He was a married man with two sons and he was considerably older than the Princess. The real Lascelles said of him: ‘He has Theudas trouble’, a reference to the Acts of the Apostles: ‘For before these days rose up Theudas, boasting himself to be somebody.’ Churchill made it clear that the Queen could not sanction the marriage. So Townsend was sent away to Brussels, where he stayed for two years. By the time he returned in 1955, when the British public were agog to know whether the marriage would take place, the path of love had completely run its course. This is the main theme of Episode 10.

Minor mistakes: The costume department gave Townsend his CVO, but failed to give the actor playing Lascelles any medals or Orders (by 1953 he was entitled to a GCVO, CMG, MC and various other medals); in Rhodesia, there was a Governor-type figure in a Guards tunic with a GCB, but only bar ribbons for medals. At one point we see the telephone switchboard, which includes Highgrove House. This is the house that the Duchy of Cornwall bought for Prince Charles in 1980, so it would not have been on the switchboard in the 1950s.

Series one, episode seven: Scientia Potentia Est

It is 1940 and the Princesses are with their French governess. Princess Elizabeth goes to Eton College to be instructed by the Provost, Sir Henry Marten (not Vice-Provost as stated in the series). This leads to the Queen wishing to be better educated – knowledge is power - and as the story moves on into 1953, one of the themes is that she wants a tutor to help expand her general knowledge. Martin Charteris such a figure called Professor Hodge, but he is a completely fictitious character. The Queen did not seek a tutor to help her and nor would she ever have taken advice over constitutional matters from a figure outside the Palace system.

Retirement, or rather non-retirement, is in the air. Churchill is getting old and rather desperate, but refusing to go. The Anthony Eden character is ill in Boston, rather luridly so, taking injections, the implication being that he was almost a drug addict (a theme which gets worse in subsequent episodes). Then Churchill has two strokes. Evidently the Queen is not informed and so the fictitious Hodge urges her to summon Churchill and Lord Salisbury to tick them off like recalcitrant schoolboys. The Crown plays out the two wiggings. Symbolically this is to demonstrate that the Queen is getting on top of her role as an assured constitutional monarch.

Tommy Lascelles is also about to retire. In this series, the Queen wants her former Private Secretary, Martin Charteris, to take over and even offers him the job. He and his wife (Gay in real life, but here carelessly called Mary - the name of his daughter), go to look at the Private Secretary’s new home at St James’s Palace and have a tree trimmed outside it. They even say the house will be good for ‘the girls’. (In real life they had the one daughter and two sons). Michael Adeane hears about this, is aggrieved, and complains to Lascelles, who engineers that he does succeed him and not Charteris. Once again Lascelles proves himself more dominant and the Queen’s private wishes are set aside.

This is inaccurate. It is traditional that the monarch’s serving Private Secretary stays on for a few months at the beginning of a new reign to help with the transition as did Lascelles until after the Coronation, retiring at the age of sixty-six on the last day of 1953. Michael Adeane and Martin Charteris were working as a team (along with Edward Ford, who is not portrayed in the series). Michael Adeane was always the natural successor, and there was no fuss. He took over.

In this episode, the film-makers have put a 1972 story into a 1953 context, presumably so that they could use the Lascelles figure. There was a fuss over Adeane’s successor when he retired. At that time Charteris was the natural successor but Lord Cobbold, a former Governor of the Bank of England, wanted to sweep away the Guards officer Old Etonian types who held sway in the Palace and replace them with more meritocratic types. He tried to reject Charteris in favour of Philip Moore. But Charteris went to see the Queen and asked to take over. She immediately agreed, and he proved to be an inspired Private Secretary, who succeeded perhaps better than any other Private Secretary in presenting her to the world as she really is. He served until 1977.

The message that emerges from this episode is that the Queen is conscientious, prepared to do her homework and research, with a knack for discovering the truth when it is kept from her – as, for example, with Churchill’s two strokes (though Lord Salisbury is unlikely to have been willfully withholding this information from her).

Lascelles is well played in the series, though his older daughter (now 94) has said that his hair parting is wrong and his moustache too big. By curious misfortune, the actor playing Michael Adeane looks more like the real life Martin Charteris.

Series one, episode eight: Pride and Joy

The King used to say of his two daughters: ‘Lilibet is my pride, and Margaret my joy.’ (This is something first published by me in my biography of the Queen Mother and therefore explains the title of this episode). Here there is a complete jumble of the real life facts. The episode starts with a scene where the Queen unveils a statue to King George VI in the Mall. This was in fact unveiled on 6 October 1955. But suddenly plans are being made for the Commonwealth tour of 1953 and 1954, so the story moves back in time.

