Elizabeth I
- TV-MA
- Year:
- 2005
- 223 min
- 851 Views
All is as
it should be, ma'am.
Thank you, Dr. Lopez.
of bearing children.
Ahh...
Virgo intacta.
Thank you,
Dr. Lopez.
So we may proceed
with her marriage.
If we're to trust
her doctor.
If she were too old
to bear children, my lord,
there will be little sense
in her marrying.
Do we only marry
to bear children?
To contemplate the prospect
of an heir, certainly.
Is there
another reason
we should not approach
the Duke of Anjou?
Politics,
religion,
temperament.
Messenger!
Ah...
and of course
the Earl of Leicester.
Francis Walsingham.
My Lord Burghley.
Married men both,
and peddlers of the matrimonial state.
You should wed each other since you
think so highly of the condition.
Certainly speed up the process
of government.
The Earl of Leicester
has the familiar touch.
If we are to make an alliance
against Spain,
Anjou would seem
the obvious choice:
Brother to
the King of France,
and giving us
a Catholic ally.
Where do you stand
on the issue, Francis?
I think the French make better
acquaintances than friends.
Tell Anjou we still need
the Queen's permission
to start
negotiations.
Thank you, my lord.
Oh...!
Your Majesty.
What's the news,
old friend?
That I am as I
have always been.
Oh, well am I
changed then?
- There is talk of...
- Talk...
talk is free.
And I would be so, too.
No no no,
be not afraid...
I will not marry.
So...
we have each other
still then?
We have each other
always, Robin,
since that way
our affections tend.
Who can tell the heart
where it should lead us?
Our hearts
cannot be told.
Time has worn away the promises
we made to each other once.
What promises,
my lord?
To amuse each other.
Your Majesty, l...
I do not trust
the Duke d'Anjou.
Because he's
a Frenchman?
Because I do not trust him to love you
as you should be loved.
- I'm afraid, Bess.
- Of what?
Of the dangers
in bearing a child.
The danger to you.
What is the world
without you in it, hmm?
- Oh, this is most flattering.
- How?
Because you are
jealous.
And why
should I not be?
Do I not live in the sun
of your favor?
And does not the world
condemn me for it?
For 19 years,
Your Majesty,
this Council
has implored you
to secure your succession
by marriage.
You have refused
all suitors, but now...
I do not say I will not marry,
Lord Burghley,
the question
before us is whom.
Spain is
the threat.
Our only hope is to divide
the Catholic powers.
- Put Spain against France.
- Oh God.
A union with the ruling house of France
would do precisely that.
Anjou, as brother
to the King of France...
Might I remind
the Council...
that although
he may oppose
the Spanish interests
in the Netherlands,
the Duke of Anjou
is still a Catholic.
But he is of the quiet kind,
my lord.
Biddable, they say.
He will pray in a corner, if you ask him.
He was a friend to the Protestant cause
in France.
He's has even had private conversation
with Master Walsingham
who eats Catholics.
...words with you
in the Presence Chamber.
My Parliament
seeks words with us,
and we must
seem to listen.
Francis?
Since you
of all of us
has met this
fellow Anjou...
what of him?
His religion, madam,
his politics,
his sincerity
or otherwise
in his support
of the Dutch Protestants?
His appearance,
Master Secretary...
is he a man
to my liking?
I couldn't say,
Your Majesty.
Well, is he well-favored
or is he ugly?
Is he a master
at serving women?
He is Catholic.
He only serves the Pope.
He was not ugly,
madam...
but...
he was not
beautiful.
Oh...!
Well, gentlemen,
I have come to hear you talk
and I trust you will watch me
while I listen.
Your Majesty.
We beg to raise the question
of your marriage.
Well, so long as you
do not come to me
to complain about your wives,
I am content.
Sir Leicester...
here stands my master of music
who wrote this very piece for me.
A Catholic,
but an Englishman first.
Thank you so much
for the anthem.
You see, a man may be a good Catholic,
and a good Englishman.
Not at the same time,
ma'am.
Get him up.
Take him away.
You're quite safe,
ma'am.
Oh Robin.
Quite safe, ma'am.
No hurt, ma'am.
Shh... no hurt, ma'am.
Clear the way!
Clear the way!
- Oh God.
- Your Majesty, take my arm.
- How did he get in? Who is he?
- Calm yourself.
Oh!
And how does
Your Majesty now?
The Queen does not know
how she does, Leicester.
How she does and what she
feels seems questions of little account.
She sometimes wonders whether she
is allowed the luxury of feeling anything.
That villain was as close
as you are now to me.
No one could be
as close as we two, Bess.
You mustn't be
alone tonight.
- No.
- No.
Nor shall I, my lord.
Our prisons in the tower were as close
as our two apartments are now.
Sweet imprisonment.
In your sister Mary's reign
when I was in the tower,
I remember the morning they brought you
in through the Traitor's Gate.
Over your shoes in water
as you stepped off the barge.
I sat down on the stone steps
and refused to move.
My usher broke down and cried.
I rated him severely.
"Truth is what matters,
not misfortune."
That's what I said.
And that none of your friends
should ever have cause to weep for you.
No. Nor shall they,
Leicester.
Some things still
are possible.
I cannot stay.
Is this the marriage
to Anjou?
If I marry,
I must marry royalty.
I could not raise up a subject so.
Shhh.
Just kiss me, Bess.
Good night, my lord.
That's enough.
Shh, shh, shh, shh.
Shh, shh, shh.
Who sent you
to attack the Queen?
The French?
The Spanish?
The Pope in Rome?
Hmm?
Wait!
Good.
You have something to say.
Good morning,
Your Majesty.
For the safety of my person
and my kingdom
I must proceed
with this match.
Bess, I beg you.
I mean who was this
would be assassin?
In the pay of Spain?
Well, how many more will they send?
And how much more secure
will you be with Anjou?
His interest is purely selfish
in the Netherlands.
Your people will...
Why, you have company!
My Lady Essex has
come to court.
I crave
your pardon, ma'am.
I here since the death
of Lord Essex,
upon your
service in Ireland.
I have made an offer
to assist the new Lord Essex.
We were sad to hear of it.
Oh...
so young to succeed
to a title.
We will kiss you.
You look well,
my Lady Essex.
Perhaps you're in search
of new offers of marriage.
She has an eye for you,
Leicester.
Oh, the portraits
of your ancestors
- look well on your walls, my lord.
- Yes.
Pity so may of them
proved to be traitors.
No, only my grandfather
and father, ma'am.
The present generation
is entirely devoid of treason.
We are pleased
to hear of it.
She knows.
She knows nothing.
She knows.
Those eyes of hers...
marbled
like a snake's.
She knows.
She has an eye
for you, Leicester.
She knows nothing.
The villain who attempted
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