The film will focus on its environmental work and we could title it Carlos III and the last crusade of the green king. But we don’t know if that will be the name. In a time where the monarchs seem porcelain figures aimed at decorating the tickets and pronouncing speeches that almost nobody remembers, King Carlos III has decided to shake the dust of the protocol and star in his own audiovisual epic. Not a word of your cancer treatment.
In a show of monarchy committed to the planet, the British sovereign will be the star of a prime video documentary that aspires to redefine the concept of sustainability, community and global transformation.
No title yet, but with the solemn promise of “not count“, The project is emerging as the most personal and ambitious piece that the king has undertaken in his very long career of recycled heir in chief of the United Kingdom. The idea is clear: teach the world that not everything in royalty is a parade of carriages and carriage and Faisanes hunting, but there is also room for the green revolution from a solid gold throne.
Filming has begun in Dumfries House, a eighteenth -century jewel in Scotland that Carlos rescued from oblivion and became a temple of applied ecologism. While some nobles prefer to collect castles as if they were mail seals, the now king has made this farm his living laboratory, his model of a world where humans and nature are stopped being treated as enemies. There, among well -combing horses and gardens designed with tiralíneas, the monarch has installed from organic agriculture programs to training workshops in artisanal trades that could have excited a medieval guild.
This documentary, according to sources close to the king cited by The Timesintends to demonstrate that many of the ideas that Carlos defended decades ago – when they looked at him with the same indulgence with which an eccentric uncle is observed at Christmas dinner – now they are applied by governments, companies and social movements around the world.
The green manifesto of a stubborn king
All this is not new. In 2010, Carlos published Harmony: A New Way of Looking at Our Worlda book where his patience with industrialized modernity and his divorce with nature were completely exhausted. In its pages he launched a war cry:
“This is a call to the revolution. Revolution is a strong word and use it deliberately. The many environmental and social problems that are now looming on our horizon cannot be resolved following the same approach that has caused them.”
Fifteen years later, that speech not only remains in force, but resonates with the urgency of a planetary emergency siren. The documentary aims to be the visual adaptation of that manifesto, only now with the support of a streaming platform, 4K cameras and a production team that will make each ecological garden look like a work of art.
Beyond the Windsor: the king who does not want to be a souvenir
In a time when British royalty has become a television genre by itself – with productions such as The Crown and the transatlantic melodrama of Harry & Meghan—This documentary unchecks the palatial gossip to focus on the legacy. There will be no scandals, or family reproaches launched on sets, or dramas on the real label. They will be, they assure, the testimony of a king who does not want to go down in history only as the head in the pounds sterling, but as someone who tried to make sense of his role in a world that no longer fully understands the need for monarchs.
Carlos III has been many things: the eternal prince, the misunderstood environmentalist, the defender of classical architecture against the horrors of brutalism, the man who spoke with plants long before that became fashionable in the forums of emotional well -being . This documentary is, in part, its claim.
For some, it will continue to be the king who speaks of sustainability from Palacios to the size of whole villages. For others, your figure will acquire a more complex dimension, that of a monarch that has tried to use its position for more than inaugurate plates and cut ribbons.
Premiere in 2025: a king in prime time
The documentary will see the light in the late 2025 or early 2026, at a key moment for Carlos’s reign. In a world that faces unprecedented climatic, political and social crises, this project comes as an attempt to demonstrate that the monarchy can have a purpose beyond symbolism.
The cameras have begun to roll, the best minds of the audiovisual work to convert the King’s vision into images that impact, and the planet follows its uncertain course. If this documentary will serve to cement Carlos III’s legacy as the monarch who wanted to save the world or will simply be another episode in the long tradition of British royalty to reinvent itself, it is still about to be seen.
What is certain is that, for the first time in a long time, a British king will not be on screen for the gossip of his family, but for the hope that his voice still has something useful to contribute.