@@MrMcNeillNZ She was only in her mid-twenties when she became queen so she wouldn't have looked that much different from her portraits at that age. It was after she got smallpox and got older she had her portrait altered to improve her appearance
@@EK-gt2xf there was a rumor that she was a man because she would wear wigs in her later life (which is true tho) and other theories. The only worst portrayal of her is in Reign which made her look like a Once Upon a Time villain
He might not have thought highly of his daughters but Katherine Parr was hugely influential in reasserting their succession, and the people naturally expected it.
@@alyshakelley403 I think it probably still would've likely gone the same way. While there was an act of parliament, Queen Mary I did have the military support from her husband, the King of Spain, as well as of course The Pope. King Edward attempted to name Lady Jane Grey and that just totally failed. After Mary's passing, Queen Elizabeth I was simply the obvious option when Queen Mary of Scots was not that popular within and without Scotland to begin with.
Interestingly, at Elizabeth's coronation service in 1559, the music, ritual, prayers, presiding bishops, and the Mass, were all Roman Catholic, as they had been for centuries. It was the last time that Latin was used for such an occasion in England.
The crown used at Elizabeth's coronation was the same crown used for Edward the Confessor nearly 600 years previously. And had been used for all English monarchs prior to Elizabeth. The crown was destroyed by Oliver Cromwell when he came to power.
zooeyhall Where did you hear such falsehood? The crown the Lord Protector had destroyed was the Crown Imperial which was made for Elizabeth's grandfather Henry VII.
bombarded with bacon You do know that the North in GOT is based on England right? The other seven kingdoms are continental Europe and the wildlings are the Scots.
I had one like that when me and Woody.EXE had our coronation last month on my 21st birthday. I oringally became his Queen aged 20 on the day Her Majesty the Queen died
Yea, Woody.EXE is powerful like Elizabeth I but he refuses to use power. Instead he loves people of Wales so much and is happy to reign over them for so long
Anne Boleyn worried too much about gaining power but she didn't pay too much attention to know the fact that women can rule as well as men. Queen Elizabeth l was the most powerful female ruler back in those days.
Notice how at 1:46 when Elizabeth puts on her crown, the Duke of Norfolk also puts his on. It's the custom at British coronations for all the nobles present to put on their crowns, the moment the sovereign is crowned. To symbolize where their power comes from.
I've read a lot about both ladys and feel this is the most realistic scene showing their relationship. As bad as Mary may or may not have been she didn't put her sister to death when she had every reason to. I think she had a small hope the Elizabeth would at least be fair to Catholics. Both sisters were abused and often accused of treason and were the center of intrigues in their name. Both were also abused, neglected and abandoned by their father.
Hard to say. She rightfully resented Elizabeth for being the daughter of the woman who stole her father as anyone would have. But they were in the same situation regardless. We don't know Mary's exact thoughts because we don't have any interpersonal writing from her. I tend to guess that she really had no choice but to accept the situation that Elizabeth was her heir since she couldn't get pregnant. I feel both sympathy and pity for Mary because while you can understand her, it doesn't absolve her of the horrible things she had done.
It is also significant that when there was an attempt to make Lady Jane Grey Queen, both Mary and Elizabeth rallied the forces loyal to them and Lady Jane Grey was deposed. I think Queen Mary was disposed to let Lady Jane Grey live but the only way the Prince Philip would come to England and marry Queen Mary would be if Lady Jane Grey was eliminated so she was beheaded
@@girl1213 Actually by many accounts Elizabeth and Mary were very close after death of Anne boleyn. They both were declared basterd and were living in same home. Though Mary and Elizabeth had 17 years age gap They were very close. After Henry VIII died Catherine parr had custody of Elizabeth. When Catherine married to Thomas Seymour, Mary asked for Elizabeth's custody, because Thomas didn't had best reputation, but Elizabeth didn't want to upset Catherine parr, whom she and her brother Edward VI addressed as mother. When Thomas misbehaved with Elizabeth, Catherine wanted to sent Elizabeth away from court but Mary supported Elizabeth against them. After Catherine died Mary had Elizabeth's custody and she lived with Mary till she turned 18. Mary also supported her when courtiers tried to frame Elizabeth for conspiring with Thomas Seymour in kidnapping of king Edward VI. After death of Edward VI, when they declared Lady Jane grey Queen, Elizabeth fully supported Mary and Elizabeth's lover Robert (who was brother In law of Lady Jane grey) supported Mary. When Elizabeth got the news Mary is Marching towards London, Elizabeth with her own army waited for Mary outside Of London and when she reached London, Elizabeth did curtsy and addressed Mary as 'Your Majestic'. After both greeted each other, Mary with purple rob as sovereign and Elizabeth with red rob as heir march together in London. And according to Elizabeth's will James VI&I buried Elizabeth and Mary together.