There is particular discussion about Gibraltar as a place that could be dangerous. This was quite true. There were threats from the Spanish and for a visit of less than two days, there were detectives from Scotland Yard operating under cover there for several months. There are some scenes from the Commonwealth tour demonstrating the Queen’s determination to undertake it all, and the strain this put on her. At one point the press see the Queen and Prince Philip emerging from a house after a row. Rightly, they stress the success of the tour.

The film-makers decided that while the Queen was away on her Commonwealth tour, the country would be run by Princess Margaret, rather than the Queen Mother, enabling them to use her as a modernizer breaking all the rules and introducing a spontaneous and touchy-feely (quasi Diana, Princess of Wales) approach to being Head of State which, not surprisingly, upsets everyone. She rewrites a speech, suiting her wayward personality and introducing more colour into it, and delivers this at an Ambassadors’ reception (curiously British Ambassadors serving overseas, in Washington and Athens, who appear to have flown in for this occasion). She gets the guests laughing. The point they seek to make is that Princess Margaret thinks she would make a better Queen than her sister, more in tune with the changing times. The Charteris figure gets more and more worried as she chats to miners, gives spontaneous interviews to the media in which she mentions her affection for Townsend and takes a dig at the Queen. She gets ticked off by Churchill who begins to detect a crisis arising, akin to the Abdication. When the Queen comes back, Churchill alerts her to Princess Margaret’s behaviour.

None of the above happened and is ultimately tabloid invention. Nor do I subscribe to the idea that there was bitter jealousy between Princess Margaret and the Queen. Princess Margaret always supported her sister.

To achieve this, they blur the dates and have the Queen Mother out of the way, buying Barrogill Castle (later renamed the Castle of Mey) in Scotland, something which actually happened a whole year earlier, in 1952. Lascelles (who would by then have retired) tells the Queen Mother what her duties will be, but she tells him she wants to be away. The episode twists history by suggesting the Queen Mother was prepared to shirk all her responsibilities.

In reality the Queen Mother was very much in London while the Queen was away, not least looking after Prince Charles and Princess Anne, who stayed with her at Royal Lodge most weekends (when she was not away racing) and at Sandringham for a long Christmas holiday. She was the senior Counsellor of State during the Queen’s absence. Counsellors act in tandem and Princess Margaret usually assisted her. But Churchill had the same kind of audiences with the Queen Mother as he would have done with the Queen, but not so regularly. The film also has Princess Margaret being advised by Martin Charteris, when in real life, he was travelling with the Queen and Prince Philip.

As to the Castle of Mey scenes, the Queen Mother did not ride horses after the early 1930s, so to see her cantering along the beaches is somewhat strange. Nor is it likely that the castle’s funny old owner, Captain Imbert-Terry, would not have recognised her. While she stays with the Vyners, she addresses the issues of her early widowhood. As this is meant to be late 1953, and not 1952, this does not convince – even with dramatic licence.

Minor mistakes: At a fitting they dress Prince Philip in the naval uniform which he wore but once – at the Coronation, an outdated uniform with epaulettes; later, he wears a Garter riband and bar medals, which is incorrect. The Caribbean Governor in white is wearing what might be a curious interpretation of a military GBE riband along with a huge GCMG star. When Princess Margaret gives her speech, the guests are wearing Orders, but she is not.

Series one, episode nine: Assassins

In London in 1954 Jean Wallop, a private person still very much alive, arrives in a restaurant to dine with Lord Porchester (later 7th Earl of Carnarvon). He proposes to her. She accepts on one condition – that he does not still hold a torch for ‘her’ – i.e. the Queen. I have it on impeccable authority that the future Lady Carnarvon did not even know that he knew the Queen when she met him. The outcome of this scene is that he tells her that for the Queen there was only ever Prince Philip, and she (his bride to be) is the only one for him. The Porchesters were married in January 1956.

The Crown suggests that Porchester was the man many wanted the Queen to marry, and they hint that she would have been happier with him than with Prince Philip. For the record, the Queen Mother originally wanted Princess Elizabeth to marry a Grenadier Guards officer. The late Duke of Grafton springs to mind. But from very early on, she set her heart on the good looking Prince Philip. Soon after he returned from war, they were engaged. The Queen Mother told Sir Arthur Penn: ‘Won’t the Grenadier Guards be disappointed?’ They were and at first refused to have Prince Philip as their Colonel.

