Intended to modernize the monarchy and make it appear less distant, the fly-on-the-wall production featured intimate scenes of Queen Elizabeth II, who died in 2022 aged 96, alongside her husband Prince Philip and their children – Prince Charles, now king and aged 77, as well as Princess Anne, 75, the then-Prince Andrew, 66, and Prince Edward, 62.
The nearly two-hour film attracted an estimated 30 million viewers in Britain and hundreds of millions worldwide, but the royal family later became deeply uncomfortable with the level of access it revealed.
A palace source said the project fundamentally changed how senior royals viewed media exposure – with Elizabeth coming to regret ever letting the cameras behind closed doors as she later came to see it made them celebrity fodder akin to the Kardashians.
The insider told us: “The Queen came to believe the documentary revealed far more than the monarchy ever should have allowed. Once audiences had seen the family joking around at barbecues and relaxing behind palace walls, she felt the carefully maintained sense of distance and mystique surrounding the Crown had been badly weakened. In her view, the cameras blurred the line between public duty and private family life in a way that could never fully be undone.
“There was real panic within palace circles after the broadcast because senior royals thought the film stripped away too much of the institution’s formality and dignity. The family worried they suddenly looked less like a centuries-old monarchy and more like television personalities being invited into people’s living rooms every week. For an institution built on symbolism, protocol and a degree of separation from ordinary life, that level of familiarity was seen as deeply dangerous.”