How? People praise Ann because she gave birth to Elizabeth, when that’s all she did. She had very little to do with her daughter’s upbringing. The only winner in this is Elizabeth, I’m not sure how Ann factors into this equation.
@@marin95 Ann was a woman of her time, who used tactics of being a woman of her time in order to achieve power. She was ambitious, but she wasn't stupid, and was fully aware that the glory and power she could get was only until the title of queen, AND being the mother of the future heir. Raising a future heir is one, if not the greatest achievement and honor from a queen. So, with Elizabeth being her blood and daughter, and becoming arguably one of the greatest rulers of England, she achieved part of what she wanted, in a way.
@@marin95 What people don't focus on is that Anne Boleyn was an incredibly charitable woman and fought her hardest to reform - and ultimately break from - a corrupt Church which was exploiting the working classes.
@@marin95 late comment but she did triumph. She had a choice of staying alive but elizabeth would never be queen or dying and elizabeth would be in line. So she died and gave england one of it’s best rulers
It's so amazing to me that St Edward's Chair was used by Elizabeth I and Elizabeth II 500 years later and now King Charles III. How I love Monarchy and traditions
It had been customary since the Plantagenet King Edward III to add 'of France' to the list of titles governed by the English crown. The claim can be traced through King Philip IV of France and his last son Charles, who died while on the throne. Edward III asserted his claim through his wife Isabella, daughter of Philip IV the Fair of the House of Capet. Much of this claim was also based on extensive land holdings by the English monarch in France. It became nominal after the loss of Calais.
@@carterbentonjr399 The Salic Law was interpreted to mean that the rights to the Crown of France could not be exercised or transmitted through women. So Isabella, the daughter and last remaining child of King Philip IV could not become Queen of France, nor could she pass down a claim to her son Edward for him to become King of France. So the crown instead went to a collateral branch, the Valois dynasty, descended from Philip IV's younger brother. In truth, the Salic Law was not really invoked at the time. It was only dug up years later to justify the coup ex post facto, but it then became a strong precedent. However, Edward's claim is weaken by the fact that if women can transmit a claim to the Crown, then the son of his cousin, Charles the Bad of Navarre, would have a better claim than him.
Yes, the claim was introduced by Edward III since his mother was Isabella of France. The claim was dropped in 1801 by George III in response to Great Britain uniting with Ireland.
So why did they say it then? Was it more like a she is the true queen even if she is not physically there type situation? (Genuinely curious and would like to know more)
@@mackenzied87 essentially. It's just a way to exert that claim. It's useful in case you actually want to act on it at some point (e.g. usurp the throne by force or whatever).
@@kubli365 Elizabeth came close to sitting on the throne of France through marriage Henri IV the so called frog Prince but there was lots of opposition to the match that nothing came of it.
I survived an illness in 2023, just 4 months before me and Woody.EXE had our coronation. I still have the portrait that was released 24 hours before and none of my fans have seen me in the coronation robes before but they have seen Woody.EXE in them the day Queen Elizabeth died and he looked incredible in them. The emotions between the 2 of us were felt that day
For reasons I cannot really explain, this scene moved me very much back then when I first saw it. Must have been the interplay between church, renaissance music, the ritual and .. Cate Blanchett.
The mini-series with Glenda Jackson is the best biopic on Elizabeth, and the mini-series with Helen Mirren is also great - but I have always felt that Cate Blanchett was the best cast.
All my life, I had an aunt commonly called "Betty Joe". Didn't know until recently which is 20 years after death, that Betty is short for Elizabeth. The "Joe" was "Josephine" - her mothers name.
Yes, for getting himself mixed up with Mary Queen of Scots. Elizabeth viewed her cousin Mary as a rival. Mary's marriage to a cousin who also has a claim (Henry, Lord Darnley) did not help things. The Catholics views Mary as the rightful heir after Mary I.
@@secretagentzacharyofsanjos315 No at Westminster Abbey. The person becomes monarch as soon as their predecessor passes away but coronation is a public and religious affair thus involving church.
She was literally the queen of three different countries at once!!! That's a incredible fleet (at the time) that even today's so-called world leaders can't even accomplished!