The episode depicts Porchester ringing the Queen late at night, with a certain number of double entendres, his wife-to-be coming through from the bathroom. The Queen’s love of racing is emphasized as is Prince Philip’s boredom with it. This theme is rather dropped as the episode goes on, though in one scene, the Queen and Prince Philip watch a mare being covered, with Lord Porchester observing from afar and with some predictably cheap lines. Afterwards Prince Philip jumps out of the Land Rover in a rage. This is followed by a scene back home with a declaration of love by the Queen for Prince Philip.

Lord Carnarvon was a close adviser to the Queen as her racing manager and she often stayed with him and his wife to visit studs in the Berkshire area. Both she and Prince Philip flew down from Balmoral to attend his funeral in 2001.

The Graham Sutherland story is well told. Sutherland was commissioned to paint Churchill’s portrait to be presented to him in Westminster Hall for his 80th birthday on 30 November 1954. Peter Morgan is on firm ground here as it is within the political domain. Intermingled with this is the theme that Churchill should stand down. There is a fictional scene where Eden visits Churchill at Chartwell and bids him to give way in a histrionic, hysterical way – presaging the recurring theme that he was some kind of junkie. As to the portrait itself, it was revealed after her death in 1977 that Lady Churchill had destroyed it. In 1957 she described Churchill’s reaction to the painting in a letter to Lord Beaverbrook: ‘it wounded him deeply that this brilliant … painter with whom he had made friends while sitting for him should see him as a gross & cruel monster.’

There is a partly fictitious version of the speech he gave in Westminster Hall in which he teases the audience that he is about to retire and that his successor, Anthony Eden, is to hand. It appears that he then promptly resigns and with the brutality of the political system, as he leaves the Palace, Eden’s car draws up. The Queen’s speech at Churchill’s farewell dinner was taken from a private letter from the Queen to Churchill after his resignation and not delivered as such on the night. As we listen to it, we see another scene – Lady Churchill presiding over the burning of the Sutherland portrait.

In reality Churchill did not resign immediately after his 80th birthday in November 1954. He hung on in office until April 1955.

Series one, episode ten: Gloriana

The episode reprises the events of December 1936. Edward VIII agrees to see his brother, the Duke of York, but not the Duchess (there is no evidence for that). Then the new King informs his daughters that their uncle has put love before duty. He tells them never to let each other down thus introducing the theme that there could be tension between them later on.

A Royal Standard is hoisted over Balmoral. It is Princess Margaret’s 25th birthday (21 August 1955) and she declares she still feels the same way about Group Captain Townsend. It seems possible that she can now marry him. But the Queen discusses the Royal Marriages Act with Michael Adeane. He invokes a different version of the situation. He mentions that both Houses of Parliament need to approve and the need to wait for 12 months. Still under the illusion that she is free to marry, Princess Margaret wants to announce it.

Another scene shows Prince Philip teaching Prince Charles to fish so that we realise that he is quite tough on the boy. The Queen Mother voices the opinion that Prince Philip is taking it out on Charles due to the frustrations of his life. The Crown likes to think that the Queen Mother is very thick with Lascelles, in his retirement. She relied on him a bit after the King’s death but Lascelles took a dim view of her philosophy of life, considering it was best summed up in the hymn: ‘the rich man in his castle, the poor man at his gate’. But it gives them the idea that Prince Philip was sent by the Queen to open the Olympic Games in Melbourne, Australia in November 1956 to get him out of the way, to get him away from bullying his son and in the hope, as expressed clearly in this episode, that he would come back ‘changed’. But this all happens in August 1955 and he did not undertake the voyage until October 1956.

The second and final round in the Princess Margaret – Peter Townsend drama is played out. We see headlines speculating as to whether or not she is going to marry the Group Captain.

Apparently Prince Philip is somewhat in league with Princess Margaret over the marriage question. Townsend returns and they run together in a passionate embrace. Then come the problems, the involvement of the Attorney-General, the threat that Lord Salisbury will resign if the marriage takes place, the Queen saying she will support her in any way she can, but then that she would be deprived of money and titles, and have to live abroad for several years as Mrs Peter Townsend. Princess Margaret claims the country is on her side. The invented words of their father about mutual support are repeated by the Queen.

