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A brand new trailer for season five of Netflix‘s The Crown has shown the royal family in crisis during the new episodes, detailing the events leading up to Princess Diana‘s 1997 death.
The sneak peek shows Elizabeth Debicki, who portrays the late Princess of Wales, whizzing away from paparazzi as she drives at full speed in a tense car chase scene.
Being released on November 9, another scene from the new season displays the character floating in a pool in a skimpy swimsuit – as she battles the crisis of royal protocol and family scandal in front of the nation.
The Crown TRAILER: Shock new teaser shows Diana screeching to a halt in car chase scene and in skimpy swimsuit as she floats in a pool as Royal Family is ‘plagued by scandal’ in most controversial series yet
‘I never stood a chance’: The new trailer shows Diana in a skin-baring simwsuit as she floats in the water while appearing at a loss
Over the first three series of The Crown, the Netflix hit has become well known for bending facts to suit its narrative, and while some artistic license is inevitable, some critics have been outraged in its rewriting of history and relationships.
But in it’s most controversial series yet, the brand new trailer declares that the ‘royal family is in genuine crisis’, as it depicts at-the-time Prince Charles and Diana’s divorce.
Actress Elizabeth’s voice can be heard explaining that Diana ‘never stood a chance’ in the trailer, as shots show the royal whizzing down a street while driving a black car at high speed to avoid paparazzi.
The dramatic scene shows an overwhelmed Diana at the wheel, donning a red puffer jacket as she struggles to keep control of the wheel.
Misunderstood: An upset Diana is seen at the side of the pool, with a voiceover sharing that ‘People will never understand how it’s really been for me’
Revenge dress: It also documents the iconic moment Diana stepped out in her famous ‘revenge dress’ at the 1994 dinner at the Serpentine Gallery in Kensington Gardens.
Nailed it:Â Originally designed by Christina Stambolian, the dress was off the shoulder and featured a royal-rule breaking hem – with Elizabeth looking the spitting image of the late royal in the new scenes
The forthcoming season five will document the events leading up to Diana’s death, but won’t reveal the tragic incident until season six -with it recently being revealed that the 1997 car crash which led to her death won’t be shown in the season.
In the early hours of 31 August 1997, Diana, Princess of Wales, died from a car crash in the Pont de l’Alma tunnel in Paris, France. Dodi Fayed, Diana’s partner, and Henri Paul, the driver of the Mercedes-Benz W140 S-Class, were pronounced dead at the scene.
Khalid Abdalla will portray her partner Dodi in the new season, while Salim Dau takes on the role of Mohamed Al-Fayed.
Netflix insists Diana’s death, in a car crash in the Pont de l’Alma tunnel in central Paris, will not be recreated in the new series.
Identical: Olivia Williams’ (left) portrays Camilla Parker Bowles (right), with the trailer showing Camilla and Charles together in an intimate moment
Diana and Mohamed: Salim Dau (left with Elizabeth) takes on the role of Mohamed Al-Fayed (right with Diana in 1996)
But one source recently told The Sun: ‘To be going back to Paris and turning Diana’s final days and hours into a drama feels very uncomfortable.
‘The show always tried to present a fictional version of royal history with as much sensitivity as possible. But lately, as things get closer to the present day, it feels harder to strike that balance.’
Throughout the trailer, emphasis is placed on pressure the royal family faced during the 1990s as the marriage between Prince Charles and Princess Diana broke down.
Dubbing the fifth season as ‘the beginning of the end’, the new trailer shows Diana in a skin-baring swimsuit as she floats in the water while appearing at a loss.
Reaction: Imelda Staunton portrays the late Queen Elizabeth in the show, shopwing her reaction to the breakdown of her son’s marriage
Windsor Castle fire: The show shows her reacting to the Windsor Castle Fire of 1992, as she can be heard speaking about the difficult year she has had in her Christmas Day address to the nation
It also documents the iconic moment Diana stepped out in her famous ‘revenge dress’ at the 1994 dinner at the Serpentine Gallery in Kensington Gardens.
Originally designed by Christina Stambolian, the dress was off the shoulder and featured a royal-rule breaking hem – with Elizabeth looking the spitting image of the late royal in the new scenes.
Imelda Staunton portrayed the late Monarch as she reacted to the Windsor Castle Fire of 1992, as she can be heard speaking about the difficult year she has had in her Christmas Day address to the nation, in what came to be known as her ‘Annus Horribilis’ speech.
She says: ‘In light of the events of the last 12 months, perhaps I have more to reflect on than most.’
The Queen’s annus horribilis saw the fire break out on 10 November at the royal residence Windsor Castle, which destroyed 115 rooms, including nine State Rooms.
The dramatised trailer shows the royal family declaring that Diana ‘wants to bring down the temple’, before depicting her famous interview with BBC journalist Martin Bashir, played by Prasanna Puwanarajah.Â
Netflix used a dramatised recreation of Princess Diana’s bombshell Panorama interview with disgraced BBC journalist Bashir to advertise their new series of The Crown today – despite Prince William’s demands that the interview be taken off air.