@@colinlavelle7806 I'm aware of that fact of course but I just love how Cate Blanchette has fully gotten into the skin of Elizabeth Tudor ( also Geoffrey Rush is a gem here as Francis Walsingham) and so, I simply love the movie despite its many flaws. 🙃
Being an absolute monarch was the hardest job ever , to be honest nothing in modern government compares to that amount of responsibility ,pressure and stress . No wonder so many of them went insane - to be the leader of a standing army , to be fully in charge of defending and expanding a kingdom , being expected to build and earn respect from the subjects , and risk being killed by the people closest to you everyday . Kudos to them , modern Presidents could never
Come to think about it i think this might be the only English/British coronation where the monarch had no if only a few family members present. Her brother Edward and sister Mary died, her mother was executed and obviously her father Henry was dead. She was never married and had no kids. The only member of the house I can think of is her aunt Margaret Queen of Scots.
This scene❤️....this film🙌....to think that the role is played by an Australian powerhouse and the film is directed by an Indian legend ❤️.... whatever good comes out of acting as as industry is just gold 🌟
@@LisaMaryification Plus he missed out in marrying her because of his grandfather Thomas Howard, Duke of Norfolk and his father the Earl of Surrey. The later committed treason by putting the leopard spots on his family crest and Henry VIII hit the ceiling and had the Earl of Surrey executed and would have executed Thomas Howard except Henry VIII passed before he could carryout the sentence so Thomas lived.
I'm fairly sure she would have been anointed because the catholic ritual was used for the last time in England. A catholic bishop performed the crowning.
1:47 ... it's funny how, decades after seeing the film, you come back to a clip from the film and only then recognize an actor that is now very familiar to you, but that you didn't know back then. I just realized that this is Mac from Newsroom.
Re: Claim to the throne of France. That comes from Edward III. His mother was a daughter of a King of France and it led to the 100 Year's War between England and France. Henry V also battled in France as a continuation of that war. What's really interesting is that Henry V married Catherine, another Princess of France, who eventually married, maybe, Owen Tudor and gave rise to the Tudor dynasty. So some could claim that the Tudors had a double claim to the French throne, although France didn't recognize female claims to the throne. That created a lot of succession problems for them
yes. We could go and let them know, unequivocally, that their countries would be mutilated beyond all recognition unless they got rid of the vermin 'financiers' of Europe. Immediately. For all time.
@@colinlavelle7806 In Doctor Who there was an episode about Shakespeare. At the end, Elizabeth turned up and tried to have him arrested! Apparently, at 1 time he had promised to marry her! The episode is called THE SHAKESPEARE CODE.
You know when Elizabeth was crowned queen. All of England even Catholic ones cheered for their English Queen cause let's face the fact, Queen Mary Tudor her sister made a huge hole in her country. Mary married a Spanish king, Philip of Spain, they lost Calais to the French and burned many protestants at the stake. Now it is Elizabeth's hard job to create a church where England is free to pray. Despite many skepticism of Elizabeth being declared queen, she was actually a good combination of both her parents, she had Anne Boleyn's wit and smarts and Henry's eighth charmed and temper. So basically she inherited intelligence, determination, and shrewdness from both parents. So in a way, she was no puppet or led astray by desire which is why they said, Elizabeth used her head over her heart.
I think she'd be pleased and gratified that we still remember her and honor her, although she might be a bit disappointed on what the screenwriters, directors and actors got wrong.
She looks so much like the portraits of Elizabeth
Didn't they always make them look better in paintings though?
@@MrMcNeillNZ She was only in her mid-twenties when she became queen so she wouldn't have looked that much different from her portraits at that age. It was after she got smallpox and got older she had her portrait altered to improve her appearance
@@devonmay5960 i doubt she was beautiful. Her sculptures and paintings look manly af...
@@EK-gt2xf there was a rumor that she was a man because she would wear wigs in her later life (which is true tho) and other theories. The only worst portrayal of her is in Reign which made her look like a Once Upon a Time villain
Margott Robbie’s Elisabeth kinda looks like the original she portrayed her physical evolution very well
Mary and Elizabeth becoming a Queen was a huge slap on Henry's face at the end 😆.
He might not have thought highly of his daughters but Katherine Parr was hugely influential in reasserting their succession, and the people naturally expected it.
If it wasn't for his last and final wife Katherine parr to have the girls back in the kingdom then there would not be any tudor line at all
Yes he wanted à son ans She is 100 ways stronger then any son he could have
@@alyshakelley403 I think it probably still would've likely gone the same way. While there was an act of parliament, Queen Mary I did have the military support from her husband, the King of Spain, as well as of course The Pope. King Edward attempted to name Lady Jane Grey and that just totally failed. After Mary's passing, Queen Elizabeth I was simply the obvious option when Queen Mary of Scots was not that popular within and without Scotland to begin with.