Then it all gets worse, with the Cabinet advising against the marriage, the Archbishop of Canterbury and other Bishops reminding the Queen that she is Defender of the Faith and of the oath made at the Coronation, and finally the Queen seeking advice from the Duke of Windsor in France. He tells her ‘You must protect the kingdom’. And so, in this episode, the Queen’s line is that Princess Margaret cannot marry Townsend and remain part of the family.

In reality, Eden did advise the Queen at Balmoral, but there was no involvement from the Archbishop, and the Duke of Windsor was in no position to pontificate about the role as sister and Queen, and duty to the realm.

The film-makers maintain that Princess Margaret broke off from Townsend because she had been forbidden to marry him. Furthermore, she tells him she will never marry anyone else. And then Townsend makes a public statement, in fact reading much of the written statement that in reality Princess Margaret issued to the press. He then returns to Brussels.

In truth, the decision was a mutual one between Princess Margaret and the Group Captain, largely based on the fact that Lascelles’s separation plan had worked and the love between them had died.

None of the characters are happy at the end of this episode. Princess Margaret is seen depressed at parties, and Peter Townsend sitting forlornly alone in his apartment in Brussels. Prince Philip is angry at being sent away on the long tour.

The situation with Nasser in Egypt is flagged up during this episode, meetings with Eden, more pills being taken and in the end, Anthony Eden slumped in front of burning cine-film of Nasser, having just stuck a needle full of drugs into his arm – followed by an image of the Queen posing in tiara and evening dress, next to the Crown Jewels which have been brought to the Palace for effect. She is shown as an assured and confident young monarch while the ever-frustrated Prince Philip drives off down the Mall in his open care, all alone, looking distinctly fed up.

I should be grateful that it is Cecil Beaton who gets the last word in both this series and Series two, extolling the virtues of monarchy with Shakespearean lines. Nevertheless Claire Foy’s Queen looks ominously sad.

 4 ) 欲戴王冠,必承其重——从历史的角度偷窥英国王室生活

美国人投资拍的英剧,本来会有所怀疑其成色。但放映过后,即使是“网剧”,也丝毫不亚于BBC的作品,所有豆瓣会有9分以上的高分,拿开有色眼镜的群众眼睛才是雪亮的。花了一周的空余时间撸完全季,看了一下时间,已是00:09。感叹一下,第二天早上再写剧评吧。
        第一季的时间节点放在二战前后,由于是纪实类的电视剧,情节大多尊重史实。所以给我们这些观众一个温习英国史的机会。读大学的时候深感高中时历史课太短,一节课能讲完中国一个朝代,一节课也能谈完一场世界大战,朝代、战争前后的种种都被老师一句带过,让我这位历史迷好不过瘾。但几年高等教育时间匆匆而过,工作之后,离开图书馆那浩于烟海的历史图书,才觉得读书的可贵。但选择容易上手的历史书籍也很重要,这部电视剧也很容易上手,边看边查阅百度百科,渐渐能看出门道。
       本剧围绕女王身边的人,亲属,近臣以及政府高官,线索千丝万缕,每一集也能保持主题不散,实在难得。女王在登基过程中遇到的种种故事或危机,比如父亲的去世,比如与丘吉尔的相处,比如不省心的妹妹的爱情故事,比如渐行渐远的夫妻感情,还有控制欲极强的内侍。年代离我们现今相去甚远,但依然会有我们熟悉的历史剧情,爱江山不爱美人的温莎公爵退位,丘吉尔重新上台,国王去世,女王登基。殖民地慢慢瓦解,雾霾灾情严重,国内物资短缺,面对着内忧外患,女王只能通过自己的巡游给子民们生活的信心。虽然丘吉尔一直活在二战的过去美梦里,虽然年事已高,但依然是年轻女王的好帮手。每天向女王汇报国情动向,对女王关心的事情给予建议,估计丘吉尔的辞职女王会怀念。相比之下前任艾德里以及后任艾登就弱很多,都整天想着丘吉尔下台,但下台之后碰到了苏黎世运河危机就又辞职了,所以丘吉尔的自傲是值得尊重的,所以他被评选为二十世纪英国最伟大的人物。
        英剧的演员都不是很熟,但演技完全在线。虽然有些与实际的人物并不形似,比如丘吉尔的身高,但依然很有力的为你展现历史人物的风貌。观影过程中,你不会吐槽,你不能走神,你只会沉浸在当时的英伦故事里不能自拔。期待下一季。

