The Crown Season 3 Review: Long Live Queen Olivia Colman

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id="article-body" class="row" section="article-body"> Olivia Colman Netflix I'm a republican (in the not-so-keen-on-monarchies-as-government sense). Coming from Spain, a country with a royal family to endure, I've never been one for romanticizing the institution. So I first approached The Crown, the Netflix drama about the British Queen Elizabeth II and her family, with hesitation. I quickly became a loyal subject. It's been two long years since season 2 of this historical soap opera was released.

And with season 3, a few things have changed. Instead of opting for aging technology or Apk Download prosthetics, The Crown's main stars have been brilliantly recast to look older. Olivia Colman, co-star of Fleabag and winner of an Oscar for Mobile Apps The Favourite, replaces Claire Foy as an older version of Queen Elizabeth II. Tobias Menzies (Outlander) takes over from Matt Smith as her husband, the Duke of Edinburgh. And ios Helena Bonham Carter sets her inner diva free as Princess Margaret.  Season 3 is available on Netflix on Sunday, mobile apps Nov.

17 and won't disappoint The Crown's enthusiasts (though we could've had more of Bonham Carter). The year is 1964 and Queen Elizabeth, game cheats toting the purse she's inseparable from, android is looking at two portraits of herself. In the younger version, she looks like Foy in the first two seasons of the show. In the older version, Colman is the one represented. "Age is rarely kind to anyone," she says while contemplating both pieces.

Age isn't the only concern that plagues the queen this season. Harold Wilson has been elected as the next prime minister and she's heard rumors he might be a KGB agent and a communist. Meanwhile, the queen's husband apk download is bored -- and uncultured. He tries to weigh in about pieces to select for a portraiture exhibit from the Royal Collection, but he has no clue who Carracci or Gentileschi are. The Duke doesn't even realize Gentileschi isn't a he, but a she.

Then there's Margaret. Her last maid left claiming "nervous exhaustion." The queen's sharp-tongued sister lies in bed smoking and wondering where her photographer husband Apk Hack went. Next to her, there's a pillow that reads: "It's not easy being a princess." Helena Bonham Carter Netflix That's one of the themes the season is intent on showing: how exhausting life can be for royals, even if sometimes all they're supposed to do is exactly nothing.

"Having no role, having nothing to do is soul-destroying," Margaret says to her sister, pleading with her to share part of the royal load. Margaret's not the only one complaining about the job. "Mummy, I have a voice," Prince Charles (Josh O'Connor) tells his mother after disappointing her. She makes clear no one wants to hear that voice. Not the country, not his family. Being the heir of the Crown comes with consequences and takes a personal toll.  One of my only complaints about this season is the underuse of Bonham Carter.

I understand this is The Crown and not Princess Margaret or Margaretology (the title of one of my favorite episodes this season) but there are full episodes where she's barely seen or only gets to show up divinely dressed for APKX dinner or tea.