The defeat of the Spanish would have been a middle finger
Interestingly, at Elizabeth's coronation service in 1559, the music, ritual, prayers, presiding bishops, and the Mass, were all Roman Catholic, as they had been for centuries. It was the last time that Latin was used for such an occasion in England.
Gunnar Thorsen anybody know the name of the music used?
@@adamnomdeplum3 Te Deum by Thomas Tallis
What language is used now?
@@swethamenon4356
I would assume English.
@@swethamenon4356 English. At least that's the language used in the current Queen's coronation.
I wonder what her mother Anne Boleyn would have thought of this moment to see her daughter crowned and rule like a boss lady.
*avenged
Henry's karma for killing her mother
Shy They call it karma!!!
of course...more Karma...
My blood was well spent.
In the end, Anne and Catherine won over Henry by their daughters
@annierexy yeah, she went trough so much things because of henry and it turned her into nothing but a monster
who's catherine's child?
nana aiman elizabeth‘s older half sister mary
@@kassandra2067 ohhh that bloody mary?
nana aiman yep, Bloody Mary
The crown used at Elizabeth's coronation was the same crown used for Edward the Confessor nearly 600 years previously. And had been used for all English monarchs prior to Elizabeth. The crown was destroyed by Oliver Cromwell when he came to power.
can we dig him up a second time?
Yea thanks Oliver for giving us all these awsome politicians who do such a fine job to earn the publics trust, i say give power back to the crown.
Oliver Cromwell is the worst thing that's happened in our history. Spit on his grave.
The current reproduction is said to be made from the same gold as the original.
zooeyhall
Where did you hear such falsehood? The crown the Lord Protector had destroyed was the Crown Imperial which was made for Elizabeth's grandfather Henry VII.
"to the north i present unto you, Elizabeth, your undoubted quee~"
the north knows no king but the king in the north whose name is stark
If I could give you more thumbs up, I would.
bombarded with bacon my king is Jon snow
bombarded with bacon r
Yassssss!
bombarded with bacon You do know that the North in GOT is based on England right? The other seven kingdoms are continental Europe and the wildlings are the Scots.
Totally love that the coronation dress is perfectly replicated from the original portrait of Elizabeth's coronation! Best highlight of the movie!
Hello, Melissa. How are you doing?
I had one like that when me and Woody.EXE had our coronation last month on my 21st birthday. I oringally became his Queen aged 20 on the day Her Majesty the Queen died
she was the last of the Tudor dynasty
and greatest
That's kind of sad...oh well.
No, she was not the last. James I. her heir was not a Tudor of name but by blood, he was the grandson of Margaret Tudor the sister of Henry VIII.
Annette Nugent exactly
Schnuffel Pfotenengel Thanks for Mary Queen of Scots and Lord Darnley
What an incredible life she did lead. Anne Boleyn's legacy to England!!
Oh yeah that's her daughter!! 😍😍
Cate Blanchett should have won the Oscar for her portrayal of Queen Elizabeth.
Agreed. To this day, no one else has surpassed this performance
@@DeeDeeFatmLoverWanab
So very true.
I have the DVDs of both of them, “Elizabeth” and “Elizabeth, The Golden Age” and Cate shines in both.
Harvey Weinstein no lo permitió.
Just imagine Anne looking down on her daughter and finally getting her revenge♥️
Anne Boleyn was a ghastly traitor
Mary queen of Scots also got her revenge but after Elizabeth when her son came to power.
@@aminiqbal4907 yes, but James wasn't powerful king
Yea, Woody.EXE is powerful like Elizabeth I but he refuses to use power. Instead he loves people of Wales so much and is happy to reign over them for so long
Ki Purnama= siapa bisa mencari anak kandung Elizabeth..
How it feels to have the wifi all for yourself:
Lol true 😆 🤣 😂 😹
BEST COMMENT EVER
Everyone must bow to you whenever they use your wifi lol.
1:36
Lmao
Anne Boleyn worried too much about gaining power but she didn't pay too much attention to know the fact that women can rule as well as men. Queen Elizabeth l was the most powerful female ruler back in those days.
Notice how at 1:46 when Elizabeth puts on her crown, the Duke of Norfolk also puts his on. It's the custom at British coronations for all the nobles present to put on their crowns, the moment the sovereign is crowned. To symbolize where their power comes from.
Yes and the traditional role of the Duke of Norfolk is MC at coronations.
She’s literally so beautiful
I also think it’s great she became queen, especially since her father declared her a bastard child.