 5 ) Age is cruel

《王冠》讲述的是初登大宝的伊丽莎白二世是如何从少不更事的公主蜕变为一代女王的故事,第九集《ASSASSINS》则向观众展示了耄耋之年的首相丘吉尔辞职心路与历程。二战后,英国从日不落帝国沦为二流国家,每个英国国民都希望年轻的女王都带领他们开启一个新时代,然而,现实中暮气沉沉的大英帝国,暮气沉沉的君主制度,暮气沉沉的政府首脑,一切都预示着荣光的远去与改革的势在必行。 和本季的另外九集相同,《ASSASSINS》多处使用隐喻手法营造出衰落中的英国与蜕变中的女王,通过深入丘吉尔与伊丽莎白二世的内心世界,探讨了在残酷的时光面前,所有的青春都在衰老,所有的心态都在逆转,而那些耀眼的光芒终将暗淡,一切都要回归自然。每个人都肩扛枷锁,负重前行。 本集在怀旧的音乐声中缓缓开场,曾真挚爱慕女王的育马师波尔契勋爵在多年后选择向另一位女子求婚。然而与此同时,编剧又使用极其隐晦的手法描述成功抱得美人归的菲利普却开始了眠花宿柳的放荡生活。在强烈的对比下,凸显时光残酷,流年下的情感难以保质。 年龄和思想同样是不可能在岁月流逝中保持新鲜的。即将迎来八十大寿的现任首相丘吉尔坐在池塘边画画。池塘在本集故事中是一个寓意性极强的工具,它象征在表面平静下的真实和痛苦,这个痛苦是属于本剧每个主要人物的——丘吉尔早年的丧女之痛与晚年对衰老的无奈,伊丽莎白女王面对丈夫出轨现状的无可奈何以及在女王与女人这两个身份中的左右为难。 现代派画家雷厄姆·萨瑟兰受议会两院委托前来为丘吉尔创作肖像画。在这个情节点中的二人谈话突出暴露了丘吉尔妄图逃避现实的思想困境。他希望站着,这样更有威严,更具活力,其中暗含不服老的心态,更是逃避的最佳写照。但萨瑟兰无情否决了他的提议,他更希望能描绘出真实。 与此同时,在另一条主线上,女王同样在演绎着时光的不可捉摸。赛马场上,她的爱马奥瑞尔成功拔得魁首。但波尔契却劝说女王让奥尔瑞在这个时候退休,巅峰时刻激流勇退才能让世人铭记辉煌,发挥最大的价值。 年老却恋栈的丘吉尔首相与激流勇退的奥瑞尔之间形成了鲜明的对照,奥瑞尔是丘吉尔最鲜明的衬托,丘吉尔却是奥瑞尔迟暮后的暗喻。主题意义来源于这不动声色中,现实在潜伏,思想在积淀,暮气与无奈的气氛开始笼罩全剧。 果不其然,外交部长安东尼前来游说丘吉尔,再次劝他辞职让位,此举惹得丘吉尔大怒。但骆驼背上的稻草已经开始积压。 值得一提的,作为一部高水准的历史剧,除了道具、装束、语言等方面,演员台词中也处处透露出时代感,例如在这一情节点里,丘吉尔就透露出斯大林已死的历史事实。(本剧发生时间是1954年,斯大林死于1953。) 萨瑟兰和妻子前来拜访丘吉尔,准备肖像画前期工作。在他们的对话过程中,再次凸显二人反差的思想认知。萨瑟兰直言不讳地告诉丘吉尔:通常人们对自己所知甚少,为了生活,人不得不欺骗自己。 但丘吉尔却如此回应:你要知道你画的不仅仅是我,你画的是大不列颠及北爱尔兰联合王国首相及其伟大政府所代表的一切,包括民主和自由,你画的是政府和领袖的最高典范,记好了。 丘吉尔对自己并不是所知甚少,他只是在欺骗自己,就像他自我欺骗英国仍旧是伟大的帝国,是民主和自由的代表,自己则是政府和领袖的最高典范,却无视他本人和大英帝国都已是英雄暮年的现实。 下一个情节点是女王在偌大的白金汉宫无聊到一个人玩扑克牌。这一画面极其隐晦,首先,它向我们透露出菲利普的屡屡外出寻花问柳;其次,它向我们揭示了头戴王冠的女王却因种种束缚受到诸多压抑,情感无处宣泄,王权成了枷锁。 波尔契打来电话向女王汇报作为种马的奥瑞尔的预估年收入,女王则表示她会为波尔契开通一条专线,这一举措为菲利普与女王的争吵埋下伏笔。 萨瑟兰与丘吉尔就肖像画事宜进行了最后一场交流,这出戏是本剧的小高潮。在这一情节点中,丘吉尔更多是以画家和朋友的身份与萨瑟兰敞开了心扉,谈到了绘画,谈到了悲伤,也谈到了时光。萨瑟兰进一步认识到,在丘吉尔不动声色的平静表面下,暗藏着波涛汹涌的悲哀和无力,这些统统被他表现在了丘吉尔的肖像画中,而这些又是丘吉尔拼命在逃避的。 女王与波尔契交流奥瑞尔作为种马的前期准备工作,这暗合了丘吉尔的辞职。值得注意的是,女王在波尔契进屋之前,有意识去整理了一下头发。中国古话讲“女为悦己者容”,女王的这一举动是很容易令人产生浮想的,也许在这一刻,女王在拥有着共同爱好的波尔契面前也产生了一丝情感波动。 唐宁街首相官邸和议会两院为丘吉尔举行了盛大的庆祝仪式,上到女王,下到百姓,每个人都在密切关注着这一场“谢幕”演出,就像丘吉尔的自嘲:“大家都希望我说出辞职。”然而直到此时,丘吉尔仍在逃避,虽然他在登上主席台时已是颤颤巍巍,但他在继续自我欺骗。直到那幅肖像画揭幕,我们看到的是一个衰老、阴郁、无奈的丘吉尔瘫坐在椅子上。那一刻,他似乎才看到了另一个自己,那个更真实的丘吉尔。这一冲击性是巨大的。 萨瑟兰拜访丘吉尔这一情节点是本集的压轴戏,政客在做我欺骗,逃避现实,现代派画家却在直面真实。什么是真的?衰老;什么又是假的?荣光。大英帝国在衰落,首相在衰老,褪去光环的女王又充满了挣扎和无力。丘吉尔愤怒萨瑟兰对他无比残酷,但萨瑟兰却更残酷地告诉他:“Age is cruel!”时光是残酷的,称霸全球的大英帝国已经不再辉煌,而叱咤风云的丘吉尔已是耄耋之年,没有人只会记得他的辉煌,现实才无时无刻不在影响人的思想。 这句话成了压垮丘吉尔的最后一根稻草,随后,丘吉尔面见女王,请求辞职。他告诉女王:你已长大,而我再没有任何能教给你的东西。 时光是残酷的。时光肢解了日不落帝国,催老了丘吉尔首相,但它也教会了伊丽莎白二世如何成为一个合格的女王。 而那幅肖像画最终被投入火海成了灰烬,它是被时光凝固的,它只停留在丘吉尔八十岁的那一年,而丘吉尔本人却拥有完整的童年、少年、青年、中年和老年。肖像画才是最无意义的东西。 最后说一下《王冠》这部美剧,它讲述的是伊丽莎白二世女王的故事,但它的野心似乎又不仅限于此。每个人看后都能令自己有些触动,有的人看到了权力的无奈,有的人看到了女王的挣扎,有的人看到了时代的缩影,等等等等,不一而足。但在我看来,它对我讲了这么一个主题:生而为人,我们各有不同的枷锁在肩,而我们的成长,就是一步一步认识并接受它们。 没有人是绝对自由的。

