The Crown release new posters showing a separated Queen, Prince Charles and Princess Diana

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The Crown released two new posters to promote the fifth season, after criticizing the show for blurring the lines between fact and fiction.

The Netflix hit series will release the new season on November 9, just weeks after The Queen’s death.

The new posters show Imelda Staunton as Queen Elizabeth II, who looks regal in a blue dress, white gloves and a sapphire tiara.

Divided: The Crown has released two new posters to promote season five, following backlash against the show for blurring the lines between fact and fiction

Divided: The Crown has released two new posters to promote season five, following backlash against the show for blurring the lines between fact and fiction

She is shown watching Elizabeth Debicki’s Princess Diana, who wears a white dress and looks down lonely, separated from the Queen by a table.

To the right of the queen stands the then Prince Charles stoically, played by Dominic West.

A crack can be seen in the wall between both sides, with the slogan: ‘A house divided’.

It comes after it was revealed that the show plans to dramatize Princess Diana’s final moments.

Season 5: The Netflix hit series will release its new season on November 9, just weeks after The Queen's death

Season 5: The Netflix hit series will release its new season on November 9, just weeks after The Queen's death

Season 5: The Netflix hit series will release its new season on November 9, just weeks after The Queen’s death

The hit series will reportedly span the hours before the tragic death of the royal family in Paris in August 1997.

The show has already been criticized for other storylines that will feature in the new series, including portraying then-Prince Charles as an unfaithful schemer who conspired against his mother and Prince Philip “pursuing an affair” with his close friend Penny Knatchbull.

William Shawcross, the Queen Mother’s official biographer, labeled the series “abominable” and “deliberately hurtful” about a seemingly made-up scene in which Charles tells the Queen she should be “thrown in jail” for being a “bad mother.” ‘ is.

Netflix risked fuel on the fire last night by refusing to add a disclaimer to the series stating that the scenes, labeled as “evil” by a royal expert, are not fact but fiction.

Criticism: Netflix is ​​furious over plans to dramatize Princess Diana's final moments before her tragic death in Paris in the new season of The Crown (Elizabeth Debicki as Princess Diana in The Crown, season five)

Criticism: Netflix is ​​furious over plans to dramatize Princess Diana's final moments before her tragic death in Paris in the new season of The Crown (Elizabeth Debicki as Princess Diana in The Crown, season five)

Criticism: Netflix is ​​furious over plans to dramatize Princess Diana’s final moments before her tragic death in Paris in the new season of The Crown (Elizabeth Debicki as Princess Diana in The Crown, season five)

Meanwhile, according to The suneven crew members are concerned about the scenes depicting the lead-up to Diana’s death, with one reportedly saying, “It feels like a line is being crossed.”

A source close to Prince William told the newspaper last night that they expect the Prince of Wales to be angry over Netflix’s move to reproduce his mother’s last days for entertainment purposes.

Netflix insists Diana’s death, in a car accident in the Pont de l’Alma tunnel in central Paris, will not be recreated in the new series.

But a regular source reportedly told The Sun: “To go back to Paris and turn Diana’s final days and hours into a drama feels very uncomfortable.

The show always tried to present a fictionalized version of royal history with as much sensitivity as possible. But lately, as things get closer and closer to the present, it’s been harder to find that balance.”

Denial: Netflix insists Diana's death, in a car accident in the Pont de l'Alma tunnel (Photo: The Flame of Freedom statue over the Pont de l'Alma) in central Paris, was not will be recreated during the new series

Denial: Netflix insists Diana's death, in a car accident in the Pont de l'Alma tunnel (Photo: The Flame of Freedom statue over the Pont de l'Alma) in central Paris, was not will be recreated during the new series

Denial: Netflix insists Diana’s death, in a car accident in the Pont de l’Alma tunnel (Photo: The Flame of Freedom statue over the Pont de l’Alma) in central Paris, was not will be recreated during the new series

Fury: A source close to Prince William (pictured with Prince Harry) told the newspaper last night that they expect the Prince of Wales to be angry about Netflix's move to reproduce his mother's last days for entertainment purposes

Fury: A source close to Prince William (pictured with Prince Harry) told the newspaper last night that they expect the Prince of Wales to be angry about Netflix's move to reproduce his mother's last days for entertainment purposes

Fury: A source close to Prince William (pictured with Prince Harry) told the newspaper last night that they expect the Prince of Wales to be angry about Netflix’s move to reproduce his mother’s last days for entertainment purposes

Prince William’s wrath as Netflix is ​​accused of profiteering by re-enacting his mother Diana’s BBC Panorama interview with Martin Bashir in a new series of The Crown

Prince William thinks Netflix is ​​making a profit by re-enacting his mother Diana’s BBC Panorama interview, palace sources say.