I've read a lot about both ladys and feel this is the most realistic scene showing their relationship. As bad as Mary may or may not have been she didn't put her sister to death when she had every reason to. I think she had a small hope the Elizabeth would at least be fair to Catholics. Both sisters were abused and often accused of treason and were the center of intrigues in their name. Both were also abused, neglected and abandoned by their father.
Hard to say. She rightfully resented Elizabeth for being the daughter of the woman who stole her father as anyone would have. But they were in the same situation regardless. We don't know Mary's exact thoughts because we don't have any interpersonal writing from her. I tend to guess that she really had no choice but to accept the situation that Elizabeth was her heir since she couldn't get pregnant. I feel both sympathy and pity for Mary because while you can understand her, it doesn't absolve her of the horrible things she had done.
It is also significant that when there was an attempt to make Lady Jane Grey Queen, both Mary and Elizabeth rallied the forces loyal to them and Lady Jane Grey was deposed. I think Queen Mary was disposed to let Lady Jane Grey live but the only way the Prince Philip would come to England and marry Queen Mary would be if Lady Jane Grey was eliminated so she was beheaded
@@girl1213
Actually by many accounts Elizabeth and Mary were very close after death of Anne boleyn. They both were declared basterd and were living in same home.
Though Mary and Elizabeth had 17 years age gap They were very close.
After Henry VIII died Catherine parr had custody of Elizabeth.
When Catherine married to Thomas Seymour, Mary asked for Elizabeth's custody, because Thomas didn't had best reputation, but Elizabeth didn't want to upset Catherine parr, whom she and her brother Edward VI addressed as mother.
When Thomas misbehaved with Elizabeth, Catherine wanted to sent Elizabeth away from court but Mary supported Elizabeth against them.
After Catherine died Mary had Elizabeth's custody and she lived with Mary till she turned 18.
Mary also supported her when courtiers tried to frame Elizabeth for conspiring with Thomas Seymour in kidnapping of king Edward VI.
After death of Edward VI, when they declared Lady Jane grey Queen, Elizabeth fully supported Mary and Elizabeth's lover Robert (who was brother In law of Lady Jane grey) supported Mary.
When Elizabeth got the news Mary is Marching towards London, Elizabeth with her own army waited for Mary outside Of London and when she reached London, Elizabeth did curtsy and addressed Mary as 'Your Majestic'. After both greeted each other, Mary with purple rob as sovereign and Elizabeth with red rob as heir march together in London.
And according to Elizabeth's will James VI&I buried Elizabeth and Mary together.
To a certain extent Ann Boleyn triumphs.
How? People praise Ann because she gave birth to Elizabeth, when that’s all she did. She had very little to do with her daughter’s upbringing. The only winner in this is Elizabeth, I’m not sure how Ann factors into this equation.
@@marin95 Ann was a woman of her time, who used tactics of being a woman of her time in order to achieve power. She was ambitious, but she wasn't stupid, and was fully aware that the glory and power she could get was only until the title of queen, AND being the mother of the future heir. Raising a future heir is one, if not the greatest achievement and honor from a queen. So, with Elizabeth being her blood and daughter, and becoming arguably one of the greatest rulers of England, she achieved part of what she wanted, in a way.
@@marin95 What people don't focus on is that Anne Boleyn was an incredibly charitable woman and fought her hardest to reform - and ultimately break from - a corrupt Church which was exploiting the working classes.
@@marin95 late comment but she did triumph. She had a choice of staying alive but elizabeth would never be queen or dying and elizabeth would be in line. So she died and gave england one of it’s best rulers
@@marin95 Not only because she gave birth!! Anne was convinced that her daughter could rule and believed in her until her end
Everything she's wearing is gold. In a certain light, even her hair looks gold.
From Elizabeth to Galadriel to Hela, Cate Blanchett was born to play queens.
Every frame of this scene is like a painting.
Cate is one gorgeous, talented actress. I'll always admire her eyes.
But she was robbed by Oscars for hee role in Elizabeth
By far one of the greatest monarchs of British history!
Elizabeth,The Perfect revenge of Anne Boleyn :)
It's so amazing to me that St Edward's Chair was used by Elizabeth I and Elizabeth II 500 years later and now King Charles III. How I love Monarchy and traditions
Crazy to think that monarchs are still being crowned in that very room, in that same chair.
It had been customary since the Plantagenet King Edward III to add 'of France' to the list of titles governed by the English crown. The claim can be traced through King Philip IV of France and his last son Charles, who died while on the throne. Edward III asserted his claim through his wife Isabella, daughter of Philip IV the Fair of the House of Capet. Much of this claim was also based on extensive land holdings by the English monarch in France. It became nominal after the loss of Calais.
