The Prisoner
1 9 6 7 - 1 9 6 8 (UK)
17 x 50 minute Episodes
The Prisoner, an existential British
spy/science fiction series, was first aired in England in 1967. Actor
Patrick McGoohan conceived the idea for the series, wrote some of the
scripts, and starred in the central role. McGoohan had become bored
with his previous series, Danger Man (known as Secret Agent
in the USA) and wanted something very different. The Prisoner was
certainly that!
The
series has attained cult status because it is so complex, so filled
with symbolism, with dialogue and action working at several levels of
meaning, that the entire story remains open to multiple
interpretations.
The Prisoner was shot in the Welsh village
of Portmeirion (pictured below right), whose remarkable
architecture contributes to the rich, mysterious atmosphere of the
series. In many ways an allegory, the adventures within The
Prisoner can be read as commentaries on contemporary British
social and political institutions.
The
hero of the series is an unnamed spy first shown resigning his
position with the British secret service. He
leave the bureaucratic office building housing his agency, goes to his
apartment, starts packing and is gassed - presumably by those for whom
he used to work.
He wakes up in "The Village," a
resort-like community on what seems to be a remote island.
"The Village," however, is actually a high-tech prison, and
the spy is a prisoner, along with other men and women who were also
spies. All have been sent to "The Village" to be removed
from circulation so their secret knowledge won't be discovered.
Every member of "The Village" is known
only by a number. McGoohan's character becomes Number Six, and finds
himself engaged in constant intellectual, emotional, and sometimes
physical struggles with Number Two. But each episode presents a
different Number Two. With a few exceptions, each episode begins with
a repetition of some of the opening sequence from the first episode;
McGoohan resigns; his file is dropped by a mechanical device into a
filing cabinet labelled "Resigned"; he is gassed; he wakes
in "The Village" and confronts (the new) Number Two. A set
piece of dialogue follows:
Prisoner:
Where am I?
Number Two:
In The Village.
Prisoner: What do you want?
Number Two:
Information.
Prisoner: Which side are you on?
Number Two: That
would be telling. We want information, information, information...
Prisoner: You won't get it.
Number Two:
By hook or by crook we will.
Prisoner: Who are you?
Number Two:
The new Number Two.
Prisoner: Who is Number One?
Number Two: You
are Number Six.
Prisoner: I am not a number. I
am a free man.
Number Two:
Ha, ha, ha, ha!
Some
argue that there is a slight gap between the words "are" and
the "Number Six" in this exchange ("You are. Number
Six."), which would mean that Number Six is also Number One, a
character who remains unseen until the final episode.
Number Two pushes the inquiry. He wants
to know why Six resigned. Six says he will not tell him, then vows to
escape from "The Village" and destroy it.
Each episode in
the series consists of an attempt by a new Number Two and his or her
associates to find out why Six resigned and of measures taken by Six
to counter these attempts. Every possible method, from drugs to
sex, from the invasion of his dreams to the use of supercomputers, is
used to get Number Six to reveal why he resigned.
In some episode
Six shifts his focus from escape attempts to schemes for bringing down
the administration of "The Village," though it is always
understood that escape is his ultimate goal.
The concluding episode, written by McGoohan, was
extremely chaotic, confusing, and very controversial. Number Six has
defeated and killed Number Two in the previous episode and when Number
six finally gets to see Number One, he turns out to be a grinning ape.
But when Number Six strips off the ape mask, we see what appears to be
a crazed version of Number Six, suggesting that Number One was,
somehow, a perverted element of Number Six's personality.
Six, aided by several characters also deemed
"revolutionaries" by the administration (including the
Number Two of the previous episode, somehow brought back to life),
does destroy "The Village." He escapes with his
associates in a truck driven by a midget. They blast through a tunnel
just before "The Village" is destroyed and find themselves,
surprisingly, on a highway near London.
When
the last episode originally aired, viewers were more confused than
ever and phoned ATV to register their fury at the inconclusive finale.
McGoohan was besieged in his Mill Hill home and physically attacked in
the streets.
He claimed: "I wanted to
have a controversy, arguments, fights, discussions, people in anger
waving fists in my face". Nevertheless he was soon to depart
British shores for the USA.
The Prisoner is considered by some critics
to be television's first masterpiece, the most brilliant television
series ever produced. Each program and every aspect of the series has
been subjected to scrutiny by its fans. Dealing with topics ranging
from the nature of individual identity to the power of individuals to
confront totalitarian institutions, The Prisoner remains one of
the most enigmatic and fascinating series ever produced for
television.
Be seeing you . . .
EPISODES
Arrival
Chimes Of Big Ben
A, B & C
Free For All
The Schizoid Man
The General |
Many Happy Returns
Dance Of The Dead
Do Not Forsake Me Oh My Darling
It's Your Funeral
Checkmate
Living In Harmony |
Change Of Mind
Hammer Into Anvil
The Girl Who Was Death
Once Upon A Time
Fallout |
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