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The Crown
Season 2
TV-MA
89%
96%
Add Show to Watchlist
As a new era begins, Queen Elizabeth struggles to navigate a world that's changing around her while preserving both the monarchy and her marriage.
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Where to Watch The Crown • Season 2
Netflix
Subscription
Netflix Standard with Ads
Subscription
Cast of Season 2
Claire Foy
Queen Elizabeth II
Matt Smith
Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh
Vanessa Kirby
Princess Margaret
Anton Lesser
Harold Macmillan
Victoria Hamilton
Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother
Allie Goss
Executive Producer
Andrew Eaton
Producer
Philip Martin Lacroix
Executive Producer
Tanya Seghatchian
Executive Producer
Andy Stebbing
Producer
Stephen Daldry
Executive Producer
Suzanne Mackie
Executive Producer
Andy Harries
Executive Producer
Michael Casey
Producer
Robert Fox
Executive Producer
Martin Harrison
Producer
Peter Morgan
Executive Producer / Theatre Play
Matthew Byam-Shaw
Executive Producer
Martin Childs
Production Design
Jane Petrie
Costume Design
The Crown • Season 2 Ratings & Reviews
Salon.com
Melanie McFarland
Happily ever after is probably more possible for the royals these days than in previous decades, and season 2 of "The Crown" depicts the very human reason as to why this is so.
Vox
Caroline Framke
Despite the roiling tensions of the imminent '60s and the various revolutions it holds, the Royal Family's domestic politics are still what The Crown does best.
Wall Street Journal
John Anderson
The Crown attains genuine sexiness without sex. Margaret, à la Ms. Kirby's interpretation, smolders, as does Elizabeth, at least on occasion
Entertainment Weekly
Chancellor Agard
As always, Claire Foy turns in an amazingly restrained performance.
New York Magazine/Vulture
Kathryn VanArendonk
All in all, I am so glad to be back in the world of The Crown, even though I'm afraid the episodes will still be too long and I'm gathering my strength to spend the next nine hours yelling at Philip.
Vanity Fair
Richard Lawson
... a bit like the monarchy itself, something about the show's sheer belief in its grandeur-in the righteousness and necessity of it all-sells me on the enterprise.
Newsday
Verne Gay
Morgan not only has a series to match his 2006 Oscar-winning movie, The Queen, but finally one to exceed it. The Crown -- the second season, anyway -- is magnificent.
New York Times
Mike Hale
It's soap opera presented with intelligence, taste and high production values, and it's a pleasure to watch, though the pleasure is perhaps more lulling than it is exciting or truly moving.
CNN.com
Brian Lowry
The upper lips remain admirably stiff in The Crown, but Season 2 takes what was a fine Netflix drama and polishes it to a high gloss -- presenting its stories more crisply, while providing a stronger showcase for its regal core cast.
New York Magazine/Vulture
Jen Chaney
But what is most striking and instructive about the second season of The Crown is Elizabeth's capacity to take modest but meaningful steps toward change
TheWrap
Phil Owen
I'm assuming that creator Peter Morgan meant for it to be comedy. There's really no other explanation for why Jeremy Northam played Prime Minister Anthony Eden like he's having a nervous breakdown in every scene.
AV Club
Gwen Ihnat
The Crown achieves a groundbreaking, intimate look at a legendary union far beyond their many official portraits.
Los Angeles Times
Lorraine Ali
Most refreshing, and perhaps timely, is that the young Elizabeth in Season 2's first few episodes firmly believes in the sanctity and importance of her position.
Washington Post
Hank Stuever
As before, I recommend taking "The Crown" in small doses - no more than an episode or two at a time - because it works best when savored as a series of short but extravagant films about a dysfunctional family facing a unique set of problems.
USA Today
Kelly Lawler
It may be a fairy tale with the cracks showing, but it's still a fairy tale.
The New Republic
Rachel Syme
[Claire] Foy is, in the second season, a genius of restraint. So much so, that the secondary characters in the show threaten to eclipse her spotlight.
Uproxx
Alan Sepinwall
Many of the season's wounds are self-inflicted in particular Morgan's mystifying fascination with Prince Philip, who despite Matt Smith's best efforts still comes across as a whiny man child.
Slate
Willa Paskin
The Crown isn't here to sing the praises of the orderly turnover of a parliamentary democracy, but only of the lasting fortitude of Her Majesty, long may she rule.
NPR
Eric Deggans
When The Crown connects the personal lives of England's monarchs directly to the country's fortunes, that's when the series shines brightest, exposing the fitful evolution of a family that remains one of the most compelling institutions in the world.
The Hollywood Reporter
Daniel Fienberg
Expanding the focus beyond Claire Foy's Queen Elizabeth hurts, but Peter Morgan's Netflix drama remains a strong depiction of power and privilege.
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The Crown: Season 2
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