No, Isabella was his mother. His wife was Philippa of Hainault.
Which was delusional of him. Salic law in France said no. Haha
@@jamiemohan2049 But if he was a Frenchman he could have gotten the throne.
@@carterbentonjr399 The Salic Law was interpreted to mean that the rights to the Crown of France could not be exercised or transmitted through women. So Isabella, the daughter and last remaining child of King Philip IV could not become Queen of France, nor could she pass down a claim to her son Edward for him to become King of France. So the crown instead went to a collateral branch, the Valois dynasty, descended from Philip IV's younger brother.
In truth, the Salic Law was not really invoked at the time. It was only dug up years later to justify the coup ex post facto, but it then became a strong precedent.
However, Edward's claim is weaken by the fact that if women can transmit a claim to the Crown, then the son of his cousin, Charles the Bad of Navarre, would have a better claim than him.
I was wondering about that. Bc they went to war w France. English blood on French colors
If anyone say "she wasnt the queen of france, she was the queen of england irland!"..she had a CLAIM to the french throne!
That was messy time in history, everybody claimed to have a claim to one throne or another
Yes, the claim was introduced by Edward III since his mother was Isabella of France. The claim was dropped in 1801 by George III in response to Great Britain uniting with Ireland.
So why did they say it then? Was it more like a she is the true queen even if she is not physically there type situation? (Genuinely curious and would like to know more)
@@mackenzied87 essentially. It's just a way to exert that claim. It's useful in case you actually want to act on it at some point (e.g. usurp the throne by force or whatever).
@@kubli365 Elizabeth came close to sitting on the throne of France through marriage Henri IV the so called frog Prince but there was lots of opposition to the match that nothing came of it.
A girl who survives so many ills before she ascends the throne is a great blessing from the Almighty...
I survived an illness in 2023, just 4 months before me and Woody.EXE had our coronation. I still have the portrait that was released 24 hours before and none of my fans have seen me in the coronation robes before but they have seen Woody.EXE in them the day Queen Elizabeth died and he looked incredible in them. The emotions between the 2 of us were felt that day
In your face Henry Vlll!
YES
@Bla Blu Imagine Henry VIII killing his own protestant daughter.
For reasons I cannot really explain, this scene moved me very much back then when I first saw it. Must have been the interplay between church, renaissance music, the ritual and .. Cate Blanchett.
1:59 hey look its Shakespeare
Really?!?!?!?!
@@deadinside8251 joseph fiennes played shakespere in shakespere in love you spaz!!!!!!!!!!
@@danielwhittaker695 nah, its Martin Luther.
Commander Waterford from the Handmaids Tale
It's Bassanio from Merchant Of Venice.
I've been fascinated with her since I was a child, after seeing the coronation portrait that this scene so beautifully recreates...
This movie deserved more Oscars than Shakespeare in Love.
Directed by an Indian Director🥰
Earned Cate an Oscar nod
My country's greatest ever Monarch.
I love Elizabeth's hair, the color is beautiful.
This setting is all the more glorious with the background choir. It sounds as if angels came down from heaven
Somewhere in the afterlife, King Henry is sobbing in the corner
She was a fantastic queen. The beginning of the British empire...
The mini-series with Glenda Jackson is the best biopic on Elizabeth, and the mini-series with Helen Mirren is also great - but I have always felt that Cate Blanchett was the best cast.
If I have a daughter one day, her name will be Elizabeth.
Me to
All my life, I had an aunt commonly called "Betty Joe". Didn't know until recently which is 20 years after death, that Betty is short for Elizabeth. The "Joe" was "Josephine" - her mothers name.
@@dj3114 Oh I love the name Josephine, like Jo March from Little Women. Always a name I had considered using as well.
Anne Boleyn would have been so proud of her daughter.
The York Minster, beautiful Cathedral. Though as for most Kings and Queens the crowning really happened in Westminster Abbey.
I think it was supposed to represent Westminster, but they could only afford to film in York Minster haha
Haha no way, I live in York and never noticed.
Not sure where it was filmed but it wasn't York Minster. Ely Cathedral was used for the series The Crown.
I'm wrong apparently is was York Minster.....but I'm sure it was worth it for them $$$$$$$
tbh york minster is far more beautiful than westminster
Sorry, on her right is Thomas Howard, 4th duke of Norfolk, Elizabeth had him beheaded in 1572 for treason.
johannesnicolaas and this is prior to that.