The streaming giant will recreate clips from Diana’s 1995 meeting with journalist Martin Bashir for the fifth series of The Crown.

A source told The Telegraph that the Prince of Wales made his feelings “very clear” and that an image in the show would be “in the way you would expect”.

They added that it was understandable that he was upset about the “dramatization of it for financial gain.”

An independent investigation found that Bashir cheated on Diana to get the interview, seen by over 20 million viewers, and then lied to BBC executives.

He had a BBC graphic artist produce fake bank statements that appeared to show payments by a newspaper group to an ex-employee of Earl Spencer, Diana’s brother.

The inquiry said this was to gain the count’s trust so that he would introduce Bashir to Diana.

The interview is thought to have contributed to her divorce from Prince Charles in 1996 – a year prior to her fatal car accident in the Tunnel de l’Alma in Paris.

Series five of The Crown begins in 1991, and a major storyline is the deteriorating relationship between Charles, played by Dominic West, and Diana, played by Elizabeth Debicki of The Night Manager.

Obviously, Netflix, which has cast Prasanna Puwanarajah in the role of Bashir, will show how the discredited reporter persuaded Diana to give the interview by playing on her paranoia.

But to tell the tale, it will recreate what one insider called “fragments” of Diana’s Panorama appearance.

Any reference to the interview, even if critical of Bashir, will likely be met with dismay at Buckingham Palace.

The storyline in which Charles plots to evict his mother was labeled a “barrel of evil nonsense” by former Prime Minister Sir John Major as those close to the new monarch called for a boycott.

Critics argue that the show should include a warning that the “false, unfair and deeply wounding” scenes are fiction, which not all viewers realize.

Nevertheless, The Crown has confirmed that series five will air from November 9 without a disclaimer.

Meanwhile, the Queen Mother’s official biographer called the series “appalling” and “deliberately hurtful.”

Mr Shawcross, in a letter to… The Daily Telegraphsaid the program is “full of lies and half-truths wrapped in lace and velvet.”

He also accused creator Peter Morgan of organizing “a campaign to abuse the monarchy” and “destroy a vital institution through lies.”

Former culture secretary Nadine Dorries said it’s only fair that the show regularly shows such a warning, as is common with other programs.

The Tory MP added: “If a program is pure fiction, as this series from The Crown is clear, it should be clearly stated in the name of fairness and transparency.

“It’s pretty bizarre that there are people on it who are still alive today, but bound by protocol and unable to refute false impressions and made-up scenarios, knowing that many viewers would think they are real.”

Royal insiders have previously described the program as “Hollywood-scale trolling,” and it was said last night that no one has been dissuaded from that view.

But Buckingham Palace has not formally commented on the spat, as officials are believed to want to rise above the fray with dignity.

A spokesperson for the series said: “The Crown has always been presented as a drama based on historical events.

Series Five is a fictional dramatization, imagining what could have happened behind closed doors during an important decade for the royal family – one that has already been closely researched and well documented by journalists, biographers and historians.”

Set in the 1990s, the new series begins with Charles – then the Prince of Wales – then lobbying Prime Minister Sir John in a bizarre attempt to force the Queen’s abdication.

The prince, played by Dominic West, actively complains to the queen, who he says has no contact.

But Sir John told The Mail on Sunday the meeting fell through and the ‘inappropriate topic’ was never discussed. His office said no scene is “accurate in any way,” adding, “They are fiction, pure and simple.

“They should be seen as nothing more than harmful and malicious fiction – a ton of nonsense spread for no other reason than to provide maximum – and completely false – dramatic impact.”

In another scene, Charles says, “If we were an ordinary family and social services came to visit, they would have thrown us into care and you [the Queen] in jail.’

Although the new series was written at least a year before the Queen died and filming was completed months ago, the timing of its release could be criticized.

Sources close to the palace have said the Queen’s death just six weeks ago makes the scenes particularly painful.

Storyline: Set in the 1990s, the new series begins with Charles - then the Prince of Wales - lobbying Prime Minister John Major in a bizarre attempt to force the Queen's abdication (Photo: Charles and John Major together in 1994)

Storyline: Set in the 1990s, the new series begins with Charles - then the Prince of Wales - lobbying Prime Minister John Major in a bizarre attempt to force the Queen's abdication (Photo: Charles and John Major together in 1994)

Storyline: Set in the 1990s, the new series begins with Charles – then the Prince of Wales – lobbying Prime Minister John Major in a bizarre attempt to force the Queen’s abdication (Photo: Charles and John Major together in 1994)