 6 ) 伊丽莎白S1简记

爱德华七世逊位后由弟弟乔治六世继承。乔治六世有两个女儿:长女伊丽莎白,次女玛格丽特。 E1 wolferton splash(乔治六世和菲利普打猎的地方) 伊丽莎白于1926年4月21日出生,与希腊王子菲利普于1947年结婚。

女王家族
菲利普被赐姓蒙巴顿
菲利普亲王的父母
1948年长子查尔斯出生
1950年安妮公主出生

E2 海德公园角(国王去世的暗号)

伊丽莎白在父亲乔治六世病重期间替父巡访各英联邦,在肯尼亚期间,乔治六世去世,伊丽莎白匆忙回国,1952年2月6日即位,1953年6月2日加冕。

丘吉尔从1951年10月再次组阁,艾登出任副首相兼外交大臣。 玛格丽特公主喜欢乔治六世的近侍武官(皇家空军上尉彼得•汤森,有家室),乔治六世去世后接受任命为女王母亲的事务长,后与妻子离婚。 E3 温莎 在纽约的温莎公爵回到伦敦,参加国王的葬礼,顺便谈谈他的年薪。 理论上伊丽莎白继承后应改为丈夫姓氏蒙巴顿的王朝。女王后来在内阁和温莎公爵建议下决定继续为温莎王朝,并且离开克拉伦斯宫,搬去白金汉宫。这违背了菲利普亲王的两个愿望。