I hope so, otherwise he's looking in fairly good health, considering him having no head.
Yes, for getting himself mixed up with Mary Queen of Scots. Elizabeth viewed her cousin Mary as a rival. Mary's marriage to a cousin who also has a claim (Henry, Lord Darnley) did not help things. The Catholics views Mary as the rightful heir after Mary I.
After much misgivings. She did not want to execute her cousin until he practically had a knife at her neck.
But how come Shakespeare In Love actress won against this masterpiece? Just how? Look at Cate? She is magnificent.
Weinstein and 💵 !
It won over "Saving Private Ryan" a Slap in the Face to the Greatest Generation! .... That's why Weinstein is in prison today!
Gorgeous church.
Church? Haha!
That's York Minster in the north of England. In this film it is meant to represent Old St Paul's Cathedral or Westminster Abbey.
@@Aeoline Westminster Abbey.
Don't they usually have coronations at the palaces
@@secretagentzacharyofsanjos315 No at Westminster Abbey. The person becomes monarch as soon as their predecessor passes away but coronation is a public and religious affair thus involving church.
Cate Blanchett is the rightful Best Actress Oscar winner in 1998, no more, no less.
"To the North, I present unto you, Elizabeth, your undoubted Queen!"
Me: Who the hell is he talking to?
He's symbolically addressing the queen's subjects in the north and south of her kingdom, so technically, all of it.
Archduchess Elisabeth Marie Scotland
@@gunnarthorsen but hwhat about east and west????????
is it because england is more long than wide? lol
@@gunnarthorsen I thought he was referring to Game of Thrones.
@@therearenoshortcuts9868 I think they do all sides as part of the ritual.
Doesn't Cate Blanchett look beautiful in this scene? She is radiant.
She was literally the queen of three different countries at once!!! That's a incredible fleet (at the time) that even today's so-called world leaders can't even accomplished!
You might Google British Empire.
She was only really the queen of England and Ireland. France had been free from English rule (save for Calais) for more than a century,
Queen Victoria would like to have a word with you
I can watch Elizabeth like forever and never get tired of it. 😅💕
It's not very accurate historically.
@@colinlavelle7806 I'm aware of that fact of course but I just love how Cate Blanchette has fully gotten into the skin of Elizabeth Tudor ( also Geoffrey Rush is a gem here as Francis Walsingham) and so, I simply love the movie despite its many flaws. 🙃
Who is here after Charles' coronation and expected to hear the song (Edit: Te Deum by Thomas Tallis)?
The guy who composed "the song" will be born more than a century later.
@@dodec8449 It's by Thomas Tallis who was contemporary to Elizabethan music, who did you mean?
@@fadikhoory5350 I thought you meant the "Jerusalem" hymn with "the song".
You mean Handels Zadok The Priest???
The singing is beyond beautiful
Being an absolute monarch was the hardest job ever , to be honest nothing in modern government compares to that amount of responsibility ,pressure and stress . No wonder so many of them went insane - to be the leader of a standing army , to be fully in charge of defending and expanding a kingdom , being expected to build and earn respect from the subjects , and risk being killed by the people closest to you everyday . Kudos to them , modern Presidents could never
I think there were many times when the council forced Elizabeth's hand for instance the execution of her cousin Mary Queen of Scots.
Come to think about it i think this might be the only English/British coronation where the monarch had no if only a few family members present. Her brother Edward and sister Mary died, her mother was executed and obviously her father Henry was dead. She was never married and had no kids. The only member of the house I can think of is her aunt Margaret Queen of Scots.
Henry sought his great heir when that heir was in front of him the whole time. Somewhere in the hereafter, Anne was probably laughing.
Historical scenes always are a sight! 👍
Hello, Manasi... how are you doing?
This scene❤️....this film🙌....to think that the role is played by an Australian powerhouse and the film is directed by an Indian legend ❤️.... whatever good comes out of acting as as industry is just gold 🌟
Sayembara desain....
Diangkat anak Elizabeth
Yahudi
Yahoo
Tafsir vs Yahudi
R.I.P queen you will never be forgotten.
i love Christopher Eccleston,,he is magnific in this movie!!
Yes, it must have been very difficult for Norfolk, her cousin, to present her as queen and stand beside her like that. He couldn't stand her.
@@LisaMaryification Plus he missed out in marrying her because of his grandfather Thomas Howard, Duke of Norfolk and his father the Earl of Surrey. The later committed treason by putting the leopard spots on his family crest and Henry VIII hit the ceiling and had the Earl of Surrey executed and would have executed Thomas Howard except Henry VIII passed before he could carryout the sentence so Thomas lived.
