The Crown Episode Four Review, Recap, and the Facts that the Viewers Should Know

By Michael Davis - 09 Nov '16 06:20AM
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The "Act of God" was a National Crisis that has troubled England and the position of Winston Churchill as Prime Minister. It also troubled the position of Queen Elizabeth with the needs of her Family as Churchill is tight with how the Royal Courts should consult the Government on all their actions, including the flying hobby of Philip.

Churchill got away when Anthony Eden was asking King George VI to tell the Prime Minister to step down. This time, in the middle of a National Crisis, opposition find its ways to ask the same proposition again but this time to the Queen.

On a published review on The Telegraph, Elizabeth requested an audience with Churchill after the chaos happening in the country. It was said an "Act of God." And Churchill is responding not unvarying to the situation and instead look into other matters. "London smog of 1952" was truly a historic crisis the country faced.

In a blink of time, Churchill was able to act on the crisis before the audience requested. Press had dubbed him as a "True Leader in Crisis". The plot to have Churchill removed as Prime Minister failed for the second time. And for the second time, Churchill is a Champion next to his heroism during World War II.

The dreadful weather in England is as dreadful how politics is happening during the 1950s'. Entertainment Weekly cited that "Churchill clings to power; Elizabeth has a crisis of faith." In the time of predicament, Elizabeth was tested by politicians and the protocols of court.

At the end of Episode Four, everything turned out well for everyone - of course not to those from the opposition. Churchill keeps his position; Elizabeth is heard with her opinion on matters of the State, and Philip gets to continue flying planes after the Cabinet's consultation and approval.

Although from Episode one to five, it seems it's falling flat, said on The Daily. However, it is observable that all scenes and plots are being related to the actual time-frame. Truly this TV Series is hitting the mark between fiction and history.

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