The fifth season of the streaming giant’s popular series The Crown will include an entire episode focusing on the Royal’s controversial sit-down with Bashir in 1995, in which she sensationally said ‘there were three of us in the marriage’ – a reference to Charles and Camilla.
The interview, originally broadcast by Panorama, has since been debunked after it was revealed interviewer Bashir gained access and trust of Diana using falsified information.
Famous interview: The trailer depicts her famous interview with BBC journalist Martin Bashir (right) played by Prasanna Puwanarajah (left)
Turbulent time: It also shows journalisy Martin declaring that Diana is ‘at breaking point’
Timothee Sambo (pictured left) portrays an uneasy-looking Prince William as he stands in front of the world’s media in the Netflix trailer for series five of The Crown. He pastes on a smile before looking overwhelmed by the occasionÂ
Johnny Lee Miller, who portrays former British Prime Minister John Major, says in the trailer: ‘It feels it’s all about to erupt’.
It was watched by 23 million people. It is thought to have contributed to her divorce from Prince Charles in 1996 – a year prior to her fatal car crash in the Tunnel de l’Alma in Paris.
Bashir showed Diana’s brother, Earl Spencer, false bank statements which suggested his former head of security had been receiving money from tabloids and the security services to spy on his sister.
However, the decision to recreate the Panorama interview puts Netflix at odds with William, who called for the groundbreaking scenes to never to be aired again.
Fireworks: Dominic West and Olivia Williams’ portray at-the-time Prince Charles and Camilla as they’re seen locking lips with a firework display going off in the background
In the trailer, Diana can be seen sitting down with Bashir, while a voiceover says: ‘I won’t go quietly.’
Charles, portrayed by Dominic West, can also be seen with Olivia Williams’ Camilla Parker Bowles, with the trailer showing an intimate moment between the pair.
Playing the couple in the scandal-filled 1990s era for the Royal Family – the pair are seen locking lips with a firework display going off in the background.Â
They are also seen in a tender moment as the then-Prince of Wales clasps Diana’s infamous sapphire necklace around his lover’s neck while they share an intimate look in the mirror.
Although the Diana, Charles and Camilla are the main focus of the series, one shot clearly shows the strain on their children, as they have to deal with the breakdown of their parents’ marriage with the eyes of the world upon them.
Prince William, who was just 15 years old when his mother passed away following a car crash in Paris in August 1997, appears uneasy as he steps out with his family in a short clip in the trailer.
The family is pictured smiling outside a house as camera crews shout from outside the property and cameras flash in their face, with a young Prince William, played by the 12-year-old actor Timothee Sambor, grimacing as he puts on a smile.Â
Johnny Lee Miller, who portrays former British Prime Minister John Major, says in the trailer: ‘It feels it’s all about to erupt’.
It was announced last year that Elizabeth would take over from Emma Corrin and play Diana for the fifth and sixth series, which will cover Diana’s death in 1997.Â
The actress said of her casting last year: ‘Princess Diana’s spirit, her words and her actions live in the hearts of so many. It is my privilege and honour to be joining this masterful series, which has had me absolutely hooked from episode one.’Â
Meanwhile  Dodi Fayed is expected to play a large part in the next series of The Crown, with British actor Khalid Abdalla, 39, who starred in the 2007 film The Kite Runner, cast in the role.Â
The final two series of The Crown will cover the Royal Family’s history throughout the 1990s and into 2003, however it is not yet know which moments will be seen.
The trailer comes as The Crown has been criticised for still going ahead with the controversial series – which will discuss King Charles’ love affair with the Queen Consort – after the death of Queen Elizabeth on September 8.Â
The hit show’s creator Peter Morgan has hit back at critics who have accused the Netflix series of ‘exploiting’ the Royal Family.
The award-winning British screenwriter, 59, has come out in defence of his show, which will dramatise the breakdown of King Charles and Diana’s marriage and the late royal’s tragic death in 1997.
Last month, a friend of the King’s told the Daily Telegraph that the series was ‘exploitative’ and claimed Netflix has ‘no qualms about mangling people’s reputations.’
Dame Judi Dench, pictured, has accused the producers of Netflix’s The Crown of being ‘cruelly unjust’ to the Royal Family. She called on the producers to include a disclaimer at the start of each episode making it clear that certain scenes had been fictionalised
It comes after Dame Judi, 87, who has played Elizabeth I and Queen Victoria, said the Netflix series risked damaging the monarchy.
The Oscar-winning actress blamed it for ‘crude sensationalism’ and blurring fact and fiction in a dramatic intervention in the row over the show’s rewriting of history.
In a letter to The Times newspaper, she called on Netflix to display a disclaimer at the start of each episode to say it is ‘fictionalised drama’.
She said it would also show respect for the bereavement suffered by the Royal Family and the nation, she said.
Dame Judi, who was made a Companion of Honour in 2005 and is pictured, right, as Queen Victoria in the film Victoria and Abdul, said she was stung by reports that the latest series would include scenes of Prince Charles lobbying to force his mother’s abdication.
She fears it will give an ‘inaccurate and hurtful account of history’.
She wrote: ‘The closer the drama comes to our present times, the more freely it seems willing to blur the lines between historical accuracy and crude sensationalism.’
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