0:55 don't let them see, don't let them know..be a good girl you always have to be🎶
my fav queen: ELIZABETH 100%!
King Edward’s chair faces the altar, actually.
She deserved an academy or oscar for this wtff
Cate really do her job perfectly
GCSE brought me here and now I'm literally enjoying it
Awwww heartbreaking that this would be the day that her mother would be so proud of her daughter taking the crown ❤
No annointing? Fun fact, the anointing spoon is the only original item of the Crown Jewels not destroyed by Cromwell. It dates from mid 11 hundreds.
I'm fairly sure she would have been anointed because the catholic ritual was used for the last time in England. A catholic bishop performed the crowning.
"One of the greatest monarch in english history" uhhhhhh im so fangirling
The destruction of the pre-Cromwell Crown Jewels is probably the biggest stain on British history
Same chair after all these years, of course not that one from the movie.
I feel that she teared up a bit when she was crowned
Because of her mother
Those were the good old days 😌
My queen
🥲
1:47 ... it's funny how, decades after seeing the film, you come back to a clip from the film and only then recognize an actor that is now very familiar to you, but that you didn't know back then. I just realized that this is Mac from Newsroom.
R.I.P
H.M. queen Elizabeth
1926-2022
This scene is so powerful because it marks the begin of new era of england thanks for this queen that england become so influent throughout world
It's called 'Te Deum' by Tallis - it's here on UA-cam.
This was the Movie that Rooney Mara saw when she was 15 and admired Cate Blanchett's work ever since.
Cate Blanchett is beautiful in this role if you haven't seen it I would suggest you do, but be mindful that it's not historically accurate.
Re: Claim to the throne of France. That comes from Edward III. His mother was a daughter of a King of France and it led to the 100 Year's War between England and France. Henry V also battled in France as a continuation of that war. What's really interesting is that Henry V married Catherine, another Princess of France, who eventually married, maybe, Owen Tudor and gave rise to the Tudor dynasty. So some could claim that the Tudors had a double claim to the French throne, although France didn't recognize female claims to the throne. That created a lot of succession problems for them
Marvelous performance.
Somewhere in the background is Rose Tyler giggling her head off
She proved that a woman could rule as well as any man.
This was such a great movie I loved it
Would be cool that we had a time machine and go to 1567 and see the queen and King
yes. We could go and let them know, unequivocally, that their countries would be mutilated beyond all recognition unless they got rid of the vermin 'financiers' of Europe. Immediately. For all time.
The smell must have been unbearable people think they were all lovly and clean far from it in fact
Wait! The Ninth Doctor coronated Elizabeth... That's awkward considering what happened with Ten.
Not sure what that means? but it's always a bishop who crowns the monarch, traditionally the Abp of Canterbury.
@@colinlavelle7806 In Doctor Who there was an episode about Shakespeare. At the end, Elizabeth turned up and tried to have him arrested! Apparently, at 1 time he had promised to marry her! The episode is called THE SHAKESPEARE CODE.
Her mother would be proud of her ❤
i love the background music
How wonderful that cate blanchet played elizabeth twice
Hello, Elyse. How are you doing?
And then Anne Boleyn says to Henry: See!!!!
Spectacular movie should have been Oscar worthy
Wow the Doctor loves being around Elizabeth
Henry VIII's greatest success was being a father to Elizabeth, making her his heir.
Go Elizabeth. My favourite Queen 🇬🇧🙏🏻
You know when Elizabeth was crowned queen. All of England even Catholic ones cheered for their English Queen cause let's face the fact, Queen Mary Tudor her sister made a huge hole in her country. Mary married a Spanish king, Philip of Spain, they lost Calais to the French and burned many protestants at the stake. Now it is Elizabeth's hard job to create a church where England is free to pray. Despite many skepticism of Elizabeth being declared queen, she was actually a good combination of both her parents, she had Anne Boleyn's wit and smarts and Henry's eighth charmed and temper. So basically she inherited intelligence, determination, and shrewdness from both parents. So in a way, she was no puppet or led astray by desire which is why they said, Elizabeth used her head over her heart.
even though Anne was beheaded little did she know she would get the last laugh
She actually never wanted to become queen but did so out of the respect of her people.
imagine if queen elizabeth went to the future to see people recreating her life to form a movie. i wonder how she would react
I think she'd be pleased and gratified that we still remember her and honor her, although she might be a bit disappointed on what the screenwriters, directors and actors got wrong.
She would be happy to see she has good teeth lol