温莎王朝由来

E4 天灾 1952年12月5日起持续性大雾,直到12月9日,一股强劲而寒冷的西风吹散了笼罩在伦敦的烟雾。

“”伦敦烟雾事件”成为20世纪十大环境公害事件之一。

同时丘吉尔受到党内外人士的反对,想要他辞职。女王差一点在一些内阁成员的建议下向丘吉尔提出此意,幸而大雾散去。 E5 烟与镜 女王加冕礼、玛丽王太后去世

加冕礼委员会通常由诺福克公爵负责,女王为了让菲利普有事做,希望由他负责。
女王为菲利普力争
不被承认的辛普森夫人
温莎公爵暂居
温莎公爵喜欢给他的皇亲国戚们取外号
君主的红匣子
爱德华七世未加冕
温莎公爵未去参加加冕礼
女王受膏
女王加冕礼,电视直播,使伊丽莎白成为全世界最知名的女性
观看电视转播后,落寞的温莎公爵
没有王国的国王

E6 重磅新闻

玛格丽特与彼得的“丑闻”

王室婚姻法

两人的恋情得到公众极大的关注热情,在各方权衡下,王室决定暂时分离他们,直到公主满25岁。

E7 知识就是力量

在与各政客交往中,女王深觉自身通识教育的严重不足,与政客交流时常常处于劣势,甚至听不懂,决定请老师重新学习。

公主从小只学习宪法和礼仪,老师认为君主只要负责高贵,而文学哲学科学等通识教育不够高贵

同时,丘吉尔因病取消与美国总统艾森豪威尔的会面关于苏联氢弹问题的讨论。而外交大臣艾登也暂时在美国进行手术。丘吉尔向女王隐瞒了病情,女王得知后约谈丘吉尔,一番话令丘吉尔对她刮目相看。

E8 小骄傲和开心果(乔治六世说伊丽莎白是他的小骄傲和玛格丽特是他的开心果)

继位后女王的第一次大巡访,为展现大英帝国最完美的一面,(此时,印度、巴基斯坦、南非、伊拉克、约旦缅甸、锡兰都已独立了),1954年,巡访从百慕大开始,行程马不停蹄,开始了为期六个月的英联邦盛大之旅,其中包括58天在澳大利亚,他们访问了57个城镇。他们笑得脸都僵了,菲利普亲王一直在抱怨这疯狂的行程,连做梦都在招手了。最后一站,坚持前往反英情绪高涨的直陀罗布海峡,得到国内民众的高呼。

同时,玛格丽特在国内暂执君主职位,充满个性的讲话,大放异彩,令内阁惶恐,不被允许“将个人意志加于王权之上”,丘吉尔决定将权利推回给王太后。

E9 时间刺客

菲利普亲王常常醉酒晚归。两人矛盾激化。

女王与她的爱马和她的“青梅竹马”波尔契。

丘吉尔与回归的外交大臣的针锋相对。

丘吉尔与他的80岁大寿肖像画家。

最后,丘吉尔承认自己老了,辞职让位

安东尼·艾登继位为首相兼外交大臣。风流倜傥的艾登凭借其俊朗的外表和二战期间的政绩,迅速成为英国国内最受欢迎的人物,并被寄予厚望。(在出任首相一年之后,艾登走错一步断送其政治生涯——第二次中东战争)

丘吉尔80岁大寿在威斯敏斯特教堂演讲

E10 荣光女王

玛格丽特与彼得仍不被允许结婚。
女王在各方压力下,不允许玛格丽特与彼得结婚,也不能抛开其身份地位。

在绝望下,彼得代表公开发言:为王室做出牺牲,终止恋爱关系。

女王与亲王渐行渐远。

英国首相与埃及总统纳赛尔谈判持续激化。

 短评

本年度看过的最棒的剧!要比HBO的西部和醉夜之奔好很多!Netflix一下子出10集就是让人看得过瘾!就用两个字来形容:精致。

8分钟前
  • 大哲兰德
  • 力荐

想说服老婆看这个剧。无法说动。后来我说:这是英国的甄嬛传,她就去看了

13分钟前
  • bymbrofeng
  • 力荐

這部影集有只一個缺點........沒有帥哥

15分钟前
  • chuchu
  • 力荐

制作精良,恢弘大气,剧本抓人,演技在线,各方面均为上乘;群像鲜活生动,互相制掣表现得丝丝入扣,关乎国体政体的勾心斗角自不必多言,家庭内部的微妙情感亦定位精确;第二集感人,剪辑棒,泫然欲泣;第七集画家乃最佳配角;现实中后来他们各自成婚,誓言就是用来破灭的。

20分钟前
  • 欢乐分裂
  • 推荐

镜头好美,故事整体叙事流畅,从第二集开始进入正题,女王的演绎非常棒,欲戴王冠必承其重说的太对了,很少有人能担得起这种重任,光看电视我都有种压力感,耐飞又一次奉上了一部好剧。

25分钟前
  • 深度电影圈
  • 力荐

一亿胖子没白花啊。

27分钟前
  • dAbAozA
  • 力荐

哪一种荣光不是戴着镣铐跳舞?

28分钟前
  • 忆秋
  • 力荐

全看完,改五星。丘吉尔那一集简直是杰作啊杰作!!!!

31分钟前
  • 张天翼
  • 力荐

表演、摄影、音乐完美组合展现,例如丘吉尔画像那段堪称经典,画展时丘吉尔、画家、女王的表情、场面镜头多角度的剪辑、画家说丘吉尔老而不自知那一刻的静默、酒宴与烧画的穿插及最后丘吉尔夫人痛绝的一转身,完美落幕。编剧差了点希望看到的事情。女王的六十年是英伦下坡的年代,大国走向独自。

35分钟前
  • 陈美芳˙Ꙫ˙
  • 推荐

最感动的几幕:1.国王乘着小舟跟女婿说要保护好他的女儿,戴着生日王冠饱含热泪与家人子民合唱共度圣诞。2.女王登基,伯父又傲娇又羡慕又庄重地解说着,其后对着夕阳边吹着边流泪地缅怀故乡3.女王为丘吉尔祝词,丘吉尔与画家争执到不得不承认老去到最后焚烧着画像。这才是一部史诗大剧! @2016-11-15 11:12:05

40分钟前
  • 天马星
  • 力荐

A true epic 厚重隽永而不疏离做作 服装道具镜头美轮美奂但不及演员表演十分之一的触动人心

44分钟前
  • 阿北
  • 力荐

我不得不说,丘吉尔这个角色实在是太出色。他不是巅峰时期的首相,而是日暮夕阳的老人。那种徘徊在坚持和放弃、强硬与失落之间的心理状态,被演绎得极妙。

46分钟前
  • 大-燕-威-王
  • 力荐

只是吐槽:菲利普亲王可是有名的美男子,MS真心不好看啊!九集过后,怒改10分!

48分钟前
  • Toni
  • 力荐

难得这世上还有“精致”的存在。

53分钟前
  • 黑夜中的孩子
  • 力荐

精致 补习一段历史 对人皆向往的生活和头衔 有更近一步了解还有 学习下英国人的说话方式..相比之下美国显得白话连篇...

54分钟前
  • Bing Sting
  • 力荐

英国女王居然没有接受过通识教育。。。忽然觉得有点难过。之前在哪里读到过玛格丽特公主,因为这样的教育一直也没有什么爱好,不爱看书,也没有兴趣,不需要工作也没啥追求。。。就这么一辈子过去了。王室那么有钱,却不给自己的孩子 提供最好的教育,真是奇怪习俗啊。

56分钟前
  • FluorineSpark
  • 力荐

老国王、丘吉尔、还有爱德华八世,演得真好

59分钟前
  • Sophie Z
  • 力荐

才刚看完第一集,看到老国王对女婿说你的工作是爱她保护她的时候我哭了

1小时前
  • 胡迪大咗叫胡哥
  • 力荐

我没啥高尚的评论,只是看懂了女王的一生,也许她一直高傲,和蔼,从不低头,但是,到头来也是个女人,还有女王一生不低头,是因为,王冠会掉……这是真的……

1小时前
  • 西瓜🍉
  • 力荐

题材本身实际平常至极,全靠一流的剧本、导演、表演、配乐、布景。这就是如何把白菜做得吃起来像是山珍海味的功力。

1小时前
  • 个别人
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